The Bible Recap - Day 283 (Matthew 5-7) - Year 6

Episode Date: October 10, 2024

SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits FROM TODAY’S RECAP:  - Article: What does the Bible mean that we ar...e not to judge others? - Philippians 2:13 - Romans 11:36 - Check out the new TBR merch! BIBLE READING & LISTENING: Follow along on the Bible App, or to listen to the Bible, try Dwell! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X | TikTok D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter/X TLC: Instagram | Facebook D-GROUP: D-Group is brought to you by the same team that brings you The Bible Recap. TBR is where we read the Bible, and D-Group is where we study the Bible. D-Group is an international network of Bible study groups that meet weekly in homes, churches, and online. Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact. Links to specific resources and content: This is not an endorsement of the entire website, author, organization, etc.. Their views may not represent our own.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap. This three-chapter section is called the Sermon on the Mount and it's the most famous sermon Jesus preached. It is meaty. I'm not going to recap every detail, I'm just going to lean into some things that might help with grasping deeper meanings or themes. Let's get to it. Jesus sits down on the rolling hillside around the Sea of Galilee, surrounded by His disciples,
Starting point is 00:00:31 and teaches them what life in the upside-down kingdom of God looks like. The launching point of the sermon is a list of eight blessings granted to God's people, except much of what He says doesn't sound like blessing at all. Lots of scholars believe these eight beatitudes at the start of chapter five are actually not just a list. They're cumulative, like a building he's constructing, and that this first blessing is the foundation of everything else he says in the sermon. Here's why.
Starting point is 00:00:56 It all starts out with poverty of spirit. It all starts with recognizing that we're spiritually poor. We have nothing to offer God, no reason for him to choose us or love us. And if we want to get really honest about it, we aren't just empty-handed. We don't show up with zero. We're in debt. And God says that's the starting point.
Starting point is 00:01:15 Can you see how this idea stands in stark contrast to the attitude of the Pharisees who think they're nailing it? Can you see why their attitude is an affront to God? They're waiting for everyone else to take note and catch up. But Jesus tells his followers that the foundation for life in the kingdom is recognizing your desperate need for God. And if these postures and blessings are, in fact, cumulative, here's what that might look like. When we realize our spiritual poverty, we will mourn it, and that will produce a meekness in us as we engage the world.
Starting point is 00:01:47 And by the way, meekness isn't weakness. It's having the wisdom and discipline to restrain your strength while you seek the good of others. Meekness gives way to a desire for God to increase our righteousness. Then it becomes easier for us to show mercy to others because we know what it's like to struggle.
Starting point is 00:02:03 God continues to purify us as we engage with Him. We'll become people who don't run from conflict, but people who, like Jesus, enter into the chaos and create peace. We won't be peacekeepers, we'll be peacemakers. The life of a humble, hungry, meek, merciful, pure peacemaker won't be an easy one. Jesus knows that personally. But despite trials, it'll be the most joyful life you can imagine,
Starting point is 00:02:28 especially because it doesn't end when the end comes. The best reward is still ahead. The hard part about this sermon is, it's easy to turn it into a checklist, to measure what we have and what we lack. Then suddenly we're back at the start again, needing to be reminded of our spiritual poverty. Depending on how my day or my week went, I'll feel like I'm doing really great or like I'm blowing it entirely.
Starting point is 00:02:49 And neither of those places are spiritual poverty because they're still looking to me to be the one getting it right. So we always have to remember square one, spiritual poverty, to remember that on our best days and on our worst days, our only hope is the cross of Christ. It's humbling to remember we bring nothing but debt, but it grants us freedom from the tyranny of the lie of man-made righteousness. One of the other ways this is all upside down and counterintuitive is because Jesus doesn't say, look, you're never going to be able to earn your own righteousness, so we're going to lower the bar.
Starting point is 00:03:21 You can pretty much do whatever you want and God will be okay with it because he's a God of love. Nope. Instead, he points out that God isn't just after right actions, he's after a right heart. The standard isn't just don't murder anyone. That's a great basic rule for building a functional society, but it doesn't have anything to do
Starting point is 00:03:37 with what it looks like to be in the kingdom of God. If you don't murder anyone, but you hate everyone around you, that doesn't sound like freedom. That doesn't echo God and His love to a fallen world. Jesus says God's standard actually goes to the heart. If His disciples weren't feeling their spiritual poverty at the beginning of this sermon, they're definitely getting a wake-up call by the end of chapter 5. That's when He says,
Starting point is 00:03:59 "...you therefore must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect." That's what God requires. That's devastating. I can't God requires. That's devastating. I can't do it. Neither can you. So what now? It's helpful to know that the word perfect here carries the idea of being complete.
Starting point is 00:04:13 But regardless of whether you read it as perfect or complete, our only hope of getting perfected or completed is by receiving the righteousness Christ grants us. That's why 517 is such great news. That's where he says he hasn't come to abolish the law but to fulfill it. He's here to complete the requirements of the law through his perfect life and perfect death.
Starting point is 00:04:33 That's another reason why it's important for us to recognize that he never broke the law, not the Sabbath, not any other law. Because if he actually did, then he couldn't be the fulfillment of the law and he couldn't be the perfect sacrifice for our sins. In chapter 6, Jesus talks about giving to the needy. Don't do it to be seen, he says.
Starting point is 00:04:52 Then he instructs his followers about how to talk to the Father. For starters, have a real, humble, relational conversation. And he gives them tips on fasting. He discourages people from seeking the praise of others, from showing off their good deeds like the Pharisees do, because then we're not square wanting. Jesus isn't saying it's bad to be seen doing things so much as He's saying don't do these things to be seen. Praying in public as a way to point to God is beautiful.
