Wednesday, January 25, 2012

50-57. Kingdom Living: Part I

LINK: Matthew 5:13-48; Luke 6:27-36 (Read over the next two days)

BACKGROUND


Plato (423-347 B.C.) in Republic and Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) in Nicomachean Ethics attempted to answer the question about which life is the "good life."  Jesus came along in the context of the day and answered that question in Matthew 5:1-20.  

In Matthew 5:1-12, Jesus taught of the blessed life for all the "spiritual zeros" who would enter the Kingdom. He continues to answer the "good life" question when he teaches about . . . 


50. Salt and light: Matthew 5:13-16

The brilliance and profundity of Jesus stand out in the overall structure and outline of The Discourse on the Hill, as he forcefully conveys an understanding of human life that actually works. The talk as a whole is given, of course, under the assumption of the availability of the kingdom he proclaimed. Within that framework, the first part of the talk (on the "blesseds" and the light and salt of the earth) revise prevailing assumptions about human well-being by presenting unlikely kinds of people who in fact found and still find blessedness in the kingdom. (The Divine Conspiracy, p. 136)
Kingdom blessedness overflows into the world. Those blessed will be a blessing (Genesis 12:1-3) by infusing the world with the two purposes for salt: seasoning and purification. Overflow also brings light to dark places. We reflect the light of Christ to the world not because we "try harder" to make it shine but Christ's life is infused in us, and it radiates (Psalm 36:9). 

51. The law: Matthew 5:17-20

The radical shift of perspective with regard to "the good life" and who has it led Jesus' hearers to begin suspecting that "the law" was irrelevant to their life in God's world. On the one hand, they were sure that their own lives fell short of the law, those "in charge" never let them forget it. But, on the other hand, Jesus had said that blessedness was still theirs in the kingdom. It sounded to them as if Jesus had set the law aside. 
However "the law" they had in mind and that they rubbed up against every day was not the law of God. It was a contemporary version of the religious respectability, very harsh and oppressive in application, that Jesus referred to as "the goodness of scribes and Pharisees" (5:20). Law as God intended it remains forever essential to the kingdom, and Jesus made it clear to his hearers that his aim is to bring those who follow him into fulfillment of the true law. The fulfillment he had in mind was not for the purpose of making them humanly acceptable. That is quite another matter. But fulfillment of God's law is important because the law is good. It is right for human life. And the presence of the kingdom brings us all that is right for human life. (The Divine Conspiracy, p. 136)

KINGDOM LIVING: PART I (Matthew 5:21-48)

Matthew 5:21-48 marks a transition point by bringing us the second question Jesus deals with in this sermon: Who is truly a good person? "Who has the kind of goodness found in God himself, constituting the family likeness between God and his children?" (The Divine Conspiracy, p. 98). How do we fulfill the Law in our daily life? How do we not just follow the ancient teaching from the Old Testament and live our life from a heart infused with Jesus' kingdom agape love and light and overflowing into relationships with others? In this section, Jesus takes six Old Testament laws and contrasts them with a kingdom mindset. Of course, Matthew deals with all these questions because he is talking to the Jews.

52. Anger: Matthew 5:21-26 versus Exodus 20:13

The sixth commandment said that murder was forbidden, but what about the heart behind why a person murders? All rash anger is considered "heart murder" as Jesus explained the full meaning behind this commandment.


53. Lust: Matthew 5:27-30 versus Exodus 20:14


The seventh commandment forbade adultery, but Jesus said you commit it even without the act if you lust in your heart. Jesus is not advocating self-mutilation here. He is advocating a change of heart. 


54. Divorce: Matthew 5:31-32 versus Deuteronomy 24:1-4


This is expanding on the seventh commandment. Jesus deals with this in greater detail in Matthew 19:1-12. You can read that section now if you would like or wait until we get to it in Event 173. 


55. Vows: Matthew 5:33-37 versus Exodus 20:7, Leviticus 19:12; Deuteronomy 23:21-23


Some commentators believe this relates to the third commandment. Pharisees made many oaths, but they used all kinds of tricks to give them an out by not swearing to the holy name of God but to Jerusalem, heaven, earth, or a part of their body. Quoting Isaiah 66:1 and Psalm 48:2, Jesus said that swearing by heaven (God's throne), earth (His footstool), and city (Jerusalem) is a binding agreement to God and profanes His name. 


So, our words should just be true because they come out of an honest heart. 


56. Revenge: Matthew 5:38-42 versus Leviticus 24:19-22


Jesus allowed that one should be willing to suffer a loss in order to avoid causing another to suffer. It means even going further by trying to help the person who injures you. 


57. Loving enemies: Matthew 5:43-48 versus Leviticus 19:17-18 and Exodus 23:4-5


The Law did not allow for hatred of enemies, and Jesus reiterated that. 


