The Sermon on the Mount: The Message of the Kingdom

The Sermon on the Mount: The Message of the Kingdom

by R. Kent Hughes
The Sermon on the Mount: The Message of the Kingdom

The Sermon on the Mount: The Message of the Kingdom

by R. Kent Hughes

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Overview

The three chapters of Matthew known as the Sermon on the Mount contain truths so rich and powerful that even a lifetime of study could not exhaust their depths. For centuries, Jesus's majestic portrait of the kingdom of heaven and his unparalleled instructions for godliness have captivated Christians and non-Christians alike. In this classic commentary, now revised with a fresh look and ESV Bible references, seasoned pastor R. Kent Hughes guides readers through this glorious portion of the Bible with exegetical precision, expositional clarity, and practical sensitivity. Whether used by preachers, small group leaders, or individual laypersons, this resource will prove invaluable for illuminating the Sermon on the Mount's enduring power to enliven hearts and transform minds.

Part of the Preaching the Word series.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781433536243
Publisher: Crossway
Publication date: 04/30/2013
Series: Preaching the Word Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 994,780
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

R. Kent Hughes (DMin, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School) is senior pastor emeritus of College Church in Wheaton, Illinois, and former professor of practical theology at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Hughes is also a founder of the Charles Simeon Trust, which conducts expository preaching conferences throughout North America and worldwide. He serves as the series editor for the Preaching the Word commentary series and is the author or coauthor of many books. He and his wife, Barbara, live in Spokane, Washington, and have four children and an ever-increasing number of grandchildren.


R. Kent Hughes (DMin, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School) is senior pastor emeritus of College Church in Wheaton, Illinois, and former professor of practical theology at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Hughes is also a founder of the Charles Simeon Trust, which conducts expository preaching conferences throughout North America and worldwide. He serves as the series editor for the Preaching the Word commentary series and is the author or coauthor of many books. He and his wife, Barbara, live in Spokane, Washington, and have four children and an ever-increasing number of grandchildren.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

The Riches of Poverty

MATTHEW 5:1 — 3

Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

5:3

JESUS' SERMON ON THE MOUNT is so famous and powerful that we can hardly overstate its influence. St. Augustine, for example, described it as "a perfect standard of the Christian life." The great preacher-poet John Donne spoke of it in the most ornate terms:

As nature hath given us certain elements, and all our bodies are composed of them; and art hath given us a certain alphabet of letters, and all words are composed of them; so, our blessed Saviour, in these three chapters of this Gospel, hath given us a sermon of texts, of which, all our sermons may be composed. All the articles of our religion, all the canons of our Church, all the injunctions of our princes, all the homilies of our fathers, all the body of divinity, is in these three chapters, in this one sermon in the Mount.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer based his classic The Cost of Discipleship upon its exposition. The influence of the Sermon on the Mount is truly past reckoning.

The Sermon on the Mount has even exerted a great influence on those outside the Christian faith. Its influence upon Gandhi's political approach is a matter of common knowledge. Those who hate Christianity and its ethics likewise have made it an object of contempt. It is seen as the source of the "slave morality" that Nietzsche so hated. When Nietzsche's teaching bore its terrible fruit during the ascendancy of National Socialism in Germany, the Sermon was vigorously attacked by men like Alfred Rosenberg, and a modified version was produced for those who wanted to remain within the Christian tradition and accommodate themselves to Hitler's philosophy. So like it or not, everyone in Western civilization has been touched in some way by the Sermon on the Mount. No one can legitimately minimize its influence.

For the Christian believer, it is simply the greatest sermon ever preached. Why is this? To begin with, it came from the lips of Jesus. The original sermon was probably quite long, possibly even several hours, and what we have in Matthew 5 — 7 (which takes about ten minutes to read) is a distillation of his teaching. The Sermon on the Mount is the compacted, congealed theology of Christ and as such is perhaps the most profound section of the entire New Testament and the whole Bible. Every phrase can bear exhaustive exposition and yet never be completely plumbed. Along with this, it is the most penetrating section of God's Word. Because the theme is entering the kingdom of heaven, it shows us exactly where we stand in relation to the kingdom and eternal life (see 5:3; 7:21). As we expose ourselves to the X-rays of Christ's words, we see whether we truly are believers, and if believers, the degree of the authenticity of our lives. No other section of Scripture makes us face ourselves like the Sermon on the Mount. It is violent, but its violence can be our ongoing liberation! It is the antidote to the pretense and sham that plagues Christianity.

