BibleProject - The Powerless, Grieving, and Unimportant (The Beatitudes Pt. 2)
Episode Date: January 29, 2024Sermon the Mount E5 ā What does it mean to be poor in spirit, mourning, and meek? Jesus uses these words in the opening of the Sermon on the Mount, and the guys examine them in biblical Greek and He...brew, finding that a better translation may be āpowerless,ā āgrieving,ā and āunimportant.ā These are the people that Jesus believes will have the āgood life.ā How can that be? In this episode, Jon, Tim, and guests explore the first triad of the Beatitudes, shedding light on how those at the bottom of society are actually better prepared to receive the kingdom of the skies.View more resources on our website āTimestampsĀ Chapter 1: A Kingdom for the Powerless (01:25-13:50)Chapter 2: Comfort for the Grieving (13:50-21:07Chapter 3: Making Space for Grief (21:07-24:15)Chapter 4: An Inheritance for the Unimportant (24:15-35:19)Chapter 5: Portraying a Jesus-Style Revolution (35:19-40:40)Referenced ResourcesA Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Gospel According to Saint Matthew (The International Critical Commentary, Vol. 1) by Dale C. Allison Jr., Christopher M. Tuckett, Graham I. DaviesInterested in more? Check out Timās library here.You can experience our entire library of resources in the BibleProject app, available for Android and iOS.Show MusicĀ āDefender (Instrumental)ā by TENTSOriginal Sermon on the Mount music by Richie KohenShow CreditsDan Gummel is the Creative Producer for todayās show. Production of todayās episode is by Lindsey Ponder, producer; Cooper Peltz, managing producer; Colin Wilson, producer; and Stephanie Tam, consultant and editor. Tyler Bailey and Yanii Evans are our audio editors. Tyler Bailey is also our audio engineer, and he provided our sound design and mix. JB Witty does our show notes, and Hannah Woo provides the annotations for our app. Special thanks to Ben Tertin, Josh Espasandin, Rose Mayer, and Nyssa Oru. Todayās hosts are Jon Collins and Michelle Jones.Powered and distributed by Simplecast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, this is Tyler at Bible Project. I record and mix the podcast. This year we're exploring Jesus'
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Here's the episode.
This is Bible Project Podcast, and we're reading through the Sermon on the Mount.
We're at the very beginning, nine statements about who is at the center of experiencing
God's coming blessings.
I'm John Collins, and with me is co- center of experiencing God's coming blessings.
I'm John Collins and with me is co-host Michelle Jones.
Hi Michelle.
Hi John.
Okay, so these nine statements, they work in three pairs of three.
Three triads.
Today we're going to go over the first triad.
The good life belongs to those who are poor in spirit because theirs is the kingdom of
the skies.
The good life belongs to those who mourn because they will be comforted.
And the good life belongs to the meek
because they will inherit the land.
That's the triad.
Now we're gonna start with the poor in spirit.
Okay, so I grew up with that phrase, poor in spirit.
And I always thought it meant like to be downtrodden,
to be having a rough life, to be depressed,
to be just kind of life, to be depressed,
to be just kind of sad.
Hmm, yeah, that's interesting.
I grew up thinking this phrase,
poor in spirit, meant to be humble.
So you're thinking humble, I'm thinking humiliated.
That's right.
Now Tim is gonna talk us through
what this word means, poor in spirit,
and what we're gonna find is it actually means less
of what I thought and a little bit more of what you thought.
Okay, I like being right.
Alright.
Here's Tim and John talking about the poor in spirit. Thanks for joining us.
Here we go.
Should we dive in? Let's dive into them.
Okay.
First one.
The good life belongs to the impoverished in spirit, NIV, porn spirit, because theirs
is the kingdom of the skies.
Kingdom of the skies.
And honestly, I don't know what it means,
the poor in spirit.
So the truth, I guess I don't really know what that means.
Yeah, we're going to unpack it right now.
Yeah, so the Greek phrase Jesus uses,
first word, tokas, which means poor,
which we'll talk about.
