Beatitudes--Their Significance And Meaning
They are simply stated, but
are profound in meaning. They guide. They point. They teach. They show
us the values that Christ cares about.
These
values if followed, can
not only bring a believer into a state of peace and happiness,
but also
right into the Kingdom of God after our journey on this earth is over
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The
Latin word for blessed is beatus,
from which we get the word beatitude.
The Beatitudes are found at:
Matthew
5: 3-12 And Luke 6:20-23
Blessed are the poor in
spirit,
for theirs is the kingdom of
heaven.
Blessed are they who mourn,
for they shall be comforted.
Blessed are the meek,
for they shall possess the
earth.
Blessed are they who hunger
and thirst for justice,
for they shall be satisfied.
Blessed are the merciful,
for they shall obtain mercy.
Blessed are the pure of
heart,
for they shall see God.
Blessed are the peacemakers,
for they shall be called
sons of God.
Blessed are they who suffer
persecution for justice sake,
for theirs is the kingdom of
heaven.
As
you read about each of the beatitudes you might look into your own
heart
and examine your feelings
towards them.
Are
you trying to follow each one of them?
I think you will find that
you need a rather humble, almost a childlike attitude towards
each one
of them if you are to be successful in following them.
In fact Our Lord
mentioned many times about how we needed to become more like children
in
our attitude and in our thinking towards many of the things in this
life.
Two verses in the eighteenth
chapter of Matthew are good examples.
Matthew 18:3 "Truly, I say to you, unless
you turn and become as little children, you will by no means enter the
kingdom of heaven."
Matthew 18:4 "Therefore whoever humbles
himself as this little child, will be the greatest in the kingdom of
heaven."
The First Beatitude
Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
The
meaning of the word
"poor" in Greek means one who has nothing and is completely empty. Was
Jesus saying the economically poor are blessed? No, for there is no
spirituality in poverty. Poverty in itself is not blessed, because the
poor can be as arrogant , ungodly and as lost as the rich.
So what
does it mean to be poor in spirit?
It means that the poor are those who
realize that they can never achieve salvation on their own and instead
put their complete faith and trust in Jesus Christ.
The poor in spirit are those
who are not self-assertive, self-reliant, self-confident,
self-centered, or self-sufficient.
The poor in spirit are not baptized
in the waters of self-esteem.
They do not boast in their God given
characteristics
such as their birth, their family, their nationality,
their education, their physical looks,
their race, their wealth, or
their culture. Because none of that
matters.
The poor in spirit are those who
are conscious of their sins and know in their hearts they are
completely unworthy of the grace that a most holy and loving God pours
down upon them.
They realize that all their righteousness is, as
Isaiah
said, like filthy rags before a holy God.
So poor in spirit means that
we come to God, conscious of our sins and our utter lack of
righteousness.
It means that we profess that we are totally unqualified
to commune with, and have fellowship with God, and that we do not
deserve any of the gifts that God is trying to bestow upon us.
The poor
in spirit realize that all our assets are actually liabilities before
God,
and that we should view these assets as Paul viewed them--as loss,
as garbage, as rubbish.
It means that we have
absolutely no hope of salvation without Jesus Christ. It means to
realize that we are full of sin and in desperate need of God's grace
and righteousness, and the poor in spirit realize that these can only
be obtained by faith in Jesus Christ.
In Luke 15 we see how the
prodigal son became poor in spirit. In his pride and arrogance he left
his father's house, wasted his inheritance and fell into great need in
some far away country. During a severe famine, this son had no job and
nothing to eat. At that point, the text says, he came to himself. He
went back to his father and said,
"I
have sinned against heaven and against you.
I am no longer worthy to be
called your son" (Luke 15:21).
That is being poor in spirit.
We also see an example of
being poor in spirit illustrated again in Luke 18 in the account of the
Pharisee and the tax collector. It is the story of a man who was
confident of his own righteousness and who looked down on everybody
else.
Jesus
told this parable: Two men went up to the temple to pray,
one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee stood up and
prayed this about himself: God, I thank you that I am not like other
men--robbers, evildoers, adulterers, or even like this tax collector. I
fast twice a week and give a tenth of what I get.
