They curl up in sleeping bags, huddle in stairwells, hunker down over meals. Meanwhile, Nathaniel recites the Lord's Prayer. His voice floats over the street's madness and tenderness, its beauty and squalor. "Thy kingdom come," Nathaniel says, and a woman screams at a man, flails her fists at his chest. "Thy will be done," he says, and two men share a cigarette. "On earth as it is in heaven," as a church group hands out boxed meals.
We're left to ponder--is Nathaniel asking for the kingdom to come to these streets, or is he announcing that the kingdom is already present? Wheat growing beside tares, pearls buried in stony fields, glory hidden in clay jars?
Jesus said to the questioning Pharisees that "The kingdom of God is within you," but they never managed to see it. Jesus, King of kings, stood before them, the kingdom was among them, and they nailed it to a cross.
To see the kingdom, to open your heart and eyes to it, you must repent. Jesus' inaugural address was exactly that. "The time has come," he said. "The kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the good news."