REFLECTION

Read about the topic of "Salt and Light" based on one man's thoughts after reading The Divine Conspiracy here


Since my breakdown in 1983 (read about it here), God has always confirmed to me that this life of grace is all about overflow. I am a very hard worker, and I try REALLY hard. So, I was predisposed to work REALLY hard at following God. The Sermon on the Mount is not a New Testament version of the "dos and don'ts" of the Ten Commandments. It transcends them. That's why I love what Dallas Willard has to say about them:

The Deeper "Beyond" from Which Actions Come 
But the question is, How can one keep the law? Jesus well knew the answer to this question, and that is why he told those who wanted to know how to work the works of God to put their confidence in the one God had sent (John 6:29). He knew that we cannot keep the law by trying to keep the law. To succeed in keeping the law one must aim at something other and something more. One must aim to become the kind of person from whom the deeds of the law naturally flow. The apple tree naturally and easily produces apples because of the inner nature. This is the most crucial thing to remember if we would understand Jesus' picture of the kingdom heart given in the Sermon on the Mount. 
And here also lies the fundamental mistake of the scribe and the Pharisee. They focus on the actions that the law requires and make elaborate specifications of exactly what those actions are and of the manner in which they are to be done. They also generate immense social pressure to force conformity of action to the law as they interpret it. They are intensely self-conscious about doing the right thing and about being thought to have done the right thing.
But the inner dimensions of their personality, their heart and character, are left to remain contrary to what God has required. That heart will, of course, ultimately triumph over their conscious intentions and arrangements, and they will in fact do what they know to be wrong. Their words, especially, will reveal the contents of their heart (Matt. 12:34). And their need to appear righteous "before men" (Luke 15:15) then forces them into hypocrisy. Hypocrisy becomes the spirit, or "yeast," that pervades and colors their entire existence (Luke 12:1). p. 142
So how do we get to the "deeper beyond"? Willard says, "It is the inner life of the soul that we must aim to transform, and then behavior will naturally and easily follow" (p. 144). We need to become "Jesus apples" by abiding in Him.

Heart transformation involves the transfusion of the very life of Christ in every pore of our being:

Seeing that His divine power has granted to us everything pertaining to life and godliness, through the true knowledge of Him who called us by His own glory and excellence. For by these He has granted to us His precious and magnificent promises, so that by them you may become partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world by lust. Now for this very reason also, applying all diligence, in your faith supply moral excellence, and in your moral excellence, knowledge, and in your knowledge, self-control, and in your self-control, perseverance, and in your perseverance, godliness, and in your godliness, brotherly kindness, and in your brotherly kindness, love. For if these qualities are yours and are increasing, they render you neither useless nor unfruitful in the true knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. (2 Peter 1:3-8) 
I emphasize "true knowledge of God" because many of us have a concept of God that is based on our cultural understanding of Him or from our parents. Truly knowing God means getting to know Him through the daily infusion of His precious and magnificent promises. 

Christmas 2012 was amazing. I read a book about Handel's Messiah and listened to it over and over again. Well, the whole thing is just God's Word, and I woke up singing it in my head every morning. Jesus was in my heart, and I did not respond to the world around me from a point of stress but love. I ended up writing a devotional to share what I learned with others. You can read it on the Bible Book Club blog here

 2023 Update: I embedded YouTube videos of all the movements in the oratorio. I also have a Microsoft Word version download that will be updated with the links to these videos by Christmas 2023, but you can download the old version here

APPLICATION

"It is the inner life of the soul that we must aim to transform, and then behavior will naturally and easily follow." 
(The Divine Conspiracy, p. 144). 

Do you want to be a "Jesus Apple"? 

Have a long and deep talk with God over this whole passage and listen to what He says to you.  Take the time to do it. 
Let's allow Him to transform us from the inside out.

Guidelines for Growth in the Kingdom of God Series

PRAYER


Infuse us Lord with Yourself, Amen. 

3 comments:

  1. All this stuff about Kingdom Living bringing about transformation is exciting! I already had an "I WILL" last week when we talked about fasting. It was to read the chapter about fasting in Richard Foster's Celebration of Discipline. After reading it, it made me want to reread it, and I also found a DVD kit going over the disciplines with discussions with Richard Foster! (Dallas Willard is in it a bit too!) So, I am starting a TUESDAY TRANSFORMATION TIME TWELVE THIRTY - TWO THIRTY (Because God loves to speak to me in alliterations.) We will go over each of the disciplines with "I WILL's" to go along with it. :)

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    1. I just read that Dallas Willard is in 3-5 minutes of every lesson! I am very excited now about this whole endeavor!

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  2. My husband and I are starting a fast today. Also, when I read about anger, it was really encouraging. I am way behind in my photos, and I am making a photo book of a trip we took in 2018. I was reading my journal, and I was doing Examen prayer as we traveled, and I had some meltdowns. One resulted in anger toward my sweet husband. I see that I let things build sometimes, and I have learned to deal with stress with Jesus! On the two international trips we took in 2022, I did not have a single meltdown, despite the huge stress on our way to our April trip to Northern Cyprus. This is so encouraging! Growth from four years before. I credit Examen prayer helping me to keep on top of my emotions, Life Model Works and the brain science behind what happens to us in stress, Immanuel Journaling, and Centering Prayer as things that help me to experience God's presence in the midst of stressful moments. Before I would disengage!

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