The Beatitudes Bible Study: Matthew 5:8 The Pure In Heart

November 18, 2009 in Bible Study, The Beatitudes by onlinefellowship.org

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Blessed are the pure in heart:  for they shall see God. Matthew 5:8

No doubt the least visited discussion topic is purity. Can you remember the last time you had a good conversation about it?  Think about radio and television talk shows.  Have any of those dedicated a show to this subject?  And what about church sermons?  Can you recall a good window-rattling sermon on purity, and its cause and effect?

Jesus wants us to consider purity.  So the sixth beatitude of his Sermon is, “Blessed are the pure in heart:  for they shall see God”.  The very reason he wants us to think about purity is why we would rather not.  Purity takes some mental concentration and dedication.  He wanted us to be dedicated to God’s will and purpose.

Dedication to an unseen God, who rewards us in private, is outside our realm of experience.  That makes it difficult for us to concentrate on spiritual activity.   Yet this is the very activity that lets us “see” our invisible God.

Purity is to be free from taint or pollution.  It is to have unmixed desires.   In this verse, it does not mean you must be sinless before you can see God.   You must simply want to be pure in thought, word, and deed.  When you want to “clean up your act”, you have made a start on this beatitude.  You will become pure in the full sense only after God himself removes your impure thoughts and acts.  God purifies you.  Our job is to cooperate with him.

Here Jesus teaches that your heart – your thoughts, feelings and emotions – must concentrate on meeting God.  Knowing and pleasing God needs to be so important to you that it is your main desire.  When you make this your priority, God will come to you.   He will reveal himself to you so dramatically it is as if you have actually seen him.

Your face-to-face encounter with God proves his reality and nature. “Seeing” God and knowing him as Abba – your Daddy – is the blessing promised in this beatitude.

The Beatitudes Bible Study: Matthew 5:7 The Merciful

November 18, 2009 in Bible Study, The Beatitudes by onlinefellowship.org

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Blessed are the merciful:  for they shall obtain mercy. Matthew 5:7

No doubt the most popular short prayer in every culture is, “God have mercy.” Even when abbreviated simply to “God,” or sometimes “Oh, God” our petition is the same.  We ask God to be merciful with us, and hope he will.  This prayer expresses our instinctive human belief that God is merciful and “will have mercy on whom he will have mercy.”

Mercy is a compassionate attitude toward others, with a desire to alleviate their discomfort or distress. In times of disaster, compassion and concern for the distress of others seems to be our natural and normal behavior.  In such times many will put aside their personal interests and work for the common good as best they can.  Some might say Jesus’ mercy beatitude is unnecessary because we have some internal drive for compassion.

A close look at mankind’s history proves the opposite.  Man’s inhumanity to man has always been the ruling force of history.  The tragic story of our past is selfishness, inconsideration, and cruelty.  The continual result is political oppression, war, poverty, and slavery.  General indifference to social distress has generated mandatory government welfare programs addressing every human need.

So our core nature is not generous mercy but self-concern and indifference.  In this fifth beatitude, Jesus tied giving mercy with receiving mercy.   Here you are told God’s rule is for mercy, and the more mercy you give, the more you will receive.  That has always been a spiritual law, “as you sow, so shall you reap.”

God’s will for you is a merciful attitude that will bring about merciful acts.  He promises his mercy to you.  He asks you to be as merciful to others as you want him to be merciful to you.  “Blessed are the merciful:  for they shall obtain mercy.” Mercy is marvelous. Mercy brings its own rewards.

The Beatitudes Bible Study: Matthew 5:6 Those Who Hunger and Thirst

November 18, 2009 in Bible Study, The Beatitudes by onlinefellowship.org

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Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied. Matthew 5:6

Everyone imagines their motives are pure.  Ask anyone why he made a particular choice and they always give a righteous reason.  You have never heard anyone say, “I did that just to be mean, ugly, and stupid.”

It would be good to look back over our past and say our actions are always blameless and full of good intentions.  You already know we can’t.  You faced that issue at the mourning beatitude.

Doing any dumb, angry, or revengeful act is painful in two ways.   First, it is terribly embarrassing for your mistakes to show up in public.   Next, bad results always come from bad acts.  So you need to make righteous choices that translate into moral acts for your own sake.  It makes life easier.

But that doesn’t always happen.  The truth is that most of us are as Paul described himself in his letter to the Romans.  “I do not control my own actions.  I do not do what I want, but do what I would not.”  Guilt and damage caused by this quirk of human nature makes your soul “hunger and thirst” for right choices and habitual righteousness.

Hungering is a discomfort caused by lack of necessary nutrients.   Thirsting is a strong need for life sustaining fluid.  Hungering and thirsting puts all other needs into the back of your mind.  “I must,” we say, “get something to eat and drink, now!”

Built into us is a hunger to be right.  We want to be seen as righteous.  Righteousness is the food and drink of our spiritual health.  It makes us comfortable.  To be complete, we must be righteous:  free from guilt, shame, and sin.

Being made righteous is to be set upright and in conformity with God’s laws.  You can depend on God’s promise to grow his righteousness in you.