The Kingdom in Their Midst
Luke 17:20–21 and the Present Reign of Christ
There are moments in the Gospels when Jesus does not merely answer a question but dismantles the framework behind it. Luke 17:20–21 is one of those moments. The Pharisees came to Jesus with a question about timing. They wanted to know when the kingdom of God would arrive. What they received was not a date on a calendar but a complete redefinition of what they should have been looking for.
“And when he was demanded of the Pharisees, when the kingdom of God should come, he answered them and said, The kingdom of God cometh not with observation: Neither shall they say, Lo here! or, lo there! for, behold, the kingdom of God is within you.” (Luke 17:20–21, KJV)
The exchange is brief but theologically explosive. The Pharisees asked the right question to the right Person, and still they could not see the answer standing before them.
To understand what Jesus said, we must first understand what the Pharisees expected. Their question was not idle curiosity. It emerged from centuries of prophetic anticipation. The Hebrew prophets had declared that God would establish His reign over all the earth, that the Messiah would sit upon the throne of David, that Israel would be restored and her enemies defeated. By the first century, these expectations had hardened into a particular shape. The kingdom of God, for most Palestinian Jews, meant political liberation, national sovereignty, and the visible overthrow of Roman occupation.
The Pharisees were not wrong to expect a kingdom. The prophets had promised one. They were wrong about its mode of arrival. They anticipated a spectacle. They expected banners, armies, and the undeniable establishment of Israelite dominion. They were looking outward and upward when they should have been looking at the Man in front of them.
Their question, “When is the kingdom coming?” assumed that it had not yet arrived. And that assumption was precisely what Jesus corrected.
Jesus responded with a denial: the kingdom of God does not come with observation. The Greek term paratērēsis carries the sense of careful watching, of looking for visible signs that can be pointed to and tracked. It is the language of astronomical observation or political calculation. Jesus is saying, in effect, that the kingdom will not announce itself in the manner they were expecting. There will be no trumpet blast from a hilltop signaling that the revolution has begun. There will be no moment when someone can point to a location on a map and say, “There. There is the kingdom.”
This is a profound statement, and it is easily misunderstood. Jesus is not denying that the kingdom of God has visible effects. The healing of the sick, the casting out of demons, the authority of His teaching—these were all visible manifestations of the kingdom’s power. What He denies is that the kingdom is reducible to external political or geographic categories. You cannot locate it by watching the geopolitical horizon.
“Neither shall they say, Lo here! or, lo there!” The kingdom is not a territory you can travel to. It is not an event you can witness from a distance. It is not the sort of thing that one person discovers and then reports to another as news. The kingdom of God is present in a different mode than the Pharisees imagined, and that mode renders their method of detection useless.
The final clause of verse 21 is the crux of the passage and has generated extensive scholarly discussion. The KJV renders it “the kingdom of God is within you.” The Greek phrase is entos humōn, which can be translated either “within you” (referring to an internal, spiritual reality) or “in your midst” (referring to something present among them).
The question of translation matters enormously for interpretation. If “within you” is correct, then Jesus is teaching that the kingdom is an interior spiritual condition—the reign of God in the human heart. If “in your midst” is correct, then Jesus is pointing to His own presence as the embodiment of the kingdom.
Both readings have defenders. But the context strongly favors “in your midst.” Jesus is speaking to the Pharisees. These are not regenerate believers in whom the Spirit of God is doing a transforming work. These are men who will shortly conspire to put Him to death. It strains credulity to suggest that Jesus is telling the Pharisees that the kingdom of God resides inside their hearts.
What makes far better sense of the passage is that Jesus is pointing to Himself. The kingdom of God is in your midst because the King is in your midst. The Pharisees are looking for the kingdom in all the wrong places—in Roman collapse, in military deliverance, in political upheaval—while the sovereign Lord of the kingdom stands three feet away from them, answering their question.
This reading is consistent with everything else Jesus says about the kingdom in the Synoptic Gospels. The kingdom has drawn near (Mark 1:15). The kingdom is demonstrated in His exorcisms: “If I with the finger of God cast out devils, no doubt the kingdom of God is come upon you” (Luke 11:20, KJV). The kingdom is present wherever the King exercises His authority. And in that moment, the King was standing in plain sight.