For me personally, the Sermon has been the most important factor in my spiritual life. Every time I return to it, especially the Beatitudes, I am brought up short as I face the bedrock reality of this amazing revelation. My dream and prayer is that somehow the spirituality of the Sermon on the Mount will penetrate our hearts, lifting us from the mediocrity that characterizes our society.

We will begin with the Beatitudes, which someone has, not inaccurately, called the "Beautiful Attitudes" of the kingdom, for they give us the character of those who are true children of God. Many suggested titles say essentially the same thing: "The Character of the Kingdom," "The Manifesto of the Kingdom," "The Norms of the Kingdom." The first four Beatitudes focus on our relationship to God, and the second four on our relationship to our fellowman. Each of the eight builds upon the other, so that there is an amazingly beautiful and compelling progression. At the same time there is a profound unity. The first Beatitude (v. 3) and the last Beatitude (v. 10) end with the same reward, "the kingdom of heaven," which according to Hebrew style means that the Beatitudes between them all deal with that very same theme.

As we begin our study, we must envision the snowballing of interest in Jesus' ministry leading up to this event. He has been traveling around Galilee teaching in the synagogues, and people are coming to him by the droves for healing. News has spread all the way to Syria, and every kind of case imaginable is coming to him. Great multitudes were following him clear out into the wilderness beyond the Jordan. Matthew 5:1, 2 tells us: "Seeing the crowds, he went up on the mountain, and when he sat down, his disciples came to him. And he opened his mouth and taught them, saying, ..."

In the midst of his escalating ministry, Jesus chose a prominent rise or hill, sat down in the customary teaching posture of a rabbi, surrounded by many disciples (that is, those who were at that time interested in learning), and began to teach them.

Those of us who grew up in the fifties are quite familiar with the name Mickey Cohen because he was the most flamboyant criminal of the day. Perhaps some have even heard of Cohen's becoming a "Christian."

The story goes like this: At the height of his career, Cohen was persuaded to attend an evangelistic service at which he showed a surprising interest in Christianity. Hearing of this, and realizing what a great influence a converted Mickey Cohen could have for the Lord, some prominent Christian leaders began visiting him in an effort to convince him to accept Christ. Late one night, after repeatedly being encouraged to open the door of his life on the basis of Revelation 3:20 ("Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me"), Cohen prayed.

Hopes ran high among his believing acquaintances. But with the passing of time no one could detect any change in Cohen's life. Finally they confronted him with the reality that being a Christian meant he would have to give up his friends and his profession. Cohen demurred. His logic? There are "Christian football players, Christian cowboys, Christian politicians; why not a Christian gangster?"

The absurdity of what happened to Mickey Cohen dramatically underscores what is happening to untold numbers today. Though many ostensibly have "accepted Christ," they continue life as they always have. There is no repentance. They remain self-sufficient, even puffed up. Indeed, they are nowhere near the kingdom because they have not experienced the poverty of spirit that the first Beatitude insists is the initial ground of the kingdom of heaven.

What evangelical Christianity needs is an exposure to the life-giving logic of the Beatitudes and the blessedness of their fearsome surgery.

Blessedness: The Approval of God

Each of the eight Beatitudes opens with the word "blessed." So it is essential that we understand here in the beginning what this word means, because it bears on everything that will be said in the remainder of this book.

Contrary to popular opinion, blessed does not mean "happy," even though some translations have rendered it this way. Happiness is a subjective state, a feeling. But Jesus is not declaring how people feel; rather, he is making an objective statement about what God thinks of them. Blessed is a positive judgment by God on the individual that means "to be approved" or "to find approval." So when God blesses us, he approves us.

Of course, there is no doubt that such blessing will bring feelings of happiness and that blessed people are generally happy. But we must remember that the root idea of "blessed" is an awareness of approval by God. Blessedness is not simply a nice wish from God; it is a pronouncement of what we actually are — approved. Blessedness indicates the smile of God or, as Max Lucado has so beautifully put it, The Applause of Heaven.

As we begin this study of the Beatitudes, let us realize that if God's blessing/approval means more to us than anything else — even the approval of our friends, business acquaintances, and colleagues — then the Beatitudes are going to penetrate our hearts, speaking to us in the deepest ways.

The question is, do we really want his approval more than anything else? Not, do we want to be happy (as proper as that desire is) but, do we truly want God's approval above all else?

If so, then we must heed every word of the first Beatitude, for it gives us the condition of blessing in just three words: "poor in spirit." "Blessed/approved are the poor in spirit."

It is so essential that we get off to a good start with the first Beatitude if we are to understand them all that I would like to encourage the following prayer.

