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​​​Here I Stand

A New Way of Seeing

3/14/2023

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Threats to Peace, Joy, and Contentment
 
When do you find yourself struggling most with being discontent? When are you more likely to experience restlessness and anxiety? What’s usually happening in your life when you’re least likely to have joy?
 
Each one of us struggles with these things at different times throughout our lives. There are a variety of reasons for this, but very often, the threat to our peace, joy, and contentment can be found in one of these four areas of our lives…
 
  1. Circumstances – what happens to us.
  2. People – our various relationships.
  3. Things – our material possessions.
  4. Status – what others think of us.
 
These four areas very often chip away at our peace, joy, and contentment. Can you relate to that?
 
In Matthew 5:1-12, Jesus points us to a new way of seeing that can make all the difference in our lives. This change in our perspective can help us find, and hold onto, the peace, joy, and contentment God desires for us.
 
The Sermon on the Mount
 
Matthew 5:1-12 comes at the beginning of what’s called, The Sermon on the Mount, which is found in Matthew 5-7. I love The Sermon on the Mount. We’ve studied it many times at the church I serve. However, as much as I love studying it, that’s exactly how much I don’t like studying it.
 
That’s a little tongue-in-cheek, but there’s some truth behind it. The Sermon is very convicting. Jesus doesn’t pull any punches in those three chapters. John Stott once said that the most charitable thing you could say about a person who says they try to live according to The Sermon on the Mount, is that they’ve never read it. Maybe you’ve heard someone say, “the preacher isn’t preaching… he’s meddling.” That’s the kind of sermon, The Sermon on the Mount is.
 
The Beatitudes
 
Therefore, it’s striking that some of the most beautiful words in Scripture, the Beatitudes, make up the first 12 verses of that kind of sermon. But it’s vital to understand that they do because the Beatitudes are the foundation for everything else we read in the Sermon.
 
Very often, when we think of the Christian life, we think of behavior, of how we act. And yet, in this sermon on the Christian life, Jesus begins by focusing on the character of the Christian, of what’s happening on the inside of a person. Jesus is saying, “This is what every Christian’s character should be.” If you want to behave or act in a Christian way, according to Jesus, you must have the character he describes in these verses, for it is this character that will mold and shape your behavior.
 
You see, the change Jesus calls us to, happens from the inside out.
 
So, here are the eight virtues, or character traits, Jesus gives us in these verses,
 
  1. A poverty of spirit
  2. Mourning over sin
  3. Meekness
  4. A hunger and thirst for righteousness
  5. Mercy
  6. Purity of heart
  7. A desire for peace
  8. Seeking righteousness, regardless of the consequences
 
The virtues Jesus lists here give us a picture or portrait of what every Christian is called to look like. It’s not a buffet table where we can pick and choose the ones like and pass on the ones we don’t.
 
To be honest, I used to think that was the case. I thought these were like spiritual gifts. We don’t all have the same spiritual gifts, and that’s a good thing because the body of Christ needs the variety of gifts – like a body needs feet, hands, noses, ears, and so on.
 
But the Beatitudes, (and the Fruit of the Spirit, for that matter), are in a different category than the gifts of the Spirit. Just as each of us is called to bear the fruit of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control, so too is each of us called to be poor in spirit, mourn over sin, be meek, hunger and thirst for righteousness, pursue mercy, purity of heart, peace, and to stand for our faith, even under the threat of persecution. It’s a group-package. It’s a cumulative portrait of what each of us who follow Christ ought to look like.
 
Blessed
 
Did you notice what word comes before each virtue? “Blessed.” Each virtue or character has a particular blessing that goes with it. And it’s important to understand the blessing isn’t something we do. It’s something given to us by God. And Christ says we receive those blessings when those virtues describe us. It’s from those blessings we begin to receive the inner satisfaction of peace, joy, and contentment.
 
It’s also vital to understand that these blessings don’t depend on outward circumstances, our relationships, the stuff we own, or what other people think of us. We often use the word “blessed” or “blessing” to describe something that happens to us – something related to our circumstances, like a good report from the doctor, a promotion at work, a safe trip. And to be sure, God blesses us in those ways and it’s right to see God’s hand of blessing in those circumstances.
 
