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BLESSED:
Makarioi: (Mt 5:4-11;
11:6; 13:16; 24:46; Psalms 1:1; 2:12; 32:1,2; 41:1; 84:12; 112:1; Psalms
119:1,2; 128:1; 146:5; Proverbs 8:32; Isaiah 30:18; Luke 6:20,21-26;
11:28; John 20:29; Romans 4:6, 7, 8, 9; James 1:12; Revelation 19:9;
22:14)
"Blessed (happy, to be
envied, and spiritually prosperous—with life-joy and satisfaction in
God’s favor and salvation, regardless
of their outward conditions) " (Amplified)
Beatitude is derived from
the Latin beatitudo/beatus, because the first word of each
statement in the Latin Vulgate is beati, which translates
Matthew’s Greek word makarios (traditionally translated “blessed”). As
you study the beatitudes, notice that the first three describe Kingdom
Citizens as those who recognize that what they are in the presence of
God is what they are, no more and no less. Observe also that all eight
beatitudes are essentially attitudes each of which has associated
promises.
In his introductory sermon on Jesus'
sermon Pastor Brian Bell has some helpful remarks which can be
summarized as follows...
1. These eight qualities can only
be lived out by Christians. These spiritual standards come about
only through surrender to the Savior. Jesus is not saying, “Live like
this in order to be saved.” He’s saying, “Live like this because
you are saved.” Conduct must flow out of character. A Christian is one
who embraces and embodies the Beatitudes. Another way to say it is that
if you want to spot a Christ-follower in a crowd, look for these
eight character qualities. (Ed comment: And we must say at the
outset, don't "try" to keep Jesus' commandments and instructions in your
own intrinsic "power", for you are powerless to carry them out. These
are "impossible" standards for fleshly men, but are imminently "Him"
possible for those who learn to surrender to and engage their indwelling
omnipotent "Enabler", their Helper, the Holy Spirit. The Christ follower
who successfully lives by the Sermon on the Mount is one who is
continually filled with/controlled by the Spirit [Eph 5:18-note]
and continually walks by the Spirit [Gal 5:16-note].
The supernatural lifestyle described in Jesus' Sermon can only be lived
out by relinquishing self effort and by relying continually on our
supernatural Source, the Spirit's
dunamis His inherent power to
accomplish Jesus' commands and instructions. So at the outset, beware of
the natural tendency of our
fallen
flesh to deceive us
into thinking we can do any of the commands and instructions in our own
energy, lest we fall into the subtle trap of legalism!)
2. The Beatitudes are a package deal, not something to pick and
choose from. Along with the Fruit of the Spirit that is to ripen in
every believer (Gal 5:22-note,
Gal 5:23-note),
a Christian should, and must, display each of these character traits.
They are not just for the “spiritual elite,” but are for every believer.
In addition, these are not eight separate groups of disciples, some who
are meek and others who hunger for God. It’s easy to make the mistake of
saying, “I’m just not merciful” or “I’m just not a peacemaker.” Oswald
Chambers refers to these words as lovely and poetic, yet their impact is
that of “spiritual torpedoes.” We can’t pick the easy ones and ignore
the difficult ones like being pure and being prepared for persecution.
Incidentally, many of the Beatitudes are the exact opposite of what we
want to do. While easy to appreciate, they are difficult to apply (Ed:
I'll add "impossible"!). John Stott writes: “The Sermon on the
Mount is probably the best-known part of the teaching of Jesus, though
arguably it is the least understood, and certainly the least obeyed”
(“The Message of the Sermon on the Mount,” Page 15).
3. Behavior must flow out of belief. Correct doctrine must always
lead to Christ like behavior (Ed: Or it least it should.
If it does not we become modern day "Pharisees!"). We must not only know
what to believe; we must understand how to behave. While Jesus teaches
content throughout the Sermon on the Mount, these opening words deal
with character. Jesus is emphasizing throughout this Sermon that His
disciples are to be different. John Stott suggests that Matthew 6:8 is
the key text: “Do not be like them…” as he writes: “They were
not to take their cue from the people around them, but from Him, and so
prove to be genuine children of their heavenly Father” (cp John
15:8) (Stott, Page 18). As Christians, we are to be stamped by Christ,
not by the culture around us, or by our tendencies within us.
A.W. Tozer once wrote: “There is an evil…glaring disparity
between theology and practice among professing Christians…An intelligent
observer of our human scene who heard the Sunday morning message and
later watched the Sunday afternoon conduct of those who heard it would
conclude he had been examining two distinct and contrary religions. It
appears to me that too many Christians want to enjoy the thrill of
feeling right but are not willing to endure the inconvenience of being
right” (As quoted in a sermon by David Hoke called “Hearing His
Voice Today,”
Hearing His Voice Today -
Introduction Sermon on the Mount).
4. Jesus wants us to seek the applause of heaven. Some
translations have utilized the word “happy” instead of “blessed” to
describe those who exhibit these expressions of discipleship. One author
even refers to them as the “Be-happy-tudes.” This doesn’t do justice to
the Greek word. While there is a close connection between holiness and
happiness, this phrase conveys how God views people who live in a
certain way.
Warren Wiersbe points out that “blessed” is “an inner
satisfaction and sufficiency that does not depend on outward
circumstances for happiness.” Those who are “blessed” have inner
lives that are rightly aligned. The root idea is “approval.” When we
bless God, we are approving and praising Him; when He blesses us, He is
expressing approval of us. In the sight of heaven, those who live out
what Jesus is spelling out are “superlatively blessed” because the
Almighty is extending His endorsement. Note that this term is used at
the beginning of each sentence as if to emphasize its exuberant
exclamation of joy....
How much do you crave God clapping for you? Do you want His smile more
than your self-centered aspirations? Do you desire His applause more
than the approval of your friends? If you want God’s blessing more than
anything else, you can have it. But first you must want to please Him
above everything else. How badly do you want His blessing?
Chuck Swindoll, in commenting on the beauty of the Beatitudes,
writes this: “Most sermons are more negative than positive, more like
scathing rebukes than affirmation. Not this one. With beautiful
simplicity, using terms any age could understand, Jesus brought blessing
rather than condemnation…Having endured a lifetime of verbal assaults by
the scribes and Pharisees, the multitude on the mount must have thought
they had died and gone to heaven.”
The blessed are those who
are allowed fellowship with God (cf Ro 5:1-3), because they have a right
relationship with Him and thus are empowered and motivated to enjoy Him
as He originally intended. Jesus is the ultimate blessing, beloved.
Don't miss that as you study the Beatitudes. So many have lost sight of
where true blessing is to be found and Jesus' beatitudes set about to
correct that wrong thinking.
Test yourself right this moment -- what is
your heart set on as vital for your life and character? What things do
you most want to see developed in your life this day, this month, this
year? Make a list and then compare it with the list Jesus unfolds in
Matthew 5:3-12. Does your list include poverty of spirit, mourning over
sin, meekness, hungering and thirsting for righteousness, showing mercy,
maintaining a pure heart and a peacemaking spirit, and finally (and
because of the former characteristics) a real willingness to be
persecuted for Jesus' sake?
Or does your list show some other path to
supposed blessing? If so, those blessings will prove to be nothing but
mirages in the desert of this dying world, holding forth wonderful
promises but dispensing nothing but disappointment. Jesus' list of
character traits that are the hallmarks of the true citizens of His
Kingdom and represent the only life that God will bless,
beloved. Do not be deceived or distracted by the passing pleasures of
this world, enticements of your flesh or the temptations of the devil.
Lord, give us ears to hear Your
magnificent manifesto afresh as the Great Physician's only
prescription for genuine, lasting happiness in this world and the one to
come! Amen.
Hear O JEHOVAH, and be gracious
to me.
O JEHOVAH, be Thou my
Helper.
Thou hast turned for me my mourning into dancing.
Thou hast loosed by sackcloth and girded me with gladness.
(Psalms 30:10-11)
As Spurgeon reminds us...
The Old Testament closes with the
word “curse.” (see Malachi 4:6). The New Testament
begins here, in the preaching of Christ, with the word “Blessed.” He
has changed the curse into a blessing: “Blessed”
Nor did he begin in that manner, and
then change his strain immediately, for nine times did that charming
word fall from his lips in rapid succession. It has been well said that
Christ’s teaching might be summed up in two words, “Believe” and
“Blessed.” Mark tells us that he preached, saying, “Repent ye,
and believe the gospel;” and Matthew in this passage informs us that he
came saying, “Blessed are the poor in spirit.” All his teaching was
meant to bless the sons of men; for “God sent not his Son into the
world to condemn the world, but that the world through him might be
saved.”
“His hand no thunder bears,
No terror clothes his brow
No bolts to drive our guilty souls
To fiercer flames below.”
His lips, like a honeycomb, drop
sweetness, promises and blessings are the overflowings of his mouth.
“Grace is poured into thy lips,” said the psalmist, and consequently
grace poured from his lips; he was blessed for ever, and he continued to
distribute blessings throughout the whole of his life, till, “as he
blessed them, he was taken up into heaven.” The law had two mountains,
Ebal and Gerizim, one for blessing and another for cursing, but the’
Lord Jesus blesses evermore, and curses not. (Matthew 5.1-12 The Beatitudes)
A number of Bible versions instead of
rendering it "blessed" use words such as “happy” or “fortunate,” which
unfortunately tend to trivialize the meaning by suggesting a temporary
emotional or circumstantial state, which is not the actual meaning as
discussed below.
Martin Luther commenting on
Jesus beginning with "blessed" as His very first word wrote...
Now that’s a fine, sweet,
friendly beginning of his
teaching and preaching. For he goes at it, not like Moses or a teacher
of the law, with commands and threats, but in the very friendliest way,
with nothing but attractions and allurements and lovely promises.
John Broadus adds that blessed...
It was also a beautifully natural
introduction (Weiss), because he came to preach the ‘good news’ of the
kingdom, {Mt 4:23} the fulfilment of all the Messianic hopes and
promises. (Commentary on Matthew)
The Encyclopedia of
Christianity notes that...
The beatitude, or “makarism,”
is a literary form commonly beginning with the word “blessed” (from
Greek makarios, see definition below) and constituting some declaration of good fortune for persons.
Familiar to Greek literature in both the classical and Hellenistic
periods, it is most often used to extol persons considered to be happy
according to the ideals of Greek philosophy (e.g., those attaining
wealth, honor, wisdom, or virtue). (Fahlbusch, E., & Bromiley, G. W.
The Encyclopedia of Christianity Vol. 1, Page 212. Grand
Rapids, Mich.; Leiden, Netherlands: Wm. B. Eerdmans)
Blessed are the poor in spirit
- In Scripture, there are two words translated "blessed",
makarios (discussed in more detail below) and
eulogetos
(from
eu = good, well +
logos
= word), the latter meaning that we speak well
of someone (as when we hear a eulogy at a funeral, the eulogy speaking
well of that person who has passed on from life to death). In contrast,
makarios is not to speak well of someone, but defines a
condition that exists. In other words, makarios describes something
that is true about someone, not something that someone says
is true about them. Makarios is a reality, an inward state of truth no
matter how you actually feel. In other words, to be "blessed" as defined
by makarios, one does not have to feel "happy" to be blessed. You can
still be blessed and act as if you are not happy. Makarios defines one's
state of being in relation to God, independent of how one feels about it
at a given moment in time. There are many times I don't personally feel
very "blessed" but the Bible nevertheless declares that irregardless of
my untoward circumstances, afflictions, trials, etc, I am still
"blessed" by God! The
Price rightly notes that...
Most people are interested in being
happy! The pursuit of happiness is the driving force of our affluent
western culture. However, when you look at the list of ingredients Jesus
gives for happiness, there is a big shock in store! This is a strange
list to say the least, and many of these qualities appear the very
antithesis of what most of us are looking for. (Ed note: "Happy are the
poor", "Happy are the sad", etc)...The major difference in this list is
that Jesus is not talking of qualities in the physical realm (the area
in which most people look for happiness), but in the realm of the
spirit...The myth of our day is that happiness is found in satisfying
our physical desires, comforts and appetites. Those desires may be
entirely legitimate, but the engine room of each human being is the
spirit which is designed to be inhabited and governed by
God....Satisfying the body is never the source of true happiness for it
is not the seat of our true appetites! Our true appetite is expressed in
the famous prayer of Augustine, ‘You have made us for yourself, and our
hearts are restless until they find their rest in you’. The teaching of
the Sermon on the Mount works from the spirit to the soul and out to the
body. The norm of our day reverses that process, and tries to satisfy
the deep needs of the human spirit by focusing on physical satisfaction.
In this regard, either Jesus Christ has got it all wrong, or the world
at large has it all wrong. You choose! There are nine beatitudes in this
passage (statements beginning with ‘Blessed are …’), but as the last
is repeated twice, eight different ingredients in Jesus’ description of
happiness. These are not descriptions of eight different people, one is
poor in spirit, another is mourning, another is meek etc, but the
description of eight ingredients that will be true of each one person
who is happy, ‘makarios’ style. The list of these eight is
progressive. Beginning with the first, the second grows out of it, the
third out of the second until the eighth gives the completed picture of
the person to whom Jesus then says, ‘You are the salt of the earth....
You are the light of the world..." (Price, C. Focus on the Bible:
Matthew).
DO YOU DESIRE
DIVINE BLESSINGS?
Blessed* (3107)
(makarios
from
root makar, but others say from mak = large or lengthy) means to be happy, but not in the usual sense
of happiness based on positive circumstances. From the Biblical
perspective Makarios describes the
person who is free from daily cares and worries because his every breath
and circumstance is in the hands of His Maker Who gives him such an
assurance (such a "blessing"). As discussed below makarios was
used to describe the kind of happiness that comes from receiving divine
favor.
A T Robertson says
The word accents the actual inner
state rather than the outward appearance as another sees it...It is
important to note that in the discussion of righteousness which is to
follow Jesus assumes the new heart (Ed: Or serves to challenge
unbelievers to believe in Jesus and receive a new heart), which alone
makes it possible to come up to the lofty ethical standard here set up.
Rob Morgan writes that...
Makarios (blessed) means
happy, fortunate, blissful. Homer used the word to describe a wealthy
man, and Plato used it of one who is successful in business. Both Homer
and Hesiod spoke of the Greek gods as being happy (makarios)
within themselves, because they were unaffected by the world of men-who
were subject to poverty, disease, weakness, misfortune, and death.
