Shine Your Light

 

Read Matthew 5:14-16

While working at a public school, I had started a prayer group that met before school once a week to pray for our coworkers, students, community, etc. I had asked another teacher to join because I knew he was a Christian. He responded he wasn’t sure if he would and he said “I never tell people I’m a Christian, that way, if I mess up, it doesn’t make God look bad.”

As I’ve been thinking about what it means to be salt and light, I can’t help but realize in these passages Jesus says:

You are the salt of the earth . . .
You are the light of the world . . .

As Christians, we get no choice to be salt or light, we are. The only choice we have is whether our salt will be savory or tasteless; whether we hide our lights or shine.

There’s no choice in being salt & light, there’s only duty . . . delightful duty to share who we are and whose we are.

To sprinkle and shine for Christ.


We don’t need to hide our lights from others. It is this light that illuminates and helps guide them through darkness. We do however need to make sure our light isn’t dim and doesn’t flicker.

Perhaps that’s why Jesus words here tell us to shine, to go out and tell AND to make sure our deeds reflect what we say. Our lives should shine as much light as our words.We are to preach Christ to people in word and deed.

If we mingle with darkness, walk in the ways of the world, how can we help others see their way out? Our light is no brighter than theirs!

If we hide our lights, if we’re too afraid to share, how will others ever see? Imagine being in a dark room and trying to help others find their way out, holding your flashlight and never using it! What good is that? How is keeping your light hidden helping others see Christ and His way of life . . . the path that leads to fullness of JOY? (Psalm 16:11)

Don’t you see why it’s so important to “flesh out” our message to the world? Others are walking in pain, darkness, sin, destruction, and death and we have the lamp to light the path to the Way out.

Go! Shine! Live brightly that others might see . . . see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven.

Salty People

“You are the salt of the earth, but if salt has lost its taste, how shall its saltiness be restored? It is no longer good for anything except to be thrown out and trampled under people’s feet.” (Matthew 5:13)

What is the purpose of salt?
Why is it used?
What benefits does it have?
And why, oh, why would Jesus call us “salt of the earth”?

Salt is used to add flavor, preserve, season, freshen, sweeten to taste.  It’s a means of purification, delays decay or physical corruption.

According to A.W. Pink, “Ministers are to dispense the Word, both Law and Gospel, in such a way as to express the qualities of salt. Now the properties of salt as applied to raw flesh or fresh meats are principally these: first, it will fret and bite, being of a hot and dry nature; second, it makes meat savory to our tastethird, it preserves meat from putrefaction by drawing out of it superfluous moisture.”

Salt . . .
Frets and bites
Makes a savory taste
Preserves

Frets and Bites
We are to be just like this to the world arounds us. Our message of Christ and Christ crucified may sting (fret/bite) a bit at first. For some, it may be offensive. It may cause pain to hear that they way they do life or understand life is wrong. It may hurt a bit to hear that Jesus is THE only way to eternal life and reconciliation with the Father. The message can be painful in the beginning. But that’s okay, salt on flesh stings at first in order to disinfect and fight disease. Pain comes before purification.

Savory Taste
However, it shouldn’t stop there. After the salt is poured onto the flesh, it begins to make a savory taste. We should be able to proclaim the message of Jesus Christ in a way that causes others to have a good taste in their mouth. One that leaves them craving more. We should share Truth in a way that is flavorful, delightful, and tasty. Not in a way that causes people to spit it out, but in a way that causes them to chew on it more.

Preserves 
Salt helps keeps things alive longer. Salt keeps things from decay (corrupting), it can keep from harm, illness, or disease. So just as salt preserves food, we as salt of the earth are to help preserve people. We are to help people along the path of of everlasting by showing them Christ. We are to help keep others from harm, moral decay, spiritual illness or disease by pointing to Christ and His word.

We are salt of the earth. Jesus tells us so. But not all salt stays “salty”. The rest of this scripture warns that we are supposed to be the kind of salt that does not lose it’s taste. If we don’t remain salty, remain fresh and pure ourselves, when we offer our “salt” to others, it will do no good. It will be useless, “thrown out and trampled under feet” as Jesus said. The way we live our life can either be as a preservative for others, or it can be meaningless and thrown out.

