Blessed are you who are poor, for yours is the kingdom of God .
Blessed are you who hunger
now, for you shall be satisfied.
Blessed are you who weep
now, for you shall laugh.
Blessed are you when men hate you, and ostracize you, and insult you, and
scorn your name as evil, for the sake of the Son of Man. Be glad in that day
and leap for joy, for behold,
your reward is great in heaven. For in the same way their fathers used to treat
the prophets.
But woe to you who are rich, for you are receiving your comfort in full.
Woe to you who are well-fed now, for you shall be hungry.
Woe to you who laugh now,
for you shall mourn and weep.
Woe to you when all men
speak well of you, for their fathers used to treat the false prophets in the
same way.
Ancient poetry, otherwise known as Luke 6:20-26
Let’s look at the beatitudes again.
“Ahhh,”
everyone sighs. “The beatitudes. How lovely.
How comforting.”
How easy to ignore.
How misunderstood.
We are all familiar with the words in Matthew. “Blessed are the poor in spirit. Blessed are the meek. Blessed are the merciful.” And on and on. And we love them because they seem so poetic
and so loving and so helpful to us who live quiet lives of desperation in the
pursuit of just living normal lives without poverty, without hunger, with some
levels of justice and peace. We will buy
plaques of the phrases and place them upon our walls to remind us of how loving
and gentle Jesus’ teaching is.
But those weren’t the beatitudes I was talking
about.
There’s another set, equally spoken by Jesus, found
in Luke. They are certainly the same set
of sayings, but they seem… different.
They seem harsher, more difficult to accept, not the kind of Jesus who
would comfort us.
After reading Luke’s version, we might be saying, “Who
is this guy? This isn’t my usual
preacher! No… good preachers don’t talk
like this. They use words like ‘beseech’
and ‘Almighty’ and when they say ‘comfort’ it sounds like they really mean
it. This guy, though, he sounds tough,
almost mean. I mean, who would go to a
church that sounded like this? People
who were desperate might—or people that had issues with wealth—but not people
who could afford to build a nice church building and give a guy a good salary
and a parsonage. No wonder Jesus had no
place to lay his head! Who would listen
to this drivel more than once? The adage
makes sense—A prophet is someone who isn’t invited to dinner twice.”
While we
can critique the style or question Jesus’ propriety, we do need to remember the
positive points. First of all, it is direct. And simple—no one can misunderstand it. And if it is true, then the message is
significant. Oh, and one other
point—Jesus is our Lord. And these are
the words of Jesus.
These words aren’t just there as a
jumping point for our understanding of spiritual matters. They aren’t
supposed to be a cover page for our traditional values—whether
conservative (“Life is tough and you’ve got to be tough back”) or liberal (“We
should really be nicer to the poor”).
They aren’t there to be politely ignored in preference to other passages
that we prefer. Nor does it help for us
to retranslate them into something more palatable (“Maybe it could say, ‘Gosh,
what a difficult position you rich people are in.’ ”).
How significantly we treat these
words is how significantly we treat Jesus.
This teaching is at the core of what Jesus had to say, and all that he
said and did flows from this core. If we
are to accept Jesus, we need to accept this basic creed.
What is Jesus speaking of? What really is the point? If there is a creed, what would it look like,
were it based on this text? Let’s break
it down into pieces:
1. “We believe in an Almighty God who will judge everyone on the earth”
Judgment
isn’t really popular to talk about. To
speak of hell or eternal dishonor or lake of fire isn’t really a popular topic,
so many Christians just avoid it.
Honestly, many people have abused hellfire for their own agenda. So speaking about God’s judgement is kind of
like an uncle who was convicted of child molestation, and though he hasn’t done
anything like it since, no one talks about him and at Christmas he just finds a
corner to sit in and watches the proceedings from a distance.
But Jesus firmly believed in a
judgment of God that would paste “good” and “bad” on every single person on
earth. Well, let me rephrase that a
bit. The problem with saying “good” or
its antonym is that we have such distinct notions in our head about what
constitutes this “not-evil.” The early
twentieth century bases of judgment seem so trite now: no smoking, no drinking,
no dancing, no playing cards, no skirts above the lower calf, no fraternizing
with actors. It seems trite because the
values have changed so much.
When Jesus speaks of “good”, he
really means “honorable.” At the onset,
it seems so subjective. To have honor
among Nazis is to be dissed by the masses.
