The basic argument of Two Kingdom Theology is this:
(1) Jesus' kingdom is not advanced or defended by the sword (John 18:36; 1 Cor. 10:4; Eph. 6:12).
(2) And God has ordained the civil magistrate to maintain order and enforce justice by the sword (Rom. 13:4; 1 Pet. 2:13)
Since the ethics of Jesus' kingdom (i.e. the ecclesiastical, sacred realm) and the civil magistrate (i.e. the civil, common realm) are fundamentally unified (which is the basis for Christian participation in the common realm contra separatism and transformationalism) and the sacred and the common exist simultaneously, then . . .
(3) Therefore, there are two distinct kingdoms at work in the New Testament era (i.e. the ecclesiastical and the civil, the sacred and the common, Jesus' kingdom and the civil magistrate).
David Strain has posted a fuller presentation of this argument here.



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