We’ve all come across these kinds of people. Those who talk about the redeeming work of Jesus and yet their lives are anything but redeemed. They lose credibility, people begin to toss them aside, throw out their message, because it is not reputable. It’s meaningless. They’re salty people who have lost their taste. Their salt is good for nothing.

Friends, will you work hard at protecting your saltiness? Will you remain in Jesus, the ultimate Preserver, so that your salt provides others with a savory taste? Let’s be people whose salt has a purpose and good flavor.

Let’s be people who allow our salt to sting, savor, and save.

 

1.  List the ways salt is used.

2.  Is your life salty to those around you?  How do you add flavor to others lives? Preserve them from death?

3.  Salt can also make you thirsty.  Does your life make people thirst for Jesus?  Why or why not?

Peacemakers & Persecution

{Matthew 5:9-12}
“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.”

“Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”

“Blessed are you when others revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you.”

Do you wonder why verse 9 says blessed are the peacemakers and the next 3 verses have to do with persecution?  Why would God call peacemakers blessed and then give 3 verses following about persecution?

We often think peacemaking is one who quiets conflict, or perhaps avoids it all together, to “keep the peace”.  Sort of like my sweet Grandma Lynn who would never raise her voice and simple hush us up with some Koolaid and grilled cheese sandwich when we were misbehaving or fighting with one another.  But is that the kind of peacemaking referred to here?  The kind that avoids conflict by saying nothing, and just comforting with a little extra butter on the bread?  Why would that lead to persecution?

Because Gospel peacemaking is different.  Gospel peacemaking speaks up. 

Could it be that when you’re a peacemaker, you aren’t seeking peace the way we understand it to be? Perhaps peace doesn’t come from silence and people pleasing, but from speaking up and speaking truth?

Tim Keller said of this passage, as an ambassador for Christ you should be “both attracting people and repelling people”. There were times when Jesus was mocked, ridiculed, harassed. He warned His disciples that they will be hated by the world, just as He was.  But, there were also times when it says He grew in favor with men. Same with the New Testament church, they grew in favor, the LORD was adding to their number daily.

So this peacemaker can’t mean someone who just gets along with everyone, stays silent, and is a people pleaser. If the peace talked about here is peace between one another, than why would He give warning not to lose heart as we are reviled and persecuted by others? If we’re making peace why would we be persecuted?

This peacemaker must be preaching a message of peace that is beyond this world.

True peace comes from reconciliation to the Father. Peace in our broken relationship, our sin, our hostility toward God. That is the GOSPEL. It’s a GOSPEL of peace between us and God.


Real peacemakers tell others this message of peace.

Some will hear this message of peace and jump with joy, knowing they can have a peace beyond understanding. This peace comes from a right standing with God, righteousness. Others will hear it and think it’s ridiculous, judgmental, naive. . . and they will persecute.

Persecuted for sharing the Gospel of peace. But blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness sake.

So we are to be peacemakers. To be a peacemaker means we must be willing to ruffle some feathers, say hard things, and be bold for Christ. It’s a deeper peace beyond “staying civil” and “not wanting to offend anyone.” It’s a peace that points others to Christ, that stands for Him even in the face of persecution, because the love is stronger. It’s a peace that comes from reconciliation.

Are you willing to be a peacemaker? Even if it’s rejecting the peace that comes from “people pleasing”?

For too long, we’ve thought peace comes from staying with crowd and not speaking up.  Perhaps this isn’t the symbol for peace:

But this is:


“What are you after? Approval of the people OR favor from the King?” -Tim Keller

 

 

1.  List some of the contrasts between peacemaking and persecution.

2.  Do you consider yourself a people pleaser?  Why or why not?  

3.  Are there areas in your life where you’re seeking worldly peace as opposed to the Gospel of peace?

Pure in Heart

“Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.” (Matthew 5:8)

hd-water-heart-shaped-wallpaper
You know the routine. People are on your way over and you’ve got just a few minutes to tidy up before guests arrive. The house is a mess, stuff is everywhere, and you need to pick it up before everyone gets here, so you grab the clutter from the counter, make a pile, and shove it in a drawer or a closet.

