Well, it’s Fantastic Friday and your weekend is almost here. We have been making our way through the greatest and most famous sermon ever – Jesus’ Sermon On The Mount. It is found in Matthew chapter 5, 6, & 7. We have specifically been looking at The Beatitudes over the last few weeks found in Matthew 5:3-12. If you are serious about living out these Beatitudes, here are two suggestions as spiritual advice that I hope will help you.
First, do not attempt to start living all the Beatitudes at once. Discipleship is a process and I would encourage you to take on a Beatitude a week to focus on in your life.
So, take September 15-21 to focus on this Beatitude. You can go back and read the devotionals on this first Beatitude that were on August 14 & 15 in these devotionals.
Second, take some time to compare Jesus’ standard for us to live with the world’s for each Beatitude you do. As you listen to music, watch TV or are on the Internet, ask yourself which system of values you are going to follow, obey and do.
Jesus gave us these Beatitudes. He said that those who do them are “Blessed.” Jesus refers to three types of blessedness: first, a broken blessedness, second a future blessedness and third, a selfless blessedness. That is what these 8 Beatitudes are all about. We have been reading, applying hopefully these to our lives. I agree with pastor and author John Stott, who summarizes well teaching on this when he says:
“The beatitudes set forth the balanced and variegated character of Christian people. These are not eight separate and distinct groups of disciples … rather eight qualities of the same group.… Further, the group exhibiting these marks is not an elitist set” (Source: John Stott, The Message of the Sermon on the Mount, p. 31).
Let me end with a simple question with a very obvious answer, but perhaps a question and answer you have never thought about before: can you think of anyone you know who has perfectly lived out these beatitudes? Well, you might say, every Christian I know—who is filled with the power of the Holy Spirit—to some extent or another lives out these beatitudes. Yes, that’s true. But it’s true only to an extent, which we all know. Why? None of us are perfect. We sin and fail at them at times. We all know that only Jesus embodies the Beatitudes perfectly! Right?
I like what New Testament scholar Douglas Sean O’Donnell writes on this:
Jesus was poor in spirit, though not the same way we are (due to our sin). But He did, while on earth, daily depend on God the Father and Spirit for everything. That’s why He prayed. That’s why He did and said nothing that was not in accordance with the Father’s will. That’s why in greatest humility He became a human and was crucified. And Jesus mourned, didn’t He? He mourned NOT over his own sin, for He had none, but over our sin—the sins of the world. He wept over Jerusalem and her rejection of the good news. And wasn’t our Lord the mightiest but also the meekest man, who offered a gentle yoke to all who would call him “Lord”?
And didn’t He hunger and thirst for God’s righteous rule to come, which is why, on the one hand, He overturned the tables and, on the other hand, received sinners in table fellowship? And didn’t He show mercy in healing and feeding the multitudes and in forgiving sins? And who was more pure in heart, undivided in His commitment to God’s will? And wasn’t (and isn’t) Jesus the ultimate peacemaker as He brought peace through His own outstretched arms—peace between Jew and Gentile, peace between God and man? And finally, who better embodied the last beatitude? From the moment of his first breath to His last, more than any figure in human history, Jesus was persecuted for righteousness’ sake” (Source: Douglas Sean O’Donnell, Preaching The Word Bible Commentary, “Matthew,” pp. 115-116).
Chuck Swindoll says this about the word “blessed.” “Jesus says “blessed” are those who live out The Beatitudes. “Blessed" means “fortunate,” “contented,” “blissful,” “privileged,” “peaceful,” “serene,” “joyful,” and “happy.” We might define it as “an inward contentment or abiding joy unaffected by outer circumstances.” The Beatitudes are pronouncements, not possibilities. They are statements of celebration, like the worshipful psalms or parts of the Wisdom Literature, not commands, like the Law of Moses dictated from Mount Sinai” (Source: Charles R. Swindoll, Swindoll’s Living Insights New Testament Commentary,” Matthew” Vol. 1a, p. 87).
So then, the Beatitudes according to New Testament scholar Bruce Barton can be summarized this way for us today.
Questions To Consider
Scripture To Meditate On: John 14:23-24, “Jesus replied, `All who love Me will do what I say. My Father will love them, and We will come and make Our home with each of them. (24) Anyone who doesn’t love Me will not obey Me. And remember, My words are not My own. What I am telling you is from the Father who sent Me” (NLT).
Prayer To Pray: “Dear Jesus, I need Your help in discipling my life to even attempt to take one Beatitude a week to work on in my life. I often have great intentions, but I often lose motivation. Please create a burning passion in me for You. I want to have all three blessednesses in my life: broken, future and sacrificial. I love You Jesus. In Jesus’ name, Amen!”
I love you Southside!--Pastor Kelly