Defense Against Miracle

(Isaiah 6Matthew 27:62-28:15)

You have to feel a little sorry for Pontius Pilate.  He’s trying to work his way up the career ladder, and he’s been handed the most fractious, intractable province in the entire Empire to try to govern.  He’s on notice, because he’s already mishandled one incident and provoked an official complaint from the local leaders—which means he’s under their thumb to some degree, because they could easily wreck his career.  He brought it on himself (I only said a little sorry), but still—here he’s trying to do his job, and all of a sudden those local leaders come to him and demand he put some poor schmuck on trial because they don’t like his theology.  Rome didn’t give a hang about Jewish religious disputes, and neither did Pilate, but here these infuriating old men were insisting that if he didn’t do what they wanted, they were going to get him fired.

And was that the end of it?  No!  He’s washed his hands of the matter—literally (Mt. 27:24)—but no sooner does he think he’s done with it then they’re back in his office.  They got the execution, but that’s not enough for them—now they want him to guard the tomb!  Guard the tomb!  You might as well guard a manhole cover.  But he has to deal with them somehow, and he has to keep them happy.  A lot of our English transla­tions have Pilate saying, “You have a guard,” but I think the NIV has the right of it here:  from the context, I think it’s pretty clear he gives them what they want, a squad of Roman soldiers to seal and guard the tomb.

He gave them sixteen members of the greatest fighting force on the planet—four watches of four men each to secure the area through the night.  A Roman squad was supposed to be able to form a square, if cut off, and hold their ground against any opposing force indefinitely; they were well-trained, well-equipped, well-disciplined, and ruthless, far more than necessary to deal with anything Jesus’ disciples might try.  It was overkill.

And why?  What are the Jewish leaders afraid of?  They claim they want to prevent a hoax, but really?  To quote the Presbyterian pastor and author Frederick Buechner,

in the not so long run religious hoaxes always tend to burn themselves out—as the chief priests and Pharisees had good reason to know, living as they did in an age when would-be Messiahs were a dime a dozen. . . .  Even if the disciples were successful in their theft of the body, and even if for a time their claim of resurrection flourished, it could not really flourish long without something more substantial than merely rumor to feed upon.

The threat of a hoax wouldn’t have been worth their time.

No, there has to be something more here.  Their real fear has to be something else—something they aren’t telling Pilate, and probably aren’t really admitting even to themselves.  It’s ridiculous, but—Jesus had worked some powerful miracles; what if, somehow, he actually did come back to life?  What if even killing him wasn’t enough to stop him?  I doubt any of them had the courage to face that fear even for a moment, and I’m sure they would have laughed in the face of anyone who dared suggest it, but that had to be haunting the backs of their minds for them to go to such absurd lengths as this.  If you’re afraid of a miracle—how are you going to stop it?

The thing is, they were going about it all wrong.  As Buechner puts it in his sermon “The End Is Life,”

maybe it is not as hard as they feared. . . .  I suspect that many of us could tell them that all in all there is a lot one can do in defense against miracle, and, unless I badly miss my guess, there are thousands upon thousands of ministers doing precisely that at any given instant—making it as secure as they can, that is, which is really quite secure indeed. . . .  The point is not to try to prevent the thing from happening—like trying to stop the wind with a machine gun—but, every time it happens, somehow to explain it away, to deflect it, defuse it, in one way or another to dispose of it.  And there are at least as many ways of doing this as there are sermons preached on Easter Sunday.

He’s right.  As he goes on to say, you can spiritualize the Resurrection away with­out much effort at all.  It’s a metaphor, it’s poetry—it’s a way of saying that the wisdom of Jesus is immortal like the works of Shakespeare, or that his example lives on in our hearts, or it symbolizes the rebirth of hope in the despairing soul—all of which miss the brute fact that if Jesus didn’t rise from the dead, there’s no foundation for any of that stuff.  If he’s just one more great leader killed off by the establishment, then his story is just one more telling us that really, the sword is mightier than the pen after all.

All too often, we hear people reduce the Resurrection to a “miracle” of symbol and metaphor that leaves the substantial reality of our world untouched; and I’m with Buechner on this one.

If I believed that this or something like this was all that the Resurrection meant, then I would turn in my certificate of ordination and take up some other profession. . . .  If I thought that when you strip it right down to the bone, this whole religion business is really just an affirmation of the human spirit, an affirmation of moral values, an affirmation of Jesus of Nazareth as the Great Exemplar of all time and no more, then like Pilate I would wash my hands of it.  The human spirit just does not impress me that much, I am afraid.  And I have never been able to get very excited one way or the other about moral values.  And when I have the feeling that someone is trying to set me a good example, I start edging toward the door.

If the Resurrection is just a story, then it’s just what someone wants us to believe; it has no power to change the way things actually are.  That’s the tragedy of modern versions of Christianity:  but understand this, it’s also the reason for them.  The reason we seek in so many ways to defend ourselves against miracle, against the reality of the Resurrection, is that just like the Jewish leaders, we’re afraid of what it might mean.  If we can reduce it to an affirmation of the human spirit, or moral values, or the importance of hope, or the wisdom of Jesus, then we get to define what that means; it might not be able to do much for us, but it can’t do anything to us, either.  We’ve made it something we can control—we’ve made it safe, tame, the seed of a nice, domesticated religion.  Miracle pitches us right out of that; even uncontrollable joy is still out of our control.

That can be frightening enough; but if Jesus died and came back to life—not even was raised from the dead by another human being, amazing as that would be, but simply got up, by the direct power of God—then what is there that he can’t do?  And if he really did that for us, with all the horror of the cross, then what might he ask of us?  What he said about “anyone who would follow me must deny himself and take up his cross”—he might have meant that.  When he said, “Love your enemies and bless those who hurt you,” he might actually expect us to do that.  Jesus laid everything down for us, he turned everything inside out for us—how can we possibly accept that and take it seriously without our own lives being turned inside out and upside down?

Even if life is miserable, change is still frightening to most people; we know in our bones that however bad things might be, they could still get worse.  “Better the devil you know,” and all that.  Even when we know we don’t have much control over our lives, our egos tell us we need more control to make things better—not to give up what little we have.  If the problem with our faith is that our God is too small, as I and others have said often enough, it’s only fair to say that we shrink him out of self-protec­tion; Easter shows us a God untamed and untameable—we can’t possibly know what he might do.