The tax collector
stood at a
distance. He felt he wasn't even worthy to look up to heaven, so
keeping his eyes on the floor he said, "God, please have mercy on me,
for I am nothing but a lowly sinner." (Luke 18:9-14).
That is being
poor in spirit.
What was the result of the prayers of these men?
The
Pharisee went home condemned,
while the tax collector went home
justified.
Only the poor in spirit will
enter into the kingdom of God.
Why?
Because they come to God having
full knowledge of their own lostness and their own sinfulness. They
readily confess that they are full of guilt and are totally unqualified
to enter into the kingdom of God. The poor in spirit are the ones who
have put their faith and trust in Jesus Christ.
The Second Beatitude
Blessed are they who mourn for they shall be comforted.
The person that mourns is
the one who recognizes that he is a sinner before God. Such a person
mourns over his various sins because he recognizes that not only do his
sins greatly hurt our heavenly Father, he also realizes that he is
empty of righteousness, and does not even begin to deserve salvation
and the joys of heaven. This miserable, but repentant sinner, realizes
that only through the grace of God does he have forgiveness and
salvation. Jesus says such a person is blessed, and there is no greater
blessing than to receive such divine approval. Those who are blessed in
this way by God will see God and dwell with him forever.
Do you mourn for the many
sins you have committed?
No one mourns unless the Holy Spirit convicts
him of sin and reveals to him that he is a violator of the laws of God.
We must also realize that as believers we all have violated
God's law
but only true Christians, under the conviction of the Holy Spirit, will
realistically declare that not only are they spiritually bankrupt, but
they are completely lost without Jesus Christ living in their lives.
And only Christians will declare that they are by nature enemies of
God, acknowledging that to sin means to set oneself against a holy God.
The unbeliever on the other hand feels that this is nothing but
foolishness, and he has no time for any of it. For the wicked refuse to
take down such barriers to God as pride and arrogance.
Psalm 10:4
"The
wicked are to proud to seek God; God is in none of their thoughts."
Thus, the mourning of
Christians referred to in this beatitude
Is not because of
financial
loss, terminal sickness, the death of loved ones, loneliness, a
divorce, or some rejection. Christians mourn because
they realize that they have sinned against a Holy God and have brought
dishonor to his name.
And this dishonor of God's name brings great
mourning to the true believer.
The true believer mourns when he sins
because he knows that the sin just committed brings great pain and
sorrow to God. This kind of
mourning is recorded by Paul in
Romans
7:24, where he says, "What a wretched man I am!"
It is also the kind of
mourning that brings unbelievable joy and hope to the believer.
Paul
wrote about this in
2
Corinthians 7:10 "For sadness in a Godly way makes for repentance that
leads to salvation".
That's right, it is Godly
mourning and sorrow that leads to repentance which brings salvation to
those experiencing it. Godly sorrow causes us to loathe, despise, and
repudiate sin, and this leads the believer to sincerely repent of those
sins. Those who experience Godly sorrow truly forsake sin and turn to
the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ. These are the necessary steps to
eternal salvation.
What is the promise to those
who mourn?
They will be comforted. Who will be comforted?
Only those
who mourn, meaning only those who repent. Only those who grieve over
their sins under the conviction of the Holy Spirit and cry out
to God,
saying,
"Woe is me! I am a sinner. I am unclean. I have sinned against
heaven and against you. I have sinned grievously. My sin is so
great". Why will we
be comforted? Because we know that Jesus Christ came to seek
and save that which is lost. We look to the cross of Jesus
Christ and realize that Christ died for our sins.
Using the prodigal son once
again as an example, it tells us in
Luke 15 of this young man who
became very dissatisfied at home, and looked to the world for answers.
This man left his father's house to go to a far country to experiment
and find pleasure with sin, but soon the fun was over. He became
famished, lonely, brokenhearted, and rejected by all. But by God's
grace this young man came to himself, became sober and began to think
clearly and Godly.
