BibleProject - The Type of People God Is Forming (The Beatitudes Pt. 3)
Episode Date: February 5, 2024Sermon on the Mount E6 – What does it look like to have our desires and actions completely aligned with God’s will? In the second triad of the Beatitudes, Jesus paints a picture of the kind of peo...ple God is forming in the Kingdom of the Skies. In this episode, Tim, Jon, and guests break down the biblical words for righteousness, justice, mercy, and purity throughout the Bible, leading up to Jesus’ words in the Sermon on the Mount.View more resources on our website →Timestamps Chapter 1: Hungering and Thirsting for Righteousness (0:00-6:32)Chapter 2: Right Relationships, Justice, and Equity (6:32-13:18)Chapter 3: Righteousness and Trust in God (13:18-24:17)Chapter 4: What Jesus Means by Mercy (24:17-32:53)Chapter 5: The Challenge of a Pure Heart (32:53-42:18)Chapter 6: Portraying Purity of Heart in Art (42:18-46:47)Referenced ResourcesMatthew 1-7: Volume 1 (International Critical Commentary), W.D Davies, Dale C. Allison Jr., and Christopher M. TuckettInterested in more? Check out Tim’s library here.You can experience our entire library of resources in the BibleProject app, available for Android and iOS.Show Music Original Sermon on the Mount music by Richie KohenBibleProject theme song by TENTSShow CreditsDan Gummel is the Creative Producer for today’s show. Tim Mackie is our Lead Scholar. Production of today’s 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. Today’s hosts are Jon Collins and Michelle Jones.Powered and distributed by Simplecast.
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Discussion (0)
Hey, this is Tyler at Bible Project. I record and mix the podcast. This year we're exploring Jesus'
teaching in the Sermon on the Mount. We're currently taking questions for the first Q&R
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We're really looking forward to hearing from you.
Here's the episode.
This is Bible Project Podcast, and we're reading through the Sermon on the Mount.
The Sermon opens with nine surprise statements about who is a part of what God is doing in
the world. I'm John Collins, and with me is co-host Michelle Jones. Hi Michelle.
Hi John. Remember there are nine Beatitudes and they are in three sets of three triads.
Right and today we're going to go through the second triad.
This is the triad where you get a picture of the type of people that God is forming.
They hunger and thirst for righteousness. They show mercy and they're pure of heart. So we'll start today with hungering and
thirsting for righteousness. Hungering and thirsting sounds very intense. I know
people who when they get hungry they're just not people I want to be around. Can
you get hangry for righteousness? Yes, it's a very evocative image. It also begs the question,
what does Jesus mean by righteousness?
That's one of those very churchy words
that we just can't quite put our finger on.
Here's how Tim puts it.
It refers to the character of someone
who is in right relationship with others around them.
So that's where we'll start,
hungering and thirsting for right relationships.
Thanks for joining us.
Here we go.
Okay, here's the second triad.
The good life belongs to those who hunger and thirst for righteousness because they will be satisfied
The good life belongs to those who show mercy
Because they will be shown mercy
The good life belongs to the pure in heart because they will see God
I love that we get to unpack these because they've become so
Familiar yet. I don't know what they mean
become so familiar yet I don't know what they mean. Yeah, that's so much of the Bible for so many people, over familiarized into meaninglessness.
Okay, so let's dive in.
I think I mentioned in the 20 years following Jesus, this is I think my fourth slow, deep
pass through the Sermon on the Mount with stacks of books and that's keeps given man
So the good life belongs to those who hunger and thirst for so first Jesus is using a metaphor. Yeah, that's
Met by the second line because they will be filled or satisfied. Yeah, and you get that you're hungry
You need food and water. Yeah, you have a good meal and you feel good.
That's right.
So let's just note he's carrying on the theme of lack being without that comes
from the first triad, the powerless, those who grieve over loss in the world,
over their own loss.
And then those on the outside, those on outside. To be in a perpetual state of hunger
is not what I would think of as the good life.
No.
Literal or metaphorical hunger,
but it's a state of lack
as opposed to a state of abundance.
But not just lack.
When you're hungry, you lack something and you want it.
I know, it's the worst.
Being hungry.
Actually, no, just lacking something.
What I was thinking about was I've been running more lately and I did some mileage the other
day and I was getting a blister on my toe and I was only like a couple miles into a pretty
long run.