But Jesus gives this qualifier—the only person who counts, in giving
honor, is God. I mean, if Simon Cowell
determines that you suck, who really cares?
But if God makes the determination that you are cool, or that you just
don’t make the cut, then it is a more serious judgment.
Thus, judgment is boiled down to
this: God saying to one group, “You’re my kind of people” and saying to another
group, “You don’t really make the cut for me.”
The first group, after the determination of the Judge, gains possession
of a new nation, which is ruled directly by God, and becomes the central nation
over it’s empire of the earth. The
second group, certainly the larger, is exiled from that nation and they make up
the outer fringes. Considering that
almost all of the merciful are within the bounds of the Nation of God, the
outer fringes just don’t sound like fun.
This kind of judgment isn’t
comfortable to a group of Christians who believe that the term “mercy” and
“judgement” cannot even date, let alone live together. They claim that Jesus hung out with lowlifes
(true) and so he, as God’s
representative, refuse to judge them (almost
true), and so Jesus’ mercy has nothing to do with judging people (wow, you need to read Matthew 23 again). The fact is that every sub group of Judaism
of the first century (and after) determined that there must be a line drawn
separating those on the “in” with God and those on the “outs”. Jesus was no different.36 What made Jesus so radical is not that he
erased the line, but where he placed the line.
Which is the rest of our creed.
2. “We believe that the disciples of Jesus who are poor and persecuted
will, at God’s judgement, obtain the
greatest blessings of God.
This
is the central point of both sets of beatitudes—in Matthew and Luke. This is not to deny that those who act in a
“pure and righteous” manner will not gain God’s blessings. This is indicated in Matthew’s list, by
giving a special line to the “pure in heart”.
But for Matthew—as well as for Luke in the broader context—it isn’t
enough to be “pure”. Sure, keeping your
legs closed until God approves and not bowing down before a moldy statue is
good and all, but it doesn’t equate the whole life that God is looking
for.
God is actually looking for the
folks who are so pure, so loving, so bold about Jesus, that they get in trouble
for it. This “trouble” looks differently
in different cases. Perhaps the trouble
is rejection by people—Jesus certainly said that his community should expect
that.37 But other kinds of
trouble also pop up. There will be
weeping in the Christian camp, and poverty.
Some of this may be as a result of persecution, some of this will be due
to the system set up to exclude Jesus people from the blessings of this
world. The fact that Jesus’ people don’t
collect possessions for themselves, but give them to the needy38;
that they aren’t cut-throat, but humble in their leadership39; that
they depend on God for their needs, even if those needs are just barely met40;
that they do good to those who hurt them, which may give their enemies cause to
think that they can get away with anything41—that might have
something to do with it. Jesus’
requirement is a lifestyle of vulnerability.
Let’s face it, Jesus’ way isn’t easy, and he doesn’t put up well with
compromise. God might as well put up a
sign, “Kingdom of
God : Fanatics need only
apply.”
3. “We
believe that the anawim should be envied, and that if we are persecuted or
obtain poverty for God’s sake, we should celebrate and feel honored.”
Saints
are cool—from a distance. Some of the
stories are great. Sebastian who was
pierced by a hundred arrows for speaking about Jesus. Michael Sattler who was tortured, had his
tongue cut out and then was drowned for teaching the Bible. Peter and John who were brought to court and
beaten for healing a man in Jesus’ name.
Anthony who lived in graveyards and the desert to live a life of
purity. The stories are inspiring, but,
ultimately, not for us. Not for real
people.
We are the people who pray, “Lord,
teach us patience, but not if it hurts too much.” We are the ones who want to live for God, as
long as it fits into our overall plan of achieving the American Dream. We are the ones who cry out “All for Jesus I
surrender”, but in practice, we limit our surrender to that which accommodates
our society’s limits and morality.
If someone falls into poverty or
persecution because of their stand for Jesus, how do we respond? Most people in the church would recommend a
compromise, a standing down. “You don’t
have to suffer like that—God doesn’t want that for you.” The church’s positions is: Stand for Jesus,
but sit down if your feet get sore. Or,
if there seems to be true injustice, there are the Jay Seculas and Rutherford
Institutes who will take the persecutors to court and make them feel economic
pain for the injustice of persecuting others.
Of course, Jesus’ command is a
little different. How do we respond to
persecution and pain and anguish for the sake of our religion? Have a party.
