Jesus opens his momentous sermon with a series of eight
pungent and largely paradoxical statements known traditionally as the
“beatitudes”
(Mt 5:2-12).
They must have fallen like thunderbolts upon those first
century Jewish ears. A more likely formula for success could hardly have
been imagined. They assaulted every maxim of conventional wisdom and
left the hearer startled and perplexed. In this way Jesus gains the
attention of his audience and drives home the essential character of the
kingdom of God and its citizens,
The whole world, then as now, was in earnest pursuit of
happiness and had just as little conception as men today of how to
obtain it. There was no surprise in the announcement that there was true
blessedness in the kingdom. The shock came in the kind of people who
were destined to obtain it.
The beatitudes speak exclusively of spiritual qualities.
The historic concerns of men—material wealth, social status and worldly
wisdom—do not simply receive little attention, they receive none at all.
Jesus is clearly out-lining a kingdom not of this world
(Jn 18:36),
a kingdom whose borders pass not through lands and cities but through
human hearts
(Lk 17:20-24).
This altogether unlikely kingdom arrived as announced in the first
century
(Mk 9:1; Col 1:13; Rev 1:9)
but most were unprepared to recognize and receive it even
as they are now.
It must be further noted that not only were the qualities
of the kingdom citizen spiritual but they are qualities which would not
come to men naturally. They are not the product of heredity or
environment but of choice. No one will ever “fall into” these
categories. They not only do not occur in men naturally, but are in fact
distinctly contrary to the “second nature” which pride and lust have
caused to prevail in the hearts of all humanity.
Perhaps there is no more important truth to be recognized
about the beatitudes than the fact that they are not independent
proverbs which apply to eight different groups of men, but are a
composite description of every citizen in the kingdom of God. These
qualities are so interwoven in one spiritual fabric that they are
inseparable. To possess one is to possess them all, and to lack one is
to lack them all. And as all Christians must possess all these qualities
of kingdom life, they are also destined to receive all its blessings —
blessings which, like its qualities, are but components of one reward-
one body called to one hope
(Eph 4:4).
In sum, then, the beatitudes do not contain a promise of blessing upon
men in their natural state (all men mourn but all will certainly not be
comforted,
5:4)
nor do they offer hope to those who seem to fall into one category or
another. They are a composite picture of what every kingdom citizen, not
just a few super disciples, must be. They mark off the radical
difference between the kingdom of heaven and the world of other men. The
son of the kingdom is different in what he admires and values, different
in what he thinks and feels different in what he seeks and does.
Clearly, there has never been a kingdom like this before.
A Kingdom for the Sinful and Lowly
There have been many approaches to the specific content
of the beatitudes. Many feel that there is a progression of thought
moving through them which begins with a new attitude toward self and
God, leads to a new attitude toward others, and culminates with the
world’s reaction to this radical change. There is some merit to this
analysis, and whether or not such a neat format always coincides with
the actual order of the beatitudes, the ideas are certainly there. To a
society governed by some serious misconceptions of the kingdom of God,
the beatitudes make two basic statements. First, that the kingdom is not
open to the self-righteous and self-assured, but to the supplicant
sinner who comes seeking out of his emptiness. And, secondly, that the
kingdom is not to be had by the “mighty” who obtain their desires by
wealth or violence, but by a company of patient men who yield not only
their wants but even their “rights” to the needs of others.
Though not explicitly stated (Jesus was not to speak
clearly of His death until a year later, Mt
16:21)
there is nothing quite so obvious in this sermon as the central gospel
truth that salvation is by the grace of God. Here the dispensational
premillennialist is palpably wrong. How could men and women so hungry
for righteousness (5:6)
and so much in need of mercy
(5:7)
find a place in a kingdom governed by a system of law
alone? And who could imagine that citizens in the earthly kingdom
envisioned by the dispensationalists would ever suffer persecution
(5:10-12)?
The righteousness of the kingdom does not rest on a system of law but
upon a system of grace. Its holy standards are attainable by sinful men
(5:48).
Otherwise, the Sermon on the Mount would be the source of
greater despair than the law of Moses
(Rom 7:25).
Other Articles by Paul Earnhart
A
Wholesome Respect for Temptation
Strange
The Search for Assurance
A Living, Transforming Hope
Sin Doesn't Work
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