And it just occurred to me, I'm going to have to think about the pain of my toe the entire time.
Yes.
And so I was lacking homeostasis or whatever.
I was lacking comfort.
You were also lacking mole skin.
That little soft stuff you put.
Do you know that stuff?
What? No.
Oh, it did. It's amazing.
For hiking?
Oh, I use it all the time.
Oh, really?
Yeah, the moment you feel a hotspot.
Yeah, put it on.
Just put that stuff on. I had nothing but some water and
miles of trail.
Oh man. It's not just lacking.
It's the pain. The irritant. The irritant of the hunger of like it's there gnawing at you. That's it.
Constantly, every step. It's great. Perfect image then.
So Jesus is saying the good life belongs to people who are lacking something, but not
just lacking it, the lack irritates, agitates, puts them in a constant state of tension and
awareness of the fact that they lack this thing.
And what is the thing that they hunger and thirst for? It's usually the Greek word d'chaosune.
D'chaosune.
The traditional English word for this in the New Testament is righteousness.
Yeah. It's a religious word.
I grew up with the word righteousness, meaning the state of being pure and good.
Before God.
Before God. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Not having flaws.
So the Kausunes Greek word is one of the standard Greek translations. It's a group of words that
comes from a root, sedeq or tzedekah. And at its roots, tzedek or tzedekah means to be in right
relationship with someone or it refers to the characterab means to be in right relationship with someone, or it refers to the character
of someone who is in right relationship with others around them.
But you can refer to a whole group of people as having a quality of Settikab, which means
all the relationships are equitable and people are in right standing with one another, meaning
they treat each other rightly.
And the way that you do right by someone
depends on the type of relationship it is.
Sure. You know?
If you're my brother, or if you're my dad,
or if you're my coworker, or teacher, or employer,
or whatever, they'll be different.
Person, bag in your groceries.
Different types of behaviors will qualify
as doing right by that person.
So the way that this word is used most often,
however, in the Hebrew Bible, is when the stories
are about people who are responsible for creating
and ensuring set-a-cah in the community,
and they're doing a really terrible job, usually is why it gets brought up.
So righteousness isn't just some abstract moral code that we live by, but it's actually
how we show up for one another.
We want to dig into a couple more passages that illustrate this.
And to do it, I've invited Dr. Ben Tertine into the studio.
He's one of our Bible Project scholars.
Hi, Ben.
I'm Michelle.
Thank you.
Okay, so help me out here, Ben. Hi, Michelle. Thank you. Okay, so help me out here, Ben. What should come to my mind when I use the word righteous or righteousness?
I think the first thing that should come to our mind here in that word is how do I relate
to other people?
Not how do I show up?
Yeah, I suppose you could see it that way in the sense of like, am I showing up in a
loving and kind way toward other people?
But if you mean it in the sense of, am I showing up with all of my personal holiness codes
in order and I don't really care about other people, then yeah, that's not righteousness.
So let's just do an example here right out of Jeremiah, prophet Jeremiah in chapter 22,
verse 3.
And he is just laying into the king of Judah.
Well, for reasons that'll become clear as we're going.
I love a good fight.
Go.
He's giving him the business.
All right.
He says, this is what Yahweh says, oh king, do justice and set a car, do justice and righteousness.
You're like, those are great words, but it's cool because he flushes it out for us and
rescue from the hand of the oppressor
The one who has been wronged
Stop doing wrong and violence to the immigrant or to the fatherless the orphan or to the widow
Stop shedding innocent blood in this city
That sounds more just to see
Then what I think of when I think righteous. Yeah,
that's good. Well, you caught it right in the beginning. He says, do justice. Heber,
there is mishpot. We've got a video on justice in it. We break down these two words, mishpot
and setaka, and they're always super tightly connected. The idea, notice he's saying to this king, man, your
town is all jacked up. It is messed up. And the way for you, meaning not righteous, because
of how you're relating to each other, you are violent, you're oppressing people, you're
doing wrong to each other, still vague, but we get a concept of your harming people. And you're
particularly, this is always called out in the Old Testament, particularly these groups are really
getting marginalized or shunned. Immigrants, orphans, widows. Yeah, yeah. People who are not
showing up with a whole bunch of benefit to you, you seem to say they don't matter then. And he says that is unjust.
So do mishpat, do justice.
And when you do is what creates righteousness in the city, which is notice in this context,
it is right social relationships, right ways of living mutually together in the society.