The fullest meaning of the term, therefore, had to do with an inward
contentedness that is not affected by circumstances. That is the
kind of happiness God desires for His children, a state of joy and
well-being that does not depend on physical, temporary circumstances
(cf Php 4:11, 12, 13). (From his sermon entitled "Blessed")
Makarios
is found 49 times in the NASB NT (Click
all uses at end of this note).
The translates makarios as blessed, 46; fortunate, 1;
happier, 1; happy, 1. (Click
for a devotional on "blessed"
or "happy")
Makarios - 40x in the
non-apocryphal
Septuagint (LXX)
- Ge 30:13; Dt
33:29; 1Kgs 10:8; 2Chr 9:7; Job 5:17; Ps 1:1; 2:12; 32:1, 2; 33:12;
34:8; 40:4; 41:1; 65:4; 84:4, 5, 12; 89:15; 94:12; 106:3; 112:1; 119:1,
2;
127:5; 128:1, 2; 137:8, 9; 144:15; 146:5; Pr 3:13; 8:32; 20:7; 28:14; Ec
10:17; Is 30:18; 31:9; 32:20; 56:2; Da 12:12.
Question: Do you want to
experience God's hand of blessing in your life? Who doesn't?!
Suggestion: Hold
pointer over the links for the Psalms and Proverbs in the
Lxx
and make a list of what is
associated with God's hand of blessing. I think you will be surprised,
edified, convicted (rebuked?), and I pray transformed by this simple
study that illumines God's truth, His word of grace (Acts 20:32),
concerning His blessing on men and women (cp Jn 17:17).
Greek used makarios to refer to their gods and thus "the blessed
ones" were the gods. They were "blessed" because they had achieved a
state of happiness and contentment in life that was beyond all cares,
labors, and even death. The blessed ones were beings who lived in some
other world away from the cares and problems and worries of ordinary
people. To be blessed, you had to be a god. Homer used makarios to describe
a state unaffected by the world of men, who were subject to poverty,
weakness, and death.
The Greeks also used makarios in reference to the dead who were "the
blessed ones", men and women who, through death, had reached the other
world of the gods and so were now beyond the cares and problems and
worries of earthly life. To be blessed, you had to be dead, a state many
of us have felt like we would just as well experience because of the
nature of our manifold troubles and afflictions at the time.
Finally, the Greeks used makarios to refer to the socioeconomic elite, the
wealthy, the idea being (completely false I might add) that their riches
and power put them above the normal cares and problems and worries of
the lower socioeconomic strata, who constantly struggled to make it in
life.
In short, the Greeks felt that one had to be either a god, dead or
filthy rich to be blessed (makarios)! And so we see another one of the words (like
doulos, charis, etc) that the Bible elevated in status and
meaning, as described below in a compilation from many different
resources.
MacArthur writes that makarios...
is a divine pronouncement, the assured benefit
of those who meet the conditions God requires. (MacArthur,
J: Matthew 1-7 Chicago: Moody Press or
Logos)
Makarios is a state of existence in relationship to God in
which a person is “blessed” from God’s perspective even when he or she
doesn’t feel happy or isn’t presently experiencing good fortune. This
does not mean a conferral of blessing or an exhortation to live a life
worthy of blessing; rather, it is an acknowledgment that the ones
indicated are blessed. Negative feelings, absence of feelings, or
adverse conditions cannot take away the blessedness of those who exist
in such a relationship with God!
Makarios ultimately describes the state those who believe in
Christ and in so possessing God, possess everything. In addition since
they are indwelt by the Holy Spirit, they are fully satisfied no matter
what their circumstances. It is interesting that Aristotle contrasted
makarios with the Greek word endees which means "the needy one".
Friedrich Hauck says that the Greek word Makarios
"refers overwhelmingly to
the distinctive religious joy which accrues to man form his share in the
salvation of the kingdom of God."
Makarios means possessing
the favor of God, experiencing "spiritual prosperity". It
describes a state of being marked by fullness from God. And so what
Jesus is saying in the "Beatitudes" is "Spiritually prosperous
(blessed) are the poor in spirit...", etc (Mt 5:3) And thus some of the translators like Wuest pick up this
definition...
Spiritually prosperous are
the destitute and helpless in the realm of the spirit, (Wuest)
Some sources record that makarios
means "to be congratulated." The
natural man thinks of the "poor in spirit" as the person who
mourns over sin and suffering, the meek, the persecuted as groups to be
despised or even pitied. However, Jesus says they are fortunate people
for God is pleased with them and fittingly He has "blessed" them. They
are to be congratulated and after all what fortune is so great as God's
blessing? D Martyn Lloyd-Jones adds that...
The only man who is at all capable of
carrying out the injunctions of the Sermon on the Mount is the man who
is perfectly clear in his mind with regard to the essential character of
the Christian. Our Lord says that this is the only kind of person who
is truly 'blessed, that is, 'happy'. Someone has suggested that it might
be put like this; this is the sort of man who is to be congratulated,
this is the sort of man to be envied, for he alone is truly happy.
(Lloyd-Jones,
D. M.
Studies in the Sermon on the Mount) (Bolding added)
One might paraphrase Jesus' first
beatitude...
Blessed are the spiritual paupers, the
spiritually
empty, the spiritually bankrupt who cringe in a corner and cry out to
God for mercy.
Why? Because they are the only
ones who tap the real resource for happiness independent of what
happens. They are the only ones who ever know God. They are the only
ones who are allowed entry into the Kingdom of Heaven (God). Theirs is
the Kingdom—then and there, here and now and forever. Hallelujah!
Blessed connotes the state
of “prosperity” that comes when a superior bestows his favor (blessing)
on one.
Expositor's Bible Commentary notes that...
Usually makarios
describes the man who
is singularly favored by God and therefore in some sense "happy"...As
for "happy" (TEV), it will not do for the Beatitudes, having been
devalued in modern usage. (Gaebelein,
F, Editor: Expositor's Bible Commentary 6-Volume New Testament.
Zondervan Publishing)
Cremer says that
makarios
“is the gracious and saving effect of
God’s favor … ,(Ed: Note this condition) but is enjoyed only
when there is a corresponding behavior towards God; so that it forms
the hoped-for good of those who in this life are subject to oppression.”
(Bolding added)
Cremer goes on to add that in the NT makarios...
"is quite a religiously qualified conception, expressing the life-joy
and satisfaction of the man who does or shall experience God’s favor and
salvation, his blessedness altogether apart from his outward
condition … It always signifies a happiness produced by some
experience of God’s favor, and specially conditioned by the revelation
of grace.” (Bolding added)
Kenneth Wuest says that
when makarios is
"used of the state or condition of
the believer, we would say that it refers to the spiritually prosperous
state of that person who is the recipient of the sanctifying work of the
Holy Spirit, who is enabled to minister these blessings to him when the
believer yields to Him for that ministry and cooperates with Him in it.
For instance, those who are reproached for the name of Christ, are in a
spiritually prosperous condition, for the Holy Spirit is ministering to
them with refreshing power (see note
1 Peter 4:14). (Wuest,
K. S. Wuest's Word Studies from the Greek New Testament: Studies in the
Vocabulary of the Greek New Testament: p.23. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans)
Makarios is is used in
pagan Greek literature to describe the state of happiness and well-being
such as the gods enjoy as distinct from that of men who were subject to
poverty and death, denoting a state of being of the gods who were
exalted above earthly suffering and the limitations of earthly life.
Other secular Greek writers used makarios to describe the state
of certain men as supremely blest, fortunate, prosperous, wealthy.
Some theological dictionaries
define "blessed" as a "state of happiness" but this is not
completely accurate because blessed differs from ''happy''
which describes a person with good ''luck''. The English word "Happy"
is from the root hap which means luck as a favorable
circumstance. What if someone asked you today "Are you happy?" Being the
spiritual person you are would you stumble and fumble and hesitate and
hem and haw because the question is not an easy question to answer.
Isn't it true that for most of us saints still on this earth, our
happiness tends to go up or down depending on what "happens" or
how things are going in our life? How much superior is the condition of
the saint who is "makarios", a state in which we are still in the
world and yet are independent of the world because our satisfaction
comes from God and not from favorable circumstances.
Ray Pritchard writes that makarios...
"doesn’t even apply to
human emotions. It’s a statement of how God views people who live a
certain way. The root idea of blessed is “approved by God.” Max Lucado
catches the idea beautifully in his book on the Beatitudes called The
Applause of Heaven.
God applauds the poor in
spirit.
He cheers the mourners.
He favors the meek.
He smiles upon the hungry.
He honors the merciful.
He welcomes the pure in heart.
He claps for the peacemakers.
He rises to greet the persecuted.
Pritchard goes on to add...
As we begin this study
of the Beatitudes, let’s realize that if we want God’s approval more
than anything in the world, then these words have the power to change us
dramatically. So the real question this morning is, How much do you want
God’s approval? Do you want it more than the approval of your family and
friends? More than the approval of the people where you work? More than
the approval of your colleagues? More even than the approval of your
closest loved one? If you want God’s approval that badly, you can have
it. That’s what the Beatitudes are all about. They show us what a
disciple looks like and they tell us how we can have the applause of
heaven. (Matthew
5:1-3 The Making of a Disciple)
Dwight Pentecost explains that...
The word happy,
as used among the Greeks, originally described the condition of the
Greek gods who were deemed to be satisfied, or content, because they had
everything they desired and were free to enjoy everything they possessed
without restriction. To the Greek mind, happiness had to do with
material possessions and the freedom to enjoy them. Their happiness had
to do with unrestrained, unlimited gratification of physical desires.
Since no limits were ever put upon their deities, the Greeks deemed the
gods to be happy. When they lived with the same liberty they ascribed to
their gods, they deemed themselves a happy people. Happiness for the
Greeks was related to the physical and material world. ( Pentecost,
J. D. Design for living: Lessons in Holiness from the Sermon on the
Mount. Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications)
As used in the Bible, makarios can rarely convey the nuance of
"happy", as in Paul's instructions given to a woman whose husband
has died, Paul writing that
"she is
happier (makarios) if she remains as she is; and I think that I also
have the Spirit of God" (1 Cor 7:40)
Paul also uses makarios with the nuance of "fortunate"
as he speaks with King Agrippa, declaring...
"In regard to
all the things of which I am accused by the Jews, I consider myself
fortunate, King Agrippa, that I am about to make my defense before
you today" (Acts 26:2)
Warren Wiersbe writes...
Imagine how the crowd’s
attention was riveted on Jesus when He uttered His first word: “Blessed.”
(The Latin word for blessed is beatus, and from this comes the word
beatitude.) This was a powerful word to those who heard Jesus that day.
To them it meant “divine joy and perfect happiness.” The word was not
used for humans; it described the kind of joy experienced only by the
gods or the dead. “Blessed” implied an inner satisfaction and
sufficiency that did not depend on outward circumstances for happiness.
This is what the Lord offers those who trust Him! The Beatitudes
describe the attitudes that ought to be in our lives today. (Wiersbe,
W: Bible Exposition Commentary. 1989. Victor)
The Bible Knowledge Key Word Study writes that in Matthew 5:3
makarios...
describes the state of
someone privileged to experience God's grace in a special way.
"Blessed," therefore, describes most importantly those who have a
relationship with God (cf. Job 5:17; Ps. 1:1, 2- note) so that secondarily they
experience his gracious provision and care in their life. (Bock,
Darrell L, Editor: The Bible Knowledge Key Word Study: The Gospels
Cook Communications)
Blessed is the state of the
individual who is the recipient of the God's grace (favor) and blessing.
The psalms begin with a "beatitude"
proclaiming...
1 How blessed is the
man
Who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked,
Nor stand in the path of sinners,
Nor sit in the seat of scoffers!
2 But his delight is in the law of the LORD,
And in His law he meditates day and night.
3 And he will be like a tree firmly planted by streams of water,
Which yields its fruit in its season,
And its leaf does not wither;
And in whatever he does, he prospers.
In both
Psalm 1:1 and Psalm 32:1-2
below, the Hebrew word for blessed is 'esher ('eser)
which describes good fortune, a state of joyous mind or a state of
bliss (complete happiness, the ecstatic joy of heaven, perfect
happiness, serene joy). The Hebrew word for "blessed" is
translated by the
Septuagint or LXX
with our Greek word makarios. Note
that in both of these psalms (as is true of its use elsewhere) to be “blessed”, a man or woman has
to do something. Of the 45 uses of 'esher in the Old Testament, 25 are
found in Psalms.
Click here
and take a moment to
meditate
on
"blessed" in the Psalms (you will be blessed!), writing down what
an individual has to do to be in the blissful state of blessedness (you
will be surprised at one of things that bring blessing!).
In the Old Testament this state of
blessedness may involve material things, but David who had been
guilty of such great against His God by committing adultery with
Bathsheba and then plotting the murder of her husband Uriah, describes
blessedness not in a material but a spiritual sense of the man or woman
who has experienced the gracious, merciful gift of the Father's
forgiveness (Ps 32:1, 2-note).
1 (A Psalm of David. A
Maskil.)
How blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven,
Whose sin is covered! ( Spurgeon's
note)
2 How blessed is the man to whom the LORD does not impute
iniquity,
And in whose spirit there is no deceit! (Spurgeon's
note)
In the original Hebrew "blessed" is
in the plural implying the multiplicity of blessings upon the man
whom God justifies. One might translate it "Oh the blessednesses!"
One can be "makarios" and
yet be in miserable circumstances. "Blessed (makarios) are you," Jesus
said, "when they insult you and persecute you and say all kinds of evil
against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for great is
your reward in heaven" (Mt 5:11, 12-see notes
Matthew 5:11;
5:12). So "blessed are you" does not mean "untroubled are
you" or "healthy are you" or "admired are you" or "prosperous are you."
It means "between you and God all is well." You are deeply secure,
profoundly content, happy in God - even if you are weeping over the pain
of a struck body, a perplexed mind, or a heartbreaking relationship.
Whatever the makarios state
is, it is true of God. Whatever it means to be blest and blessed, it is
true of God and of Jesus Christ. For example, Paul describes God as "He
who is the blessed and only Sovereign, the King of kings and Lord
of lords." (1 Ti 6:15). Thus it stands to reason that the only people who
will ever experience makarios fully are those who partake of God
and of Christ. There can be no biblical blessedness or happiness apart
from Jesus. Only for those who know and love the Lord Jesus Christ, who
by faith have become partakers in the divine nature (2Pe 1:4-note),
the same bliss, the same contentment, the same happiness, the same sense
of makarios that is fundamentally an element of the character of
God and Christ, is ours. So, when the Scripture speaks of blessedness,
it is from a biblical context and does not refer to a superficial
attitude based on circumstance.