So no one can see your mess and everyone who comes in will think you’re clean.

Everything is going just fine, until that one friend who is a little too comfortable at your house, decides to look around and open that one door and find all of your junk shoved into a closet.

Don’t act like that hasn’t happened to you!

We try to appear cleaner on the outside than we really are.

Again, with this beatitude, Jesus is helping people see what really matters when it comes to Kingdom living. During this time, there was so much religious ritual that focused more on external than it did on the internal.

One of the most obvious was the cleansing ritual that took place in the mikveh. A Mikveh was a gathering place for living water (yes, Living Water) where a Jew would enter in for a cleansing bath after some type of impurity. There was an actual ritual of being immersed in living water to be cleansed of your impurity. Some would enter in the mikveh frequently because they believed that was what cleansed them of their impurity.

Jews were more concerned with the physical cleansing in the mikveh than they were with the baptism of the heart. In other words, a beautiful ritual that was meant to point to Jesus, actual Living Water, became more important than the meaning behind it. Many believed it was the act of entering the Mikveh that cleansed you rather than the repentance within your heart.

“Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you clean the outside of the cup and the plate, but inside they are full of greed and self-indulgence. You blind Pharisee! First clean the inside of the cup and the plate, that the outside also may be clean.” (Matthew 23:25-26)

While we may not be lining up in front the Temple today to wait our turn in the Mikveh, there are many things we do that focus our purity externally, rather than internally.

Going to church
Reading our bibles
Feeding the hungry
Serving the poor
Helping the homeless
Loving our neighbor

All good things, things we should do as Christians, but done with wrong motives, done to earn your cleanliness or approval from God, can become nothing more than external rituals. If we are still looking to ritual and external acts to see God, we are doing nothing but closing our eyes hiding our mess in a junk drawer. It’s still there, will someday be found, and needs to be dealt with.

Those of us that are still “doing things” in order to be seen as clean and righteous will not see God. Those who have been cleansed from the inside by Jesus Christ will see God.

It’s the purity of the heart that only Christ can provide that will help us see.

1. Read 1 Samuel 16:7 and Jeremiah 17:9-10. What do these verses say about the heart?

2. How is your understanding on purity of heart different after reading this text?

3. Are there areas in your heart that you need to bring to the light and repent of? If so, find a friend to confess to and pray with.

Mercy


When you hear the word Christian, is the first word you think of “mercy”?

We’ve learned that the Gospel takes root in poverty of spirit, mourning our sin, meekness in our understanding of who we are and who God is, and in our hunger and thirst for His righteousness.

As these things take root, they begin to grow, bloom, and bear fruit. These next few beatitudes Jesus tells us how the Gospel should bear fruit in our lives. And again, starting place number one is not where we think it would be.

We think being a Christian means we’re diligently reading our bible, going to church every Sunday, and not cussing as much as we used to.  Jesus tells us the first fruits of being a Christian is mercy.

Mercy is not pity and it’s not just giving a $1 to the guy on the street corner.  Mercy means to withhold giving someone what he or she deserves.  Mercy is withholding judgment and condemnation toward others for their sin and pointing them to Jesus as their ultimate sacrifice.

What marks us as Christians? Does the world know us by our mercy or by our condemnation? By our exclusion of those who are different than us, or by our inclusion?

We know by now that God was merciful to us through Jesus Christ, by giving His son the punishment we deserve for our sin.

If we have been given this kind of mercy, should we not do the same to others?

Once we are in Christ, we are to be merciful to others. To see them as those who are helpless and guilty. Of all the peoples in this world, we should be the most merciful for we have received the most mercy from the most loving God.

“The merciful extend mercy to others, thus demonstrating God’s mercy which has been extended to them.” (The Bible Knowledge Commentary)

“Mercifulness, then, is a gracious disposition toward our fellow creatures and fellow Christians. It is a spirit of kindness and benevolence which sympathizes with the sufferings of the afflicted, so that we weep with those that weep.” (A.W. Pink)

Remember Jesus response to the people? “When he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd.” (Matthew 9:36)

He was not frustrated that others did not understand. He was not angered that they were not perfect. He didn’t picket their nightclubs or yell hateful things. He didn’t look down his nose at them, he didn’t turn them away, shun them, or isolate from them. He saw them and had compassion.