Okay.
So I'm going gonna throw a word out
that will feel loaded, but I don't mean it to feel that way.
My favorite kind of words, Michelle.
Blow, explosive.
Okay, good.
Lay it on me, what do we got?
Well, here we go.
So you have, you've got poor, you've got widows,
you've got immigrants, and then there's this,
it almost seems like there's this need for equity to bring these
people to a place where they're not being oppressed or mistreated.
So is that word equity?
Is it?
I think it's great.
It comes, you're right.
It comes with some modern baggage that could mean different things with it.
But the way you said it was really, really good in terms of,
so the part of it I wouldn't bring into it is a sort of homogenous bland, everybody has
all the same amount of everything. But it would very much be there is nobody being oppressed.
There is nobody who is without what they need for life and flourishing. Yeah. There's no
scenario where somebody is just rocking
and rolling and somebody else is starving. Yeah. And especially if you see that person
doing that and you do nothing about it, that makes you unrighteous. There we go. I'm thinking
right as you say that, like, good Samaritan parable or something like that. Yeah. Another
great word that I really kind of cling to in this conversation is mutuality. I like that better than equity. I think it's good because for me what it
does is it says am I looking at a person as better than me or worse than me and
then as soon as I'm doing that I'm out of a right way of relating. Yes. Because I'm
measuring them according to something I can see or whatever. God wants me to say to the human,
you human are a miraculous image-bearing creation of Yahweh and therefore you are worth loving,
blessing, caring for and never to be oppressed, harmed, mistreated, taken advantage of or a
great word is consumed. Other times the prophets talk about
this, they will say when unrighteousness is happening, it's like you're devouring each other
rather than blessing and encouraging and enlivening one another. Okay. Okay, Michelle. So let's do one
more verse Psalm 117. Yahweh is righteous. Okay. Hot diggity, you know? Like that, there you go. God the
Creator who made everything in and of Himself, His character, is that He is always rightly
relating to you and me and everybody. Interesting. And it says, so still in the same verse Yahweh is righteous and he loves righteousness
He treats people right and therefore he loves it when people do right by each other
So when we are righteous, we are imaging God. Yes when we are not righteous
We're basically saying kick rocks God. That's right. Okay. I think that's right when it says Yahweh is righteous
It means Yahweh treats people right. He loves it when people do right by each other
Okay, and if Yahweh is the giver of life, he loves it when we do right by each other
Why does he love it because we're obeying his rule?, because he knows that when we do right by each other,
ending oppression, blessing those around us,
we're coming into fullness of life and so are they.
That's his will.
So this righteousness is a vehicle for his love.
Love and life, it's a gift.
It's not just a rule to obey,
it's a way of right relating with everybody.
Oh, I love that. Yeah. Thanks, Ben. Thank you.
Psalm 24, verse 3.
Who can walk up to the hill of Yahweh? Who can go and stand in the holy space of Yahweh?
This temple imagery.
Yeah, who can get in the temple
in the throne room of God?
And really, which means that it's Eden imagery.
Right.
Who has access to the good life?
Who is it that can go be in the place
where heaven and earth are one?
Who can return and pass by this chair beam
and get back into Eden?
Yeah, not Cain and Abel.
Yeah, totally. No, at least not Cain. Abel didn't have a chance.
Yeah, that's true.
Well, here's Psalm 24's portrait. The one who has clean hands, hands of innocence,
and a pure heart. That's going to be the next beatitude of Jesus. The one who hasn't lifted up their being to any kind of
falsehood, they don't swear oaths with deceit, they don't try and manipulate other people to
convince them that you're being truthful. They have integrity. They're the same on the outside
as they are on the inside. That person will receive blessing, this is the Berkha Baruch, and righteousness from
the God of his deliverance.
You will receive righteousness.
So righteousness here doesn't mean your behavior.
It's something you get from God.
Yes.
In other words, being counted among the righteous, it's about a declaration
that God makes when he looks at someone's life and says, that's someone who has done
right by me. Because it's really hard to know just by observing each other's behavior who
God would count as righteous or not. In fact, this is G.S.'s point many times over is that we are terrible,
terrible at discerning whether people are the righteous or the wicked. We often confuse them.
Gosh, but you would think it would be obvious. You would think. But what he's going to get into
in the sermon is that you can do what looks like the righteous things.
