I wrote:
There is no kingdom grace within the "Just me and Jesus" crowd.
In this example I am not equating salvation with kingdom grace and I am certainly not saying those without the grace of the kingdom are not saved. The gospel of Salvation is merely part of the Kingdom, and yet our "Christian gospel" often starts at the cross.
The relationship between the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is the first example of the Kingdom of God. We are translated from the kingdom of Darkness into the Kingdom of the Son He Loves upon salvation. There, as infants in Him, we are to go on to maturity. This includes applying the apostle's doctrine to our own lives and within the congregation of the saints. While Jesus is the Great Shepherd, for example, He empowers saints to be shepherds of others. This is delegated authority. In a kingdom, all servants of the king function only by delegated authority and by decree of the king. God, as the perfect King, has no advisors and He does not rule by the consent of the governed. In a Representative Republic, like the United States, people choose their own leaders by majority votes. They choose their own laws by majority votes. In these issues they are accountable to no one. In many churches the same is true; they choose their own elders, pastors, leaders, building plans, etc. by majority votes. This is idea is from terrestrial government.
Imagine, if you will, your body functioned in such a way: before the brain could send a signal it had to get consent from the other parts. Or, if your home was run in such a way: where the children could decide, by majority rule, that they could play in the street and have candy for breakfast. We are given the natural to show us the spiritual. There is a certain order in the natural that displays the reality of the order in the Kingdom of God. It is so foreign to us that we reject it outright when we hear it. It is because, in our democratic society, the consent of the governed has always determine the course of the nation. "We the people..." have always decided what we should do. When it comes to understanding the ways of the King and a kingdom, this has been to our detriment.