And then the second word, you know, the spirit or breath.
Numa.
Numa, yeah.
So, poor in relation to their numa.
Yeah, which is in Hebrew Ruach.
In Hebrew, uh, to Ruach. Yeah.
So this is a great example of the Greek words, but this is all about the Hebrew Bible.
Where these words come from and what they mean in Hebrew Bible.
Yeah. So, man, upload our conversation on the Spirit of God from years ago.
Yeah. Wow.
Maybe three years ago even.
Could that have been like hundreds of conversations ago?
Yes, hundreds of hours of conversations ago.
Wow. Okay. So, ruach, the Hebrew word,
refers in its essence to invisible energy.
Yeah.
We came to that together or did you already kind of have that?
I just remember feeling like energy became the word.
We found that formulation together.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Through a lot of talking.
Invisible energy and that can be impersonal energy.
Like wind.
Like wind.
Or it can be the presence of someone's personal life energy.
Which we would call spirit.
Spirit.
Yep.
And that's the meaning when it's the Ruach of God.
And oftentimes the biblical author will use those two
Yes, totally.
meanings in the same time.
Exactly.
So one of the standard ways to talk about human life energy
is to talk about their Ruach,
but because it comes from God,
ultimately it can be called God's,
the breath of God.
So here's just one classic example in Job,
Job 1210, where Job says, in God's hand is
the nephesh, the being of every creature, and the ruach of all humanity.
All of the life energy of all humanity is in God's hand.
It comes from God.
Yeah.
Now, it's humanity's ruach in that it's the energy and the vitality that we are animated
with.
Yeah.
But it comes ultimately from God.
So Ruach is one of the standard ways you can talk about just a person's vibe.
What makes them go?
Yeah.
Yeah.
The Ruach.
You're vibing.
So that basic meaning of Ruach then can become the basis for a particular kind of Hebrew phrase where you
describe someone as X of spirit or X in their spirit.
To describe what is that life energy?
To describe its quality.
Quality of the life energy.
Yeah, just let me show you examples.
Job 711, he says the distress of my Ruach.
He's talking about a suffering.
And literally the word distress means squeezed.
When you're squeezed.
The squeezedness of my spirit.
So it's like his life vitality is in a vice.
And it's like squeezed.
Stress of spirit.
Stress has that same kind of squeezing mentality.
Yeah, it does.
Genesis 2635, Isaac has a bitterness of spirit. Stress has that same kind of squeezing mentality. Yeah, it does. Genesis 2635, Isaac has a bitterness of spirit.
What he's bitter about is that his son married two wives that he really doesn't like.
Ezekiel, after he sees the crazy throne, divine throne, chariot of Godmobile, that tells him
to go prophesy to the Israelites. He's super angry.
And he walks away bitter and hot of spirit. He's ticked off. He's bitter and angry.
Yeah. He's got some hulk energy going on.
And just one last one, because these are really helpful for understanding the phrase Jesus uses.
Proverbs 15.4 describes the one who is broken of spirit.
Isn't that interesting?
Yeah, broken of spirit.
That's like bottom of the well, it feels like.
You can't get back up.
I mean, if you're a Ruach,
if the spirit there is your life vitality,
if that's broken.
It's broken.
You're in life support.
Yeah, which doesn't necessarily mean,
in fact, here, let me read the proverb just so we can get a context for it Proverbs 15 for a
Soothing tongue is a tree of life
But distortion in the tongue
Makes one broken of spirit lies lies
When you speak kind
Healing words to somebody that's a tree of life.
Brings abundance.
When you twist reality, it brings a crushing of the spirit.
So interesting, in the parallelism of the verse, when you have a soothing tongue or
a distorted tongue, you have the tree of life and the opposite of the tree of life is being
crushed of spirit.
Crushed of spirit.
Yeah. Or broken of spirit. Yeah, or broken of spirit.
Yeah.
Okay, I'm just now going to fit Jesus' saying into it.
He speaks of those who are impoverished of spirit.
Impoverished.