In verse 20 of Luke 15 we
see this young man going back home. He was now a poor, wretched,
miserable, naked specimen of humanity, but he was going home to his
father.
He mourned and wept as he walked, and when he reached his
father, he said,
"Father, I have sinned against God and against you. I
am not worthy to be called your son. Just make me a servant of yours at
the lowest rank, for I need to be comforted. Save me, for I am lost."
How did the father react to
his son?
He cried out in joy and then comforted him.
The father hugged
and kissed him and gave him a fine garment to wear.
He told the
servants to put a ring on his finger and shoes on his feet.
He ordered
a great celebration with music and feasting.
And when the other son
questioned why the father was doing these things,
The father said he
had the greatest of all reasons:
"This
son of mine was dead but is now alive; he was lost but now is found"
(Luke 15:24).
What awesome comfort this son now had.
The Third Beatitude
Blessed are the meek for they shall possess the earth.
The Greek word for meek,
praus, was used to refer to domesticated animals. The word does not
refer to a wild, unruly animal; it refers to a strong and powerful
horse or an ox that was trained and disciplined so that it could be
controlled by a human.
The word meek used in Matthew 5:5 refers to a
strong person who is under control--
a God controlled person.
A meek
person is a man or woman of God whose strength is controlled by God.
He
or she is controlled by God in thought, word, will, emotion, and
action.
The meek man is one who submits, not to his own will or to the
will of the world,
but to the great and gracious will of God.
A meek man is not a weak
man.
He is not wishy-washy, effeminate or timid.
He is not someone who
you can walk all over.
A meek man is not passive and spineless.
In fact
the meek man is just the opposite.
The one who has put their faith and
their trust in Jesus Christ
will be meek before God, but mighty and
bold before the world and before satan.
To the sinful world and to
satan the meek person will be far stronger than they are.
What makes a person meek?
They see God. And they see God in everything.
No one becomes meek
unless they can see this infinite, personal, almighty, all-wise,
all-holy God, and when they see God they are immediately humbled.
When
we are able to see God by faith, then that is the time when the Holy
Spirit allows us to become meek.
Thus the meek person does not rely on
himself, saying, I can do all things. I have confidence in myself.
After all, I am strong and able.
the meek person says, I see God,
and he is able and willing to help me.
I can do all things through
Jesus Christ who strengthens me.
A meek person is the one who
by faith sees God as great, and himself as nothing. And because of
that, he submits to the righteous will of this great God.
A meek person
is the one who proclaims, "Not my will but Thine will be done." He
submits to the will of his heavenly Father and does not argue with the
Holy Scriptures where God's will is clearly revealed.
Therefore, the
meek believer that is being led by God is having this quality of
meekness constantly being produced within him.
In Psalm 37:3 it says,
""Trust in the Lord and do good."
Faith is trust.
The meek person
trusts the Lord, meaning he rests in God by entrusting his whole life
to him.
His whole being is resting upon the sure foundation of the
almighty God.
The meek man knows that his past, present and future
rests in God. He has heard the gospel proclamation which says, "Come
unto me, all who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest."
The
meek person who comes to Christ and trusts in him for his salvation is
always at rest in God. Jesus Christ is his rest, no matter what
circumstances he is facing.
A meek man is patient. He
has a long view of life, knowing in the end it is not the wicked who
win, but the meek. How can he be sure of this?
The meek person knows
that in the end God wins, and if God wins then the meek win.
God
himself tells us that the meek, not the wicked, will inherit the earth.
The wicked may indeed possess the earth for a short time today, but
the
Lord tells us that when he comes back, the meek shall possess this
earth.
Psalms
76:9 "Then God arose to judgment, To save all the humble of the earth".
The Fourth Beatitude
Blessed are they who hunger and thirst for
Righteousness for they shall be satisfied.
To help us understand this
beatitude we first have to ask ourselves, what is meant by
righteousness?
righteousness means being in complete accordance
with what is just, honorable, and Godly. Righteousness are those things
that are upright, virtuous, noble, morally right, and ethical.