The thing is, the desire for control of our lives is just another version of the primal temptation:  to be our own gods.  There’s no life in it; it is the road to death.  The gospel doesn’t offer us a tame, reasonable faith that lets us feel like we’re in control and we understand what’s going on; Jesus doesn’t promise us a safe religion with a god who makes perfect sense to us.  The gospel proclaims, and Jesus gives, life—life that has overcome death, and will overcome it.  Life that takes the thousand and one little deaths that we suffer in this world and transmutes them into seeds of growth.  Life that raises dead hopes, dead relationships, dead souls, not as they were before, but better—not merely earthly and human, but eternal and divine.  “Safe” and “reasonable” are limited to our imagination; Jesus is good beyond our ability to imagine, and alive beyond our experience of life.  Let go your grip on control, drop your defenses, and let the miracle of the Resurrection overwhelm you.  Let go, and live.

The Vulnerable God

(Isaiah 5:1-6Luke 20:9-19)

It was the Passover, the greatest and most important feast of the Jewish year.  Jesus had entered Jerusalem on a donkey to the praise of the crowds, who laid cloaks and palm branches before him on the road.  Before him stood the Temple—a magnificent structure of beautifully-carved cream-colored stone.  The gates in its outer walls opened into the the Court of the Gentiles; a low wall separated that from the Court of the Women.  Past that wall no Gentile could pass who had not been circumcised, on pain of death.  Within that was the Court of Israel, from which women were barred, and then the Court of the Priests, forbidden most of the year to all but priests and Levites.  Inside the Priests’ Court stood the great altar, and the Holy of Holies.
When Jesus entered the temple, he found that—as had happened before—the high priest, Caiaphas, had set up a market in the outer court, turning it from a place for Gen­tiles to worship God into an opportunity to make money off all the Jews coming to pay the tithe and offer their sacrifices.  Once again, Jesus drove them out; more, he refused to let anyone carry anything through the temple.  Apparently, given the disrespect the high priest had shown the temple, the people of Jerusalem had started using its outer court as a public street.  Jesus put a stop to that—which must have meant taking control of the en­tire 35-acre complex, for at least a few hours.
Needless to say, the authorities were infuriated, and demanded to know by what authority he presumed to do such a thing.  Instead of an answer, they got a parable about a man who planted a vineyard, then rented it out while he went off to a far country.  The harvest came, and he sent a servant to collect the rent—a share of the crop—but instead of paying, the renters beat the servant and told him to go away.  This was a grave insult to the owner, but he sent another servant; this time, they not only beat the servant, they publicly humiliated him.  Yet a third servant was sent, whom they hurt even worse and then physically threw out of the vineyard.
This is all a huge public insult to the vineyard owner, who is no doubt rightly furi­ous—less for the financial loss than for the dishonor done to him.  Honor demands that he avenge the injustice to his servants and the insult to his name.  He has every right to ask the authorities to send the army to retake the vineyard and punish the tenants for their wickedness; no one would expect anything else.  But he doesn’t do that.
One night in the early 1980s, King Hussein of Jordan discovered that a group of army officers were meeting nearby to plot a military coup.  His chief of security request­ed permission to seize the barracks and arrest the plotters, but the king refused; instead, he flew by helicopter to the roof of the barracks.  He told the pilot, “If you hear gunshots, fly away without me,” then walked down two flights of stairs, unarmed.
He appeared without warning in the room where the officers were meeting and said, “Gentlemen, it has come to my attention that you are meeting here tonight to final­ize your plans to overthrow the government, take over the country and install a military dictator.  If you do this, the army will break apart and the country will be plunged into civil war.  There is no need for this.  Here I am!  Kill me and proceed.  That way, only one man will die.”
Kenneth Bailey tells this story, having confirmed it from an American intelligence officer; he reports that “after a moment of stunned silence, the rebels as one rushed forward to kiss the king’s hand and feet and pledge loyalty to him for life.”  They had been planning to kill him, but the nobility of King Hussein’s act in making himself totally vulnerable, putting his life in their hands for the sake of their country, changed their hearts.
This is the approach the vineyard owner chooses.  He sets his anger aside; rather than retaliate, he humbles himself and risks far greater loss at the hands of his tenants for the sake of one last attempt at reconciliation.  He sends his beloved son to the vineyard in the hope that when they see him, their hearts will be moved to shame at their behavior, and they will regain their honor.  Of course, it doesn’t happen, and judgment comes.
This is what God does.  Jesus tells this parable against the chief priests and the Pharisees—Israel is the vineyard; they are the tenants who think they own the place—but we could just as well apply it to all of us.  God created a beautiful world and gave it to us to care for, and what’s the first thing we did?  We decided being tenants wasn’t good enough, we wanted to own the place.  And really, we’ve been on about that ever since.  God raised up Israel, and he sent the prophets, and there were some who listened, but most didn’t—even within Israel itself, there were often few who feared the Lord.  God could have done as he said he would do in the parable in Isaiah—he could have loosed his wrath and wiped us out.  Instead, he set his anger aside, and he set his glory aside, and he made himself vulnerable to our hatred.  He sent his son down among us, unarmed.
That’s what God does.  And we killed him, because that’s what we do.  And his enemies on Earth celebrated, and maybe the Devil celebrated . . . but it only happened because God chose it.

This Is the Lord’s Doing

(Psalm 118:15-24Zechariah 9:9-17Matthew 21:1-13)

