Sometimes when surveys are taken of what people believe, the question is asked, “Who do you think Jesus is?” Good question. Jesus himself asked his disciples this question. Among the most popular answers are: “He was a great teacher” and “a new lawgiver — like Moses.” What people mean by this is often a guy with good advice into how you can live a good life here and now. From this perspective, there is nothing like the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew’s version) and the Sermon on the Plain. (Luke’s version) On the top of the list of most familiar teachings are: “Do to others what you would have them do to you,”(Luke 6:31) “Judge not,” (Matthew 7:1) and the Beatitudes. (Matthew 5:1-11, Luke 6:20-23)
Many sermons, Christian commentary and devotional literature treat the Beatitudes as a kind of recipe for the Christian life. They teach that Jesus is giving a new law on how to live your life at a higher level. They are taught to be the way to “be perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect.” (Matthew 5:48) But such an analysis is missing the point. These are more descriptions of what Christians are like than what they must strive to do. They are predictions and promises, not commands to do to be saved or to be Super Christians.
But how can these be true? It is obvious to every Christian that they are far from poor in spirit–we think very highly of ourselves; we do not mourn our sins often — we kind of like them; we may say we want to be righteous, but keep our own favorite sins; we are mixed up at heart between the good we want to do and the evil we end up doing; we often want to carry grudges and have it out with our neighbor and dread persecution. Jesus’ line: “be perfect as your Heavenly Father is perfect” haunts us.
Yet the promises of the beatitudes come true because Jesus lived them out perfectly. Having done so, he took our sins and imperfections to cross where he died to pay their debt and broke their power over us. Now when God sees us, he sees only the ways we live the blessed life and not the way we fail to keep it. These blessings and others like them in Scripture are also promises of the way life will be for us when we live in the eternal kingdom after Christ at last returns to take us home. So, we are blessed and will be blessed, in God’s kingdom now and in his kingdom come.
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