- Sermon on the Mount
- Sermon on the Mount 2
- Sermon on the Mount – Salt and Light (Part 1)
Over the next year in our church, I am speaking on the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7). Over the last few months, I have been reflecting on the famous inaugural speech from Jesus, as he seems to outline his manifesto. It is gripping, scary, and very enticing. Imagine a world where everyone lived this sermon? Where we loved our enemies, sorted out our differences, remained faithful to those we loved in heart and action, where we resolved our anger towards others, didn’t worry about tomorrow but trusted God, where we didn’t judge others, and weren’t consumed by the pursuit of money, but served God?
Sounds a bit like heaven on earth.
And so, this last Sunday, I opened the series, primarily looking at the context for the sermon. Here is a summary. You can listen to it here, once it is uploaded in a day or two. Your thoughts and comments would be appreciated, as we learn together, and discern what God is saying to us.
The Context
Jesus came announcing the Kingdom had come, and was here (Mt 4:17). Now. Not some future hope (although it was surely that too). But the possibility of living in the Kingdom on earth, now. Here.
To demonstrate that the Kingdom had come, Jesus travelled throughout Galilee, healing people who were sick and ill, setting people free, and preaching about the Kingdom (Mt 4:23-25). Crowds followed him, as this revival spread. And we come to Mt 5:1-2 …
Now when he saw the crowds, he went up on a mountainside and sat down. His disciples came to him, and he began to teach them saying:
Jesus left the revival (as good as it was) because it was too small a vision. I believe he had seen something about the Kingdom, that was wouldn’t just change a few people’s lives, but change the world.
A New Community
Jesus saw a community of God’s people, who would live out the Kingdom life, on earth. Groups of people, who would realise the instability of the worlds system, that one day will eventually pass away, and would live with a different set of values.
For ages, I have always thought of the sermon on the mount as an individual ethic. But it isn’t. It is how we can live in Christian community. A community that will embody the Kingdom. Jesus leaves the crowds; his disciples follow (not the 12, as they weren’t all together yet – but a group of people who were willing to follow Jesus). Jesus has a vision of them forming a visible Christian community, that would show people there is a different (and better) way to live.
A Missional Community
This community is at its heart, a missional community. Not necessarily in what is does, but in who it is. We are salt and light. We reveal the nature of God, by the way we love, and forgive, and trust God, and don’t judge, and don’t rely on power, manipulation, status, or position.
We don’t form community that is hidden or removed from the world in which we live. We live this out, in the midst of the world around. But we aren’t of the same system. As Hauerwas says in the title of his book, we are “resident aliens”
Turn the world upside down
Jesus invites us into this kind of community. It isn’t a question of are we saved or not. Or will we go to heaven. But to go beyond faith in Christ being for our personal needs, to living and incarnating the Kingdom with others. And this will turn the world upside down. When Paul & Silas were in Thessalonica, they upset some of the Jews and people were becoming Christians (were they worried about their diminished influence?) and they went to get them questioned, shouting “these men have caused trouble all over the world!” (NIV). Which doesn’t sound that attractive to me! But it is more helpfully translated “these who have turned the world upside down have come here too“. (NKJV).
Jesus left the revival, because he has a vision of a Kingdom and a Kingdom people who would turn the world upside down. He invites us, to move beyond our allegiances to this system and values that characterise so much of this world, to turn the world upside down.
Now I think that is worth giving our lives to.
What do you think?
I will write some more on the background, and include some of the quotes later in the week. But in the meantime, here is some food for thought and discussion.
Tags: Missional, Sermon, Sermon on the Mount
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