Or as my wise teacher once said, He recognized “They were not the enemy, they were victims of the enemy.” We are to extend mercy, to show grace and compassion, for others. We are to offer Christ and pray that they receive relationship with the Father of Mercy.

As an act of gratitude for receiving mercy from our sovereign LORD, we are to share that mercy with others. It is the only response for being saturated in this gift of mercy . . . pouring it out onto others.

“Be merciful, even as your Father is merciful.” (Luke 6:36)

 

1.  Read Matthew 5:7 and write out the definition for the word mercy.

2.  List some ways you have received mercy from God or from others.

3.  Do you struggle to show mercy to others?  How does understanding this beatitude change your view on mercy?

Hunger & Thirst

Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied.” -Matthew 5:6

Wash over me like a tidal wave
Clean out what pulls me to the grave
Nothing left that you don’t love

Take me where your river flows
Heal the desert in my soul
Let it wash over my feet
All I’m asking for is just a drink

I thirst for You
Yes my soul it thirsts for You
Even as the deer is panting for the stream
Even though my soul is thirsty
I thirst for you

Spirit of the living God
Would you fall afresh like rain on us
Burst the doors and flood the halls
Into forgotten rooms inside our hearts

And we will all be swept away
In the current of your love and grace
Living water flow to me
All I’m asking for is just a drink

I thirst for you
Yes my soul it thirsts for you
Even as the deer is panting for the stream
Even though my soul is thirsty
I thirst for you

One thing I ask and I would seek
To see You there in front of me
With nothing standing in the way
Just me before You unashamed

I thirst for you
I thirst for you
You’re the well that won’t run dry
Only you can satisfy

I thirst for you
I thirst for you
Living water flow to me
All I ask is just one drink
I thirst for you

*Lyrics to “Thirst” by Phil Wickham

1. Listen to the song above.

2. Read John 4:7-29 and John 6:25-35. What does Jesus refer to Himself as in these passages?

3. What do you hunger and thirst for? Do you look to other things besides Jesus to satisfy?

Blessed are the Meek

Read Matthew 5:5

We tend to think of meekness as being soft-spoken, passive, or gentle.  Often if someone is strong and bold, we wouldn’t also categorize them as meek.  Meekness is not a characteristic of leader for most of us.  However, Jesus was meek.  He tells us “blessed are the meek”.  How can you be strong and meek?  Gentle and yet lead?  Meekness really has to do with character more than it does about personality.  It is more about humility than passivity.  Meekness has to do with seeing yourself for who you truly are, and seeing God for who He truly is.

Kevin DeYoung, an author and pastor, wrote about meekness at The Gospel Coalition Blog last week.  Here’s his insight on meekness:

Meekness is hard to define. It is not a subservient groveling. It is not a spineless acquiescence. The Greeks had no respect for meekness because they equated it with servility–people taking advantage of you, people walking all over you, people punching you in the gut as you thank them for the pleasure of being hit, that sort of thing.

But that’s not what the Bible means by meekness.

Meekness is a combination of patience, gentleness, and a complete submission to the will of God. Meekness is learning to be self-controlled instead of needing to be in control. Meekness is opening your heart instead of clenching your fist. Meekness is the firm resolve that it is always better to suffer than to sin.

Meekness is one of the great virtues of the Christian (Col. 3:12). The world may have no place for it, but the Bible does.

Moses was the meekest man on the earth (Number 12:3). And if you know anything about Moses, you know he wasn’t born with a meek personality. He killed somebody! We are not talking about a personality trait. You can be soft or loud, introverted or extroverted and still have meekness. Moses had to have meekness pressed into him by life and by the Lord.

Or think of Paul. There were big time issues in Corinth, and Paul wasn’t afraid to talk tough. But his first approach was to plead with the saints by the meekness and gentleness of Christ (2 Cor. 10:1).

If you think meekness is for losers, then you think Jesus is a loser. The Son of Man was a meek man (Matt. 11:29). Of course, that’s not the only thing to say about Jesus, but it’s one thing we can say.