You
could say that righteousness is a life style that is in complete
conformity to the will of God.
It is a lifestyle that Jesus not only
finds pleasing, but one that he
approves of.
Jesus Christ is the one
leading the righteous person through life.
It is Jesus who is making
the decisions that the righteous person will follow.
For the righteous
believer, all his daily actions, everything that he thinks about, every
decision that he makes, everything that he reads and looks at, will be
done the same way that Our Lord would have done them. The true believer
will know immediately whether something is right or wrong, just or
unjust, godly or ungodly. How could the true believer not know that
something is wrong when the Son of God is living within him?
Jesus Christ who is dwelling
within the righteous person is communicating constantly with the
person's heart, conscience, soul, and spirit.
Jesus Christ will be talking to
the believer. And while this
is going on the Holy Spirit will be hard at work doing his guiding and
his warning. This is why when a believer sins, it winds up
being extremely painful, usually leaving the sinner with great sorrow.
Sin for the righteous believer is never worth the pain and dishonor he
knows that he has brought upon the Lord.
For the believer,
righteousness saturates every single aspect of his life. And every
Godly believer knows that he has Jesus Christ living on the inside of
him leading and guiding him.
Psalms
11:7 "For the Lord is righteous; He loves righteousness; And the
upright will behold His face".
Hunger and thirst are
appetites that return frequently and they require that they be met
often during the day. Similarly the true believer calls for constant
meals of righteousness to do his daily Godly work, just as the living
body calls for its daily food. When a believer hungers and thirsts
after righteousness he becomes a new man and This new man greatly
desires to do the
will of God for he
now has great interest in Christ and all that Christ said and promised.
To hunger and thirst after
righteousness can spiritually enlightened,
and to understanding our Lord Jesus Christ living and dwelling
within us.
The child of God not only has an earnest desire to fervently seek
righteousness and thus lead a Godly life on a second to second basis,
but wants to be possessed by righteousness, wants to
constantly
live in it, to be totally absorbed into it, to be completely saturated
in righteousness, that this way of life is the Godly way
of life. And a righteous life is what also fills us with
peace and joy. And because of spiritual enlightenment we
realize that nothing can be more perfect, more pure, and more pleasing
to Our Heavenly Father then living a life that he totally approves of.
The Fifth Beatitude
Blessed are the merciful for they shall obtain mercy.
Mercy is love toward those
that are miserable,
those that are wretched,
and those that need some
type of help or assistance.
The merciful are those that
are tender hearted and who truly feel in the deepest parts of their
beings the pain and the suffering of those who need mercy. But most
importantly is the fact that the merciful are those special individuals
who go out of their way and make the effort to help. Having compassion
on the those that are in anyway hurting is only the first part of
having mercy. Doing something about
it, is the all important second
part.
We as believers must show
mercy to all men and we are to do this by
both sympathizing with them
and by taking care and tending to their needs.
And we must do this with
readiness and gladness,
with affection and tenderness, always ready to
give and to forgive.
Our Lord instructs us to show the same type of
mercy to others that he shows to each of us. He talked much about
showing mercy
a good example is found at
2
Corinthians 1:3-4 "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us
in all our tribulation, that we may be able to comfort those who are in
any trouble, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by
God".
Therefore, to be merciful as
a Christian does not mean to perform isolated, occasional acts of
charity.
A Christian is to be habitually merciful, and all acts of
mercy should be done in a thankful and cheerful manner.
Just imagine
how absolutely wonderful God feels when he hears in act of being
merciful
you say, "Praise be to you God for this opportunity that you
have given me to help someone else in need. Thank you Father for
letting me be of some assistance to another human being."
So doing an
act of mercy in a thankful and loving manner makes God our Father
beam with joy.
The merciful are indeed
those special people who love all men as themselves:
The merciful truly
believe that whatever mercy they desire from God,
they in turn will
show to all men everywhere.
The merciful are the ones who realize that
our Heavenly Father demands that we be merciful, and they also realize
that our acts of mercy will be repaid a thousand fold.