Beware, he says in chapter 6, of doing your set-a-ka, your righteousness, in order that
other people will see you and then think highly of you.
And he calls that kind of person a hypocrite.
So in Abraham's story, Abraham is powerless and his wife, they're powerless to produce a child.
And what Abraham does is trust that God's promise,
even though there's lots of reasons not to trust.
There are some reasons to trust.
God has been faithful to him up to that point,
but there's lots of reasons not to.
And he trusts God's crazy promise
that a nation's gonna come out of you and your wife.
And God stops, the narrative stops, Genesis 15 verse 6, and God reckoned it to him as
one who does right by me.
He declares that this guy who trusts me for something he can't do for himself.
That's someone who does right by me.
That's what it means to do right by me.
Yeah.
And the implication of that is this is a person who then will do right by others.
Yeah, correct.
Which then Abraham doesn't fully succeed at.
Well he has successes and failures, leading up to his final, which is a success in 22,
where he surrenders the life of his son back to God.
The ultimate act of faith.
And his faith is rewarded with a promise.
And then the apostle Paul will pick that up.
He sees there a super important insight into the whole story of the Hebrew Bible.
The one who God will count as righteous, the one who does right by me, is the one
who stakes everything on God's word and promise and just trusts in him. And for Paul,
that's what it means to give your allegiance
and trust and faith to Jesus.
So it kind of feels like we're talking about
two different things then.
Abraham trusts in God's promise.
God's like, this is what I want.
I wanted that trust, that faith, that allegiance to me.
So I declare you as one who does right by me.
But the idea of being a righteous person and doing right by God means you're gonna be does right by me. But the idea of being a righteous person
and doing right by God means you're going to be
doing right by people.
Correct. That's right.
And then you get these narratives of Abraham
not doing right by people.
Totally. Yes, that's right.
And then it all culminates this climactic act
of surrendering all of that back to God again.
Yeah. So you could say he's a mixed bag.
He's a mixed bag.
He's a mixed bag.
But when Paul reflects on it, he's focusing on the trust and not the right relationships
that he developed amongst people.
Oh, yeah.
So which is it?
Is it doing right by others or is it trusting God?
Exactly.
That it's both.
It's the same word.
It's to be righteous and do righteousness.
To be someone who does right by God is to be someone who does right by other people.
But you got Abraham who is being right by God while not being right to other people.
Yes.
So what a surprise that on the basis of trust, God will declare the ungodly to be people who
are in right standing with him.
Man, that is a generous, extremely generous kind of God. Right? Isn't that Paul's point?
I guess it is.
One who justifies the ungodly, that's what he says in Romans.
So yeah, my point is these two nuances of meaning of the word are they're actually really
close together.
To be declared righteous by God means to be someone who did right by God, which means
that in your life you will do right by other people who are made in the image of that God
that you are doing right by by doing right to them.
So Jesus says, here's someone who is not taking care of the poor and the oppressed.
When that person meets God and God is going to declare them as righteous.
He says, nope.
You didn't do right by me.
You didn't do right by me.
Because you didn't do right by them.
So that's that first kind of layer of righteousness, doing right.
Now what if that person said, ah, yes, yes, God, but I do trust you
and I have faith in you.
I see that I screwed up.
Oh, sure.
Father Abraham screwed up too.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I wanna surrender.
Yeah.
Then would God say, I'll declare you as righteous?
As the first response is, I'm not God,
so I have no idea what to say about anybody.
You know, there's the sub theme of this about God
as the one who searches the heart, there's proverbs and Psalms about anybody. You know, there's the sub-theme of this about God as the one who searches the heart, his proverbs and Psalms about this. This is about why God tests people
to discern what is in them, this kind of thing. So yeah, I think God in his wisdom and generosity
will be just and fair and generous with how he evaluates people. But he evaluates us. He's evaluating us.
But that's the point, is there's this moment where God will declare you're standing.
Totally. Yeah, totally. These are age-old questions in the Christian tradition. And you
can see James and Paul reflecting and working all these themes. The fact that God would be generous to me and
overlook my failures, but the moment that becomes an escape clause for me to begin compromising,
then I need to get some holy fear and trembling. And that's just attention that the biblical authors
refuse to solve for us,
because I think it's the drama of the life
of following Jesus,
is to trust that God will be generous with me.
While I pursue righteousness.
While I do righteousness,
not while I sit on my arse and-
And just expect God to check me off the list
because of some prayer I did.