Dear Lord,

I long for your smile upon my life. So please open my heart to the meaning of the Beatitudes.

I open myself to their light. Shine their rays into the deepest part of my life. Sear my soul. Heal me.

Build the character of the kingdom in me so that you can call me blessed.

Amen.

Understanding Poverty of Spirit

Let us understand what poverty of spirit is not. It is not the conviction that one is of no value whatsoever. It does not mean the absence of self-worth or, as one theologian put it, "ontological insignificance." It does not require that we believe ourselves to be zeros. Such an attitude is simply not Scriptural, for Christ's death on our behalf teaches us that we are of great value (1 Corinthians 6:20; 7:23).

Neither does "poor in spirit" mean shyness. Many people who are naturally shy and introverted are extremely proud. Nor does "poor in spirit" mean lacking in vitality, spiritually anemic, or gutless.

Certainly, "poor in spirit" also does not refer to showy humility like that of Uriah Heep in Charles Dickens's David Copperfield, who kept reminding people that he was a "very humble person."

The great British preacher Martyn Lloyd-Jones tells of meeting such a man on one of his preaching missions. When Dr. Lloyd-Jones arrived at the train station, the man asked for the minister's suitcase and in fact almost ripped it from his hand saying, "I am a deacon in the church where you are preaching tomorrow. ... You know, I am a mere nobody, a very unimportant man. Really. I do not count; I am not a great man in the church; I am just one of those men who carry the bag for the minister."

Lloyd-Jones observes, "He was anxious that I should know what a humble man he was, how 'poor in spirit.' Yet by his anxiety to make it known, he was denying the very thing he was trying to establish. Uriah Heep — the man who thus, as it were, glories in his poverty of spirit and thereby proves he is not humble." We all have met this kind of person, who by his own self-conscious diffidence is begging for us to say that he is not really nothing but actually quite wonderful. When this attitude is present, there is an absence of poverty of spirit.

What, then, does "poor in spirit" mean? The history of the Greek word for "poor," ptochos, provides some insight. It comes from a verbal root that denotes "to cower and cringe like a beggar." In classical Greek ptochos came to mean "someone who crouches about, wretchedly begging." In the New Testament it bears something of this idea because it denotes a poverty so deep that the person must obtain his living by begging. He is fully dependent on the giving of others. He cannot survive without help from the outside. Thus an excellent translation is "beggarly poor."

Now, if we take this meaning and combine it with the following words ("in spirit") we have the idea, "Blessed are the beggarly poor in spirit." The sense is: "Blessed are those who are so desperately poor in their spiritual resources that they realize they must have help from outside sources."

"Poverty of Spirit, then, is the personal acknowledgment of spiritual bankruptcy." It is the awareness and admission that we are utterly sinful and without the moral virtues adequate to commend us to God. John Wesley said of the poor in spirit, "He has a deep sense of the loathsome leprosy of sin which he brought with him from his mother's womb, which overspreads his whole soul, and totally corrupts every power and faculty thereof."

It is the recognition of our personal moral unworthiness. The "poor in spirit" see themselves as spiritually needy. My favorite rendering of the verse is:

Blessed are those who realize that they have nothing within themselves to commend them to God, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

The World Rejects Poverty of Spirit

Poverty of spirit is the antithesis of the proud selfishness and self- sufficiency of today's world. The world has its own ideas of blessedness. "Blessed is the man who is always right." "Blessed is the man who is strong." "Blessed is the man who rules." "Blessed is the man who is satisfied with himself." "Blessed is the man who is rich." "Blessed is the man who is popular."

Today's men and women think that the answer to life is found in self. Actress Shirley MacLaine is not alone in her journey into self. Many in the church travel with her. Karl Jung is their Virgil, and the subterranean god of self is their Inferno. Christian narcissism is promoted as Biblical self- love. King Jesus becomes the imperial self. When this happens, Christianity suffers a massive shrinkage, as David Wells explains:

Theology becomes therapy. ... The biblical interest in righteousness is replaced by a search for happiness, holiness by wholeness, truth by feeling, ethics by feeling good about one's self. ... The past recedes. The Church recedes. The world recedes. All that remains is self.

Someday, if history is allowed to continue, a perceptive artist may sculpt a statue of twentieth-century man with his arms wrapped around himself in loving embrace, kissing his image in a mirror.

To this, Jesus answers, "Blessed [approved of God] are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven."