David's psalm of thanksgiving
after his repentance over his sin of adultery w Bathsheba & murder of
her husband Uriah (2Sa 11:16,17) which by contrast left him "spiritually
destitute" (Read Ps 32). Paul thus notes that justification by faith was
true both before and after Moses--before, in Abraham, Israel's great
patriarch, and after, in David, Israel's greatest king & was always
apart from works.
Barclay has this note on
makarios writing that
"Makarios is the word which
specially describes the gods. In Christianity there is a godlike joy.
The meaning of makarios can best be seen from one particular usage of
it. The Greeks always called Cyprus hē makaria (the feminine form of the
adjective), which means The Happy Isle, and they did so because they
believed that Cyprus was so lovely, so rich, and so fertile an island
that a man would never need to go beyond its coastline to find the
perfectly happy life. It had such a climate, such flowers and fruits and
trees, such minerals, such natural resources that it contained within
itself all the materials for perfect happiness.
Makarios then describes
that joy which has its secret within itself, that joy which is serene
and untouchable, and self-contained, that joy which is completely
independent of all the chances and the changes of life. The English word
happiness gives its own case away. It contains the root hap which means
chance. Human happiness is something which is dependent on the
chances and the changes of life, something which life may give and which
life may also destroy. The Christian blessedness is completely
untouchable and unassailable. “No one,” said Jesus, “will take
your joy from you” (John
16:22). (Ed note: Makarios is an inner peace, an
inner bliss, an inner happiness. Such inner joy is not produced by
circumstance. It is a word that indicates character, touching man at the
very base of his existence) The beatitudes speak of that joy which seeks
us through our pain, that joy which sorrow and loss, and pain and grief,
are powerless to touch, that joy which shines through tears, and which
nothing in life or death can take away.
The world can win its joys,
and the world can equally well lose its joys. A change in fortune, a
collapse in health, the failure of a plan, the disappointment of an
ambition, even a change in the weather, can take away the fickle joy the
world can give. But the Christian has the serene and untouchable joy
which comes from walking for ever in the company and in the presence of
Jesus Christ. The greatness of the beatitudes is that they are not
wistful glimpses of some future beauty; they are not even golden
promises of some distant glory; they are triumphant shouts of bliss for
a permanent joy that nothing in the world can ever take away." (Barclay,
W:
The Gospel of Matthew The New Daily
Study Bible Westminster John Knox Press)
Lloyd-Jones comments
that...
There is, beyond any question, a
very definite order in these Beatitudes. Our Lord does not place
them in their respective positions haphazardly or accidentally; there is
what we may describe as a spiritual logical sequence to be found here.
This, of necessity, is the one which must come at the beginning for the
good reason that there is no entry into the kingdom of heaven, or the
kingdom of God, apart from it. There is no one in the kingdom of God who
is not poor in spirit. It is the fundamental characteristic of the
Christian and of the citizen of the kingdom of heaven, and all the other
characteristics are in a sense the result of this one...It is obviously,
therefore, a very searching test for every one of us, not only as we
face ourselves, but especially as we come to face the whole message of
the Sermon on the Mount. You see, it at once condemns every idea of the
Sermon on the Mount which thinks of it in terms of something that you
and I can do ourselves, something that you and I can carry out. It
negatives that at the very beginning...The Sermon on the Mount, in other
words, comes to us and says, 'There is the mountain that you have to
scale, the heights you have to climb; and the first thing you must
realize, as you look at that mountain which you are told you must
ascend, is that you cannot do it, that you are utterly incapable in and
of yourself, and that any attempt to do it in your own strength is proof
positive that you have not understood it.' It condemns at the very
outset the view which regards it as a programme for man to put into
operation immediately, just as he is.
(Lloyd-Jones, D. M.
Studies in the Sermon on the Mount)
The Sermon on the Mount reveals
the true standard of righteousness which Christ requires of all who
belong to Him (Matthew 5:1). The limitation of the Sermon on the
Mount lies in the fact that our Lord reveals His standards for the
Kingdom life, without the full revelation of the power by which this
standard can be maintained. This fuller revelation would come later. It
is similar to the John 7:37-39 passage, where Christ gives His promise
of power and fruitfulness before the Holy Spirit has come, through Whom
this power is given. The Sermon on the Mount is similar to a plumbline
which shows the crookedness of a wall, but does not rebuild it.
More Like Jesus Would I Be
by Fanny
Crosby
Let my Saviour dwell in me;
Fill my soul with peace and love,
Make me gentle as a dove.
More like Jesus while I go,
Pilgrim in this world below;
Poor in spirit would I be;
Let my Saviour dwell in me.
(Play
hymn)
><>><>><>
Join the Happy Minority -
Are most people happy? Dennis Wholey, author of Are You Happy? reports
that according to expert opinion, perhaps only 20 percent of Americans
are happy.
Those experts would probably agree with the wry definition of happiness
offered by psychiatrist Thomas Szasz, who said, “Happiness is an
imaginary condition, formerly attributed by the living to the dead, now
usually attributed by adults to children and by children to adults.”
Are you happy? What if we define happiness as an abiding mood of joyful
contentment, a deep-down state of peace and hope, not just an upbeat,
fleeting feeling induced by favorable happenings? Now, in light of that
definition of happiness, are you happy?
In His “Sermon on the Mount,” our Lord gave us His prescription for a
life that is truly happy regardless of circumstances. Most English
translations of Matthew 5 use the word blessed, but Jesus was
actually promising happiness. He repeatedly assured His disciples that
they would be happy if they trusted Him and practiced His teachings.
The Great Physician has prescribed this remedy for unhappiness. Have you
tried it? Take it and rejoice with the “happy minority.”— Vernon C.
Grounds
(Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
“Rejoice in Him!” Again, again
The Spirit speaks the word,
And faith takes up the happy strain:
“Our joy is in the Lord.”
—Peters, Mary Bowley (1813-1856)
The Christian’s happiness is not determined by happenings.
><>><>><>
ARE THE POOR
IN SPIRIT: oi ptochoi to pneumati: (Mt
11:25; 18:1, 2, 3; Leviticus 26:41,42; Deuteronomy 8:2; 2 Chronicles
7:14; 33:12,19,23; 34:27; Job 42:6; Psalms 34:18; 51:17; Proverbs 16:19;
29:23; Isaiah 57:15; 61:1; 66:2; Jeremiah 31:18, 19, 20; Daniel 5:21,22;
Micah 6:8; Luke 4:18; 6:20; 18:14; James 1:10; James 4:9,10)
"they who know their spiritual
poverty" (Berkley)
"those people who depend only on
Him" (CEV)
"who recognize they are
spiritually helpless" (GWT)
"those who know they are spiritually
poor" (GNT)
" those who are destitute in spirit"
(ISV)
"those who feel poor in spirit"
(Moffat)
"those who realize
their need for him" (NLT)
"people who know they have great
spiritual needs" (NCV)
"the poor in spirit (the humble,
who rate themselves insignificant)" (Amplified)
"when you’re at the end of your rope.
With less of you there is more of God and his rule" (Message)
"Blessed are the beggars in spirit,
blessed are the spiritual paupers, blessed are the spiritually
destitute, blessed are the spiritually bankrupt ones who cringe and
cower because of their helplessness; for theirs is the kingdom of
heaven.” (Dwight Pentecost)
"They who are unfeignedly penitent,
they who are truly convinced of sin; who see and feel the state they are
in by nature, being deeply sensible of their sinfulness, guiltiness,
helplessness." (Wesley)
"Our attitude toward ourselves
in which we feel our need and admit it" (Wiersbe)
Are (2076)
(root verb is
eimi) is
in the
present tense
indicating continuous action. The
indicative mood is the mood of
certainty and means that this is
a fact (the poor in spirit
continually possess the kingdom of heaven). It is interesting to
note that the next 6 beatitudes are in the future tense but that in the
eighth beatitude promising as a reward "the kingdom of heaven", Jesus
reverts back to the
present tense.
The Expositor's Bible Commentary
has an interesting note here that...
one must not make too much of this,
for It should be noted that the present tense can function as a future,
and the future tense can emphasize certainty, not mere futurity (Tasker).
There is little doubt that here the kingdom sense is primarily
future,
post-consummation, made explicit in Mt 5:12
(note). But the present tense
"envelope" (Mt 5:3,10
[note]) should not be written off as insignificant or as
masking an Aramaic original that did not specify present or future; for
Matthew must have meant something when he chose estin ("is")
instead of estai ("will be"). The natural conclusion
is that, though the full blessedness of those described in these
beatitudes awaits the consummated kingdom, they already share in the
kingdom's blessedness so far as it has been inaugurated (see Mt 4:17;
8:29; 12:28; 19:29). (Gaebelein,
F, Editor: Expositor's Bible Commentary 6-Volume New Testament.
Zondervan Publishing)
The poor in spirit in the
present context describe not so much those in
literal poverty or a depressive condition although many have so
misinterpreted Jesus' meaning. Some in fact have given away all their
possessions based on Mt 5:3! The tragedy is that a man can possess no
earthly possessions and still not possess the spirit Jesus is
describing! No, the poverty Jesus describes is the state of
spiritual poverty (see analysis of the definition
of ptochos below) without which no one can become a
believer! And every believer has recognized and acknowledged his
spiritual poverty and like the prodigal have also come to their senses
(cf Luke 15:17). They have come humble, as beggars, empty of all pride,
conscious of the debt owed for their sins (cf note
Matthew 6:12) realizing that
all they can do is cry out "Have mercy on me O Lord!" because...
Nothing in my hand I bring
Simply to Thy cross I cling;
Naked, come to Thee for dress,
Helpless, fly to Thee for grace.
Foul, I to the fountain fly.
Wash me, Savior, or I die. (play)
And so we see Augustus Toplady (biography)
beautifully expressed the
truth of "poor in spirit" in his classic hymn
Rock of Ages.
Praise God for that moment in time and eternity when He by His
sanctifying Spirit (cf 1Pe 1:2
(note), 1Cor 6:11, 2Thes 2:13) leads us to
see that spiritual poverty is our real condition before Him and
recognizing this to be so, then He births that spirit in our hearts. (cf
Ro 3:10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19-see notes
Romans 3:10;
11;
12,
13;
14;
15;
16;
17;
19)
We come to see that in God's courtroom of righteousness we are all
bankrupt debtors and can only plead for mercy.
In passing it is noteworthy that many who
have experienced
sustained economic lack and social distress are often
who are also "poor in spirit". (cf
Mt 19:24, Mk 10:25, Lu 18:25) We need to heed Jesus' warning to the
Laodicean church who said...
"I am rich, and have become wealthy,
and have need of nothing," and you do not know that you are wretched and
miserable and poor and blind and naked" (see note
Revelation 3:17)
Their failure to recognize their
spiritual poverty placed the Laodicean church in danger of being spewed
out of the Lord's mouth!
Sinclair Ferguson warns that
We are urged today to develop almost
every other kind of spirit except poverty of spirit...There is much
teaching on how to be filled with the Spirit, but where can we learn
what it means to be spiritually emptied - emptied of self-confidence,
self-importance, and self-righteousness? The sad truth is that we know
so little of the blessing of which Christ speaks (and which He gives)
because we are all too often full of ourselves and our own means of
blessing. In fact, there is no sadder commentary on our lack of this
spiritual poverty than the readiness so many of us have to let others
know what we think. But the man who is poor in spirit is the man who has
been silenced by God and seeks only to speak what he has learned in
humility from Him. (Ferguson,
Sinclair: Sermon on the Mount :Banner of Truth)
Spurgeon...
Spiritual poverty is both commanded
and commended. It is the basis of Christian experience. No one begins
aright who has not felt poverty of spirit. Yet even to this first sign
of grace is the kingdom given in present possession: "theirs is the
kingdom of heaven." The question in heaven's kingdom is not, "Are you a
peer?" but, "Are you poor in spirit?" Those who are of no account in
their own eyes are of the blood royal of the universe. These alone have
the principles and the qualifications for a heavenly kingdom. May I be
such! (The Gospel of the Kingdom: A Popular Exposition of the Gospel
According to Matthew.)
It is sad to see how inaccurate
interpretation
can lead to inappropriate
application
as in the case of the Roman emperor Julian the Apostate (332-63) who is
reputed to have said with vicious irony that he wanted to confiscate
Christians' property so that they might all become poor and enter the
kingdom of heaven!
Joseph Hart (1759) paraphrases
the essence of Jesus' first and in some ways most important beatitude,
for if you tarry tell you're better you will never come at all! Dear
reader, perhaps you have never seen yourself as utterly, totally
bankrupt before the holiness of God. You've tried to be better, to do
better, to be pleasing, and on an on... but it was always "you" trying.
Jesus says we must recognize our poverty and quit trying to be good
enough. Come ye sinners poor and needy, weak and wounded by the fall.
Your King stands ready to receive you and to make you one of His royal
subjects. And you dear fellow citizen of the Kingdom...continue to come
thirsty (Mt 5:6-note)...continue to come daily to Him and drink so that you
might be replenished, sanctified, adequate and prepared for every good
Kingdom work.
|
Come, Ye Sinners,
Poor and Needy
by Joseph Hart |
Come, ye sinners, poor and
needy,
Weak and wounded, sick and sore;
Jesus ready stands to save you,
Full of pity, love and power.
Refrain
I will arise and go to Jesus,
He will embrace me in His arms;
In the arms of my dear Savior,
O there are ten thousand charms.
Come, ye thirsty, come, and welcome,
God’s free bounty glorify;
True belief and true repentance,
Every grace that brings you nigh.
Refrain
Come, ye weary, heavy laden,
Lost and ruined by the fall;
If you tarry till you’re better,
You will never come at all.
Refrain
View Him prostrate in the garden;
On the ground your Maker lies.
On the bloody tree behold Him;
Sinner, will this not suffice?
Refrain
Lo! th’incarnate God ascended,
Pleads the merit of His blood:
Venture on Him, venture wholly,
Let no other trust intrude.
Refrain
Let not conscience make you linger,
Not of fitness fondly dream;
All the fitness He requireth
Is to feel your need of Him. (play
hymn) |
Alexander Maclaren explains
that...
to be poor in spirit is to be
in inmost reality conscious of need, of emptiness, of dependence on God,
of demerit; the true estimate of self, as blind, evil, weak, is
intended; the characteristic tone of feeling pointed to is
self-abnegation (self-denial), like that of the publican smiting his
breast (Luke 18:9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14) or that of the disease-weakened, hunger-tortured
prodigal (Luke 15:11-32), or that of the once self-righteous Paul, ‘O
wretched man that I am!’ (Ro 7:24, 25-notes
Ro 7:24;
25) People who do not like evangelical
teaching sometimes say, ‘ Give me the Sermon on the Mount.’ So
say I. Only let us take all of it; and if we do, we shall come,
as we shall have frequent occasion to point out, in subsequent passages,
to something uncommonly like the evangelical theology to which it is
sometimes set up as antithetic. For Christ begins His portraiture of a
citizen of the kingdom with the consciousness of want and sin.