Totally.
That's right.
The good life belongs to those who hunger and thirst for rightness.
Righteousness.
So first of all, if you hunger and thirst for it, it's showing that it's something that
you're not seeing or experiencing.
Right relationships are not happening.
Yeah, this thing is,
is it's not something you have in the present,
which compels me to think it's that first meaning
of people doing right by each other
and therefore right by God.
There's a serious lack of that
that I see going on around me.
And it puts me in a constant state of agitation,
anxiety, and discontent.
The blister is forming.
The blister, yeah, the blister. They see a world of people who are being deprived of...
Righteousness.
Righteousness. And they see people taking advantage of each other and they see people
doing injustice and they see some people ignoring it all other, and they see people doing injustice,
and they see some people ignoring it all and doing great.
Looks like they're doing great, and it just grieves them.
It's another one of these paradoxes.
This is similar to the good life
belongs to those who grieve.
Because you're grieving over the lack of equity,
of harmony, and wholeness in relationships.
And what Jesus is saying is, yes, yes, you're grieving.
Yes, you want that.
If you're hungering for it, what you desire
is a time and a place when there is true justice,
ultimate justice, when everybody does right by everybody. If you're not
hungering and thirsting for people to do right by each other, you're not paying
attention. If you're hungering and thirsting for it, that means you've
developed a palette for the kingdom of God. Yeah. And you're ready. Yeah, that's
right.
So, righteousness, doing right by God, doesn't bother me too much. I think the thing that sticks uppermost in my brain is that hunger and thirst thing.
I mean, that's uncomfortable.
is that hunger and thirst thing. I mean, that's uncomfortable.
In other words, it should bother me
when the world isn't lined up with God's sense
of what's right and wrong,
and when people aren't treating each other right.
In the same way I make moves to get water and food,
like I don't wait for somebody else to take care of me
unless I'm a baby.
I need to be intentional
and active about helping to set things right. You got to get in there. Like John said, get some blisters.
Okay, let's move on. Take a look at the next beatitude.
Religious word alert. The good life is for the merciful.
Second part of this triad, the good life belongs to those who show mercy because they will
be shown mercy.
Yeah, and this is a big theme in Jesus' teachings of forgive.
If you don't forgive others, you will not be forgiven.
Yes.
In fact, there's the famous parable of the guy who's forgiven a debt.
Yes, and then he doesn't forgive a debt owed to him.
Correct.
And the conclusion of that is the guy who holds the debt, saying to the guy who owes
him money, saying, shouldn't you have shown mercy?
Hmm to your fellow just as I showed mercy to you right?
It's the same word. So yeah mercy here actually has a very specific nuance for giving a debt
It's forgiving someone who's wronged you or owes you. Yeah, that's the specific meaning of mercy in the gospel of Matthew
Wrong has been done.
Yeah, how else do you make right relationships when there's so much chaos?
Yes, you have to find a way to forgive.
As Bishop Desmond Tutu said, Bishop in South Africa, there is no future for the human race
without forgiveness.
There will be no way forward for us on individual or corporate levels without the practice of forgiveness. There will be no way forward for us on individual or corporate
levels without the practice of forgiveness. And that's a huge theme in Jesus' teachings.
Here's what's interesting. You actually know this word, the Greek word, mercy. It's
the Greek word, eleas, which we talked about in past conversations in a word study about loyal love in Exodus 34.6 series.
Oh yeah.
Okay.
So the Hebrew word chesed, which means love, generosity, and loyalty, that was translated
by the Greek translators of Septuagint with a variety of words, but one of the most common
ones was the Greek word, elas, mercy. And so the question is, is Jesus talking merely about forgiveness or is he loading this Greek
word with its Hebrew meaning of chesed?
So what's interesting is that in the Gospel of Matthew, this word appears quite a bit,
elas, the Greek word, with the ideas of chesed.
So for example, there's multiple stories, healing stories, where people who are in really
desperate situations call out to Jesus, and what they ask him is to show us El-As, son
of David.
So this is what the blind men say to Jesus.
It's usually translated, have mercy on us.
Or the Canaanite woman, think his daughter is sick, have mercy on me.
So it sounds weird in English because we think have mercy on me means I did something wrong,
please forgive me.
It's like uncle.
Uncle, uncle.
No.
And this is like, hey, listen, Jesus, you don't know me.
You don't know me and you don't owe me.