Poverty of Spirit Is Essential for Knowing God's Approval

We must understand and embrace a true poverty of spirit, for that is the only way we can ever know God's smile. David became the greatest king of Israel, and the key to his rise to greatness was his poverty of spirit. Listen to his words when it all began: "Who am I, and who are my relatives, my father's clan in Israel, that I should be son-in-law to the king?" (1 Samuel 18:18). Later in life, before his fall, he said, "Who am I, O Lord GOD, and what is my house, that you have brought me thus far?" (2 Samuel 7:18).

Similarly, Gideon, whom we celebrate for his amazing deliverance of Israel with just 300 men, began with these words: "Please, Lord, how can I save Israel? Behold, my clan is the weakest in Manasseh, and I am the least in my father's house" (Judges 6:15).

Significantly, when Jesus began his public ministry he opened the scroll to Isaiah 61:1 and began with this opening line: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor" (see Luke 4:18). In Isaiah's context the poor were the exiled people of Israel who had not compromised and who looked to God alone to save them and establish his kingdom. These are always the people to whom he comes. The incarnate Son of God was born of a woman who sang, "My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior, for he has looked upon the humble estate of his servant" (Luke 1:46 — 48). When Christ was born, the angels announced it to humble shepherds, not to the Establishment (Luke 2:8 — 15). And when Jesus was presented in the temple, aged Simeon and Anna, representatives of the poor of Isaiah's prophecy, exalted God because of him (Luke 2:25 — 38). These are the people to whom Christ is born and in whom he is born. Lay this to heart: "The LORD is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit" (Psalm 34:18). This is the way it will always be.

Poverty of Spirit Is Essential for Salvation

Poverty of spirit is an indispensable sign of grace. No one can truly know Christ without it. There are most likely scores of evangelicals in your own community, prominent "Christians," who do not know Christ. They are tares amidst wheat who perhaps do not even know it (Matthew 13:24 — 30). They have never come to a blessed emptiness, to the very end of themselves. They have never confessed, "There is nothing in me to commend me to God"; and thus they are lost.

The changeless truth is, no one can come to Christ without poverty of spirit. This is not to say that one must have a perfect sense of one's spiritual insufficiency to be saved. Very few, if any, come to this. Rather, it means that the spiritually proud and self-sufficient, those who actually think there is something within them that will make God accept them — these people are lost.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "The Sermon on the Mount"
by .
Copyright © 2001 R. Kent Hughes.
Excerpted by permission of Good News Publishers.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments11
A Word to Those Who Preach the Word13
1The Riches of Poverty (Matthew 5:1-3)15
2The Comfort of Mourning (Matthew 5:4)25
3The Strength of Gentleness (Matthew 5:5)33
4The Fullness of Hunger (Matthew 5:6)39
5The Dividend of Mercy (Matthew 5:7)45
6The Reward of Purity (Matthew 5:8)53
7The Paternity of Peace (Matthew 5:9)61
8The Joy of Persecution (Matthew 5:10-12)69
9"The Salt of the Earth" (Matthew 5:13)77
10"The Light of the World" (Matthew 5:14-16)83
11Jesus on Righteousness (Matthew 5:17-20)91
12A Righteous Person's Relationships (Matthew 5:21-26)99
13Radical Purity (Matthew 5:27-30)105
14Jesus' Teaching on Divorce (Matthew 5:31-32)113
15Radical Truthfulness (Matthew 5:33-37)123
16Wrongs and Rights (Matthew 5:38-42)131
17Superseding Love (Matthew 5:43-48)139
18Christianity Without Hypocrisy (Matthew 6:1-8)145
19The Lord's Prayer: The Father (Matthew 6:9)153
20The Lord's Prayer: The Name (Matthew 6:9)161
21"Your Kingdom Come" (Matthew 6:10a)167
22"Your Will Be Done" (Matthew 6:10b)175
23The Lord's Prayer: The Bread (Matthew 6:11)181
24The Lord's Prayer: Forgiveness (Matthew 6:12)187
25The Lord's Prayer: Temptation (Matthew 6:13)193
26The Lord's Prayer: Glory (Matthew 6:13)199
27Lasting Treasure (Matthew 6:19-21)205
28Unclouded Vision (Matthew 6:22-24)211
29"Do Not Worry ... But Seek First" (Matthew 6:25-34)219
30The Speck and the Log (Matthew 7:1-5)227
31"Seek and You Will Find" (Matthew 7:7-11)233
32The Two Roads (Matthew 7:13, 14)241
33Discerning False Preachers (Matthew 7:15-20)247
34Entering the Kingdom (Matthew 7:21-29)253
35The Sermon on the Move (Matthew 8:1-3)261
Notes266
Scripture Index273
General Index277
Index of Sermon Illustrations280
About the Book Jacket288
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