All the rest of the morality of the Sermon is founded on this. It is
the root of all that is heavenly and divine in character. So this
teaching is dead against the modern pagan doctrine of self-reliance,
and really embodies the very principle for the supposed omission of
which some folk like this Sermon; namely, that our proud
self-confidence must be broken down before God can do any good with
us, or we can enter His kingdom. (entire
sermon)
(Bolding added)
Spurgeon sums up this
beatitude writing that...
This is a paradox that puzzles many,
for the poor in spirit often seem to have nothing; yet they have the
kingdom of heaven, so they have everything, lie who thinks the least of
himself is the man of whom God thinks the most. You are not poor in
God’s sight if you are poor in spirit.
POOR:
PTOCHOS
Poor (4434)
(ptochos from ptosso = crouch, cringe, cower down or hide oneself
for fear, a picture of one crouching and cowering like a beggar with a
tin cup to receive the pennies dropped in!) is an adjective which
describes one who crouches and cowers and is used as a noun to mean beggar.
These poor were unable to meet their basic needs and so were forced to
depend on others or on society.
Classical Greek used the ptochos to refer to a person reduced to
total destitution, who crouched in a corner begging. As he held out one
hand for alms he often hid his face with the other hand, because he was
ashamed of being recognized.
Ptochos describes not simply
honest poverty, and the struggle of the laboring man to make ends meet
but also describes abject poverty, which has literally nothing and which
is in imminent danger of real starvation.
Ptochos focuses
on a state of dependence, so that in Mt 5:3 "the poor in spirit" are
those who have learned to be completely dependent on God for everything
and these are the ones who possess the kingdom of heaven.
Ptochos (35x in NASB): poor,
29; poor man, 5; worthless, 1 - Matt 5:3; 11:5; 19:21; 26:9, 11; Mark
10:21; 12:42, 43; 14:5, 7; Luke 4:18; 6:20; 7:22; 14:13, 21; 16:20, 22;
18:22; 19:8; 21:3; John 12:5, 6, 8; 13:29; Rom 15:26; 2 Cor 6:10; Gal
2:10; 4:9; Jas 2:2, 3, 5, 6; Rev 3:17; 13:16
Ptochos - 88x in the
non-apocryphal
Septuagint (LXX)
- Exod 23:11; Lev 19:10, 15; 23:22; Deut 24:19; Ruth 3:10; 1 Sam
2:8; 2 Sam 22:28; 2 Kgs 24:14; 25:12; Esth 1:20; 9:22; Job 29:12; 34:28;
36:6; Ps 9:18; 10:2, 9, 14; 12:5; 14:6; 22:24; 25:16; 34:6; 35:10;
37:14; 40:17; 41:1; 68:10; 69:29, 32; 70:5; 72:2, 4, 12f; 74:21; 82:3f;
86:1; 88:15; 102:1; 109:16, 21; 113:7; 132:15; 140:12; Prov 13:8;
14:20f, 31; 17:5; 19:4, 7, 17, 22; 22:2, 7, 9, 22; 28:3, 6, 8, 15, 27;
29:7, 14; 31:20; Isa 3:14f; 10:2; 14:30; 24:6; 25:3; 29:19; 41:17; 58:7;
61:1; Jer 5:4; Ezek 16:49; 18:12; 22:29; Amos 2:7; 4:1; 5:11; 8:4, 6;
Hab 3:14
Paul uses the derivative verb form
of ptochos (ptocheuo = to be destitute, extremely poor) to
describe our Lord Jesus writing to the Corinthians in his great
exposition on giving from the heart that...
you know the grace of our Lord Jesus
Christ, that though He was rich, yet for your sake He became poor,
(He became extremely poor) that you through His poverty (ptocheia = noun
form = extreme poverty) might become rich (abundance of riches,
ultimately speaking of spiritual riches not material riches). (2Cor 8:9)
(cf Mt 8:20)
In light of this truth about the
extreme poverty of our Lord, Richards writes...
Similarly, in order to follow him and
to live a life of dependency, Christ's disciples left employment (Mt
4:18-22; Mk 1:16-20; Lk 5:1-11, 27-29; cf. Mt 10:1-16; Lk 10:1-17).
Jesus and his disciples accepted this role in their eagerness to do the
work of God's kingdom. They had made the choice freely in an awareness
of God the Father's care (Mt 6:25-33). (Richards,
L O: Expository Dictionary of Bible Words: Regency)
Vincent writes that
ptochos
conveys the idea of utter
destitution, which abjectly solicits and lives by alms. Hence it is
applied to Lazarus (Luke 16:20, 22), and rendered beggar. Thus
distinguished, it is very graphic and appropriate here, as denoting the
utter spiritual destitution, the consciousness of which precedes the
entrance into the kingdom of God, and which cannot be relieved by one’s
own efforts, but only by the free mercy of God. (Vincent, M. R.
Word Studies in the New Testament. Vol. 1, Page 3-36).
Barclay notes that...
In Greek there are two words for
poor. There is the word penēs. Penēs describes a man
who has to work for his living the man for whom life and living is a
struggle, the man who is the reverse of the man who lives in affluence.
Penes is defined by the Greeks as describing the man who is
autodiakonos, that is, the man who serves his own needs with his own
hands. Penēs describes the working man, the man who has nothing
superfluous, the man who is not rich, but who is not destitute either.
But, as we have seen, it is not penēs that is used in this beatitude, it
is ptōchos, which describes absolute and abject poverty. It is
connected with the root ptossein, which means to crouch or to
cower; and it describes the poverty which is beaten to its knees. As it
has been said, penēs describes the man who has nothing
superfluous; ptōchos describes the man who has nothing at all. So
this beatitude becomes even more surprising. Blessed is the man who is
abjectly and completely poverty-stricken. Blessed is the man who is
absolutely destitute. (Barclay, W:
The Gospel of Matthew The New Daily
Study Bible Westminster John Knox Press)
Thayer writes that
ptochos means
"to be thoroughly frightened, to
cower down or hide oneself for fear; hence, properly, one who slinks and
crouches, often involving the idea of roving about in wretchedness (but
it always had a bad sense till it was ennobled in the Gospels)... hence
1. In classical Greek from Homer
down, reduced to beggary, begging, mendicant, asking alms: Luke
14:13,21; 16:20,22.
2. Poor, needy: Matt. 19:21; 26:9,11;
Mark 10:21; 12:42,43; 14:5,7; Luke 18:22; 19:8; 21:3; John 12:5,6,8;
13:29; Rom. 15:26; 2 Cor. 6:10; Gal. 2:10; James 2:2,3,6; Rev. 13:16; in
a broader sense, destitute of wealth, influence, position, honors;
lowly, afflicted: Matt.
11:5; Luke 4:18 (from Isa. 61:1); Lk 6:20; 7:22; the poor of the human
race, James 2:5; tropically, destitute of the Christian virtues and the
eternal riches, Rev. 3:17; like the Latin inops, equivalent to helpless,
powerless to accomplish an end: Gal. 4:9 (`bringing no rich endowment of
spiritual treasure' (Lightfoot)).
3. Universally, lacking in anything,
with a dative of the respect: as respects their spirit, i.e. destitute
of the wealth of learning and intellectual culture which the schools
afford (men of this class most readily gave themselves up to Christ's
teaching and proved themselves fitted to lay hold of the heavenly
treasure, Matt. 11:25; John 9:39; 1Cor. 1:26,27; (others make the idea
more inward and ethical: `conscious of their spiritual need') Matt. 5:3
The majority of the NT uses of
ptochos refer to one who is literally poor or economically
disadvantaged, literally being forced to beg to survive! As used in Mt
5:3 ptochos is used figuratively to picture one who is
spiritually disadvantaged, lacking spiritual worth or power and thus is
spiritually destitute and helpless.
In the context of Matthew 3 and
Matthew 4 (especially Mt 3:2, 4:17) ptochos appears to refer to
those who have heeded the message of John and Jesus to "repent for
the kingdom of heaven is at hand". They have admitted their need for
God's mercy and turned away from their confidence in themselves and
their reliance on their physical descent from Abraham (Mt 3:9).
They have come to see themselves as spiritually impoverished and in need
of God's grace, mercy and forgiveness.
Paul uses ptochos as an
adjective as he rebukes the Galatian church writing...
But (contrast the time
when they did not know
God and were slaves to those which by nature are no gods) now that you
have come to know God or rather to be known by God, how is it that you
turn back again to the weak (state of limited capacity, impotent) and
worthless (ptochos - "poverty–stricken" practices, powerless
to enrich, edify and equip and here a figurative picture of the
religious practices of the Jews) elemental things, to which you desire
to be enslaved all over again? (Galatians 4:9)
To be poor in spirit
means to recognize your true condition before God and thus does not
refer to one's natural disposition but to one's deliberate choice. It is the exact
opposite of being rich in pride. You might say that being "poor
in spirit" means to recognize one's spiritual bankruptcy or
acknowledge their own helplessness in the eyes of
God, on Whose omnipotence they rely. They sense their spiritual need and
find it supplied in the Lord. Like the GNT says...
“Blessed are they who
feel their spiritual need.”
Ptochos is used some 88 times
in the Greek
Septuagint or LXX
Below are some uses of
ptochos in the Greek
LXX
translation of the Hebrew Old Testament which convey a meaning similar
to that convey by Jesus in the first beatitude. Note also that these Old
Testament parallel passages support the conclusion that what Jesus
taught in the Sermon on the Mount is not "new" truth, but truths
that readily can be found elsewhere in both the Old and New Testaments.
David cries out to the Lord in a
number of psalms in which he uses the Hebrew word "ani" (Strong's
6041) which is translated
by the Greek
LXX
by our word ptochos:
Psalm 25:16 (Spurgeon's
note) Turn to me and be
gracious to me, for I am lonely and
afflicted
Psalm 34:6 (Spurgeon's
note) This
poor
man cried and the LORD heard him, and saved him out of all his troubles.
Psalm 35:10 (Spurgeon's
note) All my bones will
say, "LORD, who is like Thee, Who delivers the
afflicted from him who is too strong for him,
and the
afflicted
and the needy from him who robs
him?"
Psalm 40:17 (Spurgeon's
note) Since I am
afflicted
and needy, Let the Lord be mindful of me; Thou art my help and my
deliverer; Do not delay, O my God.
Psalm 69:29 (Spurgeon's
note) But I am
afflicted
and in pain; May Thy salvation,
O God, set me securely on high.
Psalm 70:5 (Spurgeon's
note) But I am
afflicted
and needy; Hasten to me, O God! Thou art my help and my deliverer; O
LORD, do not delay.
Psalm 86:1 (Spurgeon's
note) A Prayer of David. Incline Thine ear, O LORD, and
answer me; For I am
afflicted and needy.
David also testifies to Jehovah's
salvation of a "poor" people declaring...
2 Samuel 22:28
"And Thou dost save an
afflicted people; But
Thine eyes are on the haughty whom Thou dost abase.
In each of the previous prayers (and
the testimony in 2 Samuel 22) by David the word "afflicted"
or "poor"
is the same Hebrew word ani (6041)
which pictures one in some kind of disability or distress. William
Barclay says that this word ani (and a related Hebrew word ebion/ebyown
Strong's #34)
has
"a most interesting and significant development of meaning. The meaning
has three stages.
(i) They mean simply 'poor',
in the sense of lacking in this world's goods (Deut. 15.4; 15.11).
(ii) They go on to mean, because
poor, therefore 'downtrodden and oppressed' (Amos 2.6; 8.4).
(iii) It is then that they take their
great leap in meaning. If a man is poor and downtrodden and oppressed,
he has no influence on earth, no power, no prestige. He cannot look to
men for help and when all the help and resources of earth are closed to
him, he can only look to God. And, therefore, these words come to
describe people who, because they have nothing on earth, have come to
put their complete and total trust in God (Amos 5.12; Ps 10.2, 19:12, 17;
12.5; 14.6; 68.10). (Barclay,
William: New Testament Words:. Westminster John Know Press, 1964)
In each of the above verse
the
Septuagint or LXX
choose
the Greek word ptochos to translate the Hebrew. So what is the point?
Clearly ptochos is used in each of these prayers to describe on who is
in distress and unable to relieve himself of this affliction, just as is
the man or woman who experiences the poverty of spirit in Mt 5:3. David
was a man who knew the meaning of being poor in spirit and of his
need to constantly rely upon the provision and power of Jehovah.
It follows that to be "poor is
spirit" is not a one time event by which a person gains entree into
the Kingdom of Heaven but is as it was with David (a man after God's own heart)
a continual mindset which leads to a lifestyle of submission to and
dependence upon His God. This is the man who is blessed, in a state of
spiritual prosperity, even though the physical or emotional
circumstances are far from "prosperous". This blessed state is thus
clearly a paradox and can only reflect a supernatural work of God in a
man or woman's heart. It is ultimately a foretaste of the fullness all
the poor in spirit will experience eternally in the future Kingdom.
BLEST ARE THE HUMBLE SOULS THAT SEE
Blest are the humble souls that
see
Their emptiness and poverty;
Treasures of grace to them are giv’n,
And crowns of joy laid up in Heav’n.
Blest are the men of broken heart,
Who mourn for sin with inward smart;
The blood of Christ divinely flows,
A healing balm for all their woes.
Blest are the meek, who stand afar
From rage and passion, noise and war;
God will secure their happy state,
And plead their cause against the great.
Blest are the souls that thirst for grace
Hunger and long for righteousness;
They shall be well supplied, and fed
With living streams and living bread.
Blest are the men whose bowels move
And melt with sympathy and love;
From Christ the Lord they shall obtain
Like sympathy and love again.
Blest are the pure, whose hearts are clean
From the defiling powers of sin;
With endless pleasure they shall see
A God of spotless purity.
Blest are the men of peaceful life,
Who quench the coals of growing strife;
They shall be called the heirs of bliss,
The sons of God, the God of peace.
Blest are the suff’rers who partake
Of pain and shame for Jesus’ sake;
Their souls shall triumph in the Lord;
Glory and joy are their reward.
---Isaac Watts
C H Spurgeon commenting on "poor
in spirit" advises...