Could you show me this kindness by restoring my body?
That's what they're asking.
Over and above.
So when you're saying show me chesed.
Treat me like family.
Treat me, yes, treat me like you would a family member that you're going above and beyond.
So within our social relationships, within the biblical imagination, there's people that
you are already connected to
and you have a duty and obligation to them.
Okay, so it's like, you've got your neighbors
and it's like, do right by your neighbor.
That's right, that's righteousness.
But you got your family and your close friends
and it's like, I'm not gonna just do right by you.
I'm gonna go above and beyond.
I'm gonna align myself with you. I'm gonna show you so much favor and grace and kindness and beyond. I'm gonna align myself with you.
I'm gonna show you so much favor and grace
and kindness and love.
It's based off of this familial loyalty
that we have together.
That's Hesed.
That's right.
And in Jesus' mind, having that kind of love towards
and other is actually the ultimate goal and purpose
of being a human image of
God is to love God and love your neighbor.
And so this shades very quickly into Jesus' commands to love using the Greek word agape,
which gets us into a whole other discussion.
But the elos, Greek word rendering the Hebrew word chesed, is about that familial bond,
which makes it amazing
in later in Matthew when a Canaanite woman comes up to Jesus and says, would you show
me chesed?
Yeah.
And so, I'll just, it would invite the reader, if you're a note taker, Psalm 136 has the
word chesed in it in more times than one literary unit in the whole Bible.
And it retells the story of God making creation and then of God calling and liberating Israel
from slavery and bringing them into the promised land and rescuing them from their enemies.
And every single line of the poem is punctuated with the line, his chesed endures forever.
So the whole history of Israel is seen as a gift of mercy, that is, loving kindness,
that is chesed.
Israel didn't deserve it.
Yahweh didn't have to do it, but he just did it because he chose to and he's just that,
that's chesed.
Okay.
Do you want to do away with mercy? Do you think we
should find another English word? Familiar love to wordy. Yeah, what's hard with the word mercy
is it doesn't mean what we're talking about. What's hard with the word loyal love is it still
needs a lot of explanation, I think. Yeah. Yeah. Plus there are those who and kindness doesn't go far enough what a word about how you treat your family generous love
How good is life for those who love generously? They will be shown generous love. That's an aspect of it
Mm-hmm. Yeah, I mean tend to love people that are close in and we're talking about generous over abundant
love now we're getting it.
Elos and...
abundant love.
Yeah.
Here, maybe I'll close these reflections.
Again, I'll just say it throughout the series.
I've learned so much from the commentary on multi-volume commentary by W.D. Davies and Dale Allison about Sermon
on the Mount, and they summarize Elas this way. They say Elas connotes the idea of loyalty
in a relationship. Hence, it would seem that Matthew was persuaded that while Jesus and
his followers in their acts of mercy and loving
kindness were demonstrating their loyalty to God, that there were weightier matters of
justice and mercy or elos and faith that were neglected by Matthew and Jesus' opponents,
namely the Pharisees.
Throughout the gospel of Matthew,
this word, mercy, in its connected words, imply that merciful action is the concrete
expression of your loyalty to God, and that what God demands is not so much activity directed
to God, but loving kindness directed towards other people. And they're alluding here to
another line in Matthew where Jesus quotes from the Prop Hosea and says, to the Pharisees, God desires elos, not sacrifices,
which he actually doesn't mean God doesn't want sacrifices, but it's in comparison. If you're
going to surrender something to God, you can do it in the form of sacrifice, and that's good and right. And God, right? God set that up in Leviticus.
But if you're comparing, offering a sacrifice, versus the opportunity to surrender yourself
in an act of generous love towards another, God will say, do that one every time,
and come offer the sacrifice later.
The good life belongs to those who embody chesed love. The ones who treat people like really close family without outrageous generosity in their
love.
Now Israel never deserved that, but God was always faithful to give that.
God's loyal love punctuates their whole story. There's actually just one story.
God's loyal love goes on forever. That's the story. And Israel's life, and in fact,
all of our lives, punctuate that truth.
Here's our last beatitude for the day. The good life belongs to the pure in heart.
Here's the last one of the middle triad.
The good life belongs to the pure in heart because they will see God.
Do you remember how the first triad ended with a quotation from the book of Psalms?
Yeah, bless the outsiders. They will inherit the land.