What does that word mean?
Oh, poor.
In English, we have the words poor, poverty, and impoverished.
It's not having resources.
Yeah, lack. A not having resources. Yeah, lack.
A lack of resources.
Yeah.
When your life energy doesn't have fuel.
Yeah, you lack vitality and you lack ability, right?
Because your Ruach is what makes you get up and go.
And you don't have the power to get up and go.
Is depressed a good?
If Ruach is about this power or energy,
then what we're talking about is a lack of power.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, so I guess if you're thinking on an individual
psychological level, depressed.
That's what I am thinking, individual.
Should I be thinking more corporate here?
Oh, well, if you're thinking of what people would observe,
and especially where the next two Beatitudes are going,
I think Jesus is
thinking more on a social level. I think powerless without power. You lack the energy to do what
needs to be done. If Ruach is your energy and ability.
Here's a crew and their collective like Ruach, Numa is lacking in resources.
The word poor is people without economic social stability and resources.
Yeah.
And obviously practically they don't have a lot of money or resources or influence.
But metaphorically then their life energy is also lacking.
Yeah, that's right. Yeah, correct. So there's a couple of commentaries out there on Matthew that
are like 10 or perhaps 20 times the length of the actual book of Matthew. But one of them was
produced by two scholars, W.D. Davies, and then another historical Jesus
scholar, Dale Allison.
It's massive.
It's a three volume, but dude, it's like no stone unturned.
You can find whole pages on just one or two words.
It's awesome.
What they note is in the history of interpretation, poor and spirit has been given what they call a religious
meaning, meaning those who lack spiritual excitement or energy, the poor in spirit,
people who aren't spiritually or religiously influential or significant.
That's what they call the religious meaning.
And then there's a whole strand in the history of interpretation of this phrase that they
call the economic meaning, which is the social economic meaning of poor?
So here's their take on it. They say it must be stressed that the religious meaning of poor
Does not exclude its economic meaning rather for Jesus the two go together
with probably the majority of Jesus's audience, the religious state of poverty,
was matched by an outward condition.
They suffered literal poverty
and experienced firsthand economic inequities.
They knew the meaning of being needy
because they were poor in spirit and poor in fact.
They are literally without power
in the religious structures of their day. When
Caiaphas the High Priest makes a decision, he doesn't like to do a poll. What do the
poor in Galilee think? That kind of thing. So the powerless, I like the word powerless.
The powerless of spirit? The powerless. If the spirit is talking about one's energy
or vitality or power and poor means
a lack of power less.
So you think a good translation could be the good life belongs to the powerless.
That would be an interpretive...
An interpretive translate.
Yeah, that's right. It would be interpreting the meaning of this phrase.
Yeah.
To have a poverty of spirit. But I think powerless is a good interpretation.
So the spirit is lost to me, if you just say powerless.
Ah, that's because the word spirit has been connected to the word power.
Power less.
Ah.
Less of power.
Poor of spirit, lacking in power.
Hmm.
Because what does the word spirit mean there?
Some people take it to mean poor in the spiritual realm or in the world of spiritual things.
And that's what I'm saying.
It actually doesn't mean.
Got it.
The spirit is using this.
Spirit is about my life energy, my power.
My life energy.
My ability to get up and do things in the world.
And this is a group of people who...
They're impoverished.
They're impoverished in their... In their ability to get things done. In the world. And this is a group of people who... They're impoverished. They're impoverished in their ability to get things done.
In the world structure and have influence.
Yeah, that's right. And that becomes even more probable that Jesus is zeroing in on that in
light of the next two.
What's great about that translation is, what's a better word than translation since we're doing
a bit of a...
It's an interpretation as well, or paraphrase. Without that translation, what's a better word than translation since we're doing a bit of a...
It's an interpretation as well, or paraphrase.
What's good about that paraphrase is it really helps you feel that counterintuitive tension.
The good life belongs to the powerless.
What?
Yes.
A blessed or the poor in spirit.
That's just kind of gotten so flattened out.