Learn this lesson—not to trust
Christ because you repent, but trust Christ to make you repent; not to
come to Christ because you have a broken heart, but to come to him that
he may give you a broken heart; not to come to him because you are fit
to come, but to come to him because you are unfit to come. Your fitness
is your unfitness. Your qualification is your lack of qualification.
None ever considered the poor as
Jesus did, but here he is speaking of a poverty of spirit, a lowliness
of heart, an absence of self-esteem. Where that kind of spirit is found,
it is sweet poverty
In Isaiah we find another use of
ptochos that parallels the meaning in Mt 5:3, in the famous verse
Jesus quoted in the synagogue in Luke 4:18....
Isaiah 61:1 The Spirit of
the Lord God is upon me, because the LORD has anointed me to bring
good news to the afflicted; (ptochos) He has sent me to bind up the
brokenhearted, To proclaim liberty to captives, And freedom to
prisoners; (See study on
The Incredible Prophecy of Isaiah
61:1-3)
Luke 4:18 "The Spirit of the
Lord is upon Me, Because He anointed Me to preach the gospel to the
poor. He has sent Me to proclaim release to the captives, And
recovery of sight to the blind, To set free those who are downtrodden,
19 To proclaim the favorable year of the Lord."
How unlike the world is Jesus'
opening salvo, for the world of natural men would open more like...
Blessed are the rich, for
theirs is the kingdom of
the world.
The paradox is that those who are
spiritually poor are the very ones who are spiritually rich!
Truly the foolishness of God is wiser than man (1Cor 1:25, 27-31). Jesus
is flatly stating that it is not what a man does but what
he is in the sight of God!
John MacArthur
explains that...
The word commonly used for
ordinary poverty was penichros, and is used of the widow Jesus saw
giving an offering in the Temple. She had very little, but she did have
“two small copper coins” (Luke 21:2). She was poor but not a beggar.
One who is penichros poor has at least some meager resources. One who is
ptōchos poor, however, is completely dependent on others for sustenance.
He has absolutely no means of self-support.
Because of a similar statement
in Luke 6:20-
“Blessed are you who are poor,
for yours is the kingdom of God”-
some interpreters have
maintained that the beatitude of Matthew 5:3 teaches material poverty.
But sound hermeneutics (the interpretation of Scripture) requires
that, when two or more passages are similar but not exactly alike, the
clearer one explains the others, the more explicit clarifies the less
explicit. By comparing Scripture with Scripture we see that the
Matthew account is the more explicit. Jesus is speaking of a spiritual
poverty that corresponds to the material poverty of one who is ptōchos.
If Jesus were here advocating
material poverty He would have contradicted many other parts of His
Word-including the Sermon on the Mount itself (5:42)-that teach us to
give financial help to the poor. If Jesus was teaching the innate
blessedness of material poverty, then the task of Christians would be to
help make everyone, including themselves, penniless. Jesus did not teach
that material poverty is the path to spiritual prosperity.
Those who are materially poor do
have some advantages in spiritual matters by not having certain
distractions and temptations; and the materially rich have some
disadvantage by having certain distractions and temptations. But
material possessions have no necessary relationship to spiritual
blessings. Matthew makes clear that Jesus is here talking about the
condition of the spirit, not of the wallet. (MacArthur,
J: Matthew 1-7 Chicago: Moody Press) (Bolding added)
Dwight Pentecost writes that
ptochos which is...
word translated “beggar” (Luke 16:20, 22) is the identical word
translated “poor” in Matthew 5:3. The beggar was destitute,
poverty-stricken, without any resources whatsoever. The words poor and
beggar come from a root word which means “to cover” or “to cringe.” It
so humiliated a man to confess he had nothing and was dependent on
someone else that the very act of begging demeaned him. So the beggar
would cover his face and crouch, or cower, as he held out his hand for
an alm. He was ashamed to let the giver know his identity...In spiritual
things, poor in spirit is the opposite not of self-esteem but of
spiritual pride. It is the self-sufficiency that springs from spiritual
pride that our Lord condemned. The New Testament records that the
Pharisees were intensely proud, for they counted themselves as
righteous; they deemed themselves to be righteous and to need nothing.
They heard the Lord Jesus offer a true righteousness from God, and they
spurned it. This word is addressed to them and to those who follow their
path. The man who is characterized by spiritual pride will receive
nothing from God; there can be no blessing of God upon him, for pride is
no foundation for righteousness. Spiritual pride is not an evidence of
holiness but of sinfulness. Spiritual pride can never produce
happiness...The poor in spirit is the one from whom the ground of
self-sufficiency has been taken. The poor in spirit is the heart on its
knees. The poor in spirit is the one characterized by an attitude of
utter dependence.
(Pentecost,
J. D. Design for living: Lessons in Holiness from the Sermon on the Mount. Kregel Publications)
Oswald Chambers commenting
on "poor in spirit" writes...
The Sermon on the Mount produces
despair in the heart of the natural man, and that is the very thing
Jesus means it to do, because immediately we reach the point of despair
we are willing to come to Jesus Christ as paupers and receive from Him.
“Blessed are the poor in spirit”—that is the first principle of the
Kingdom. As long as we have a conceited, self-righteous idea that we can
do the thing if God will help us, God has to allow us to go on until we
break the neck of our ignorance over some obstacle, then we will be
willing to come and receive from Him. The bed-rock of Jesus Christ’s
Kingdom is poverty, not possession; not decisions for Jesus Christ, but
a sense of absolute futility, “I cannot begin to do it.” Then, says
Jesus, “Blessed are you.” That is the entrance, and it takes us a long
while to believe we are poor. The knowledge of our own poverty brings us
to the moral frontier where Jesus Christ works. (Chambers, O. Studies in
the Sermon on the Mount. Hants UK: Marshall, Morgan & Scott)
Price explains "poor in
spirit" as follows...
The first step to real
happiness is an acknowledgement of spiritual poverty, the recognition of
the fact I do not have in myself what it takes to be the person I was
created to be. This is deeper than recognizing I fail, it is realizing I
do not have the capacity within myself to do anything else! As Paul
wrote, ‘I know that nothing good lives in me, that is, in my sinful
nature’ (Ro 7:18), more literally, ‘in my natural self’. Human
beings have been so created that the Spirit of God within them is
indispensable in their ability to function as intended. David wrote, ‘I
said to the LORD, “You are my LORD; apart from you I have no good
thing”’ (Ps 16:2)... When Paul says, ‘nothing good lives in me’,
it is not that everything about him is bad! Elsewhere he lists some
things about which he says he could boast (Phil 3:4-6), but he is
saying that apart from the indwelling presence of Jesus Christ,
everything else which may be good about me is ultimately good for
nothing. I am like a car without an engine. It is to face this fact and
acknowledge our own poverty of spirit which is the first step to real
happiness. It is to this person Jesus says, ‘the kingdom of heaven is
theirs’. All the riches of the kingdom of heaven are available to the
person who recognizes their own bankruptcy without God." (Price, C.
Focus on the Bible: Matthew)
Warren Wiersbe writes that
"poor in spirit" means
to be humble, to have a correct
estimate of oneself (Ro 12:3). It does not mean to be “poor spirited”
and have no backbone at all! “Poor in spirit” is the opposite of the
world’s attitudes of self-praise and self-assertion. It is not a false
humility that says, “I am not worth anything, I can’t do anything!” It
is honesty with ourselves: we know ourselves, accept ourselves, and try
to be ourselves to the glory of God. (Wiersbe,
W: Bible Exposition Commentary. 1989. Victor)
J C Ryle writes that "the
poor in spirit" refers to
He means the humble, and
lowly-minded, and self-abased; he means those who are deeply convinced
of their own sinfulness in God’s sight: these are people who are not
“wise in their own eyes and clever in their own sight” (Isaiah 5:21).
They are not “rich” and have not “acquired wealth”; they do not
fancy they “do not need a thing”; they regard themselves as
“wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked” (Revelation 3:17). Blessed
are all such! Humility is the very first letter in the alphabet of
Christianity. We must begin low, if we want to build high. (Ryle, J. C.
Matthew)
Lloyd-Jones comments that
"poor is spirit"
is ultimately a man's attitude
towards himself...This is something which is not only not admired by
the world; it is despised by it. You will never find a greater
antithesis to the worldly spirit and outlook than that which you find in
this verse. What emphasis the world places on its belief in
self-reliance, self-confidence and self-expression! Look at its
literature. If you want to get on in this world, it says, believe in
yourself. That idea is absolutely controlling the life of men...Now in
this verse we are confronted by something which is in utter and
absolute contrast to that, and it is tragic to see how people view this
kind of statement. Let me quote the criticism which a man offered a few
years ago on that famous hymn of Charles Wesley, "Jesus, Lover of my
soul". You will remember the verse in which Wesley says:
Just and holy is Thy name,
I am all unrighteousness;
Vile and full of sin I am,
Thou art full of truth and grace.
(Play
Jesus, Lover of My Soul)
This he ridiculed and asked, 'What
man desiring a post or job would dream of going to an employer and
saying to him, "Vile and full of sin I am"? Ridiculous!' And he said it,
alas, in the name of what he regards as Christianity. You see what a
complete misunderstanding of this first Beatitude that reveals....we are
not looking at men confronting one another, but we are looking at men
face-to-face with God. And if one feels anything in the presence of God
save an utter poverty of spirit, it ultimately means that you have never
faced Him. That is the meaning of this Beatitude...To be 'poor in
spirit' is not as popular even in the Church as it once was and always
should be. Christian people must rethink these matters. Let us not take
things on their face value; let us above all avoid being captivated by
this worldly psychology; and let us realize from the outset that we are
in the realm of a kingdom which is unlike everything that belongs to
this 'present evil world'.
(Lloyd-Jones,
D. M.
Studies in the Sermon on the Mount) (Bolding added)
Dave Guzik notes that "poverty
of spirit"
is not a man's confession that he is by nature insignificant, or
personally without value, for that would be untrue. Instead, it is a
confession that he is sinful and rebellious and utterly without moral
virtues adequate to commend him to God. The poor in spirit
recognize that they have no spiritual "assets." They know they are
spiritually bankrupt. With the word poor, Jesus uses the more
severe term for poverty. It indicates someone who must beg for whatever
they have or get. Poverty of spirit cannot be artificially induced by
self-hatred; it is brought about by the Holy Spirit and our
response to His working in our hearts. (see John 16:8-11, Acts 2:37,
16:29,30)
For theirs is the kingdom of heaven: Those who are poor in spirit, so
poor they must beg, are rewarded. They receive the kingdom of heaven,
and poverty of spirit is an absolute prerequisite for receiving the
kingdom of heaven, because as long as we harbor illusions about our own
spiritual resources we will never receive from God what we absolutely
need to be saved. The call to be poor in spirit is placed first for a
reason, because it puts the following commands into perspective. They
cannot be fulfilled by one's own strength, but only by a beggar's
reliance on God's power (Guzik's
Notes on Matthew 5)
Lloyd- Jones goes on to
summarize poor in spirit as follows...
It means a complete absence of pride,
a complete absence of self-assurance and of self-reliance.
It means a consciousness that we are nothing in the presence of God.
It is nothing, then, that we can produce; it is nothing that we can do
in ourselves.
It is just this tremendous awareness of our utter nothingness as we come
face-to-face with God.
The answer is that you do not look at
yourself or begin by trying to do things to yourself.
That was the whole error of monasticism. Those poor men in their desire
to do this said,
'I must go out of society, I must scarify my flesh and suffer hardship,
I must mutilate my body.'
No, no, the more you do that the more conscious will you be of yourself,
and the less 'poor in spirit.
The way to become poor in spirit is to look at God. Look at Him; and the
more we look at Him, the more hopeless shall we feel by ourselves, and
in and of ourselves, and the more shall we become 'poor in spirit'. Look
at Him, keep looking at Him. Look at the saints, look at the men who
have been most filled with the Spirit and used. But above all, look
again at Him, and then you will have nothing to do to yourself. It will
be done. You cannot truly look at Him without feeling your absolute
poverty, and emptiness.
(Lloyd-Jones,
D. M.
Studies in the Sermon on the Mount)
In Luke 18:9-14 Jesus
gives us a vivid illustration of one "poor in spirit"...
And He also told this parable to
certain ones who trusted in themselves that they were righteous, and
viewed others with contempt:
10 "Two men went up into the temple to pray, one a Pharisee, and the
other a tax-gatherer.
11 "The Pharisee stood and was praying thus to himself, 'God, I thank
Thee that I am not like other people: swindlers, unjust, adulterers, or
even like this tax-gatherer.
12 'I fast twice a week; I pay tithes of all that I get.'
13 "But the tax-gatherer, standing some distance away, was even
unwilling to lift up his eyes to heaven, but was beating his breast,
saying, 'God, be merciful to me, the sinner!' (This is poverty of
spirit!)
14 "I tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than
the other; for everyone who exalts himself shall be humbled, but he who
humbles himself shall be exalted."
15 And they were bringing even their babies to Him so that He might
touch them, but when the disciples saw it, they began rebuking them.
Two men in the temple, both men
prayed. Whose prayer did God hear? The religious Pharisee? Oh no,
because he wasn’t praying, he was giving God his resume! Jesus said that
God heard the other man’s prayer because his words came from a man who
was "poor in spirit". Then Jesus gave the moral of the story:
“Everyone who exalts
himself will be humbled (See Luke 18:9-14).
One man was rich with pride, the other poor in spirit. One man thought
highly of himself, the other felt his shortcomings. One man impressed
with his own accomplishments, the other depressed by his sin. One man
boasted, the other man begged. One man recommended himself to God, the
other man pleaded for God’s mercy.
One man was saved, the other lost. Only it wasn’t the “good” man who was
saved. He ended up lost. And the “bad” man? He ended up saved.
Alexander Maclaren in a
sermon on this beatitude says that...
This, the first of them, is dead in
the teeth of flesh and sense, a paradox to the men who judge good and
evil by things external and visible, but deeply, everlastingly,
unconditionally, and inwardly true. All that the world commends and pats
on the back, Christ condemns, and all that the world shrinks from and
dreads, Christ bids us make our own, and assures us that in it we shall
find our true blessing. ‘The poor in spirit,’ they are the happy men.
The reason for the benediction is as foreign to law and earthly thoughts
as is the benediction of which it is the reason — ‘for theirs is the
Kingdom of Heaven.’ Poverty of spirit will not further earthly designs,
nor be an instrument for what the world calls success and prosperity.
But it will give us something better than earth, it will give us heaven.
Do you think that that is better than earth, and should you be disposed
to acquiesce in the benediction of those who may lose the world’s gifts
but are sure to have heaven’s felicities?