Mercy is
extremely important to Jesus Christ
and much of the Bible either
directly or indirectly deals in some way
with mercy and kindness shown
to others.
This beatitude is also very
concerned with mercy through the act of daily forgiveness.
Of forgiving
offenses that have been inflicted upon you, and in which
you show mercy
towards everyone who wrongs you regardless of the reasons
and
regardless of the circumstances.
Our Lord demands that we forgive one
another just as he is constantly forgiving you.
Matthew
6: 14-15 points this out so very clearly. "For if you forgive men their
trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do
not forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your
trespasses".
Many ask why should
Christians be merciful?
Well for one thing, God shows us mercy, not
when we are good, but when we are miserable, helpless, wicked, ungodly,
and powerless.
He shows us mercy when we are his enemies and we are
disobedient, unrighteous, dead
in trespasses and sins, foolish,
ignorant, suffering, and miserable due to the consequences of our
sin.
Yet God looks upon our misery and wretchedness and truly feels
our pain
and is very happy to extend his mercy to each of us.
So instead of
pouring out his just wrath upon us,
he is compassionate toward us.
He
freely justifies us, forgives our sins, extends his mercy upon us, and
fills us with his own righteousness. And that is one reason why we
ought to be merciful every day
to the miserable, the helpless, the
wretched, and the needy.
Secondly, each one of us
needs the mercy of God each and every day.
We need to be aware that we
are still miserable sinners, and because of that,
we are still in need
of God's mercy every single day.
If we are honest and examine ourselves
in the light of God's Word,
then we will realize that indeed we do sin
daily.
And because we sin daily, we need God's forgiveness and mercy
daily,
and if God is willing to give us his mercy every day (and He
will)
then we in
turn should be happy to extend mercy to others also on a daily basis.
Another reason for having
continuous mercy is that being merciful is a test of our Christianity.
If you are not constantly
being merciful then there is only one
explanation.
You have not understood the
grace and the mercy of God and
you are outside of Jesus Christ.
We who have received God's
rich mercy
are merciful
because the grace of God
makes us that way.
The Sixth Beatitude
Blessed are the pure of heart for they shall see God.
Psalms 119:9 "How can a believer keep his
heart pure? By keeping it according to The word of God".
Out of the hearts of men
come all kinds of evil things. Everything from evil thoughts and greed,
to slander and arrogance. All these evil things come from the inside of
man, from his heart, and this evil from the heart is what makes man
unclean. Two very good examples of verses that show the evil of the
heart are below.
Mark 7:20-23
"That which proceeds out of
the man, that is what defiles the man. For from within, out of the
heart of men, proceed the evil thoughts, fornications, thefts, murders,
adulteries, deeds of coveting and wickedness, as well as deceit,
sensuality, envy, slander, pride and foolishness. All these evil things
proceed from within the man, and they defile the man."
Jeremiah 17:9 "The heart is deceitful above
all things, And desperately wicked".
Therefore, one of the most
important questions that we can ask is how can we be truly pure in our
hearts and clean of filth and sin?
How can we be pure in our
imaginations, in our thoughts, in our words, in our decision making,
and in our desires?
How can we think what God thinks, will what God
wills, desire what God desires, hate what God hates, and love what God
loves?
In other words how can our hearts be pure hearts, free from sins
like pride and envy, free from evil thoughts and evil deeds?
The truth is we can't do any
of these things on our own.
We can't reform ourselves.
We can't self
clean ourselves.
Many people have tried to clean themselves. Some have
tried to do this through asceticism or leading a life of complete self
denial, or by other methods such as by going away from the world and
living in solitude, or permanent silence, or by beating their bodies
with whips and clubs, even by inflicting upon themselves all forms of
degrading and unpleasant acts, even going so far as castrating
themselves. They have tried to cleanse themselves through celibacy,
fasting, and prayers. But such asceticism is not biblical and it will
not result in purity of heart.
So
the first point we must
be aware of is this.
The path to a pure heart
begins with the realization that we have impure hearts.