It's like, okay, I think I get it.
I'm going to be this.
I don't know.
Like I said, I didn't actually know what it meant.
Yeah.
But even you have that little reflex of like, I need to be or I want to be like.
Oh, right.
But you don't get that when you say, bless her the power last year.
It's like, why do you talk about Jesus?
Yeah.
This is not a state that you would wish upon somebody.
But Jesus is saying to people who find themselves in this state
are in fact the privileged ones
because they are in a position
to receive the kingdom of the skies.
The reign of God is coming to them.
There will be other people like Zacchaeus
or Nicodemus who will enter the kingdom
and they would not be counted
among the powerless, right? Sure. But there is something about being in a powerless position
in a society that makes that person more easily grasped and understand the upside down value
system of the reign of God. I think that's what Jesus is announcing here.
He's looking out at farmers, fishermen, right?
Traders, merchants, beggars, sex workers.
This is the crew.
He had around himself and he says,
the good life belongs to you because here I am,
offering you first the reign of the skies.
The good life is for the powerless. You know, that's interesting because when you think about it, those who don't have power in their hands or don't grasp at it, They're actually able to see the kingdom, and their hands are open and ready to take hold of it.
We live in a world where the good life is
for the movers and the shakers,
and Jesus is saying,
the good life is for the empty-handed,
because theirs is the kingdom.
And the next statement follows.
If you don't have a lot of inner resources,
if your life is on the margins, likely you're experiencing a lot of loss and death and grief.
Well Jesus says surprisingly, the good life is also for those who grieve.
Here's Tim and John.
The good life belongs to those who grieve, for they will be comforted."
Grief and comfort, they mean in English, actually pretty close, map on pretty closely to what
they mean in the Bible.
Grief is associated with death, primarily, death and loss, these words, to mourn or to
grieve, but I think they do in English too, don't you think so?
And then the phrase comfort is particularly paired with grief over loss and death.
So for example, this is in the book of Genesis.
Ah, this is in the story of when Joseph gets sold into slavery and his brothers get his
coat and dip it in the animal blood.
And so when Jacob sees the coat with blood, this is Genesis 37, Jacob is
Joseph's dad. Jacob tore his clothes, he put on satcloth. So here these are the cultural
practices of grieving over the dead and he grieved for his son many days. His sons and daughters came to
comfort him. But he refused to be comforted,
saying no. So I could put in front of you a slew of passages where these words for grief
and then words of comfort are paired and that's the pair that Jesus is drawing on here. Okay. So the good life belongs to people who experience life in a constant state of grieving.
Because they're experiencing death and loss.
Yes.
And to be comforted then means to what exactly?
Yeah.
Well, okay.
So it's these, the second line of all the Beatitudes are typically going
to be oriented towards the future or present overturning of the age, the arrival of God's
kingdom.
So here he's standing on the shoulders of the Israelite prophets.
Isaiah 40, comfort, comfort my people.
Exile is over.
The New Jerusalem is on its way.
That will be the comfort for those who grieve and mourn.
The state in which you don't need to grieve anymore.
Yeah, your time of grieving will be over because restoration.
Think Job.
Job was in a state of grieving, but by the end his fortunes, his circumstances are all
reversed and restored, and that's his comfort.
To find comfort after grief means to experience some new restored kind of life after a prolonged
period of loss and grief over death. I think the standard English translation of this is
mourn, and again, that just sounds more religious,
and whereas the word grief sounds, I think, lands as a broader usage.
The good life belongs to those who experience death and loss.
Yes.
Yeah.
Because they will be comforted.
Now, there's a particular layer of meaning here about grief as it relates to the story of the
Bible.
The state of the exile, the Babylonian exile, brought about a period of grief and comfort
became an icon, as it does in the book of Isaiah, for the new Jerusalem, the restoration
of Jerusalem.
A hundred or so years after Nebuchadnezzar took out Jerusalem, and after the people were
exiled from Jerusalem, a bunch of people come back.
This is what the books of Ezra and Nehemiah are about.