Psalm 118 is a psalm of triumph—we see the king and people of Israel praising God for victory in battle, a victory in defiance of all human expectation.  The army of Israel was badly outnumbered, their king was hard pressed on every side, but the Lord heard the prayer of his servant and delivered him from death; by his power, the Lord gave the king victory against overwhelming odds.  In thanksgiving and joy, the king is now leading a procession through the streets to the temple to offer his sacrifice to God.
Which king?  What battle?  We don’t know.  We do see the psalmist reaching back to the first great victory God won for his people, their deliverance from Egypt; verse 14, which we used as part of the call to worship, is quoted from Moses’ song of praise in Exodus 15, after the Lord drowned the army of Egypt in the Red Sea.  Whatever event occa­sioned this text, the writer is deliberately setting it in the context of God’s mighty acts of deliverance in the past—his righteousness to his people—in order to show this victory as one more step in God’s ongoing work of salvation.  That’s what’s important.
Irony, the reversal of expectations, is potent in this psalm.  It comes to a point in verse 22, in the context of the temple of God.  In verses 19-20 we have a challenge and response:  the king arrives at the great doors of the sanctuary and calls, “Open to me the gates of righteousness, that I may enter and give thanks to the Lord”; the countersign comes, “This is the gate of the Lord; the righteous may enter through it.”  The king passes through to worship the Lord; in verse 14, borrowing from Moses, he has declared, “The Lord is my strength and my song, and he has become my salvation,” and now he gives thanks to God for so answering his prayers.
And then in verse 22, we get this:  “The stone that the builders rejected has become the keystone.”  NIV has “capstone” there, which is fine too; you’re likely more familiar with the translation “cornerstone,” but that points us in the wrong direction.  The keystone holds the integrity of the arch and makes it work, serving to transfer the weight of the wall outward and down the arch to its vertical supports.  In a stone arch, you’ll often see the keystone emphasized because of this—it may be larger, or a different color, or perhaps engraved or embossed.  It would be the prize stone in that section of the wall.
And yet here, the king and the psalmist declare, the keystone is not a stone the builders prized, but one they rejected.  How?  Remember what we were saying about the divine passive a couple weeks ago—to say this stone “has become the keystone,” without any other explanation, means that God did it.  God has trumped the builders.  Which is particularly interesting because, remember, this is the temple.  It’s God’s building, but who built it?  The leaders of Israel.  The keystone of God’s work here, the person through whom he has won this victory, wasn’t just facing enemies among the other nations—he had been rejected by the leaders of his own people.  He could truly say his enemies sur­rounded him on every side, because even his own side was against him.  Even so, he overcame them all by the power and faithfulness of God.
Thus we have verse 23:  “This is the Lord’s doing, and it is marvelous in our eyes.”  There is no one else to credit, and no one else to blame; there is no other explanation.  Human power and human brilliance cannot encompass it, much less create it, for it’s a victory in defiance of all prediction.  This isn’t even a mere upset; we’re not just talking Florida Gulf Coast over Georgetown, or Valpo over Ole Miss, or Butler making the champi­onship game two years running.  Those get called March miracles, but they’re entirely human affairs when all’s said.  The psalmist is celebrating a victory more on the order of Grace College beating IU to win the NCAA tournament.  Only God can do that.
Now, I mentioned earlier that this psalm draws on Moses’ song of praise after the Lord drowned the Egyptian army.  That was one of the great events of the Exodus, when God delivered Israel from Egypt; over the centuries, as Israel celebrated the Exodus in the Passover feast, this psalm came to be a part of that celebration.  As the Passover began, Jesus had just raised Lazarus from the dead; popular interest in him and his ministry was likely at its peak, and the city was full of pilgrims, many of them from Galilee where he had done most of his work.  Given that Psalm 118 was already in the hearts and on the lips of the people of Jerusalem as he approached the city, it’s no wonder that they took up its words to acclaim him:  “Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord!”
The thing is, they’d had centuries to wear the edges off this psalm; the crowds hailed Jesus in the words of verses 25-26, but they didn’t really understand the significance of verses 22-23.  Over the generations, repetition had ground away the shock value of those verses and their message, leaving them safe and familiar; what was once unpre­dictable had become completely predictable.  The crowds knew they needed a deliverer, but only in the conventional way—someone who would kick out the Romans and give them political independence.  They wanted God to do something that made sense to them.  They missed the lesson of the psalm that God can and does deliver us in ways that defy common sense and human expectation, “to showthat the all-surpassing power belongs to God and not to us”; he doesn’t limit his victories to the horizon of our imagination.
The crowds were excited by Jesus because they thought he might give them the worldly success they wanted; because they failed to understand what he was really on about, it would be just a few short days before the Jewish leaders would be able to fire them up to demand his crucifixion.  They missed the Messiah for thinking too small.

Getting into Trouble

(Isaiah 42:1-9Matthew 5:11-161 Peter 4:12-19)

Blessed are you if you’re slandered and persecuted and abused because you’re trying to follow Jesus.  The church keeps telling people, “Come to Jesus and all your problems will be solved”—but if being a Christian has bought you a whole pile of trouble instead, count yourself blessed.

This is essentially an expansion of the previous verse, the eighth beatitude, with one significant shift:  no longer does Jesus say, “Blessed are those,” he says, “Blessed are you.”  He moves from describing a group of people—much as I might describe, let’s say, the kind of people who live in small mountain resort towns—to personal address; and in so doing, he abruptly connects the Beatitudes to the lives of the people before him.  He has presented the vision, he has given them the goal:  now he begins the challenge.

You see, in the Beatitudes, Jesus has laid out the qualities which characterize someone who is truly his faithful disciple, who is being filled with the life of the kingdom of God—but with the last one, “Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake,” there’s a shift.  It still tells us what the life of the kingdom of heaven looks like in this world, but the angle is different; it’s not describing what a faithful disciple of Jesus looks like, but rather what their life will look like.  It belongs among the Beatitudes, be­cause it’s another contradiction to this world’s ideas of what it means to have a blessed life, but at the same time, it doesn’t exactly fit with the rest of them.  It shifts from a description of character to a description of action.

Thus we have the challenge.  It would be possible to be the kind of person described in the first seven beatitudes and have almost no one know it—to stay within a very small circle of friends and family and have very little effect on the world outside.  The eighth beatitude removes that possibility:  those who belong to the kingdom of heaven won’t live that way.  They won’t keep themselves safe from the world—they’ll be out where the world has the opportunity to go after them.  No gated communities allowed.

This is critical, and so Jesus underscores it and aims it directly at the people before him:  “If you follow me, you’ll be slandered and persecuted and abused—and when that happens, rejoice and recognize that you’re blessed.  You’re standing right there with the prophets, and God will reward you for it.”  We often think of good Christians as people who stay out of trouble, but Jesus’ statement is emphatic:  my disciples get into trouble.  Not for doing wrong, sure, but we all know trouble often comes for doing what’s right; that’s why they say, “No good deed goes unpunished.”  If we follow Jesus, we won’t avoid those opportunities—he leads us right into them.  Indeed, he leads us to seek them out.  There are a terrible lot of trouble spots in this world; that’s where the good news of Jesus Christ most needs to be heard, and so that’s where we need to be.

He communicates this by telling us we are salt and light.  These images show us three key things about what we’re supposed to do as his disciples.  First, we are to move into the world.  Salt only does anything when you pour it out of the saltshaker, and light only benefits anyone when you uncover the lamp.  Turn on the light and put a bucket over it, the room is still dark; and while salt is the first great preservative the world ever discovered, it can’t preserve the meat if you leave it on the shelf.  In the same way, we do very little good if we just hang out here in our saltshaker, and our light never gets beyond the front door.  We need to be where the need is.