What is this poverty of spirit?...To
me it seems to be a lowly and just estimate of ourselves, our character,
our achievements, based upon a clear recognition of our own necessities,
weaknesses, and sins...Two or three plain questions, to which the
answers are quite as plain, ought to rip up this swollen bladder of
self-esteem which we are all apt to blow. ‘What hast thou that thou hast
not received?’ Where did you get it? How came you by it? How long is it
going to last?... I suppose that we have all come out of nothing, and
are anything, simply because God is everything. If He were to withhold
His upholding and inbreathing power from any of us for one moment, we
should shrivel into nothingness like a piece of paper calcined in the
fire, and go back into that vacuity out of which His fiat, and His fiat
alone, called us. And yet here we are, setting great store, some of us,
by our qualities or belongings, and thinking ever so much of ourselves
because we possess them, and all the while we are but great emptinesses;
and the things of which we are so proud are what God has poured into us.
A W Pink has some pithy
comments on "blessed are the poor in spirit" writing that...
There is a vast difference between
this and being hard up in our circumstances. There is no virtue (and
often no disgrace) in financial poverty as such, nor does it, of itself,
produce humility of heart, for anyone who has any real acquaintance with
both classes soon discovers there is just as much pride in the indigent
as there is in the opulent. This poverty of spirit is a fruit that grows
on no merely natural tree. It is a spiritual grace wrought by the Holy
Spirit in those whom He renews. By nature we are well pleased with
ourselves, and mad enough to think that we deserve something good at the
hands of God. Let men but conduct themselves decently in a civil way,
keeping themselves from grosser sins, and they are rich in spirit, pride
filling their hearts, and they are self-righteous. And nothing short of
a miracle of grace can change the course of this stream. Nor is real
poverty of spirit to be found among the great majority of the
religionists of the day: very much the reverse. How often we see
advertised a conference for “promoting the higher life,” but who ever
heard of one for furthering the lowly life? Many books are telling us
how to be “filled with the Spirit,” but where can we find one setting
forth what it means to be spiritually emptied—emptied of
self-confidence, self-importance, and self-righteousness? Alas, if it be
true that, “That which is highly esteemed among men is abomination in
the sight of God” (Luke 16:15), it is equally true that what is of great
price in His sight is despised by men—by none more so than by modern
Pharisees, who now hold nearly all the positions of prominence in
Christendom. Almost all of the so-called “ministry” of this generation
feeds pride, instead of starving the flesh; puffs up, rather than
abases; and anything which is calculated to search and strip is frowned
upon by the pulpit and is unpopular with the pew.
And what is poverty of spirit?
It is the opposite of that haughty, self-assertive and self-sufficient
disposition which the world so much admires and praises. It is the very
reverse of that independent and defiant attitude which refuses to bow to
God, which determines to brave things out, which says with Pharaoh, “Who
is the Lord that I should obey His voice?” To be “poor in spirit” is
to realize that I have nothing, am nothing, and can do nothing and have
need of all things. Poverty of spirit is a consciousness of my
emptiness, the result of the Spirit’s work within. It issues from
the painful discovery that all my righteousnesses are as filthy rags
(Isa 64:6, Phil 3:7-9, Rev 3:17). 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 corresponds to the initial awakening of the
prodigal in the far country, when he “began to be in want.”
Poverty of spirit may be termed the
negative side of faith. It is that realization of my utter worthlessness
which precedes the laying hold of Christ, the eating of His flesh and
drinking His blood. It is the Spirit emptying the heart of self that
Christ may fill it: it is a sense of need and destitution. This first
Beatitude, then, is foundational, describing a fundamental trait which
is found in every regenerated soul. 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. He may, through false teaching or worldliness, leave this
place, but God knows how to bring him back; and in His faithfulness and
love He will do so, for it is the place of blessing for His children.
How to cultivate this God-honouring spirit is revealed in Matthew 11:29.
(Pink,
A. W. An Exposition of the Sermon on the Mount)
(Bolding added)
Expositor's Bible Commentary
adds that...
To be poor in spirit is not to
lack courage but to acknowledge spiritual bankruptcy. It confesses one's
unworthiness before God and utter dependence on him. Therefore those who
interpret the Sermon on the Mount as law and not gospel...stumble at the
first sentence...The kingdom of heaven is not given on the basis
of race (cf. Mt 3:9), earned merits, the military zeal and prowess of
Zealots, or the wealth of a Zacchaeus. It is given to the poor, the
despised publicans (Ed note: most of these tax collectors were actually relatively rich in terms of "mammon"), the prostitutes, those who
are so "poor" they know they can offer nothing and do not try. They cry
for mercy and they alone are heard. These themes recur repeatedly in
Matthew and present the sermon's ethical demands in a setting that does
not treat the resulting conduct as conditions for entrance to the
kingdom that people themselves can achieve. All must begin by
confessing that by them selves they can achieve nothing....in the
last book of the canon, an established church must likewise recognize
its precarious position when it claims to be rich and fails to see
its own poverty (Rev 3:14-22). The kingdom of heaven (Mt 3:2; 4:17)
belongs to the poor in spirit; it is they who enjoy Messiah's reign and
the blessings he brings. They joyfully accept his rule and participate
in the life of the kingdom (Mt 7:14). (Expositors
Bible Commentary)
John Piper comments on "poor in spirit" asking first...
How does it get started, so that we have the power to love and can prove
that God is at work within us? The answer was Matthew 5:3
"Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven."
We receive Jesus and his kingdom through bankruptcy—by admitting the
poverty of spirit. The answer was Mark 10:15
Truly I say to you, whoever does
not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it at all.
We receive Jesus and his kingdom
by admitting that we are as helpless as a little child. The answer was
Mark 2:17
It is not those who are healthy
who need a physician, but those who are sick; I did not come to call the
righteous, but sinners.
We receive Jesus and his kingdom
by admitting that we are sick and in need of a spiritual
physician—namely, Jesus. In other words the commands of the Sermon on
the Mount are not the first things in the matter of our
relationship to Jesus and his Father. The first things are free
gospel promises that he will be the Forgiver and Healer for our
sin-sickness, the Father for our helpless childlikeness, and the
Supplier for our poverty stricken heart. All of that we receive by
faith. Jesus said to the prostitute who wept at his feet
Your sins have been forgiven . . .
your faith has saved you; go in peace. (Luke 7:48, 50)
This is how the Christian life
starts. It doesn't start by measuring up. It starts by
realizing that we don't measure up. We are poverty stricken, helpless as
a child, and sin-sick in need of a Great Physician. Then we hear the
gospel news that Jesus "came not to be served but to serve and to give
his life a ransom for many" (Mark 10:45); and we hear the free offer
that by trusting him our sins we will be forgiven, God will be our
Father and the power of the kingdom will come into our lives, and we
will have the help we need to live out the Sermon on the Mount. Jesus
said
I am the vine, you are the
branches; he who abides in Me, and I in him, he bears much fruit; for
apart from Me you can do nothing. (John 15:5)
We are grafted into the vine by
faith in the all-satisfying promises of Christ. And we abide there by
faith—drawing on His power and His enabling. So the fruit we
produce, like loving our enemies, is not produced in our own strength,
but by the strength of the Vine. "Without me you can do nothing."
(From the sermon
But I Say to You, Love Your
Enemies, Part 2 )
(Bolding added)
Barnes rightly remarks
that...
It is remarkable that Jesus began his ministry in this manner, so unlike
all others. Other teachers had taught that happiness was to be found in
honor, or riches, or splendor, or sensual pleasure. Jesus overlooked all
those things, and fixed his eye on the poor and the humble, and said
that happiness was to be found in the lowly vale of poverty more than in
the pomp and splendors of life. (Barnes' Notes on the NT)
FOR THEIRS IS
THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN: hoti auton estin (PAI) e basileia ton ouranon: (Mt
3:2; 8:11; Mark 10:14; James 2:5)
THE KINGDOM
It has been well said that the only
kingdom that will prevail in this world is the kingdom
that is not of this world! Amen!
Billy Graham adds that...
The longings and dreams of mankind
will be fulfilled as God establishes His glorious Kingdom on earth for
the enjoyment of mankind. (Ed: But there is a caveat - Sadly, not
all of mankind but only that portion of mankind that has by grace
through faith received Messiah as their sole/soul Savior and reigning
King!)
Kingdom
(932)
(basileia from basileus = a sovereign, king, monarch)
denotes sovereignty, royal power, dominion. Basileia can also refer to the
territory or people over whom a king rules (See "Three Basic Meanings"
below).
At the outset it should be noted that
the Kingdom of Heaven/God is both simple and complex and has been
the subject of many non-Biblical interpretations (this summary makes no
attempt to review these interpretations). It is as simple as the truth
that wherever the King (God/Jesus) rules and reigns, there the kingdom
is present! It is complex in that a number of references to Kingdom
of God/Heaven have prophetic (eschatological) overtones, so it has a
present and future aspect. It is also complex in the sense that the
Kingdom of God/Heaven is described in both testaments from Genesis
to Revelation (See Tony Garland's interesting related summary of
Genesis and Revelation as Bookends).
It follows that any attempt to give a Biblical definition of kingdom
will be woefully lacking. So as you read these notes on the definition
of basileia, understand that this is only a summary --indeed,
it will take all eternity to comprehend God's Kingdom, a Kingdom which
will endure forever and ever! Amen!
BASILEIA:
THREE BASIC MEANINGS
There are three basic meanings of basileia (realize
however that there is some overlap
in the meanings in a number of passages)
(1) The power
exercised by a king, the act of ruling - kingship, royal rule, reign (Acts 1.6, Lxx =
1Ki 15:28, 20:31, Esther 3:6, Lk 19:12, 15, Rev 17:12, 17, 18-note.
Lk 1:33, 22:29, 23:42).
Basileia
means kingdom and is used most often in the NT to describe God's
(Christ's) rule and reign, a rule and reign which in turn most often
described by the phrases
kingdom of heaven or kingdom of God. Although some
scholars attempt to differentiate these terms, it is more reasonable (as
discerned from the context) to consider these two phrase as synonyms. Kingdom of heaven is found only in the Gospel of Matthew
(32 times) and Kingdom of God is used in the other Gospels (66
times including 4 times in Matthew), 6 times in Acts, and 8 times by Paul. Most
observers conclude that Kingdom of Heaven is used by Matthew
whose
Gospel was addressed primarily to a first century Jewish audience that
for the most part would
not (and still do not, especially the orthodox) vocalize the Name "God".
Jesus' began His ministry proclaiming
the Gospel of the Kingdom (See Tony Garland's discussion -
The Arrival of God’s Kingdom) by which, if one receives it and believes it,
gains entrance into the Kingdom of God/Heaven, which is simply another way of
saying one is "saved" by grace through faith (Jn 3:3, 5, Mt
18:3). Where there is a
kingdom, by definition there is a king who reigns over that kingdom, and
it follows that when one enters the Kingdom of God/Heaven by
believing, Jesus becomes their King. (Is
Jesus King on the throne of your heart dear reader?) The reign of the King of kings (Rev
19:15-note)
is the realm of His dominion and can speak of the people over which He
rules (believers in this present age - see Col 1:13-note)
or the land over which He will reign (in "the age to come"
[Mk 10:30, Lk 18:29, 30, cp "end of the age" Mt 24:3-note]
- referring to the next "age," the future
Millennial Kingdom of Christ
- see Rev 20:6-note).
Thus we see that from the standpoint of time (temporally), the Kingdom
has both a "now" and a "then" aspect. In other words the Kingdom of our
Lord has a present spiritual aspect and a future physical aspect. So
when one encounters the word basileia, one must examine the
context to determine whether kingdom refers to the spiritual, now
aspect, the future, physical aspect or sometimes both. Thus one can see
how the definitions (#1) and (#3) sometimes overlap.
TIMING OF
THE KINGDOM
Notice also that
Jesus claimed that "If I cast out demons
by the Spirit of God, then the Kingdom of God has come upon you." (Mt 12:28)
Jesus the One prophesied to be King on David's throne (See the Word of
God through Nathan to King David = 2Sa 7:12, 13, 14, 15, 16-fulfilled in
part in Solomon but completely fulfilled only in Jesus the Messiah,
greater Son of David, Mt 1:1) was in hearer's midst and His exercising
of supernatural power was clear evidence that the promised King had come
(albeit as discussed the Jews failed to recognize and accept Messiah's
rule). Remember also the principle that where the King was present, His
Kingdom was also present, independent of whether the Jews recognized His
rule or not! In Luke 17:21 Jesus declared "Behold, the Kingdom
of God is in your midst" (In one sense it was because Jesus was the
rightful Heir to the throne of David and where the King is present, so
is His Kingdom!) In another reference to the timing of the Kingdom,
Jesus said "the Kingdom of God is at hand (Gk = eggizo = in
context near in time - Mk 1:15, cp Mt 3:2, 4:17, Lk 10:11)
In summary, basileia or
kingdom in many NT uses can have a temporal component (see
more discussion below by W. E. Vine on the past, present and future aspects) as
well as a spiritual
and/or physical component depending on the context.
In Revelation 1:6 and Rev
5:10, "the redeemed are referred to as a kingdom, because they
are the people over whom God reigns, and also because they will share
His glorious reign. There are of the sphere of salvation—those over whom
Christ rules—as well as its future millennial and eternal glory.
Only those who “receive the kingdom of God like a child” (Mark 10:15) or
accept God’s rule here and now, enter into the realm of its blessings in
the future.
(2) Basileia can sometimes
refer to the land, the realm or the territory
over which a king rules. (Mt 4.8, Mt 12:25, 26, 24:7, Mk 3:24, 6:23,
13:8, Lk 11:17, 18, 21:10)
(3) As discussed under #1
basileia or kingdom can refer to the
spiritual rule of God in the hearts of people now (Ro 14.17) and
ultimately to be fulfilled in the Messianic reign of Christ on earth
reign, kingdom (Lk 1.33).
Detzler notes that...
The Greek word for king in the
New Testament is basileus, and the word for kingdom is basileia.
These are reflected in such English words as the man's name Basil,
and in the term basilica (which literally means an assembly hall or royal
hall). (New Testament Words in Today's Language)
NASB Topical index...
The biblical words for
kingdom primarily signify the abstract idea of kingly authority or
reign (kingship, e.g., 1 Sa 14:47; 1Ki 2:12. However, since a reign
necessarily creates a realm over which it is exercised, the terms are
also used for that realm (kingdom, e.g., Mt 4:8; 8:11). They are used
both for secular earthly kingdoms and the kingdom related to God and
Christ. Although the expression “kingdom of God” is not used in the OT,
the idea of the reign of God and His kingdom is frequent (e.g., Ps
22:28; 145:13; Da 2:44).