It's a copy-paste quotation from Psalm 37. Jesus concludes this triad with another
copy and paste quotation his holy space. The one who has clean hands and a pure heart,
who has not lifted up his being to falsehood or sworn deceitfully, he will receive blessing
from Yahweh. He will be declared righteous to be in right relationship with God. This,
verse 6, this is the generation of those who seek him, of those who seek your face, oh God of Jacob.
The good life belongs to the pure of heart.
They are the ones who will look upon the face of God.
Looking upon the face of God in the Hebrew Bible,
isn't that a very dangerous thing to do?
It is, but it's only dangerous
if you live on the outside of Eden.
Right?
Right.
Okay.
Because if you're in Eden, you're walking in the cool of the day.
You're walking.
Yeah.
You're walking and talking.
That's right.
To see the face of God is shorthand for to gain re-entry back into Eden.
Or in Revelation 22, when Heaven and Earth are reunited, his servants, you know, this
is just coming to me in the moment.
Some hyperlinks are happening in your brain.
Wow.
Wow.
So this is, yeah, the reunion of Heaven and Earth, the last page of the Bible.
He showed me the water, the river of the water of life coming from the throne of God and
the Lamb.
So the throne of the new Jerusalem is now where the tree of life is at the center of Eden flowing
out of it. Tree of life is sprouting up. Sprouting up because the tree of life is the throne of God.
In other words, in this new Jerusalem Eden at the center of it is a thing from which flows the river.
In the garden, the tree, here it's the throne of God and the lamb. And that's because it's the Holy
Holies. Verse 3, there will no longer be any curse, the throne of God and the lamb will be in it.
His servants will serve him, they will see his face to have access and reentry back into Eden.
Is to look upon the face.
Yeah.
What?
Yeah, it's the image.
So this is all being hyperlinked to Moses on the mountain.
Show me your face.
And he says, you can't because here, you know, outside of Eden, it's dangerous.
You'll die.
So he saw like the back of God.
Yeah, such a great metaphor for the indescribable.
So this, is this getting into the holiness theme?
This is getting in.
Well, it is, but it's using purity language.
Purity language, which is like so in like Leviticus.
Yes.
Yeah.
Ritual purity.
These, these ritual acts you do
as to symbolize the state of my heart. So I wash my body of physical impurities
before I enter into the temple courtyards.
That's very common.
And you do it as a symbol of I wanna shed myself
of death and mortality, and also of my own moral failures and come
into your presence in a pure state.
But the trick is, it's a symbol and an external thing, but you want it to be true of what's
internal as well. I get this picture of purity being when everything is right and that an impurity, then even the
smallest thing that is introducing chaos and disorder, that's something that is good and
right.
And I kind of get this picture of an order to really be in God's presence, like any amount
of impurity is going to then just get magnified and like compromise you.
To be pure of heart means that my behavior that's observable to others is doing right
by God and doing right by others, and that it's matched completely
by my internal lives and motivations that are doing right by God and by others.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, because I think we all learn pretty quickly.
You can fake it.
You can fake it.
Oh, from a young age.
We learn how to manipulate others.
Oh yeah.
So there you go, that's it.
Jesus is putting his finger on that.
This is one of those moments in the sermon where you're like,
oh man, well, cross me off that list.
You know, I can get with a hunger and thirst for righteousness.
Yeah.
I resonate with that, but this one.
For it to be connected to my true motivations.
Yeah.
Whew.
I, it's pretty tall order.
It's a super tall order.
So in one sense, you're like, okay, I get it.
That's the purpose of humanity.
Mm hmm.
That's the relationship God designed humanity for.
And so it's this ideal.
But then you, you think about it practically I
Think about it, and I'm like how many minutes of the day could I even say I'm anywhere near?
Yeah, what this is asking for
Let's say like the purpose of my day
Was just wholeheartedly to try to be pure of heart all day. I wake up and that's all I'm thinking about.
It's my focus all day.
How well could I do it?
Well, think of it this way.
This is the third of a triad here.
The previous two were about doing right by others and generous acts of love.
Yeah, that's hard enough.
But in other words, I think the fact that the purity of heart comes as the third one to conclude
all these behaviors. What we're talking about here isn't just behavior, it's character,
the core character of a person. And I know that one of the important contributions of biblical thought to the world
and that the Protestant Reformation really kind of zeroed in on alongside God's generous grace
and mercy is the compromised, mixed, confused, yucky nature of the human heart, depravity as it were.