However, that’s not what Jesus is saying here. The blessing he’s talking about in these verses doesn’t have anything to do with circumstances. Paul understood what Jesus had in mind. He said in Philippians 4:12-13,
 
I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want. 13 I can do all this through him who gives me strength.
 
Paul’s outward circumstances weren’t dictating his inward peace, joy, and contentment. He found them in Christ alone.
 
God’s Eternal Perspective
 
So, here’s the big idea: Jesus is giving us a new way of seeing. It’s not what we would’ve naturally come up with on our own. It’s only as we see all of life the way God does – what we might call an eternal perspective – that we’re able to have this inner peace, joy, and contentment, regardless of our circumstances.
 
But don’t you find yourself, more often than you would like, thinking and living like Eeyore, from Winnie the Pooh? We can become very negative, really quickly, can’t we? And that’s often because we’re not enjoying God’s blessings that come from cultivating these virtues, because we’re looking at life through only a temporal perspective.
 
Thus, we say things like,
 
  • If only I get this job, then I’ll be happy.
  • If only this relationship improves, then I’ll be at peace.
  • If I finally get this car or house, then I’ll be content.
 
You can fill in the blanks with whatever you want, but those things will never bring the blessing Jesus is talking about. The blessing he’s talking about doesn’t depend on your outward circumstances. The Apostle Paul knew it’s our perspective on our circumstances that will shape us most, and not just the circumstances.
 
This isn’t Stoicism that says, just adjust your attitude and then you can handle any situation you face. Instead, God is at the center of an eternal perspective. Trusting in God and depending upon his grace in every circumstance is what brings the blessing. It’s loving what he loves, desiring what he desires, obeying him always, seeking to align your will with his. This is what brings the blessing Jesus is talking about.
 
The World’s Temporal Perspective
 
But this isn’t the perspective of the world, is it? How might the Beatitudes sound if they were written today. I came across the following that attempted to answer that question. The “Modern Beatitudes” might sound like,
 
  • Blessed are the proud and self-sufficient
  • Blessed are those who never mourn
  • Blessed are the strong
  • Blessed are the self-righteous
  • Blessed are those who show no mercy
  • Blessed are those who look out for number one
You get the idea. But when we compare those fallen and broken imitations to the eight characteristics Jesus gave us, they don’t exactly match up, do they?
 
That’s because Jesus turned the thinking of the world upside down.
 
A New Way of Seeing
 
Instead, we must look to God’s inspired Word, the Bible. That’s where we hear the authoritative voice of Jesus saying things like, blessed are…
 
  1. The Poor in Spirit
  2. Those who Mourn
  3. The Meek
  4. Those who Hunger and Thirst for Righteousness
  5. The Merciful
  6. The Pure in Heart
  7. The Peacemakers
  8. Those who are Persecuted because of Righteousness
 
But those aren’t virtues we would naturally seek to pursue and cultivate, are they?
 
We need God’s grace to change our hearts. We need a new way of seeing – a different perspective. God’s eternal perspective. This new way of seeing comes only when we have a new heart, and we receive a new heart only when we trust in Christ alone as our Savior and Lord… only when he comes to dwell in us, by his Spirit. We need his Word to direct us and his grace to enable us to see in this new way, which, in turn, helps us cultivate the character of Christ in our lives.
 
Walking Points
 
  • Read Matthew 5-7. List five descriptions or commands of Jesus you found in those chapters that are antithetical to the human condition and the values of our culture.
  • How would you define character? What is the emphasis on character in our culture today? Do people you know regard good character as important? Why or why not?
  • How and why does character influence behavior?
  • How would ignoring the cultivation of godly character impact your daily life? (List some specific ways.)
  • Read Matthew 5:3-12; Galatians 5:22-23; Philippians 4:8. Assuming one has already come to faith in Jesus Christ, how does one cultivate the character, or virtues, listed in these verses? Why is the cultivation or development of these virtues still so difficult?
  • What are the top three obstacles to your growth in godly character? Describe how each one is an obstacle to you.
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  • Home
  • About
    • Natalie Tedder
    • The Fellowship of Ailbe
    • Reflections Ministries
  • Here I Stand
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    • C.S. Lewis
  • A Far Green Country
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