Partly, that’s a matter of place:  where might we find people who need to be in­troduced to Jesus Christ, and how might we find a way to speak with them?  There’s also the matter of culture.  Let’s say some of us decided we were called to go preach the gospel in Rex’s Rendezvous, or in Zimmer’s corporate head­quarters; in either case, we would find ourselves not just in a different building but in a different cultural environment, full of people who aren’t just like us.  They have different values, goals, assumptions, plans, desires; they might be smarter than us, better educated and more knowledgeable, or they might be rather less so.  How would we earn the right to be heard, and what would we do to be sure we were clearly understood?  We can’t say, “Well, they need to become like us, and then they’ll understand”; but sadly, many churches do.

That sort of attitude develops when we think outreach is primarily about us and our own growth.  In truth, Jesus calls us into the world not to strengthen ourselves but to give of ourselves.  Salt and light work by expending themselves.  Light pours out to be absorbed here and reflected there; salt dissolves in liquids and works its way into the meat; that’s how they fulfill their purpose.

It’s also how God works.  Father, Son, and Holy Spirit exist in eternal, self-giving love for one another; he created us to share their love with us, to extend the circle of love.  When we rebelled against him, they raised up Abraham, and through him the people of Israel, to extend his love into the world; then Jesus came to live for us, and die for us—and to make us his people, his body on earth, that we might continue his work, to go out and do the same.  He’s creating us as a community of the self-giving love of God, a people of the cross, who understand that our mission is to give ourselves to others, for others, just as he did.  This is profoundly countercultural; our consumerist society is all about taking, not giving.  If the world doesn’t see it in us, they won’t get there on their own.

Our part is to show the world the love of God, so that when they look at us they don’t just hear us talking about Jesus giving his life for us—they see his sacrifice reflected in the way we live our own lives.  We’re called to go into the world, not for our own benefit, but for the flourishing of our neighbors.  Salt is used, not for the sake of the salt, but for the sake of the food and those who eat it.  Light shines, not so we ooh and aah over the light, but so that we can see where we’re going.  And our work is not for the purpose of our own “success” as an organization, however we might define that, but to resist the decay of the world and to light up its darkness.

Jesus calls us to move into the world to give of ourselves for the sake of our neighbors.  He has given us a mission not to avoid the troubles of this world, but to put ourselves right in the middle of them, to get into trouble for his sake and the sake of the gospel.  He calls us to be salt—to be a spiritual preservative, to fight the sin that corrupts our lives and the lives of our neighbors.  We must do so with care and grace, seeking to draw people away from their sin rather than condemn them for their sin,understanding that we need to earn the right to speak by showing them we love them and that we can be trusted, both in one-on-one relationships and through ministries like the Beaman Home.

That said, we can’t shy away from speaking, even though it’s difficult, because Jesus has made us to be light—to let love and truth shine from him through us into the lives of our neighbors, so that the darkness in their hearts and their actions will be revealed for what it is.  Some will thank us for that, responding with humble repentance, and then with the joy of the forgiven, and they’ll come along and follow Jesus with us.  Others will resent us, preferring the darkness, and they’ll fight back, seeking to turn out the light.  But blessed are you when that happens, says Jesus, because that’s how they treated the prophets—and that’s how they treated me.  Blessed are you, says the Lord, because that means you are where I am.

For the Right Reason

(Jeremiah 11:18-20Matthew 5:101 Peter 3:13-17)

Back in January, I argued that this first section of the Sermon on the Mount is composed of eight beatitudes, rather than nine, and ends here in verse 10.  For one thing, while verses 11-12 are certainly a pronouncement of blessing, they are a very different one, moving in a different direction for a different purpose.  We’ll get into that next week.  My other main reason for this conclusion is that this beatitude and the first share the same promise statement:  “for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”  As I noted then, this is a simple form of parallelism called an inclusio, which is designed to frame a passage, to put it into a particular context.  These references to the kingdom of heaven—Matthew’s language for the kingdom of God—frame the Beatitudes, and we need to understand them in that context:  these are statements about the life of the kingdom of heaven.  As God transforms us with his life, this is how we come to live.

As I said when we looked at the first beatitude, this promise goes with “Blessed are the poor in spirit” because being poor in spirit is the essential characteristic of the citizens of the kingdom of God:  if it comes down to a choice between God on the one hand, and on the other, your earthly riches, ambitions, desires, and accomplishments, which are you going to choose?  This is the dividing line between those who bow before Christ in love as Lord, and those who will bow in the end, but only because they must.  Here, we have the other end of the process, as you might say:  if yours is the kingdom of heaven, this is how the kingdoms of earth are probably going to treat you.  As Curtis Mayfield would say, “people get ready.”

Why do I say that?  Well, remember the context.  Those who are persecuted for the sake of God’s righteousness are those who hunger and thirst for his righteousness; and if you hunger and thirst for his righteousness, if you live for his righteousness, if you pursue his righteousness above all other things, what are you not doing?  You are not hungering and thirsting for the products this world wants to sell you; you are not living for its applause and its approval; you are not pursuing its agenda or its approved goals.  This means you are not under its thumb, you are not under its influence, it has no lever on you—and that makes you a threat to be neutralized or eliminated.  If you are hungry and thirsty for righteousness, sooner or later, the world is going to rise up and try to change that fact, by any means necessary.

Now, at this point, we must be clear about two things.  First, this verse doesn’t just apply to people who get their heads chopped off by Muslims in Iran or Hindus in India or Communists in North Korea.  Obviously, if you stand up to preach the gospel in someplace as hostile as Iran or North Korea, you can expect obvious, direct and severe persecution; but that’s not the only kind the world has to offer.  Those who pursue the righteousness of God will find that persecution may come anywhere—it’s just more subtle in some places than others.

And I do mean anywhere; as the Holy Spirit reminded me while I was praying about this text, we can’t assume that the church is not the world.  We ought to be able to, but we can’t; there are plenty of people building earthly kingdoms in the church, running the church by worldly methods, for worldly reasons.  Persecution for righteousness’ sake happens surprisingly often within the church—though it shouldn’t really be surprising if we think about Jesus.  He was certainly killed for righteousness’ sake, after all, and it was the religious folk who killed him.

Second, this verse does not in any way imply that persecution is evidence of righteousness.  Jesus does not say, “Blessed are those who are persecuted and claim to be righteous.”  I expect we’ve all known people who claimed they were being persecuted for righteousness’ sake, when actually they were being persecuted because they were jerks.  If you’re an insensitive lout, the fact that you’re quoting Bible verses rather than Howard Stern or Bill Maher doesn’t change the fact that you’re being persecuted for being an insensitive lout, not for being righteous.  Being a victim is not proof of moral superiority, however much our world might think otherwise.