Crank up the dancing music. Set
out the little food that you need little forks to eat it with. Jesus’ bumper sticker is: Celebrate
Poverty.
To be obedient to Jesus, it isn’t
enough to just grit our teeth in difficulties, we need to rejoice, be happy,
throw a party, invite our friends over to get ecstatic with us, watch the
Wizard of Oz with the dip in bowls the shape of ruby slippers. “It’s the happy day!” Jesus says. “The day you get beat up and killed for God,
that’s the day we’ve all been waiting for.
The day you get sick and die because you were handing out tracts in a
blizzard—that’s the party day! The day
your airplane crashes because you were going to share the gospel with people in
the jungle—that’s the dancing day! The
day you get kicked out of your apartment because you’ve been inviting the
mentally ill to worship God with you there—Live it up! Get some horn blowers and fireworks and make
it seem like New Year’s day, because it’s better than that! It’s the day you’re assured of being right
before God!”
4. “We
believe that the disciples of Jesus who are conspicuously wealthy and honored today
will, at God’s judgment, obtain sorrow
and rejection.”
The
real question is not, however, what happens to those who suffer for God. That’s a no-brainer. We’re all pretty sure of that, God will take
care of them. They’ve got a place with
God. Okay, that’s fine. But what about all those who hang with God
and do all the religious things, but they don’t suffer? Perhaps they are doing the… um… opposite of
suffering in the present life. There are
people in God who are doing really well.
And, let’s face it, these
non-suffering folks, the ones who have an excellent bank account (“for many
years, frankly, and the accumulated interest is really very healthy and can’t
be given away willy-nilly”), and a really nice home (“meant really for family
and friends, it just wouldn’t be comfortable to have strangers stay there”),
and a car that almost never breaks down (“but I couldn’t pick up hitchhikers,
because, well, who knows what they would do”) and a line of credit that doesn’t
end (“and we have to take care as to what we invest in, because otherwise we
couldn’t be trusted financially”)—these non-suffering folk are really the ones
who pays the bills in the church.
These aren’t vulnerable in this world, but they do
their part, right? They show up on
Sunday, sing as loud as anyone else, head committees, pay for the new building,
makes sure the pastor has a decent salary.
So, God has his place for them, right?
Absolutely. God has a place for them. It’s called “the outer darkness.”
Paul and Barnabas at one point set
out to do some revival meetings. The
churches they had planted were struggling spiritually, so the apostles had a
powerful message to give to them. The
summary we have received is one sentence, “We shall only enter God’s kingdom
through much tribulation.”42
In other words, the ONLY door to God’s ultimate blessing is difficulty,
sacrifice, persecution and hardship.
There isn’t any other way.
This doesn’t mean that God doesn’t
bless people on earth. Oh, my, I have
seen many people blessed. Many rich
people today are blessed in their lifetimes beyond the dreams of those who had
lived on earth for more than ten thousand years of history. I mean, indoor plumbing, a health care system
that can actually cure more illness than it causes, the ability to fill rooms
with such variety of entertainment as has never been seen, never without food,
never thirsty, never homeless. Such a
plenty has never been seen in the history of the world for so many people. This is God’s blessing. And for those who are content to accept this
blessing, this is all they will get.
- For those who have all their needs met, and never meet hunger—God has for them a place of hunger.
- For those who surround themselves with pleasantries and joy—God has for them a place of tragedy.
- For those who reward themselves for the simple act of living—God will strip away all trophies.
- For those who secure themselves by assuring their own wealth and separation from the poor—God will make them poor and expose them to eternal insecurity.
No, this isn’t funny. This isn’t entertaining. It’s scary.
This is worse than Alien, worse than the Exorcist. This is the real spiritual existence. And for those who have all the world has to
give—they should be grabbing someone’s arm, because the music is getting
ominous.
5. “We believe that Jesus’ disciples who are honored and wealthy should
set these benefits aside for the sake of our needy counterparts, so they can
receive true honor and wealth.”
But
Jesus’ beatitudes aren’t one of those horror movies that finishes with “The
End?” They are more like an epic
move—Laurence of Arabia, Gone With The Wind, Top Gun—the center of which you
find yourself almost weeping and breathing hard in your empathy with the
hero(ine). But in the end, through some
terrible tragedies and sacrifices, the hero(ine) survives and achieves glorious
honor. This is the story Jesus is
telling as well.