Starting point is 00:05:16 It's all throughout scripture. But praying in public to point to me is another thing altogether. That's when we know we've lost the awareness of our spiritual poverty. The problem with trying to be spiritually rich is that it's all Monopoly money anyway. It can't actually earn you anything except some tiny plastic hotels on a piece of cardboard you're about to lose anyway.
Starting point is 00:05:35 So he tells them, stop trying to get more plastic hotels, enough with the Monopoly money. Fix your eyes and your time and your efforts on something that will last. In 621, he says it like this, Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. Heart follows treasure.
Starting point is 00:05:51 What you invest your time and money and emotion into is what you'll really value. I'll give you an example of this from your own life, even if we've never met. I'm guessing that by spending 20 to 30 minutes of each day fixing your eyes on God's Word in your reading and fixing your mind on His kingdom through listening to this podcast, you've probably seen your love for Him increase, right? Especially if you've been with us since day one in the Old Testament. That's a lot of investment, and He's been at work in you and all the time you've invested in this, paying big dividends in your heart. He says if we really start to value the eternal things above all else, then our concerns about the temporary things will be displaced. Jesus is likely talking to a group
Starting point is 00:06:30 of people who are legitimately poor, and he speaks to their very real concerns with reminders of who their father is. He says it's very normal for people who don't know God and don't have him as their father to be concerned about things like food and clothes. But for God's kids, Jesus says, remember how much the Father loves you. Remember how he values you above everything else he's created. That should free your heart up to focus on the things that matter instead of the things that are temporary. As long as you're focused on those fleeting things, you'll be filled with fear. And fear usurps your allegiance to God's kingdom because it never stops demanding your attention.
Starting point is 00:07:06 Instead, remember who your father is. He is providing for you. In chapter seven, we hit a section that can seem contradictory. In verses one through five, Jesus tells us not to judge others. But then in verses 15 through 20, He seems to be telling us to judge others.
Starting point is 00:07:21 That's the section where He basically says to be fruit inspectors, to discern whether someone is bearing healthy or diseased fruit. There are a few things that are helpful in understanding what Jesus is communicating here. First, Scripture establishes that God is the judge of all mankind. He's the one who hands down the verdict and its very real consequences. Humans don't have that power, nor should we,
Starting point is 00:07:42 because we don't know people's hearts, and God does. Second, what we often refer to as judging, the kind humans can do, is probably better defined as approving or disapproving. That's part of the meaning this word carries in the original Greek. Jesus knows we don't have the power to condemn someone to hell, but he's saying, don't try to weigh someone's heart, because you don't actually know it. Because in presuming that you can weigh a person's heart, you're presuming to be God, and that in itself is worthy of condemnation. Jesus is calling people to humility. He's not saying judgment won't happen, it's coming for all of us, and
Starting point is 00:08:16 he's not saying, hey, to each their own, lighten up. After all, he just got through giving us two chapters of things that are unacceptable to God. There is a standard. But since God's judgment happens at a heart level and we don't have eyes to see that, it's best to direct our discernment more toward an action being right or wrong instead of a person being good or bad. When we venture into that territory, it becomes far too easy to lose sight of square one, our own spiritual poverty.
Starting point is 00:08:44 Square one isn't a spot we move on from or leave behind or outgrow. It's the foundation everything else is built on. When we hit verses 15-20 where he tells us to be fruit inspectors, this still holds true. We inspect fruit. We can't see the roots, and we aren't the one who chops the tree down. But we need to be discerning because we don't want to eat the fruit if it's bad. And in the big farmers market of religious teachers and spiritual gurus, there's a lot of rotten fruit. It might look glossy on the outside, but if it doesn't measure
Starting point is 00:09:12 up to scripture, it's full of worms. By the way, we'll link to a very helpful article on this in the show notes. It shows a much broader scope of scripture's teaching on this topic than we have time to cover. My God shot was in 516. It says, let your light shine before others so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven. Along with everything else we read today, this passage directs our eyes off of ourselves. It humbles us real good, because the point of our good works is to glorify God, not us.
Starting point is 00:09:44 But then we have to ask, why would God want to get glory for something He didn't do, something I'm doing? Well, because He is doing it. His spirit at work in us is actually the one doing the good works through us. Philippians 2.13 says it like this, it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for His good pleasure. Romans 11.36 says, from Him, through him, and to him are all things. He deserves the glory because he does the doing.
Starting point is 00:10:11 But he doesn't leave us empty-handed. He gets the glory and we get the joy, because he's where the joy is. [♪ music playing, light music playing, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat drops, beat Fall is such a great time of year. The fresh crisp air, the fresh fall colors, and at TBR we just dropped some fresh new merch. If you were with us at TBR Live, you got first dibs on our new caps and tees, our new retro coffee mug, and my personal favorite, the Hey Bible Readers hoodie. One of the things I love about seeing you guys in TBR Merch is that you're helping spread the word about where people can find real joy.
Starting point is 00:10:48 You're like living billboards for the Bible. Plus, these are high-quality items that will also make great gifts for your family and friends. Now, heads up, a lot of these items sell out fast, especially at this time of year. So if you don't want to miss out, check out thebiblerecap.com forward slash store or click the link in the show notes.

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