That said, if we are seeking the kingdom of God and his righteousness with any sort of seriousness, we will be offensive to many people, and we will be perceived as a threat by some.  By our very way of life, by the goals we set, by the things we say and don’t say, by the things we don’t laugh at and the joy in our laugh when we do, in the pleasures we pursue and those from which we turn aside, we will challenge people around us and call their lives into question, without ever trying to.  We will make some of them uncomfortable enough that they’ll lash out against us in an effort to break us down or expose us as frauds.

When that happens, our instinct is to react—we’ve been talking about this lately, it’s fight or flight:  we run, we back down, we compromise ourselves, or else we counterattack.  Why?  Because our gut-level assumptions go back to early childhood, where the practical definition of right and wrong is what makes our parents happy vs. what makes them mad, and the expectation is that if we behave, nobody will be mad at us.  Obviously, some people grow up in badly fouled-up homes that don’t work that way at all—but that doesn’t change those subconscious presuppositions.  When someone gets mad at us, our first flash is, “Oh, no, I did something wrong”; that may be followed immediately by, “No, I didn’t—how dare you!”  Either way, it’s rooted in the assumption that if we’re doing what’s right, people will be happy with us.

Jesus here is saying, no—don’t expect the world to applaud you for seeking his righteous­ness, and don’t take it as a bad thing if you’re attacked for it.  Take it as a challenge to examine your heart, first:  is this because I’m being faithful to Jesus, is it a reaction to his right­eousness in me, or is there sin here in my life that I’m not seeing?  If I’m being persecuted, is it for the right reason?  And if it is, take it as evidence of his blessing in your life.  It is because yours is the kingdom of God that persecution has come; and the gates of Hell will not prevail against it.

Lay Your Weapons Down

(Psalm 34:11-14Matthew 5:9Colossians 3:12-15)

“Blessed are the peacemakers.”  Not “blessed are the peacekeepers,” the appeasers, the people who will sacrifice justice for a little temporary quiet and safety.  Not “blessed are the peace-imposers,” the control freaks, those who create “peace” on their own terms by shouting down or crushing anyone who disagrees with them.  Not “blessed are the diplomats,” the manipulators who practice “the fine art of letting someone else have your way.”  These produce no true peace, just an illusion.  And speaking of illusions, if you heard this and your mind immediately went to nations and governments and global politics, bring it back, because that’s not what Jesus means either.

As we’ve been working our way through the Beatitudes, we’ve seen that they build on each other.  What kind of people are peacemakers?  They are people who are poor in spirit—who recognize their need for Jesus, and find the meaning and value of life in following him.  As a consequence, they hunger and thirst for righteousness:  more than anything, they want their relationship with God to be right, the way it should be, which also means they want the same for all their other relationships.  Thus they are meek, not demanding their own way or what they see as their rights; rather, they are merciful toward those who wrong them, recognizing their own dependence on the mercy of God.

Peacemakers, then, are people who first make peace within themselves, and do nothing to create unnecessary conflict with others, or among others.  They control their tongues, keeping back the word that will only cause trouble and division, strife and mis­trust.  That means no gossip, for one thing; but even more importantly, it means not talking about people instead of to them.

The ministry of peacemaking is the ministry of re­conciliation, and it must begin in our own lives.  If anyone has a fair complaint or grievance against us, we need to do what we can to make amends; and if we have a complaint or grievance against anyone else, we need to take it to them.  Too often, we do everything but; instead of talking to that person, we talk to others about them.  In so doing, we create strife, dissension, disunity, and trouble; we are unrighteous, unmerciful, and arrogant rather than meek.  If we would make peace, we must begin by silencing our tongues, cutting out those words of complaint, and dealing directly and honestly with the person who we believe has done us wrong.

As I say that, I’m well aware that we often use words like “direct” and “honest” as euphemisms for “rude, demanding, selfish and insulting”; and that’s obviously not in view here.  If we would make peace, yes, we must confront people, but we must do it humbly and graciously, and we must do it out of the desire to serve them rather than to get back at them or to extract our pound of flesh.  Jesus says, “Blessed are the merciful,” and, “Love your enemies and do good to those who hurt you”; Paul tells us, “If your enemy is hungry, feed him, and if he’s thirsty, giving him something to drink.”  If we understand how great is the grace Jesus has given us, if we understand how blessed we are in him, we can look at our enemies and realize—they’re less blessed than we are, at least at that moment.  We can see them as people needing grace, and feel compassion for them.

Now, as I noted a couple weeks ago, the fact that you show someone mercy doesn’t guarantee they’ll accept it; and the fact that you try to make peace with someone doesn’t mean they’ll be willing to make peace with you.  That’s why Paul also says in Romans 12, “If possible, as far as it depends on you, be at peace with everyone.”  If someone refuses to listen, if they refuse to consider that they might be in the wrong, if they refuse to forgive you when you ask forgiveness—you can’t control that.  You’ve done what’s yours to do, and the rest is their problem, not yours.

In closing, let me say one thing about the promise statement for this Beatitude.  “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called sons of God.”  “They will be called” is a divine passive—a standard way for pious Jews to avoid using the name of God; God will be the one who declares that those who make peace are his children.  But note that, because the word here isn’t “children,” it’s “sons.”  Jesus knew he was speaking to men and women both, the point isn’t about gender; rather, it’s about authority.  The children of God are those whom he loves, and those to whom he has given his life, but in that society, sons were something more:  they were those who shared in the authority of the father as his representatives.  Blessed are the peacemakers, for they are the ambassadors of God, filled by his Holy Spirit, carrying out his mission in this world in his power.

To Will One Thing

(Psalm 24:1-6Matthew 5:8Colossians 3:5-11)

The author, musician and preacher Marva Dawn has called this the most difficult Beatitude for Americans to understand, “because we have absolutely ruined the word ‘heart.’”  I’m not sure I’d agree it’s the most difficult, but she has a point, as she usually does:  when we think of the heart, it’s all about feelings.  We’re ten days past Valentine’s Day, you don’t need me to tell you that.  When we call someone “good-hearted,” we mean they have good feelings toward people around them—they’re kind and sympathetic and caring.  They may also be spineless enablers who make excuses for everyone around them and are easily persuaded to do things that aren’t right, but that’s okay, because they have a “good heart.”  Not according to the Bible, they don’t.