The theological framework that best accounts for the full range of New Testament kingdom teaching is what scholars call “inaugurated eschatology”—the conviction that the kingdom of God has been inaugurated in the first coming of Christ but will not be consummated until His second coming. The kingdom is already here, and it is not yet fully here. It has been launched, but it has not yet reached its final form.
This is not a modern invention. It is the natural reading of the New Testament data. Jesus declares that the kingdom has arrived (Luke 17:21). He also teaches His disciples to pray, “Thy kingdom come” (Matthew 6:10). Both statements are true because the kingdom operates in two phases. The first phase is the present spiritual reign of Christ over the hearts and lives of His people. The second phase is the future, visible, glorious establishment of that reign over all creation at His return.
The present phase of the kingdom is real but hidden from those who insist on looking for it in the wrong places. It is manifested in transformed lives, in the proclamation of the gospel, in the authority of Scripture, in the power of the Holy Spirit at work in the church. It does not come with observation in the Pharisees’ sense. It comes through repentance and faith.
The future phase will come with observation. Every eye will see Him (Revelation 1:7). The Son of Man will come in clouds with great power and glory (Mark 13:26). At that point, the hiddenness of the kingdom will give way to its full unveiling. What was present in seed form during Christ’s earthly ministry will blossom into the undeniable reality of His universal reign.
The Pharisees missed the kingdom because they defined it by the wrong criteria. They wanted political power. They got a suffering servant. They wanted national triumph. They got a crucified Messiah. They wanted observable, external transformation of the world order. They got a call to internal, spiritual transformation of the human heart.
Their error was not that they believed the kingdom would be glorious. It will be. Their error was that they refused to accept a kingdom that begins in humility before it arrives in glory. They wanted the crown without the cross. They wanted Revelation 19 without Gethsemane. And because they rejected the King in His humiliation, they forfeited the kingdom in its consummation.
This is the consistent pattern of divine revelation. God hides His greatest works inside seemingly insignificant vessels. The Savior of the world is born in a stable. The King of kings enters Jerusalem on a donkey. The power of God is made perfect in weakness. Those who insist on glory as a precondition for faith will always miss what God is doing, because God delights in working through what the world dismisses.
The Pharisees’ error is not confined to the first century. It reappears whenever Christians equate the kingdom of God with a political movement, a national identity, or a cultural agenda. The kingdom of God is not a party platform. It is not a civilization. It is not a voting bloc. It is the sovereign, saving, transforming reign of Jesus Christ over the hearts of men and women who have been born again by the Spirit of God.
This does not mean that the kingdom has no public implications. It does. Christians who have been transformed by the kingdom carry its values into every sphere of life—family, vocation, governance, education, the arts. But the kingdom itself is not identified with any of those spheres. It transcends them. It operates through them. It will outlast every political system and every nation on earth.
When believers begin to say, “Lo here!” or “Lo there!”—when they locate the kingdom in a particular movement, election, or cultural moment—they have repeated the Pharisees’ mistake. They have confused the kingdom’s fruit with the kingdom itself. The kingdom is wherever Christ reigns. And Christ reigns first in the hearts of those who bow before Him in faith and repentance.
The sharpest irony of Luke 17:20–21 is this: the Pharisees asked about the coming of the kingdom while standing in the presence of the King. They were so consumed with looking for signs on the horizon that they could not see the fulfillment standing in front of them. The kingdom had come. The King had arrived. And they demanded a schedule.
This is a warning for every generation. Do not look past Christ in search of the kingdom. He is the kingdom. Where He rules, there the kingdom is. Where He is rejected, the kingdom remains unseen—not because it is absent, but because the eyes that should perceive it are closed.
The Pharisees looked for an army. Instead, they encountered a King whose reign begins in the heart and will one day be revealed in glory. They wanted a spectacle. They got a Savior. And because they refused the Savior, the spectacle, when it comes, will not be for their comfort.
But for those who have received the King, the promise holds. The kingdom is already theirs. It is present. It is real. It is growing. And it will one day fill the earth as the waters cover the sea.
The Pharisees asked when. Jesus answered where. Right here. In your midst. Open your eyes.
Rooted. Reasoned. Relevant.
Dr. Peter J. Carter is a theologian, author, and the founder of Theology in Focus. He holds a D.Min. with a concentration in theology and apologetics and has spent over two decades teaching, preaching, and writing to make theology accessible to every believer.