The entire
Bible revolves around the central theme
that the Lord looks at the
heart of the person and not at their external appearance, their
behavior, or their achievements.
The Lord does not acclaim education,
intellect, business success, or social position,
as the world does.
And
the second point we must
be aware of is this.
God must clean us.
God alone
is able to make rotten people pure in their imaginations, thoughts,
words, deeds, and desires.
To be pure in heart is to be free
from evil desires and evil purposes.
So if God is the only one who can
cleanse us, then how does he do it?
Well the Bible tells us that God
has a plan to deal with the problem of sin infected hearts.
God has a
plan to save us and make us holy in thought, word and deed.
And the
plan is found in many places such as in Romans
8:29.
Here God tells us that he wants
"to
conform us to the image and likeness of His Son".
Thus God's
plan is to make us like his own Son, like Jesus Christ.
His purpose is
nothing less than that we be pure in heart just like Jesus Christ is.
How does God clean and
purify us?
First of all, when we become born again and we completely
surrender ourselves to Jesus Christ and put our entire faith and trust
in him,
God will supernaturally regenerate us and give us a brand new
nature, a new self.
We become a brand new creation.
He tells us what he
is going to do to us at
Ezekiel
36:26-27. "Moreover, I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit
within you; and I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and
give you a heart of flesh. And I will put My Spirit within you".
And
this all happens the
very moment when you are saved, because when you are born again you
indeed become a brand new person. A brand new person who is walking arm
and arm with Jesus Christ on a road to spiritual purity, spiritual
growth, spiritual maturity, and spiritual strength.
The Bible tells us that once
we are saved and become born again then we are no longer living our
lives by ourselves.
Galatians 2:20 tells us, "It is no
longer I that
live,but it is Christ that is living in union with me".
Now both you
and Jesus are living your life together, and it is at this point that a
number of very marvelous things occur.
First of all you have a brand
new spotless heart, one that is no longer saturated with sin.
You also
have Jesus Christ dwelling within you and you are united with Jesus
Christ.
You now believe fully and completely in our Lord Jesus Christ.
You have also pledged your love, trust, and obedience to the Lord.
And
something else extremely important has occured
Is that the Holy
Spirit has decided to move in and take up residence within you.
The
Holy Spirit is the one who's going to guide you and teach you and show
you exactly what to do and how to do it, in order for you to become
pure in heart.
All the believer needs to do is constantly and
continuously keep their focus on Jesus Christ.
This beatitude tells us if
we are pure in heart then we will see God.
The reward for this
beatitude is truly marvelous because when the believer becomes
pure in
heart, not only will we see God as they pass into heaven immediately
upon their death, but will see God right now, not with our
natural eye, but through spiritual vision, through faith in
Jesus Christ. The pure in heart will see God in all his glory in
every single thing that they see.
To the pure in heart, God will become
extremely visible.
The Seventh Beatitude
Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called sons of God.
The peacemakers are those
children of God who not only have great love for God, but also have
love for all of mankind
they attempt to do everything possible for
the advancement of peace everywhere.
The term "peacemakers" includes
all who make peace between men,
whether as individuals or as
communities.
It includes even those who endeavor to make peace even
though they fail.
The peacemakers are those
who have a peaceful disposition
because to make peace is to have a
strong and hearty affection for peace.
It is to love, desire, and
delight in peace.
The peacemakers also want to preserve the peace and
when the peace is broken, then the peacemakers have a great desire to
recover it as quickly as possible.
The peace that God bestows upon his
believers is in turn shared by the believers with the rest of mankind,
so that the peace-receivers are transformed into peace-givers.
Romans
14:19 tells us,
"So then let us pursue the things which make for peace
and the building up of one another".
One would imagine a person
of this amiable temper and behavior and who strives for peace would be
the darling of mankind.
But our Lord well knew it would not be so, as
long as satan was the prince of this world.
We must realize that not
only is satan a troublemaker, but all those who follow him are
troublemakers. They all are enemies of God, opposing God in their
thoughts, their wills, and their actions. The devil and his followers
can be considered the true enemies of peace.