KINGDOM OF GOD/HEAVEN:
PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE
SPIRITUAL, PHYSICAL
Vanhoozer offers some
helpful summary thoughts on the kingdom writing that...
When asked when the kingdom of God is coming, Jesus replies that it is
already “among you” (Lk 17:21)....at the Last Supper he looked forward to drinking
new wine with his disciples “in the kingdom of God” (Mk 14:25). This
tension between the now and the not yet is illustrated by the
traditional form of the Lord’s Prayer, which bids us pray “Your kingdom
come” and yet concludes with the declaration “Yours is the kingdom." (Mt
6:10-note,
Mt 6:13-note)
In a series of parables in Mark 4 and Matthew 13, Jesus explains more
about the “mystery of the kingdom of God” (Mk 4:11KJV). It is not
visible to all, but only to those with God-given eyes to see. It is like
seed that germinates in some soil but not in others (Mk 4:3-8),
like a seed growing secretly away from human observation (Mk 4:26, 27,
28, 29), like the tiny mustard seed that is now so small as to be
unnoticed but will one day be a great tree (Mk 4:30, 31, 32), like the
tiny pinch of yeast that will gradually penetrate the whole lump of
dough (Mt 13:33). So God has already established His rule in the coming
of Jesus, yet it still has to work itself out to its full potential. In
the meantime (the Kingdom of God/Heaven) remains a secret, a paradox,
rejected by some, but for others the one great treasure for which they
will sell all they have (Mt 13:44, 45, 46). (Ed:
This truth begs the question dear reader - have you received the
great treasure of salvation by placing your faith in Jesus, the King of
kings?) (Dictionary
for Theological Interpretation of the Bible - Kevin J. Vanhoozer
or
Logos)
W E
Vine summarizes the past, present and future
aspects of the Kingdom of God/Heaven as well as alluding to the
spiritual and physical aspects of the Kingdom (this discussion has
some repetition) ...
The Kingdom of God is the
sphere of God’s rule (Ps 22:28; 145:13; Da 4:25; Lk 1:52; Ro 13:1, 2)
Since, however, this earth is the scene of universal rebellion against
God (Lk 4:5, 6; 1Jn 5:19) the Kingdom of God is the sphere in which, at
any given time, His rule is acknowledged. (Ed: Spiritual aspect)
God has not relinquished His
sovereignty in the face of rebellion, demoniac and human, but has
declared His purpose to establish it (Da 2:44-note;
Da 7:14-note; 1Cor 15:24, 25). In the meantime, seeking willing obedience,
God gave His law to a nation (Israel) and appointed kings (Saul, David,
Solomon, etc) to administer
His Kingdom over Israel (1Chr 28:5). Israel, however, though declaring still
a nominal allegiance (Ed: To Jehovah as their true King, Whom
they in effect rejected when they ask for human kings like the pagan
nations - 1Sa 8:7, 10:19, 12:12, but even before their rejection, Jacob
had prophesied that the true King, Messiah from the lineage of the tribe
of Judah, would one day come and all peoples would obey Him - Genesis
49:10 where "scepter" symbolizes kingship and "Shiloh" means something
like "Rest Giver" = Messiah, cp parallel prophecy in Nu 24:17 where
Messiah = a "Star" and a "Scepter") shared in the common
rebellion (e.g., Isa 1:2-4-note) and, after they had rejected the Son of God (Ed:
The rightful Heir to the Throne of David was openly rejected by
the Jews as their King
[Jn 19:15b, compare Jn 1:11, 12, 13, Mt 21:33-43]; See Tony Garland's
summary on
Presentation and Rejection of Messiah)
and
Stages in Rejection of Jesus), and were “cast away,”
(see Ro 11:1KJV-note, Ro 11:2KJV-note) (Ed:
The Jews were temporarily set aside "until the fulness of the Gentiles
has come in" to the Kingdom - Ro 11:15KJV-note,
Ro 11:20-note,
Ro 11:25-note.
After the fulness comes in the future, "The Deliverer [King Jesus] will
return [Second
Coming]
and "remove ungodliness from Jacob." [Ro 11:26-note,
see Zech 13:8,9 in parallel with Zech 12:10] at which time these
spiritually regenerate Jews will enter into the Kingdom of God/Heaven,
which at that time will be the beginning of Messiah's
Millennial Kingdom!). Henceforth
God calls upon men everywhere, without distinction of race or
nationality, to submit voluntarily to His rule (Ed: That is, to
believe in Christ and thus to enter the Kingdom of God, Jn 3:3, 5, cp Mt
19:23, 24). Thus the Kingdom is said
to be ‘in mystery’ now (Mk 4:11 - This refers to the "spiritual" aspect
of the Kingdom of God/Heaven), that is, it does not come within the
range of the natural powers of observation (Lk 17:20), but is
spiritually discerned, (Ed: More accurately "it is spiritually
entered" in Jn 3:3 and spiritually discerned in 1Co 2:14). When, hereafter, God
asserts His rule universally, then the Kingdom will be in glory, that
is, it will be manifest to all (Ed: Here Vine is alluding to the
future aspect of the Kingdom of God/Heaven, that time when Messiah rules
as King of kings over the entire earth, which will be filled with His
glory and over all the people who live on the earth at that time, the
time of His glorious
1000 Year reign - click to read the
description of His coming Kingdom)
(Mt 25:31-34; Php 2:9-11; 2Ti
4:1, 2Ti 4:18)
Thus, speaking generally,
references to the Kingdom fall into two classes, the first, in which it
is viewed as present and involving suffering for those who enter it, 2Th. 1:5; the second, in which it is viewed as
future and is
associated with reward (Mt 25:34), and glory (Mt 13:43, Acts
14:22). (Ed: Others have referred to the temporal aspects of the
kingdom of God as "already" [present] and "not yet"
[future] dimensions of the kingdom of God implying that God's divine
power is at work in the present and is also a process that is moving
toward its future fulfillment or completion.)
WHERE THE KING IS,
THERE IS THE KINGDOM
The fundamental principle of
the Kingdom is declared in the words of the Lord spoken in the midst of
a company of Pharisees, “the Kingdom of God is in the midst of you,”
Luke 17:21, that is, where the King is, there is the Kingdom.
Thus at the present time and so far as this earth is concerned, where
the King is and where His rule is acknowledged, is, first, in the heart
of the individual believer (Acts 4:19; Eph 3:17-note; 1Pet 3:15-note) and then
in the churches of God (1Cor 12:3, 5, 11; 14:37; cp. Col 1:27-note).
Now, the King and His rule
being refused, those who enter the Kingdom of God are brought into
conflict with all who disown its allegiance, as well as with the desire
for ease, and the dislike of suffering and unpopularity, natural to all.
On the other hand, subjects of the Kingdom are the objects of the care
of God, (Mt 6:33-note), and of the rejected King,
(Heb. 13:5-note).
Entrance into the Kingdom of God is by the new birth (Mt 18:3; Jn
3:5), for nothing that a man may be by nature or can attain to by any
form of self–culture, avails in the spiritual realm. And as the new
nature, received in the new birth, is made evident by obedience, it is
further said that only such as do the will of God shall enter into His
Kingdom (Mt 7:21-note), where, however, the context shows that the
reference is to the future (Ed: That is the Kingdom has both
present and future components) (2Pe 1:10, 11-note. 1Cor 6:9,
10; Gal 5:21-note;
Eph. 5:5-note)...Concerning
the present, a man is of the Kingdom of God as not shown in the
punctilious observance of ordinances, which are external and material,
but in the deeper matters of the heart, which are spiritual and
essential, viz., ‘righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit"
(See Ro 14:17-note)
(Online
reference)
Basileia - 162x in 154v - Observe that most uses occur in the
Gospels.
Mt 3:2; 4:8, 17,
23; 5:3, 10, 19, 20; 6:10, 33; 7:21; 8:11, 12; 9:35; 10:7; 11:11, 12; 12:25,
26, 28;
13:11, 19, 24, 31, 33, 38, 41, 43, 44, 45, 47, 52; 16:19, 28; 18:1, 3, 4, 23;
19:12, 14, 23, 24; 20:1, 21; 21:31, 43; 22:2; 23:13; 24:7, 14; 25:1, 34;
26:29;
Mk 1:15; 3:24; 4:11, 26, 30; 6:23; 9:1, 47; 10:14f, 23, 24, 25;
11:10; 12:34; 13:8; 14:25; 15:43;
Lk 1:33; 4:5, 43; 6:20; 7:28; 8:1,
10; 9:2, 11, 27, 60, 62; 10:9, 11; 11:2, 17f, 20; 12:31, 32; 13:18, 20,
28, 29; 14:15; 16:16; 17:20, 21; 18:16, 17, 24, 25, 29; 19:11, 12, 15; 21:10, 31;
22:16, 18, 29, 30; 23:42, 51;
Jn 3:3, 5; 18:36
Acts 1:3, 6; 8:12; 14:22; 19:8; 20:25; 28:23, 31;
Pauline epistles - Ro 14:17; 1Cor 4:20; 6:9, 10; 15:24, 50; Gal
5:21; Eph 5:5; Col 1:13; 4:11; 1Th 2:12; 2Th 1:5; 2Ti 4:1, 18;
Other uses - Heb 1:8; 11:33; 12:28; Jas 2:5; 2 Pet 1:11; Rev 1:6, 9;
5:10; 11:15; 12:10; 16:10; 17:12, 17, 18.
Basileia - Used 437 times in the non-apocryphal Septuagint:
Ge 10:10; 14:1; 20:9; Nu 21:18; 24:7; 32:33; Deut 3:4, 10, 13, 21;
28:25; Josh 11:10; 13:12, 21, 27, 30f; 1Sa 10:16, 18; 11:14; 13:13f;
15:28; 20:31; 24:20; 28:17; 2 Sam 3:10, 28; 5:12; 7:12, 16; 12:26; 16:3,
8; 19:9; 1Kgs 1:46; 2:12, 15, 22, 35; 4:20; 9:5; 10:20; 11:11, 13f, 31,
34f; 12:21, 24, 26; 16:28; 18:10; 2Kgs 11:1; 14:5; 19:15, 19; 24:12;
25:1, 27; 1 Chr 4:23; 10:14; 11:10; 12:23; 14:2; 16:20; 17:11, 14;
22:10; 26:31; 28:5, 7; 29:30; 2 Chr 1:1; 2:1, 12; 3:2; 7:18; 8:6, 9;
9:19; 11:1, 17; 12:1f, 8; 13:1, 5, 8; 15:10, 19; 16:1, 12f; 17:5, 7, 10;
20:6, 29f; 21:3ff; 22:9f; 23:20; 25:3; 26:21; 29:3, 19, 21; 32:15;
33:13; 34:3, 8; 35:19; 36:20, 22f; Ezra 1:1f; 4:5f, 24; 6:15; 7:1, 13,
23; 8:1; Neh 9:22, 35; 12:22; Esther1:4, 19f, 22; 2:3, 16, 18; 3:6ff,
13; 4:11, 13; 5:1, 3, 11; 7:2; 8:5, 12f; 9:4, 16, 20; 10:1ff; Ps 22:28;
45:6; 46:6; 68:32; 79:6; 102:22; 103:19; 105:13; 135:11; 145:11ff; Eccl
4:14; Isa 1:1; 7:8; 9:7; 17:3; 23:17; 37:16, 20; 47:5; 62:3; Jer 1:2,
10, 15; 15:4; 18:7, 9; 24:9; 25:26; 27:8; 28:8; 34:17; 51:27, 59; 52:4;
Ezek 17:13f; 37:22; Dan 1:1, 3, 20f; 2:1, 37, 39ff, 44; 3:30; 4:1, 3f,
17f, 25ff, 29ff, 34, 36; 5:7, 11, 16, 18, 20f, 26, 28f, 31; 6:1, 3f, 7,
26, 28; 7:14, 17f, 22ff, 27; 8:1, 23; 9:1f, 26; 10:13; 11:2, 4ff, 9, 17,
20f; Hos 1:4; Amos 6:2; 7:13; 9:8; Obad 1:21; Mic 4:8; Nah 3:5.
Here are a few OT uses of basileia...
Psalm 22:28-note For the kingdom
(basileia) is the LORD'S And He rules over the nations.
Psalm 45:6-note Your throne, O God, is
forever and ever; a scepter of uprightness is the scepter of Your
kingdom (basileia)
Psalm 68:32-note Sing to God, O
kingdoms of the earth, Sing praises to the Lord, Selah.
Psalm 79:6-note Pour out Your wrath
upon the nations which do not know You, And upon the kingdoms
(basileia) which do not call upon Your name.
Psalm 145:11, 12-note They shall
speak of the glory of Your kingdom
(basileia)
And talk of Your power; 12 To
make known to the sons of men Your mighty acts And the glory of the
majesty of Your kingdom.
Psalm 145:13-note Your kingdom
(basileia)
is an everlasting kingdom
(basileia)
, And Your dominion endures
throughout all generations.
Isaiah 37:20 "Now, O LORD our God,
deliver us from his hand that all the kingdoms of the earth may
know that You alone, LORD, are God." (Ed:
And all God's people say "Amen!")
Daniel 2:44-note
"In the days of those kings the
God of heaven will set up a kingdom which will never be
destroyed, and that kingdom will not be left for another people;
it will crush and put an end to all these kingdoms, but it will
itself endure forever.
Comment: When the Stone (Da
2:34, 35-note)
strikes the statue representative of the major world empires that have
interacted throughout history with Israel, God will remove all vestiges
of Gentile world powers and replace them with the Kingdom of Messiah (Millennial
Kingdom;
see also
Overview of Doctrine of Millennium
including various views),
eg see
Why Must there be a Millennial
Kingdom?) followed by the New Heavens and the New Earth.
Below are a selected uses of basileia in the New Testament...
Repent,
(present
imperative
= see related noun
metanoia)
for the kingdom of
heaven
is at hand. (Mt 3:2)
Comment: The first NT use of
basileia is very instructive for it defines how an unbeliever gains
entrance into the Kingdom of heaven (which most agree is
synonymous with the phrase "kingdom of God" used in the other Gospels).
There is a major attack on the Gospel today which states that repentance
is not part of the work of the Spirit in bringing about salvation. To be
sure repentance, representing a change of mind leading to a change of
conduct, does not arise from within man apart from a work of God, Who
grants repentance as an act of mercy (see Acts 3:26 [turning from ~
"repentance", cp Jer 18:11, 23:14, 24:7, 35:15, 36:3, Ezek 18:23, Jonah
3:10], Acts 5:31, Acts 11:18, Acts 26:20, 2Co 7:10, Ro 2:4-note,
2Ti 2:25-note).