For the biblical writers, the heart was not the seat of the emotions; to the Old Testament writers, that was the kidneys, while the Greeks thought feelings came from the bowels.  The Greek word that meant to be powerfully moved with emotion—won­derful word, splanchnizomai, sounds like a sneeze—basically meant to have your guts knot up on you.  I don’t think it was used literally of a powerful cramp, but it could have been.

When the Scriptures talk about the heart, they mean a lot more.  If you think about the human spirit, we’re three-part beings:  the intellect, the emotions, and the will.  We think, we feel, and we do—though not always in that order, or with all parts involved.  The heart, biblically, involves all three of them, not at the superficial level, but at the core; it is the center of the intellect, the center of the emotions, and the center of the will.  It is the root out of which the rest of our life grows—and as is always the case, the nature of the root determines the nature of the plant.

To be pure in heart, then, doesn’t just mean having certain feelings; it means to be pure in how we think, and what we think about, and what we desire, and what choices and decisions we make.  In part this means not doing certain things, and we see that in Colossians 3; what is merely earthly in us, we need to put to death.  But note the context here.  We read verses 1-4 two weeks ago—seek the things that are above, where Christ is; set your minds on the things above, not on things of earth; for Christ is your life.  Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness.  Last week, we read verses 12-14—put away anger and malice, don’t lie to one another, don’t undermine one another, but don’t stop there, go further:  be humble and meek, actively patient with one another, and go out of your way to forgive others when you have a complaint against them, because that’s how Jesus forgave you.  Blessed are the meek, and blessed are the merciful.

You see, purity of heart isn’t just the absence of bad things—don’t do this, and don’t do that; it’s a positive reality.  What is pure gold?  It’s gold that has nothing else in it:  it’s all gold, and only gold, all one thing.  What is pure water?  It’s water that has nothing dissolved in it:  100% itself.  So what then is a pure heart?  Psalm 86, we used this for the call to worship earlier:  “Teach me your way, O Lord . . . give me an undivided heart, that I may fear your name.  I give thanks to you, O Lord my God, with my whole heart.”  A pure heart is a heart that is single, undivided, no additives, no preservatives, no high-fructose corn syrup:  100% set on God.

The Danish philosopher/theologian Søren Kierkegaard captured this in the title of one of his books:  Purity of Heart Is to Will One Thing.  When our hearts are impure, we desire contradictory things and our wills point us in mutually incompatible directions; we are at war within us, wanting both to follow Jesus and to spit in his face.  We are divided against God and against ourselves.  Purity of heart is singleness of mind and simplicity of will:  no mixed motives, no hidden agendas, what you see is what you get, all for Jesus.

Again, as with the other Beatitudes, this is the Holy Spirit’s work in us.  We can’t purify our will by force of will—our wills cannot purify themselves, for they cannot create a purity which they do not possess.  Only a perfectly pure will can do that; only a per­fectly pure heart can purify our hearts.  Only Jesus can do it, by the power of his Spirit; and he is doing it in us, day by day, as we walk with him.

This is important, because it is the pure in heart who shall see God.  Indeed, as the psalmist tells us, it is only the pure in heart who can, for God cannot tolerate impurity in his presence.  At the end of all things, when this world is remade, those who belong to him, whom he has purified by his love and power, will be able to stand before him and see him face to face, as we now see one another—something which we could not now endure.  Now, we are able to come to God in prayer because the blood of Jesus covers us, and he has declared us pure in him; but then, his work in us will be finished and we will fully and finally be what God in Christ has declared us to be, and we will see God with our own two eyes, with nothing in the way.

That’s a powerful truth; but I don’t think that exhausts the meaning of this Beatitude.  It isn’t just that the pure in heart will see God in the new heavens and the new earth; it’s also that they are able to see God in this world in a way that others cannot.  God is at work in this world through the body of Christ on earth, the church; his Holy Spirit is at work through us, and also in many other ways.  God is still sovereign, he is still in control, and he is still fully engaged with this world he has made.  The only question is, can we see him?  To the extent that our hearts are divided and impure; like impurities in glass, the impurity of our hearts blurs and blinds our vision.  The more God clears our hearts, the more we are able to see him in the church and in the world.

 

Photo © 2009 Arne List.  License:  Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic.

The Cycle of Mercy

(Exodus 34:4-6Matthew 5:7Colossians 3:12-14)

“Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy.”  Does that mean that those who are not merciful won’t receive mercy?  You can certainly find support for that idea in the Bible—in the very next chapter, in fact, where Jesus says, “If you don’t forgive others, your heavenly Father won’t forgive you.”  Mercy and forgiveness aren’t the same thing, but they’re closely related; is Jesus saying that we have to earn mercy?

Clearly, that isn’t the point.  For one thing, remember what we’ve been saying:  these are descriptions, not commands, and we need to be careful not to read them as commands.  For another, remember the context here—remember the first beatitude, which sets the stage for the rest of them:  “Blessed are the poor in spirit,” blessed are those who know they have no riches of themselves, that everything they have is of God and from God.  These aren’t descriptions of things we’re able to achieve, but of the character that God is forming in us by his Holy Spirit.  And third—mercy, by definition, can’t be earned.  We cannot read this as law.

To understand this, first note that, like last week, Jesus does not say, “Blessed are those who perform certain actions.”  It isn’t “Blessed are those who show mercy,” it’s “Blessed are the merciful.”  You might think that’s a small difference, but it isn’t; it’s the difference between outward action and heart attitude—between law and grace, really.  If the blessing is on those who do specific things, then the blessing is contingent—you’re only blessed as long as you keep it up.  If once you fail to show mercy, you lose the mercy of God, at least until you correct your error; and then too, of course, you get into all the arguments about how much you have to do for it to count as mercy, and whether or not this or that act qualifies.  That sort of hair-splitting is of the Pharisees, not the gospel; and the blessings of God are not contingent, they are absolute.

This is important .  God makes it clear all through Scripture that his blessings are conditional—they are for those who seek him, who obey him, who are faithful to him, and he will not bless those who rebel against him—but they are not contingent on us, they are not dependent on chance.  His blessings are absolute and certain; God pronounces what he has already done.

We should also note this nuance:  our English translations don’t say, “they will be shown mercy,” but “they will receive mercy.”  That’s a translator’s choice, either is possible from the Greek, but I think it’s a wise one.  Just because you show someone mercy does not guarantee they will receive it; often people don’t, out of pride, or fear, or mistrust.  Or, worst of all, out of their hardness of heart and lack of mercy for others.  If you’re familiar with the story of Les Misérables, think of the suicide of Inspector Javert:  to accept the mercy shown him by Jean Valjean would be to accept and confess that his entire life to that point had been wrong.  He would have to repudiate the person he had been—to die to self in Christ, as it were—and he couldn’t do it.  He found it preferable to reject the mercy that had spared his life, and simply to die.  When we harden our hearts against mercy for others, we harden our hearts against mercy for ourselves, too.