Many will tell you that the
world's greatest need is for peace.
But it appears that much of what
man does today ends up in discord, dissension, and factions. Neighbors
kill neighbors, complete strangers kill each other, brothers murder
brothers, religious factions try to wipe each other out, tribes
exterminate neighboring tribes,
whole nations try to eradicate other
nations, and on and on it goes.
These
horrible examples of hate all
begin with the absence of love and having no desire for peace.
And thus
it seems as if hate in some form or another is the world's pastime and
that peace is the last thing many people want.
The children of this
world love to fish in troubled waters,
but the children of God are the
peacemakers, they are the quiet in the land.
However peacemaking does not
mean seeking peace at any cost,
for the peacemaker realizes that peace
at any price will usually end up in complete and total destruction.
So
a peacemaker is not an appeaser.
He's not one who smiles a lot and
doesn't take a position on anything.
He is not one who has an easygoing
personality and who is nice and flabby and can easily be shoved around.
He's not a doormat.
A peacemaker is one who through strength and Godly
knowledge endeavors to establish a right relationship between estranged
parties based on truth and righteousness.
The peacemakers realize that
there is only one way that this world can have peace,
and that is by
trusting in Jesus Christ.
What Jesus did on the cross was bring peace
between not only God and man,
but also between man and man.
Christ's
death tore the barrier of the veil at the entrance of the Holy of
Holies from top to bottom and opened a way for us to have access to
God,
so that we can now come into the very presence of God and have
peace with our Father.
And when we are at peace with God, we will be at
peace with all men.
By his death Jesus also
destroyed another barrier, that dividing wall of hostility between man
and his fellow man.
Ephesians
2:14 "For He Himself is our peace, who made both groups into one, and
broke down the barrier of the dividing wall".
The reason we can love other
people and have peace with them, including our enemies, is because
Christ destroyed the hostility between man and man when he died on the
cross.
Colossians 1:20
"And through Him to
reconcile all things to
Himself, having made peace through the blood of His cross".
The Eighth Beatitude
Blessed are they who suffer persecution for
justice sake for theirs is
the kingdom of heaven.
In this beatitude Christ
pronounces a blessing on those who are being persecuted.
But the
persecution that they are suffering is not for misdeeds or evil acts,
their persecution is for doing righteousness.
No, not for any crimes they
have done, and not for being unrighteous and committing the acts of
those who practice evil such as murderers, thieves, and all other acts
of wickedness,
but on account of their righteous and Godly conversation
and Godly actions
which in turn brings upon them the hatred and enmity
of the men of the world.
For by living righteously believers
separate themselves from the world and profess themselves not to belong
to the world. The Godly life of true believers places a brand upon them
that distinguishes them from the rest of the world.
There is much evidence that
proves that more Christians around the world have been martyred for
their faith in this century alone, than in the combined previous
nineteen centuries of the church's history. In many countries today it
is a crime to be a Christian.
If you live in the United States, you may
think that the idea of persecution of Christians is not very relevant
today. We are not experiencing any real persecution here in this
country.
But as you look around in this country, you can't help but see
many great evil inroads that have been made into destroying anything
having to do with Jesus Christ, the Bible, or the laws of God. The
greatest assault against Christianity have been the many laws that have
been passed recently, all with the idea of suppressing Christianity in
all areas of society.
Persecution in the United
States at this time, frequently comes verbally, via the tongue, usually
in the form of cruel mockings and reproachful language, or by deeds
such as confiscation of goods, banishment from a group, or even in the
workplace where one may be fired, demoted, or spoken against because of
one's Christian faith.
In today's society to tell others that you are a
born again Christian who has put his entire faith and trust in Jesus
Christ, is to bring on smirks and laughs, rude and disgusting comments,
and alienation and retaliation.
If you doubt this then tell
a group of your friends what the Word of God says about the homosexual
lifestyle, and that God says that it is horribly wrong, and then tell
them what the Bible says is going to happen to those who engage in it.