When you are confronted, when you are wronged, when you get all hot and bothered and you’re tightening up inside, what does meekness look like? When you come after your adversaries is it with a whip or with a weep? Who’s sins upset you more, the sins of your neighbors or your own? Meekness is not about being a doormat. It’s about being dignified, even in the face of confusion, anxiety, and injustice.

Blessed are the meek, for they–of all people!–shall inherit the whole wide world (Matt. 5:5).

 

1.  Write out the definition for meek.

2.  How does the correct definition of meek compare to what you may have thought beforehand?

3.  Would you have considered meekness a value or a virtue prior to reading this?  Why or why not?

 

 

 

Mourning Our Sin

I did not grow up in church. I grew up in a wonderful family, who was very close, I had parents who loved each other, and we believed in God, we just didn’t go to church.

I can remember friends in elementary school asking what religion I was. I answered, “Well, I think I’m Christian.” I mean I was American after all, right?! As I got older, I can remember many people who were Christian telling me two things that were very confusing.

“You’re a sinner”
“Don’t you know Jesus died for you?”

Neither of these made sense to me. First of all a sinner? That felt a little judgmental, how could someone possibly call me a sinner? I was a good person. And Jesus died for me? What does that even mean? I didn’t even know Him and why would he die for me??

This was all so offensive to me. Really, think about it for a moment. When you call someone a sinner it means you’re telling them you’re going to hell. No one wants to hear or believe that!

It wasn’t until I was 21 years old did I understand what sin and Jesus death on the Cross truly meant. I lost my father unexpectedly when I was 19 to a heart attack. Our whole world shattered and everything I thought I knew about life, and death, and time on earth flipped upside down.

This led me to start asking question and truly seeking answers. I needed to know what happens after you die, who is control of your time on earth, and why people were always telling me about Jesus.

My now husband patiently began to answer these questions. One evening, we sat down to watch the Passion of the Christ. I still did not truly understand sin and Jesus’ death on the Cross-, but I was seeking and my heart was warm towards God.

There is a scene in the movie based on scripture in which a woman is caught in the act of adultery. In biblical times, the penalty for being caught in adultery was death. This woman committed a sin that deserved death according to the law. So the religious leaders dragged her out to be stoned to death.

With their stones in hand, ready to do justice and kill this woman, Jesus walks up and enters in. He stands in front of her, as she is scared, filthy and bloody from already being dragged out to face death. You see her reaching out her shaking, filthy hand toward His feet. He kneels down and draws a line in the sand.

woman-caught-in-adultery-1

She knew she deserved death; she was filled with shame and guilt, covered in dirt and blood and Jesus stands in front of her, as her Defender as if to say, “Her sin deserves death, but I will stand before her. My grace is sufficient and my death will satisfy.” The religious leaders drop their stones.

In this moment, I realized I was that woman. While I though of myself as “not too bad, a good person, certainly not a sinner”, this visual of God’s grace made me see my sin for what it was. My sin earned me death, and Jesus by His grace, stood in the gap to defend me and rescue me. My eyes were opened, I saw my sin, and I mourned.

I grieved deeply over how sinful I was. I cried. I confessed. I repented. And I thanked God for the gift of His son and His death on the Cross.

This beatitude “Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted” is not something to quote when a loved one passes. While God will comfort you in your mourning, this mourning mentioned here is referring to our sin. When we truly see our sin for what it is, when we truly understand how deeply embedded sin is in our lives, it should lead us to mourn and grieve.

And, it should lead us to gratitude that Jesus would reach out His hand to defend and rescue sinners like us.

 

1.  What does it mean to mourn?

2.  How is mourning your sin different from feeling guilty over your sin?

3.  Have you mourned your sin?  Ask God to reveal your sin to you, to see it for what it is, and then remind you of His grace.

Poor in Spirit

Read Matthew 5:3

I can remember a time when I was a waitress and I was serving a young family of four. The mother was clearly exhausted and her two young kids were, well, being kids and playing at the restaurant. As I walked up to take their order, her son who was probably around 4 years old picked up his glass of water, and poured it into her glass of water, which was already full.