The point here, as in all the Beatitudes, is:  “Blessed are those whose hearts are being changed by the power of God.”  I like the way the great British preacher D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones put it:  “Our Lord is really saying that . . . the one condition of forgiveness is repentance.  Repentance means . . . that I realize that I have no claim upon God at all, and that it is only His grace and mercy that forgive.  And it follows as the night the day that the man who truly realizes his position face to face with God, and his relationship to God, is the man who must of necessity be merciful . . . to others.”

If we truly understand our need for Jesus and his grace, if we see ourselves in the light of his goodness and holiness and if we hunger and thirst for his righteousness, won’t that change how we see everyone around us?  As Dr. Lloyd-Jones says, “Have you not felt sorry for people who show from the expression on their faces the bitterness and the anger they feel?  They are to be pitied.  Look at the things about which they get angry, showing that their whole central spirit is wrong; so unlike Christ, so unlike God who has forgiven them everything.  We should feel a great sorrow for them, we should be praying to God for them and asking Him to have mercy upon them.”  That’s not a com­mand, it’s an observation:  the more we understand that we owe everything to God’s mercy, the more this will be our heart toward others, and the more we’ll see others in this way.

As well, the more we grow poor in spirit and the more we hunger and thirst for the righteousness of God, the more we come to understand that our real treasure is something no earthly person or power can take away from us—yes, this points forward to a later section of the Sermon on the Mount—and the less we see other people as threats to us.  The more we realize how blessed we are in Christ, the easier it is to be merciful.

Blessed are the merciful, not because being merciful is a precondition to receiving God’s mercy, but because the merciful are those who have already received God’s mercy, and are being changed by it.  Blessed are those who show the mercy they have been shown, who live out the mercy in which they live, in the confidence that they won’t lose out by being merciful to others, because the mercy of Christ pays for all.

The Blessing Is the Thirst

(Isaiah 55:1-3Matthew 5:6Colossians 3:1-4)

We have a problem with this Beatitude:  there might not be anyone in this room who understands the kind of hunger and thirst Jesus was talking about.  We have super­markets and water mains, restaurants and drinking fountains—in the course of normal life, we have food and drink everywhere around us.  We may be the first society in world history in which the great nutritional problem for the poor is obesity.  When pundits talk about “food deserts” in this country, they don’t mean places where you can’t get food, they mean places where you can’t get fresh vegetables; the problem is too many calories, not too few.  And as for thirst—well, I’ve read about what it’s like to suffer extreme thirst, but I’ve never come anywhere close.  Lack of water just isn’t a daily concern.

That was not so for those gathered around Jesus.  Theirs was a dry land, especially in the hot summer, and travel was far harder and more dangerous than it is in our day.  They knew the sort of story Kenneth Bailey tells of a trip into the Sahara in which it was 110° in the shade and there wasn’t any shade, and then one of their goatskin waterbags leaked.  As he says, “my mouth became completely dry, and eating was impossible because swallowing felt like rubbing two pieces of sandpaper together.  My vision became blurred and the struggle to keep moving became harder with every step.”  The only thing that kept him and his companions moving forward was the desperate desire to reach the well that lay at the end of the journey; its water was their only hope of life.

What would it mean to desire righteousness as our only hope of life?  What would that look like?  Let’s be clear, this isn’t about earning our salvation, and it isn’t about having a certain lifestyle; Jesus doesn’t say, “Blessed are those who live righteously.”  This is not a blessing on those who think they have everything together, it’s on those who know they don’t; the all-surpassing desire for righteousness is the point.

So, again, what does that mean?  Well, the first thing to understand is that the Hebrew word for righteousness, tsedaqa, doesn’t refer to some sort of abstract ethical standard that we just have to measure up to, which I think is how we tend to think of righteousness.  Rather, it’s a relationship word.  Every relationship we’re in—dating, marriage, parent-child (from either end), friendship, work—makes certain claims on us, because the other person in that relationship has the right to expect certain things from us.  When we honor those claims and answer those rightful expectations, when the relationship is right, then you might say we are righteous in that relationship.

You can see that isn’t just a matter of law and duty.  Is it my duty to go home to my wife in the evening, or to tuck my kids into bed at night?  In a sense, yes, but that’s not why I do it; I do it because I love them, as an expression of love.  If I came home grumbling about being ordered around and having better things to do with my time, if I put the kids to bed in an angry and resentful spirit, that wouldn’t be to the point at all.  And so it is with righteousness before the Lord.

Of course, we understand that our righteousness is not from us; rather, God has declared us righteous in Christ Jesus and given us his righteousness by the work of his Holy Spirit.  He has acted in righteousness as the Mighty One who saves to give us a status that we could not earn on our own; he has established us and claimed us as his people whom he will pronounce righteous in the final judgment.

Which means, if every relationship makes claims on us, that his infinitely great gift of acceptance in his presence rightly deserves our unending gratitude and love; and if we live in love for God and gratitude to him, that will have a powerful effect on our behavior.  We will do what pleases him, not because we think we have to or because we want to get something, but because we want to please him.  I don’t go home because I want to manipulate my wife and kids, I do it because I love them and want to be with them.  Our righteous behavior is our grateful response to God’s righteousness in us.

At this point, the Greek gives us a blessing.  In Hebrew, righteousness and justice are two different words.  We’ve talked before about the Hebrew word for justice, mishpat; Paul Hanson, an Old Testament scholar at Harvard, has defined it as “the order of compassionate justice that God has created and upon which the wholeness of the universe depends.”  Actions in keeping with mishpat are those which advance the restoration of the original created order of the universe, when “everything was right, just, whole, in accordance with God’s perfect will.”  The Greek brings these together, with one word for both righteousness and justice:  dikaiosune.  The one who is righteous in the Lord, the one who lives to please him, is the one who does justice for others.

Note that:  it is to do justice for others, not to demand justice from others.  We have been shown incalculable mercy and infinite grace, by the righteousness of God; this is the model for how we should treat others.  This isn’t about demanding what we think we deserve, but about setting that aside to serve others.  It is, however, about standing up to do justice to those who are suffering injustice, and to show the mercy of God to those who are broken, suffering, or in need.  You may not have thought of the ministry of our deacons as a ministry of righteousness, but it is.