And Jesus still loves them and wants to save them
Or tell a few of your fellow workers what the Bible says about
murdering unborn children and that God considers it nothing less than
an abomination. ut
Jesus still loves them and wants to save them
Then observe the response
from these friends and fellow
workers.
I think you will see most of the time the seeds of verbal
persecution beginning to form.
But why is there such
persecution in the world, and why is God so offensive to so many?
Because the Word of God is a stumbling block to ungodly people.
The
unbelievers that don't know Jesus enjoy sinning, in fact they revel in
it.
They enjoy partaking in as many sins as possible. Sinning is what
gives them pleasure.
The reason why ungodly
men persecute Godly men, is because of the spirit that the creator has
placed within each one of us (even The sinner)
When the unbeliever sins, the Holy Spirit
is convicting the spirit of that sinner
and this causes the sinner to
know that he is doing wrong and that his actions
are against the laws
of God.
Of course this is all
foolishness to the non-believing unrepentant sinner, but still the
unbelieving sinner feels guilty and doesn't like that feeling, so it is
rather easy for him to lash out at the believers of God, blaming them
for making him feel bad.
That is why the things of God and the beliefs
of God are constantly being ridiculed and made fun of.
The unbelievers
are constantly attempting to destroy anything that has to do with God
in a desperate attempt to do away with the source of their feeling bad.
Throughout human history blaming someone else for their troubles has
always been a very easy way out for a great many groups. So the sinner
is trying to fight back against God. And
since the sinner can't get at God, he does the next best thing - he
goes after those that follow God.
Jesus told us in John 3:20 that,
"Everyone
who does evil hates the light,"
and in John 7:7 he declared,
"The world
hates me because I testify that what it does is evil."
This
can all be summed up by another verse in the Book of John
.
John 15:20 "If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you."
The world hates Jesus
because he is light, righteousness, and truth.
They hate him because he
reveals the wickedness of the people of the world, and
they hate him
because he exposes their evil.
Jesus also told his disciples
that they
were his servants, and he told them just as he is telling us, that if
the master is hated, then the servants of the master will also be
hated.
It's like someone who hates someone of a different race.
Usually
that person will also hate all others in that entire race.
Or if a man
hates his neighbor, he will usually also hate the man's wife and
children.
In fact it is sad to say but he will many times even hate
those who come and visit that neighbor.
If you are not being
persecuted, you should ask, "Why?"
And the answer just may be that you
are not living a Godly life.
It is our Godly life that causes the other
person to get heated up, upset, and unhappy.
The truth is, everyone who
lives a Godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted.
If no one is
persecuting you, it is because you are not living the Christian life
and shining as lights in the world.
In
Luke 6:26 Jesus said,
"Woe to you when all men speak well of you, for
that is how their fathers treated the false prophets."
When the world applauds,
appreciates, and commends you instead of persecuting you, you can
pretty well figure that you are no longer a true prophet of the Lord.
When the world chuckles right along with you and pats you on
your back,
you can pretty well deduce that you are, in fact, a false prophet who
always speaks smooth things created from your own subjectivity without
hearing from the Spirit of the living God.
Sadly, if you have no
persecution in your life
then that is probably just another way of
saying that you have been absorbed into the world.
It is very true that
persecution is the cost of being a Christian,
because the believer must
reckon upon hardships and troubles much more than other men.
At first
glance persecution looks to be a truly horrible experience.
But even
though persecution usually isn't pleasant, it does have a great many
rewarding advantages,
for when persecution comes into our lives then we
must conclude the following:
That we have put our complete faith and
trust in Jesus Christ.
That we can truly call ourselves Christians.
That we belong to the kingdom of God.
That we are righteous.
That we have been chosen by the Father and
the Son.
That ours is the kingdom of God now and in
the future.
That Jesus is truly our Lord and that is
why we are being persecuted.
That our salvation is sure and certain.
That we are not false prophets.
That we are not worldly for the people of
the world are not persecuted.
That we are in the very good company with
many other saved Christians.
That we can know that we are truly born
again.
That
eternal life is ours.
I hope ou liked this study and will check out Our Lords Prayer study
God Bless
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