Water went everywhere.
I gasped.
Dad tried to stop it.
Mom yelled: “Son, what are you doing?? Why would you dump your glass of water in mine? Mommy already has enough water!”
She said I’m sorry. I said I’m sorry. And the son didn’t quite know what he had just done and just stared at the mess.

I think about this scenario probably more than I should. This boy trying to fill up a glass that was already full. And maybe it’s a cheesy illustration, but hold that picture for a moment.

How can you fill up a glass with more water if it’s already full?
You can’t. It has to be empty.

When Jesus starts the Sermon on the Mount, he doesn’t start with “Blessed are the ones who have it all together. Blessed are the ones who are filled with their good works. Blessed are the ones who are full of self-righteousness. Blessed are the ones who are full of their legalistic lists of do’s and don’ts. He starts with . . .

“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” (Matthew 5:3)
 
Blessed are the ones who are empty, the ones who have come to the end of their rope, the ones who are spiritually bankrupt, the ones who have nothing left to offer.  Blessed are the ones who see their need for God.

Arthur Pink said “To be “poor in spirit” is to realize that I have nothing, am nothing, and can do nothing, and have need of all things. It issues from the painful discovery that all my righteousnesses are as filthy rags. It follows the awakening that my best performances are unacceptable, yea, an abomination to the thrice Holy One. Poverty of spirit evidences itself by its bringing the individual into the dust before God, acknowledging his utter helplessness and deservingness of hell. It is the Spirit emptying the heart of self that Christ may fill it: it is a sense of need and destitution. The one who is poor in spirit is nothing in his own eyes, and feels that his proper place is in the dust before God. {Pink, A.W., An Exposition of The Sermon on The Mount}

As long as we think of ourselves more highly than we ought, we are filled with pride, and have yet to taste of His grace. When we see ourselves as sinful, we see The Cross more clearly. When we see our need for God, we inherit the kingdom.

Seeing our emptiness is seeing our need for God. It’s seeing our need to be filled. It’s a gift of brokenness that leads us to our Healer.

Being poor in spirit is being brought low so that we can be lifted high.
Being poor in spirit leads us to riches in Christ.
Being poor in spirit is seeing our emptiness that leads us to His grace.

 

1.  What does it mean to be poor in spirit?  

2.  Read Isaiah 66:2, Psalm 51:16-17, and James 4:10.  What do all of these verses have in common?

3.  Have you had a moment in your life when you realized you were poor in spirit?  When did you recognize your need for Savior?

Be Happy and Blessed

photo-168

If I asked you what it means to be blessed, what would you say? How do you define “blessed”?

Is it being financially stable?
Free from worry?
Healthy?
Loving husband?
Well behaved kids?
A nice home?
Lots of friends and loved ones?

Another way of defining the word blessed, is happy. What is true happiness?

If you wrote out a definition for happiness what would it be? What would your life have to look like in order to be happy?

Read Matthew 5:1-10.

Does your list of “blessing and happiness” look anything like what Jesus listed?

Poor in spirit
Mourning
Meek
Hungry & Thirsty
Merciful
Pure in heart
Peacemakers
Persecuted

I don’t know about you but when I made my list, none of these words were on there. I have always considered blessing and happiness to mean free from trials and suffering. Jesus tells us true happiness comes when we are emptied of our selves, when we’ve come to the end of rope, and we look to God. True happiness comes when we mourn our sin, become humble and see ourselves lowly when compared to God, when we are so desperately hungry and thirsty for Christ and His kind of life, that’s when we find true happiness.

These beatitudes are not new commands or things we force ourselves to do in order to be blessed. Because of the posture of our hearts and our understanding of our sin, God, and his unending grace, we are blessed.

The beginning of blessing is not health, wealth, and prosperity.
It’s poverty, grief, hunger, and thirst.
It’s seeing the Cross clearly and living in light of that.
As a result of living in the light of the Gospel, we get more blessing and more happiness than we can even understand.
Living in right relationship with God leads us into green pastures, life and life abundant with the Most High God.
It leads us to find our happiness in God over earthly treasures, and delight in Him is our treasure ever more.

That’s true happiness, true blessing.

 

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