So what does it mean to hunger and thirst for righteousness?  Do I always passionately desire to please God?  No, I don’t.  But I want to get there.  I want, first of all, to be filled with wonder at God’s mighty act of salvation in my life, to be grateful to him as I should be and to be moved by that gratitude.  I want to love him more than anyone else, and to desire to please him above all others.  I want to live a life that pleases him, because I see the beauty in that.  I want to be free of my own unrighteousnesses, of the ugly places in my heart; I want to be pure and clear and undivided in his service, not struggling against myself, my own worst enemy.

And as part of this, I want to see God’s righteousness in others; I want to see justice done, the poor and oppressed lifted up, the sick and wounded healed, and those who are lost in the darkness brought into the light.  I want to see the redeeming work of God; I want to see him making all things new—and I want to be a part of that.

Can I honestly say I hunger and thirst for righteousness?  Some days; some days I’d rather have a burger and a Coke.  But I want the hunger and thirst, if you know what I mean.  And I have experienced enough of it that I’ve come to understand something very important:  “they shall be filled,” “they shall be satisfied,” does not mean “they will cease to hunger and thirst.”  Rather, it means that our hunger and thirst will only grow.

That might sound like an addiction, but the thing about addictions is they give you increasing cravings for diminishing pleasure; that’s because they lead only to death.  In God is only life, and so the more we hunger and thirst for his righteousness, the greater the joy and delight we find in his righteousness, and in his presence, and therefore the more we hunger and thirst.  Psalm 37, which we read last week, says, “Delight yourself in the Lord, and he will give you the desires of your heart”—because the more you delight yourself in the Lord, the more that becomes the desire of your heart.  Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, not because the time will come when they will achieve righteousness and won’t need to desire it anymore; rather, blessed are they, for the hunger and thirst are themselves the blessing.  The blessing is the thirst.

Strength Restrained

(Psalm 37:1-11Matthew 5:5)

Meek.  What sort of word is that, anyway?  Sounds like a mouse:  “meek, meek, meek.”  Kind of looks like one, too, as Andrea Skowronski pointed out to me the other day.  Rhymes with “weak.”  I go looking for definitions, I find things like “overly submissive or compliant,” “spineless or spiritless,” “deficient in spirit and courage,” “easily imposed on,” “tame,” “lacking in self-assertion,” and “docile under provocation from others.”  So . . . blessed are the wimps?  Blessed are the doormats?

In a word, no.  Meekness is not weakness, and it has nothing to do with being “deficient in spirit [or] courage”; though it does have to do with being poor in spirit.  We might say that if we are poor in spirit toward God—if we find all our riches in Christ, if we let go our self-protectiveness and self-defensiveness and just follow him, trusting that he will take care of us—then we will be meek toward those around us.  Meekness is expressed in how we exercise our strength, to what purpose we use our courage, and which Spirit is guiding us as we do so.  The meek are not those who are never angry, because anger has its proper place as a response to injustice; rather, the meek are those who don’t let anger drive them to sin.

There are two aspects to this.  First, meekness is strength harnessed to the will of God, serving his purposes rather than our own desires.  It doesn’t mean we don’t get angry when we see injustice done—even when that injustice is done to us; this is not about making ourselves victims—but it means that we submit ourselves in humble obedience to the authority of God.  We give up our claim to pronounce our own judgment, and we renounce any right to demand—or inflict—pun­ishment on others, but we do not simply accept injustice.  Rather, we let God’s justice judge our sense of justice; we let him be the one to decide if we’ve been done wrong, and we leave the doing of justice in his hands.

Thinking about our strength harnessed to God’s will, Andrea gave me a good image this week for this.  I’ll admit, I don’t know much about horses; we see a lot more sheep imagery in the Bible than horse imagery because sheep were a lot more com­mon, so you don’t get this in seminary.  In dressage, which is a form of equestrian competition, there’s a movement called piaffe—basically trotting in place.  As Andrea explained it to me, “It’s very physically demanding because horses are built to move forward.  In this movement, the horse pushes off almost straight up with two diagonal legs (for example: left hind and right fore).  Ideally, he actually hovers in the air for a moment before landing and pushing off with the other diagonal pair.  Since the horses usually used for dressage can easily weigh 1200 pounds, it requires a great deal of strength.  However, it also requires patience and complete trust in the rider.”

Second, meekness is strength restrained by the human will submitted to God, so that—while we do not try to enforce our own idea of justice—we become agents of God’s justice.  Kenneth Bailey, in his book Jesus Through Middle Eastern Eyes, notes that this was an important concept for Aristotle, who defined meekness as “the virtue of acting halfway between recklessness on one side and cowardice on the other. . . .  The one who is truly [meek] is the one who becomes angry on the right grounds against the right person in the right manner at the right moment and for the right length of time.”

Part of this is that the meek are those who have learned the self-control not to just react when they are challenged or attacked.  We talked about this a little during Advent, that when we perceive a threat, instinctively the fight-or-flight reaction kicks in; either we counterattack, or else we back down, deny, pass the blame, or just plain run.  By the grace of God and the work of his Spirit, however, we can learn to stop and catch ourselves—and once the impulse to react rolls past, to think and pray, and do something constructive.  Of course, it then remains to follow through in obedience to the will of God; but once the first reaction is over, that becomes much easier.

Now, note the blessing Christ pronounces on the meek:  “they shall inherit the earth.”  Or, as his original hearers would have understood it, “they shall inherit the land”—which is to say, the Promised Land, the land of Israel.  The Jews believed the land was theirs simply because they were the descendants of Abraham; the Romans believed it was theirs because they’d conquered it.  The family of Herod considered it theirs because Rome had given it to them to rule.  There were those in Israel—the Zealots—who were planning to make it theirs by taking it back from the Romans.  They actually thought they would be able to do it, and so not too long after Jesus’ day, within the lifetime of his disciples, war would break out between them and the forces of Rome.

In contrast, Jesus says, no, it isn’t those who have the right ethnic heritage who will inherit the land of God’s promise; it isn’t those who would claim it by brute force and the willingness to kill, either.  Joining the Zealots who sought fiery revolution wasn’t the way to go, and neither was supporting the corrupt powers that be.  Instead, Jesus says, God’s promise will be fulfilled to those who aren’t seeking it for themselves and their own gain.  You don’t inherit the land, you don’t receive the promise of God, by seeking the promise; you only receive it by seeking God, his kingdom and his righteousness.