Heaven to Earth (by Daniel Hill)

Heaven to Earth (by Daniel Hill) May 6, 2015

Daniel Hill is the Author of 10:10: Life to the Fullest, and Founding and Senior Pastor of River City Community Church, located in the Humboldt Park neighborhood of Chicago.  The vision of River City is centered around the core values of worship, reconciliation, and neighborhood development.  Formed in 2003, River City longs to see increased spiritual renewal as well as social and economic justice in the Humboldt Park neighborhood and entire city, demonstrating compassion and alleviating poverty as tangible expressions of the Kingdom of God. 

Prior to starting River City, Daniel launched a dot.com in the 90’s before serving 5 years on the staff of Willow Creek Community Church in the suburbs of Chicago.  Daniel has his B.S. in Business from Purdue University, his M.A. in Theology from Moody Bible Institute, his certificate in Church-based Community and Economic Development from Harvard Divinity School, and is currently working on his Doctoral of Ministry in Community Development at Northern Seminary.  Daniel is married to his wife Elizabeth, who is a professor of Psychology at Chicago State University.  They are the proud parents of Xander and Gabriella Hill.

Screen Shot 2015-05-02 at 9.01.42 AMIt wasn’t on purpose, but it was definitely providential that I read these two books back to back: “Surprised by Hope” by NT Wright, followed by “Bringing Heaven to Earth” by Josh Ross and Jonathan Storment. Wright is a leading NT scholar and retired Bishop, while Ross and Storment are on-the-ground pastors articulating their theology from the trenches of ministry. But while all three have different contexts, there is a clear and common thread that ties together these books: We are not meant to think of heaven as some abstract, in-the-future, far away reality. Heaven is meant to crash into our collective reality, right now.

Part of their motivation for writing the book is a declining sense of impact coming from the witness of the North American Church. “Christians are the best reason for someone to follow or not follow Jesus,” they point out, and right now “it seems like the evidence for the latter is stacking up.” I think that any observant Christian would have to acknowledge this reality, and I appreciate the evangelistic mindset that permeates the pages of this book. Ross and Storment clearly care about the Gospel, the Kingdom, and the Church’s role in being a holistic and effective witness to the Resurrected Christ, and that commitment comes across warmly and consistently throughout the book.

So how does our generation turn the tide? How do Christians become the best reason for people to follow Jesus?

Ross and Storment believe that the answer is found in a more holistic understanding and practice of the kingdom of God. If we come to see the relationship between heaven and earth, as the title suggests, our witness would dramatically change. They say it like this: “hell isn’t the counterpoint to heaven in the Bible – earth is. The two belong together. God made both heaven and earth; they are both current realities; and from Genesis to Revelation, the story is God bringing them back together.”

The book is then filled with a nice mixture of everyday stories of “heaven-earth collisions,” as well as some deep reflection on theological principles that undergird our understanding of heaven (I personally loved the exposition they did on the book of Ephesians, as well as the exploration of the difference of viewing the Bible through a “rapture” vs. “resurrection” lens).

The authors mention early on that their contexts are quite different – Storment in an educated, college town, and Ross in an intentionally multiethnic and economically diverse community. I appreciated this diversity of perspective, and believe it will help readers translate these principles into their own context. I myself am in a historically poor neighborhood in Chicago (though one that’s experiencing a lot of changes due to gentrification), and resonated with much of what they shared. Like the authors, I see the need for a more holistic, integrated way of thinking about and practicing the presence of God. We live in a day and age where the wholeness of the Gospel seems to consistently evade us. We have trouble holding onto to the integrated nature of both internal & external transformation; evangelism & justice; faith & works; present & future reality. This in turn has led to a fragmentation of the Christian witness, and a more whole view of Jesus seems to be the only way home.

Ross and Storment remind us that when Jesus told his disciples that we should pray “thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven,” he was speaking to one of the most central motifs of the Bible. The point of Jesus’ prayer was not to focus exclusively on the afterlife, where we would join Jesus in heaven. Instead, we are to see heaven and earth as interlocking realities, made for each other. Their book is a welcome addition to a reclaiming of this holistic way of seeing the words and ministry of Jesus.


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