And it's cool, but not great.
It's the narrative.
It's a reflection of, it's a diminished version of what they had before.
Correct.
That's right.
And so in both stories of the characters, Ezra and Nehemiah, there's
moments I haven't marked here. One's in Ezra chapter 10, where all of his plans to restore
Jerusalem and the temple, they all start falling apart in Ezra chapter 10. And so he starts
fasting, eating no food, drinking no water. And he says he's in a state of mourning, grieving
over the unfaithfulness of the exiles. So now the unfaithfulness of Israel, living in
prolonged violation of the covenant under oppressed oppression by rulers, is called grieving.
And then same with Nehemiah in chapter one, when he hears about the state of Jerusalem all broken down and ruins, he grieves and mourns and prays. So there's also within the
biblical story, the state of grieving is waiting for the restoration and the fulfillment of God's
promises is also identified as a state of grieving. So I think there's probably both layers
to what Jesus is saying here.
There's like a social kind of political layer.
Yeah.
Of the people that he's like looking at, as he says this.
Everyone does experience loss,
but there's something about when you have power,
you can ignore it.
Yeah, you have distractions. Yeah, you can ignore it. Yeah, you have distractions. You can distract yourself.
And so then you don't actually have to grieve. You can skip over the grieving.
It's kind of what modern life is oftentimes. We don't want to spend time
grieving and being sad. Let's just move on because when you have power, you don't
have to grieve. But when you don't have power, you're just stuck having to grieve.
Yep.
Yeah.
You have to face it.
You have to face it.
Mortality, death, but not just in their existential sense, in their like social sense of like,
I can't change these circumstances.
There's no other way out of this.
I don't have another option. It's an appropriate twin to the poor of spirit,
being powerless in the first one.
The good life belongs to those who experience the world
and they understand that this is the world in a state worth grieving over.
My city is in a state worth grieving over.
My city is in a state worth grieving over. If you're glibly moving through life
and everything's dandy,
you're probably not paying attention.
Wouldn't that be an implication of this?
Right.
And the good life belongs to those who do pay attention
and paradoxically it will make you sad. The good life belongs to those who do pay attention, and paradoxically it will make you sad.
The good life belongs to those who will pay attention to loss and grief.
And it may be your own, in which case you can't avoid it.
But it may be you start noticing other people's loss and pain.
And that also will put you into a state of grieving.
And that's a fortunate place to be, according to Jesus.
That's profound, man.
I think we need a bigger vision for the space and time it takes to grieve.
So to help me unpack this, I have back in the studio Bible Project scholar Ben Tertine.
Hi Ben, thanks for coming.
Yeah, thank you. Where should we go first?
I want you to walk us through a story of grieving, particularly the one in Genesis where Joseph has to bury his father.
Okay, so check this out. In Genesis 50, let me just read it here. Then Joseph hugged his father's face and he wept
over him and he kissed him. Joseph instructed the physicians in his service to embalm his
father and so they did. And they took 40 days to do the embalming. You keep reading, then they mourned for 70 days and when I say they,
it's not just Joseph and company or family. It says the Egyptians mourned for him for 70 days.
So there was this whole like national communal mourning period and if you, you know,
tell us up, yeah, you got 40, 70, then keep
reading and they ask for permission, can I take Jacob, my father, back up to the
Land of Canaan to be buried and when they arrive there, there's seven more days.
So you get from that story, but just look for different instances of mourning
and grieving throughout the Hebrew Bible and you'll pick up on this all the
time. It's public, not just private. And there is a, it's the old phrase of steering into
the skid, you know, when your car fishtails out the back, instead of turning away, you
go at it. They're intentionally focusing on the pain for extended periods of time, far longer than we
would ever be comfortable doing. So Jesus is saying a good life actually requires you to have a
capacity for grief. Yes, yes. And turn toward this king, Jesus, and participate with his way.
Actually, join with him as he says, this is actually good for you.
This is good for a human being to not just pretend
in the face of tragedy, death, loss and corruption of life,
to just pretend it's okay.