Have you
ever worked for the needy? Those who are
really needy, those whom our society calls “the bottom of the barrel”, for whom
no real help exists? To be friends with the friendless, to offer yourself to
the needy, it is a daily sacrifice. You
constantly struggle with how much to give, are you being taken advantage of,
what is the real need, who of all the worthies should you give to with the limited
resources you have? Inevitably, you give
more than you realistically can, and personal and social conflicts arise. Your health fails. Your family and friends whom you trusted no
longer find you to be trustworthy. You
become an alien to all those whom you have loved. You become the avoided, the
dispossessed. The one who surrenders
themselves to the needy becomes one with the needy. The one who sacrifices for the anawim becomes
the anawim themselves.
This is
the challenge to the wealthy, the well-loved, the sheltered. Expose yourself to those whom you most
fear—those whose needs far outweigh your ability to help them. Perhaps you will gain great satisfaction
doing the work. Perhaps you will obtain
prizes and be Time’s Man of the Year.
But let me be brutally
honest (as if I hadn't been before). Of the few of you who make the
choice to sacrifice all you have for the needy, to obtain God’s glory instead
of security and inner peace—you will be put under the bulldozer. You will go to doctors and they won’t be able
to tell you what’s wrong. You will be
disinherited by proper society. You will
have friends who tell you “you’ve just got to stop, for your own sake” but God
won’t let you. You will wonder why you
are exhausted all the time. You will go
to bed each night as if you had been beaten.43 You will walk the streets and cry out to God,
“Just give me rest!” but the rest never seems to come. The needy themselves will blame you for not
giving enough. You will rack your brain
to find ways to really help them, to really meet their true needs, and find no
solution. You will cry and weep and
mourn and wonder why God put you in this place.
To do this work. To have what
seems to be a pointless life.
Now I’ll tell you a secret. If you sacrifice yourself and feel all
this—you’ve made it. You’re in. It’s time to celebrate. It’s time to party. Yeah, it seems pointless. To Jeremiah speaking about the destruction of
Jerusalem seems
pointless because no one he could see would listen. To David it all seemed pointless because his
theocratic monarchy came crashing around his ears. To the disciples of Jesus it all seemed
pointless because their Lord, their Savior was dying on a cross. Yeah, it all seems worthless—without
resurrection. Without God.
“Vanity, vanity, all it
vanity—everything done under the sun is vanity.” That’s Scripture. That’s God’s word. But, you see, if we embrace the vanity of
God, the foolishness of God, the sacrifice of ourselves for the poor and needy,
the life of the anawim—then we get all that exists above the sun. Under the sun? Screw under the sun. I’m looking for the best retirement plan that
exists. Sure, the salary’s lousy. But the benefits—nothing can compare to them. And the only way to obtain them is to
sacrifice one’s wealth and to stand with the anawim.
Notes
36. The polar opposites of Jesus is that although he welcomed
sinners and the outcast into the kingdom (Mark 2:16-17; Luke 19:10), yet he
also condemned people to hell on the smallest sins, such as insulting another
and looking at the opposite sex with lust (Matthew 5:22, 28-29). Some people see Jesus as being the most
lenient, while others see him as being the most strict. Jesus’ point was that there are two
requirements to enter into God’s utopia (Mark 1:15): The first is repentance. This is recognizing the evil one has done and
doing what one can to change it. This is
what the religious leaders refused to do, because they refused to agree with
Jesus about what sin is. Sin, according
to Jesus, is refusing to give to the needy, acting hypocritically, and making
excuses for one’s sinful actions (Luke 16:19-23; Matthew 13:41-42; Matthew
5:21-29). Thus, Jesus said, those who
sinned terribly but recognized their need for repentance would enter God’s
utopia, but those who refused to recognize their own personal (not theological)
sin would be left out (Matthew 21:31-32).
The second requirement is to trust God to live a non-survival lifestyle
in the midst of a world trying to survive. That’s what this chapter’s
about. Read on!
37. Jesus promised persecution to his disciples. John 15:18-16:3; Matthew 10:34-39; Mark
8:31-38.
38. Luke 12:33; Acts 2:44-45.
39. Luke 22:25-27
40. Matthew 6:25-34.
41. Matthew 5:38-48.
42. Acts 14:22. Also, see
II Timothy 3:12.
43. Which is a quote from Louis Guanella.
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