“The Kingdom of heaven is at hand.” Matthew 10:7

Jesus’ proclamation, “The Kingdom of heaven is at hand”, as depicted in the image today, which is taken from the series “The Chosen“, is the central announcement of Jesus’ earthly ministry. It is not simply a prediction of a future reality, nor merely a promise of heaven after death. It is the declaration that, in the person of Jesus Christ, God has drawn near to His people. The long-awaited reign of God has entered human history. The King Himself has come.

For the Jewish people who first heard these words, the “Kingdom of heaven” carried deep expectations. The prophets had foretold a day when God would restore Israel, defeat evil, establish justice, and gather His people into covenant communion. Yet Jesus reveals that the Kingdom arrives in an unexpected way—not first through military power or political revolution, but through conversion of heart, mercy, healing, forgiveness, and self-giving love. Wherever Christ is welcomed, the Kingdom begins to take root.

The phrase “is at hand” conveys both nearness and urgency. God’s invitation is not distant or postponed. The Kingdom is already breaking into the present through Christ’s preaching, miracles, and ultimately through His death and resurrection. It is a Kingdom that is “already” present, yet “not yet” fully realized. We experience it now in the life of the Church, especially through the proclamation of the Word, the celebration of the sacraments, and lives transformed by grace, while we still await its fullness when Christ returns in glory.

This proclamation also becomes the mission entrusted to the disciples. Jesus sends them to announce the same message because they are to become visible signs of the Kingdom. Their healing of the sick, cleansing of lepers, casting out of demons, and proclaiming peace reveal that God’s reign restores what sin has broken. The Church continues this mission today whenever she brings Christ’s mercy into a wounded world through evangelization, charity, justice, and the celebration of the Eucharist.

For each of us, these words are a personal invitation. The Kingdom is not merely a place we hope to enter someday; it is a life we are called to embrace today. Every act of faith, every work of mercy, every moment of forgiveness, every surrender to God’s will makes His Kingdom more visible in our lives. When we pray, “Thy Kingdom come,” we ask not only for Christ’s glorious return, but that His reign may first transform our own hearts.

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