So that's why we have Jesus when he goes to see Lazarus.
He knows I went there to raise this guy.
That's a perfect example.
And yet he still weeps.
He still, he still grieves about his death.
Yes.
He is unwilling to minimize what's going on.
And the Queen Elizabeth said that grief is the price we pay for loving.
And this feels like that.
It totally does. The Xermen on the Mount is
about the kingdom of God, which is a world of people all compelled by love.
Yes.
The third and final statement in this triad is the good life belongs to the meek. What does this word meek mean to Jesus?
Is meek the best translation?
Here's Tim and John.
All right.
The third saying of Jesus about the good life is most famous or well-known for
blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.
Blessed are the meek.
Yes.
Now for a whole bunch of reasons, that way of phrasing in English is going to lead our
minds down a totally wrong path to get what Jesus was trying to communicate.
Meek and mild. Yeah. So let me go for this as a start.
Okay. So the good life belongs to the afflicted because they will inherit the land. The afflicted.
The afflicted. Another English word that could get us there much more closely than meek would be the unimportant.
So there's nothing for it.
We just have to know what words Jesus is activating.
What's the background of around these words?
And what's cool is both this word, the afflicted or the unimportant one, and also the phrase,
they will inherit the land.
They both are hyperlinks to very clear passages
in Isaiah and the Psalms.
And when you turn there, then like, it's not hard to get it.
So should we just do that?
Yeah.
Okay.
All right.
So the Greek word gets translated as meek, is the Greek word praus, which in the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible,
that is a couple hundred years before Jesus, called the Septuagint,
this word praus was one of the most common ways to translate into Greek a Hebrew word.
And the Hebrew word is ani, ani.
And I'm just going to read a few Psalms where this word ani appears.
And these are both where this word appears.
And if you read this Greek Septuagint version of these Psalms,
it's also the Greek word pragus, which is the word Jesus uses here.
So Psalm 76,
God, you caused your justice to be heard from heaven. The earth was afraid and stood still when God arose for justice to save all of the
onee of the earth.
The onee of the earth are saved from God's judgment.
No, by God's judgment.
God's judgment is what saves them.
What did I say?
You're saved from God's judgment. Oh's judgment is what saves them. What did I say? You're saved from God's judgment.
Oh, okay. Yeah.
That's good Protestants thing.
That's not what Jesus is saying or the Psalm.
Sometimes you define judgment as justice. You sometimes just swap that word because of that
reason.
Because it's what it means.
Oh, that's how you do it.
Our modern use of the word justice captures much more what the biblical authors say of
judgment.
So, the point is that whoever the A'ni are, they're a group of people that need to be
rescued and they will be rescued when God brings ultimate justice.
Now, what's unspoken here is the Ai are people who are being abused and taken advantage by the wicked.
And God's justice will confront the wicked resulting in deliverance for the Ani.
That's the context of this song.
Yep. Yeah. It's appealing to a judgment scene where there's somebody being accused of wrongdoing
against the Ani. So the Ani are people who have wrong done against them.
wrongdoing against the on the on the or people who have wrong done against them. Okay. So let's that's first category. Mm-hmm. Ooh, in Job 24, Job describes the worst kind of
guy you could imagine. It's a portrait of the wicked man. Okay. In Job's point of view.
And he describes it in vivid imagery, you know, the wicked man is somebody who drives
away the donkey of an orphan. He takes the widow's ox for their own debtor's pledge. He's describing somebody who's heartless
Yeah, so he sees the donkey of an orphan. He's like nice donkey
I'm I I deserve that
Mmm, you just take it and it's like the you know, you had a name, the orphan, you know, named it and cared
for it. And the rich man is like, who you don't matter.
Yeah.
That's the image here.
Yes.
Okay. They push the needy aside on the road. The on me of the land hide themselves when
the wicked man comes.
Yeah.
Okay. So you're getting the idea.
Because you're vulnerable. This guy wants to take advantage of that. Yeah, the Ani are somebody who's in a social position of unimportance,
but also you lack, it's very similar to being powerless to the poor in spirit.