And you can overemphasize that to the degree of actually not being faithful to the full
portrait of human nature in the Bible because humans are a lot more in God's eyes than
depraved.
But that moral compromise nature is really a big emphasis in the biblical story and
because it's realistic,
it's true.
And so, the Psalmist says, give me pure, clean hands and pure heart.
That's right.
Actually, yeah, that's right.
David in Psalm 51, after murdering Uriah and committing adultery with Bathsheba, asked
for God's forgiveness and says, God, mercy create Genesis 1 language. Hmm. What I need is a new creation like for my core my thoughts my
desires and my
Feelings create in me a pure heart. Hmm
so we need a pure heart and the pure heart is
The entry card to returning to Eden.
So in Psalm 24, the idea of going up to the high mountain
where you go into the Holy of Holies,
this is all about the return to Eden
because the temple and the tabernacle are symbolic Eden's.
So this is about going past those cherubim
and the fiery sword that's going to cut away
some stuff that you might think is really important to who you are.
But God says you got to lose that stuff if you want to be with me and I want you to be
with me.
So, let's find a way to purge that stuff in a way that doesn't kill you.
That's essentially God's mission in the storyline of the Bible.
So God's not a mission to make us pure of art. It's possible. I think you were just lamenting.
Sorry, this is a whole kind of rambling response to you lamenting like, is that even possible? And
there's one sense in which,
wow, I'm not sure I can do that.
But then there's another sense in which 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 and mercy and the power
of God's spirit.
But it's what we are made for.
We're made to be pure of heart.
God is on a mission to make us pure of heart. In our next and final segment, let's listen in as Dan Gommel talks with one of our Bible
Project artists about how she chose to portray this idea of pureness of heart.
Well, hey everybody, this is Dan Gommel,
and I'm sitting here in the Bible Project Kitchen
because it was a little bit too loud in the animation studio.
And I'm sitting here with a friend of mine, Rose Mayer.
So I want to talk about that image
that you guys associate with being pure of heart.
So in this shot, what we're doing is watching the scholar
interact with her own perceptions
of what it means to be pure of heart.
This one really raises the bar.
To be part of this revolution, my heart needs to be so pure I could look directly at God.
So the way it's drawn up is you have this tall scholar figure in these very impressive
religious robes and he's standing on this little pedestal, and then this light shines from above, and he kind of has his chest puffed
out like swelled up, and he's looking up at this light.
So this illustrates the scholar presenting himself to God, like, check out how good I
am doing.
And this little bubble that pops up of a heart on his chest is his own idea of what he is.
Jesus knows that all of our choices, even our good ones, are often driven by mixed motives.
All of a sudden the platform like swivels and he is now facing away from the light.
He's kind of hunched over in the shadows, so like he's a little bit more crouched over and it's a little darker.
So this is just like drawing the rear side of a penny. You want to show everybody your good face but you also have a backside and sometimes you don't even know what's back there and so if you
flip anybody around you're going to see some stuff that's not as appealing. And that's not what you would be showing God.
That's the inverse of what you want to show anybody.
The problem that we're trying to illustrate in this shot is the idea that we can get away
with our false presentation.
It's about being honest with ourselves.
That's really cool.
Well, thank you, Rose. It's been really fun. That's it for today's episode.
Next week, we'll look at the third and final triad, which
focuses on being peacemakers, an uncomfortable but crucial way
of life for those who follow Jesus.
Biblical peace is not the absence of conflict, it's the presence of harmony.
Bible Project is a crowd-funded nonprofit and we exist to experience the Bible as a
unified story that leads to Jesus.
Everything that we create 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 Gommel is the creative producer for today's show.
Production of today's episode is by producer Lindsey 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, original Sermon
on the Mount Music is by Richie Cohen and the Bible Project theme song is by
Tents. Special thanks to Ben Turteam and Rose May, and your hosts, John Collins and Michelle Jones.
Hi, this is Stephanie, and I'm from Malaysia.
I first heard about Bible Project in 2017,
and I fell in love with it immediately.
I used Bible Project for my personal devotion
and Bible study with friends.
My favorite thing about Bible Project is its animation. I'm a visual
learner and it brings the Bible alive for me. We believe the Bible is a unified
story that leads to Jesus. We are a crowd-funded project by people like me.
Find free videos, study notes, podcasts, classes and more at BibleProject.com