The central problem with the futurist interpretation of the Kingdom in Matthew 13 — as defended by McClain, Toussaint, Mal Couch, Mike Stallard, Andy Woods, R. Bruce Compton, and others — is that it creates a serious and recurring tension with the natural grammatical force of Jesus' own language. For a broader map of how dispensationalists have read this chapter, see Matthew 13 in Dispensationalism: Three Interpretive Patterns.
Problem 1: The Genitive "Of the Kingdom" Defines the Subject Matter
Jesus speaks His parables to disclose mysteries — previously unrevealed truths concerning the promised Messianic Kingdom. The genitive "of the kingdom of heaven" (τῆς βασιλείας τῶν οὐρανῶν) is not incidental; it defines the subject matter of the mysteries. They are revelations concerning the Kingdom itself. The expression "mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven" grammatically indicates that these mysteries belong to and reveal something about the Kingdom. It would be unusual to speak of "the mysteries of X" in order to describe an era in which X is entirely absent.
To be sure, a revelation about the delay, hiddenness, or preparatory phase of the Kingdom could still, in a broad sense, be called a revelation concerning the Kingdom. But this concession only goes so far. If the content of these mysteries were simply "there will be a gap before the Kingdom arrives," that could be stated in a single sentence. It would be unnecessary for Jesus to tell eight elaborate parables merely to communicate the idea of a hiatus. The richness and complexity of the parabolic teaching — and the fact that the present age is so consistently in view — suggest that something substantial is being revealed about what is happening during this period, and that Jesus directly connects this to the Kingdom of Heaven itself.
Problem 2: "The Kingdom of Heaven Is Like…" Describes Present Realities
This difficulty is confirmed and deepened by the introductory formula that governs six of the parables: "The kingdom of heaven is like…" (Ὁμοία ἐστὶν ἡ βασιλεία τῶν οὐρανῶν; cf. ὡμοιώθη, 13:24; ὁμοία ἐστίν, 13:31, 33, 44, 45, 47). The subject of the comparison is the Kingdom itself. The formula does not say, "The absence of the kingdom of heaven is like…," nor, "The interval before the kingdom of heaven is like…." The futurist interpretation may claim that these parables reveal truths related to the Kingdom's absence, but it must still explain why Jesus makes the Kingdom of Heaven itself the grammatical subject of the parables.
Furthermore, the formula compares the Kingdom to scenarios depicting present, dynamic realities: sowing, growth, fermentation, the discovery of treasure, fishing — activities occurring now, not exclusively in the future. The imagery is present in force. This does not by itself settle every eschatological question, but it does weaken the claim that Matthew 13 describes a period in which the Kingdom is wholly absent. The context points instead to a present form or operation of the Kingdom, awaiting its final consummation.
Problem 3: The Narrative Flow
When the futurist reading is laid out consistently, it produces a strained narrative. Jesus announces that He will reveal "mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven" — and then proceeds, parable after parable, to describe conditions of the pre-Kingdom age:
- The Sower: A new truth about the Messianic Kingdom is that, before the Kingdom arrives, the gospel will be preached and receive different responses.
- The Wheat and the Tares: Another truth about the Messianic Kingdom is that, before the Kingdom arrives, wheat and tares will coexist.
- The Mustard Seed: Another truth about the Messianic Kingdom is that, before the Kingdom arrives, the message will expand greatly.
- The Net: Another truth about the Messianic Kingdom is that, before the Kingdom arrives, the righteous and wicked will coexist.
The effect is telling: Jesus announces one theme (the Kingdom) and, according to the futurist reading, ends up discussing something else altogether (a pre-Kingdom age). It is as if someone said, "I am going to reveal secrets about the United States," and then proceeded to speak almost exclusively about China. If the futurist interpretation were correct, it would be far more natural for Jesus to have used a different expression — not "mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven."
This narrative tension connects directly to the broader dispensationalist debate over postponement and parenthesis. If the Kingdom is entirely postponed, Matthew 13 becomes a collection of truths about an interval rather than revelations about the Kingdom itself.
Problem 4: The Wicked Are Gathered "Out of His Kingdom"
A further and decisive problem arises from Jesus' own explanation of the parable of the wheat and the tares. At the end of the age, the Son of Man sends His angels, and "they will gather out of His kingdom" — ἐκ τῆς βασιλείας αὐτοῦ — "all causes of sin and all lawbreakers" (Matthew 13:41). The removal of the wicked occurs at the end of the age, before the righteous shine forth in the Kingdom of their Father. Yet Jesus explicitly says the wicked are gathered out of His Kingdom.
If, according to the futurist scheme, the Messianic Kingdom has not yet been established at that point, it becomes very difficult to explain how the wicked can be removed out of a Kingdom that does not yet exist in any present form. The language presupposes that the Kingdom is already operative during the age, however mixed and hidden its present manifestation may be.
This aligns with what Acts 1:6 also implies when the disciples ask about the restoration of the Kingdom — a question that progressive dispensationalism interprets as evidence against total postponement.
Conclusion
The issue, therefore, is not that a revelation about the delay or hiddenness of the Kingdom could never be called a "mystery of the Kingdom." In principle, it could. The deeper problem is that Matthew 13 repeatedly speaks as though the Kingdom itself is the reality being disclosed — presently operative in mystery, mixed in its historical manifestation, and awaiting eschatological separation and consummation. The futurist reading does not merely interpret the parables; it must repeatedly qualify their most natural grammatical force in order to preserve the conclusion that the Kingdom is entirely absent from the present age.
By contrast, a more coherent reading recognizes that the parables do indeed speak of a present Kingdom — though not yet inaugurated in its fullness. As progressive dispensationalism claims, there are real Kingdom realities already operative in this age: sons of the Kingdom, the proclamation of the Kingdom's message, and — most significantly — blessings belonging to the Kingdom program already being experienced. Interestingly, this interpretive move is not without precedent even within dispensationalism. Darby himself argued that the New Covenant has not yet been formally inaugurated, yet believers already participate in its blessings. If that pattern holds for the New Covenant, a similar logic may apply to the Kingdom: present in its benefits and operative in mystery, though awaiting its full and glorious consummation. For how the already/not-yet tension has always been part of the dispensational tradition, see The Already-Not Yet in Dispensationalism Was Never Foreign to the Tradition.
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Author
Leonardo A. Costa
A researcher and writer exploring dispensationalism from a progressive perspective, with a deep appreciation for the tradition's heritage.
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