It is similar.
So it's, you are in a social position where it's easy for people to take advantage of you.
You're a social outsider from centers of the resources and social capital and that's the Ani. So David
calls himself an Ani. When he is out in the wilderness fleeing from Saul and there's poems
in the Psalms where David describes himself as the ani.
The outcast. Yeah, and he's not poor. He's connected to the royal family.
But he is a social outcast in that season of his life. And so he's got to pull together his own
community of support. He's on the run and he's got an oppressor So, that's the ani and the praus in Greek. Okay. Now, that's step one. Step two is they will inherit the land. So, when we're talking about land
inheritance, we're on one level, there's a hyperlink here that we'll look at, but land
inheritance is about wealth and the ability to haveā¦
The minion?
Yeah, economic means to generate wealth, which makes you a contributing, valuable member of
the community. And this was a culture where land ownership was the primary way to generate wealth.
And it's probably one of the very clear things the afflicted will lack.
Yes, yeah, that's right.
Yep, land, yeah, yeah.
Be a landowner puts you in kind of in a class that would not be considered the une.
Yeah, and that's true in most societies throughout human history that have set up systems of
private property and so on.
So that's one piece.
Another piece on the ground in first century Galilee and Judea in the land of Israel, these
are their ancestral lands that Israel inherited in the days of Joshua.
And it's very clear that they do not have independent freedom on their land because
it's occupied
territory.
And you think so many of Jesus' parables are filled with images of landowners or managers
who hire servants to work on the land.
And he's reflecting on real life, like the land was being bought up by non-Israelites
who don't live nearby.
They live in Italy. They
live on Cyprus. They live up on the coast. And so you've got Moshe and Esther who are
now day laborers on the very land that their great, great, great grandfather and mother
like owned as part of their tribal inheritance. That's the tragedy here.
Yeah.
So to say they will inherit the land is pretty explosive.
Politically.
Political language. Yeah, that's one layer of what's going on here.
That's a second layer.
Oh, you're right. Second layer. So now here's another layer.
They will inherit the land is straight up a quotation from Psalm 37.
So shall we read it? Yes. All right. Psalm 37 verse 7.
Be still before the Lord. Wait patiently for him. Don't be anxious when people succeed in their ways
and carry out their wicked schemes. Refrain from anger. Turn from your hot anger. Don't be anxious. It will
only lead to ra, the Hebrew word badness. For those who are evil will be destroyed,
but those who hope in Yahweh will inherit the land. A little while, the wicked will be no more. You will look for them, they will
not be found. But the ani, they will inherit the land and enjoy shalom and tov. Goodness,
peace and goodness.
Okay. Now, this hyperlink is to that second layer of Israel being, was this written in exile?
So what we're tapping into in a poem like this is if Israel is no longer in a position
of having Eden's freedom and responsibility over their land, we're definitely in the realm
of the covenant curses of Deuteronomy and God has handed Israel over to foreign oppressors. And when you're living in that scenario, it's
very over after generations, it's very easy to think this is just how it is and the wicked
are winning and how it's going to be. And so Psalm 37 is one of many, many poems that hope for Israel's
restoration to the land as the time of comfort and the time of inheriting the reign, the
kingdom of the heavens here on earth, or in this case, inheriting the land. So the position
of the Psalm is very much within the larger biblical story of Israel
and so on.
All right, so that's the role of the afflicted in inheriting the land.
So Jesus is speaking in very real terms to Galilean, Israelites who are poor, who don't
have any land, who are grieving over the state of Israel, oppressed by foreigners, and by their own people who are in league with the foreigners.
And, you know, they were whatever, edged out of their land holdings,
generations ago or recently.
And that's the context for Jesus saying how good is life.
The good life belongs to those who are unimportant, to those who are on the
outside of centers of power and influence, because something is happening here when the
reign of God arrives that is going to bring about the new creation, which will be the ultimate land
inheritance.
which will be the ultimate land inheritance.
Okay, so before we sign off, we want to give you a little behind-the-scenes look at a video we made here at Bible Project about these statements of the good life.
Here is our producer, Dan, talking to some of our artists.
talking to some of our artists. Okay, Dan here, and I'm going to walk downstairs to the animation studio and talk with our
friends Josh and Nisa.
You guys ready to do this?
Okay, I was really excited to talk to you guys because the scene that stood out to me the most in
video number two was centered around the idea of blessed or the meek or as Tim and John say.
Blessed are the unimportant for they will inherit the land.
These people are not powerful or important but just wait, Jesus says, because one day it
will be you all who are ruling the world.
I'd love to hear the creative process behind that.
What's happening right here?
This portion of the scene, we're moving from the mountaintop where Jesus is given his sermon
to this inner world portrayal of a throne room that has an elevated throne with a little king on it.
And then right at the moment when they're talking about
the blessing of the unimportant,
that he switches places with this farmer
who has been sitting kind of heads down
at the foot of the throne.
So Tim says this is the movement
of people who are gonna serve.
Yeah, and so the king and the farmer switch places and when she goes to take it off to
put it on the humbled king, it produces a second crown, leaning into the abundance over scarcity
mindset and reversing the role again where even though she is elevated, now she's coming
down to the former king. You know, it kind of sounds like Jesus is trying to start a revolution.
Kind of, but it's not a revolution for those who are hungry for power or influence.
This is a movement of people who are going to serve.
So, Rose is joining us now.
You were the director of this video.
Is there anything else that you guys
wanted to communicate in this scene?
Everything I'm drawing is about trying
to get people to flip their perceptions.
If people can, after seeing this,
think about how they relate to power,
maybe they're unimportant, and they get to have this crown.
And that means that they get to share that same thing
with everybody that be incredible.
Yeah.
Thanks, y'all.
Talk to you later.
These first three statements are all
about the surprising, backwards nature of God's kingdom,
how the good life starts in the margins
with the poor, the afflicted, and the downtrodden.
Next week, we look at the second triad.
If the first triad is about the place God finds us in,
the second triad is the type of character God calls us to.
The Pure of Heart is the entry card to returning to Eden
in the storyline of the Bible.
So God's not a mission to make us pure of heart.
It's possible.
It's important to recognize the biblical authors
and God really thinks humans are capable of this.
They're capable through God's new creation,
power and presence.
It's what we are made for.
We're made to be pure of heart.
Bible project is a nonprofit and we exist to experience
the Bible as a unified story that leads to Jesus
and everything that we make is free because of the generous support of thousands of people just like you.
Thank you so much for being a part of this with us.
Hi, this is Cooper here to read the credits.
Dan Gummell is the creative producer for today's show.
Production of today's episode is by producer Lindsay Ponder, managing producer Cooper Peltz,
producer Colin Wilson, Stephanie Tam is our consultant and editor.
Tyler Bailey is our audio engineer and editor
and he also provided the sound design
and mix for today's episode.
Brad Whitty does our show notes,
Hannah Wu provides the annotations for our app,
Yanni Evans and Tyler Bailey edited today's episode.
Original Sermon on the Mount Music is by Richie Cohen and the
Bible Project theme song is by Tents. Special thanks to Ben 13, Josh Esposandin, Rose Mayer,
and Nisa Oru, and your hosts, John Collins and Michelle Jones. Hi, I'm Julie, and I'm from
Seattle, Washington. Hi, this is Rico, and I'm from South Africa. I first heard about Bible Project back in 2016.
I used Bible Project for Quiet Time with the Lord and various studies.
I first heard about Bible Project online.
I used Bible Project for my devotional time.
My favorite thing about Bible Project is the Read Scripture series.
My favorite thing about Bible Project is how it brings the stories to life for me.
We believe the Bible is a it brings the stories to life for me.
We believe the Bible is a unified story that leads to Jesus.
We're a crowd-funded project by people like me.
Find free videos, study notes,
podcast classes, and more
at BibleProject.com.