From that time Jesus began to preach
and say, “Repent,
for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” (Mt 4:17)
Comment: Jesus message is
identical to John the Baptist's message in Mt 3:2. Jesus later
emphasized "I have not come to call the righteous but sinners to
repentance." (Luke 5:32) Clearly Jesus preached repentance and before He
departed, He charged His apostles to also preach repentance (Luke 24:47).
In short, repentance is an intrinsic
aspect of genuine, Biblical conversion and the modern church does great
harm by not teaching this truth. (for much more discussion of this
important truth see H A Ironside's booklet entitled "Except
Ye Repent")
Woe
to those who teach that repentance
is not to be preached as part of the Gospel of Jesus Christ!
KJV Bible Commentary:
Jesus, as the Messiah, is not calling on His listeners to prepare for
the coming of the kingdom but rather announces that the kingdom is here.
In a very real sense the first coming of the King is an honest,
straightforward presentation of the kingdom promised by the Old
Testament prophets to the people of Israel. Thus, we find unusual
miracles attending Jesus’ presentation of this kingdom: incurable
diseases and incomprehensible afflictions are cured by the power of His
touch and His word. The kingdom blessings promised in Isaiah 35:5–6 to
be fulfilled in a future kingdom, here become the credentials of the
King in His first coming.
Jesus was going throughout all
Galilee, teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the gospel (euaggelion
= Good News) of the kingdom, and healing every kind of disease
and every kind of sickness among the people. (Mt 4:23, cp Mt 9:35)
Comment: This is the first
mention of "gospel" in the NT. It is significant that this beginning of
the gospel looks forward to the future kingdom when Christ will finally
be acknowledged as King of kings (see Php 2:9, 10, 11-note,
Rev 1:7-note).
Compare this with the final mention of "gospel" (Rev 14:6,7-note),
which looks back to the creation. The gospel or good news of Christ thus
embraces all aspects--past, present, future--of His great work, from
creation to consummation.
And after John had been taken
into custody, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the gospel of God, and
saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at
hand;
repent
and
believe
(both present imperative) in the Gospel.” (Mk 1:14-15)
BKC: This concept (kingdom of
God/kingdom of Heaven) was familiar to the Jews of Jesus’ day. In light
of Old Testament prophecy (cf. 2Sa 7:8-17; Isa 11:1-9; 24:23; Jer.
23:4-6; Micah 4:6-7; Zech 9:9-10; 14:9) they were expecting a future
Messianic (Davidic) Kingdom to be established on earth (cf. Mt 20:21; Mk
10:37; 11:10; 12:35-37; 15:43; Lk 1:31-33; 2:25, 38; Acts 1:6). So Jesus
did not have to arouse interest in His message. His hearers naturally
understood His reference to the kingdom of God to be the
long-awaited Messianic Kingdom predicted in the Old Testament.
(Walvoord,
J. F., Zuck, R. B., et al: The Bible Knowledge Commentary. 1985. Victor
or
Logos
or
Wordsearch)
Blessed are those who have been
persecuted for the sake of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of
heaven. (Mt 5:10-note)
Comment: The kingdom of heaven
is the glorious promised prize - in the present and in the future! No
crown without a cross!
Whoever then annuls one of the
least of these commandments, and so teaches others, shall be called
least in the kingdom of heaven; but whoever keeps and teaches them, he
shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven. (Mt 5:19-note)
MacArthur Comments: The
consequence of practicing or teaching disobedience of any of God’s Word
is to be called least in the kingdom of heaven (Jas 2:10). Determining
rank in the kingdom of heaven is entirely God’s prerogative (cf. Mt
20:23), and Jesus declares that He will hold those in lowest esteem who
hold His Word in low esteem. There is no impunity for believers who
disobey, discredit, or belittle God’s law (see 2Co 5:10-note).
That Jesus does not refer to loss of salvation is clear from the fact
that, though offenders will be called least, they will still be
in the kingdom of heaven. The positive result is that whoever
keeps and teaches God’s Word, he shall be called great in the
kingdom of heaven.
(MacArthur,
J.: The MacArthur Study Bible Nashville: Word
or
Logos)
For I say to you, that unless
your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes and Pharisees, you
shall not enter the kingdom of heaven. (Mt 5:20-note)
Comment: God does not "grade
on a curve" (meaning all grades are relative to the best score in the
class) but demands perfect (100%) righteousness, found only in
Christ Jesus and only credited to the spiritual account of those who
believe in Christ "the Lord our righteousness" (Jer 23:5,6 1Cor 1:30,
2Co 5:21-note,
Php 3:9-note).
Notice that the phrase "enter the kingdom of heaven" is tantamount to
conversion or salvation (cp Jn 3:5, 6)
Thy kingdom
come (a command). Thy
will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. (Mt 6:10-note)
Comment: The phrase Thy
kingdom come refers to the eschatological nature of this prayer.
Notice that the kingdom is to be prayed for, implying that it has not
already arrived. The kingdom represents the full and effective reign of
God through the mediatorial office of the Messiah. The disciples were
not to think of their own convenience as their foremost expression in
prayer, but the full and quick realization of the effective rule of God
on earth in the hearts of men. That rule is realized through the
regenerating process of the new birth in the lives of individuals. It
will reach its pinnacle when the last enemy (sin and death, 1Cor
15:24-28) has been destroyed at the Lord’s return.
(Radmacher,
E. D., Allen, R. B., & House, H. W. The Nelson Study Bible: NKJV.
Nashville: Thomas Nelson)
Hagner comments: This refers
to the eschatological rule of God (cf. Harner) expected and longed for
by the Jewish people (cf. the central petition of the Qaddish, above v
9). It involves the consummation of God’s purposes in history, the
fulfillment of the prophetic pictures of future bliss (cf. Acts 1:6).
(Word Biblical Commentary: Matthew 1-13)
Hermeneia Commentary: The
eschatological interpretation of the prayer has its strongest pillar. In
Jewish prayers one frequently praises and prays for God’s reign. Indeed,
it is amazing how often God’s future reign is the object of petitions by
the rabbis, for whom ordinarily the present aspect of God’s rule is more
likely to be in the foreground.
Barclay Newman: The reference
is to the final establishment of God’s reign on earth.
(The
United Bible Societies' New Testament Handbook Series - Matthew
or
Logos)
Not everyone who says to Me,
'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does (present
tense
= as one's lifestyle) the will of My Father who is in heaven will enter.
(Mt 7:21)
Comment:
Jesus is not saying "doing" works gets us into heaven. He is saying that
one who does works (direction, not perfection) in keeping with the will
of God demonstrates by those works that he or she is a genuine new
creature in Christ. We are saved by faith alone in Christ alone, but the
faith that genuinely saves is not alone but brings forth fruit in
keeping with repentance.
I say to you that many will come
from east and west, and recline at the table with Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob in the kingdom of heaven 12 but the sons of the kingdom
will be cast out into the outer darkness; in that place there will be
weeping and gnashing of teeth. (Mt 8:11, 12)
Comment:
In this passage clearly kingdom refers to a future (eschatological)
event. Jesus has just commended the great faith of the Roman centurion,
a Gentile, who came seeking healing for his servant. The "children of
the kingdom," in this instance, refers to UNREPENTANT JEWS who thought
that their ancestry automatically entitled them to the kingdom of God
(see John 8:31-59). In reality, however, these were false children of
the kingdom (Mt 7:21-23; 13:38; Lk 13:22-30). Those who come "from the
east and west" are Gentiles who exercise personal faith in Jesus Christ.
The Jews thought that they were assured of special favor by God, but the
Lord reminded them that they could be "last" in the kingdom of God while
those who thought themselves "last," such as publicans and prostitutes,
would be "first" if they exercised faith in Him (Mt 21:31). Furthermore,
the UNREPENTANT JEWS would be "cast out" because of their hypocritical
claim that they were the children and followers of Abraham. Abraham was
the father of the faithful, and although these men were physical
descendants, they were not part of the family of faith.
KJV Commentary:
Here Christ is referring to the gathering in of the Gentiles through the
preaching of the Gospel, culminating in their final gathering at the
time of His Second Coming....The children of the kingdom, refers
to those to whom the kingdom really belongs. The natural claim to
that kingdom had been given to the Jews. Their reception of Christ as
Messiah could potentially have brought in the kingdom, that had been
promised by the Old Testament prophets. However, their eventual
rejection of the Messiah caused the postponement of a literal kingdom
on earth.
(Before Jesus spoke the parable
of the soils, He explained to His disciples the reason He was beginning
to speak in parables) And He answered and said to them (the disciples,
Mt 13:10), "To you it has been granted to know the mysteries of the
kingdom of heaven, but to them it has not been granted....19 When
anyone hears the word of the kingdom and does not understand it,
the evil one comes and snatches away what has been sown in his heart.
This is the one on whom seed was sown beside the road. (Mt 13:11,19)
Comment:
Note that the "language" of the Kingdom is supernatural speak! It cannot
be understood by human intellect alone but must be spiritually discerned
(see 1Cor 2:7, 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 - strictly speaking this
post-Pentecost verse refers to the indwelling Spirit which had not yet
been given to the disciples but is today present in all Christ
followers). Notice also that while Jesus' word of the kingdom is
a "mystery" (musterion)
to those who have not been granted understanding (e.g., the "natural
man" of 1Cor 2:14), it is also a "mystery" which is revealed to those
who will enter or who have entered into the Kingdom of heaven/God (those
who are saved or who are being saved, for it is "revealed through the
Spirit" [1Cor 2:10]). The "Word of the kingdom" the seed
and is the word of God which in context is another way of saying
the Gospel, the Good News which one believes and by which one is saved
and gains entrance into the Kingdom of God/Heaven.
He (Jesus) presented another
parable to them (His disciples), saying, “The kingdom of heaven
(as discussed this is a Jewish phrase and is equivalent to the "kingdom
of God" used in Gospels other than Matthew) is like a mustard seed,
which a man took and sowed in his field; 32 and this is smaller than all
other seeds; but when it is full grown, it is larger than the garden
plants, and becomes a tree, so that THE BIRDS OF THE AIR come and NEST
IN ITS BRANCHES.” (Mt 13:31, 32)
Comment: This parable
shows us that the kingdom is both present and future. Today it is with
us in seed form, but someday it will be in full bloom. Today the
kingdom is significant only to the believers, but then it will
encompass the whole earth and all that are in it.
And He said to her (see Mt
20:20), "What do you wish?" She said to Him, "Command that in Your
kingdom these two sons of mine may sit, one on Your right and one on
Your left." (Mt 20:21)
Comment:
In this context, it is clear that the mother of James and John
understood Jesus' kingdom to have a future fulfillment and that
Jesus would sit on His throne as ruler over His Kingdom (The
Millennial Reign of Messiah).
Now having been questioned by
the Pharisees as to when the kingdom of God was coming, He
answered them and said, "The kingdom of God is not coming with signs to
be observed; nor will they say, 'Look, here it is!' or, 'There it is!'
For behold, the kingdom of God is in your midst." (Luke 17:20,
21)
For He (God the Father)
delivered us from the domain of
darkness, and transferred us to the kingdom of His beloved Son
(Col 1:13-note)
Comment: Unbelievers are in
the domain of darkness, this present world system ruled by the devil who
is over "the kingdoms (basileia) of the world...for it has
been handed over to" him (Luke 4:5-6, 1Jn 5:19). All who place
their faith in Christ are immediately transferred (aorist tense,
in context = past completed act) from the kingdom of the devil to the
Kingdom of the Deliverer (Jesus).
The
Kingdom of Heaven/God is
the sphere in which God and Jesus are acknowledged as King. In this sense the
Kingdom has a
spiritual aspect, a present physical aspect, and a future eternal aspect
(beginning with the
millennium,
cf Mt 25:31,34), all of course depending on the context of the passage
in which basileia is found (see
discussion below). Paul is careful to remind us that the
Kingdom of Heaven/God is not in observance of ordinances, external and
material, but in the deeper matters of the heart, which are spiritual
and essential (Ro 14:17-note)
And the seventh angel sounded;
and there arose loud voices in heaven, saying, "The kingdom of
the world has become the kingdom of our Lord, and of His Christ
(the Anointed One, the Messiah - see prophecy of His Kingdom to come in
Ps 2:1,2, 7, 8, 9-see
detailed notes by Tony Garland,
see also Rev 2:7-note);
and He will reign forever and ever." (Revelation 11:15-note)
Comment: This declaration
occurs at the sounding of the Seventh Trumpet which chronologically is
at the midpoint of the last 7 years known as
Daniel's Seventieth Week
(see Da 9:27-note).
This period is often called "The Tribulation" but in fact that name is
never applied specifically in Scripture to the entire seven year period.
Jesus used the term
Great Tribulation
(Mt 24:21, cp Rev 7:13-note,
Rev 7:14-note)
which is the last 3.5 years of that 7 year period, during which the
Antichrist assumes his rule (See Jesus' clear warning of the inception
of this horrible time - Mt 24:15 = an event which all the world,
especially Jews, would be able to identify!) and reign of terror which
is directed especially at the Jews (Zech 13:8, 9), which is why it is
also called by Jeremiah "the time of Jacob's Trouble" (Jer 30:7,8,9) and
by Daniel "the time of great distress such as never occurred since there
was a nation until that time; and at that time your people, everyone who
is found written in the book, will be rescued." (Da 12:1-note,
compare Da 12:10-note)
Careful observation of the events of the Revelation reveals that Seventh
Trumpet is also the Third Woe, the time when "the mystery of God is
finished" (Rev 10:7-note)
That mystery (which is no longer a "mystery" but is revealed) is the
full revelation of the consummation of God’s plan (Rev 11:15, Rev 11:17-note),
a plan which the OT prophets foresaw, but never in its fullness as has
been revealed in the Revelation of Jesus Christ.
The New Treasury of Scripture
Knowledge (Jerome Smith):
This seventh trumpet is the last of this series of seven, but not the
last absolutely, and is not to be confused with the “last trump” of 1Cor
15:52. Chronologically, the trumpet of Mt 24:31 must follow this seventh
trumpet of Revelation, for it occurs after the Tribulation, at the open
manifestation of Christ’s Second Advent (Mt 24:30), which in the book of
Revelation is recorded in Rev 19:11-16, which is after the time
expressed here. In the book of Revelation the seventh trumpet is never
called “last” (Rev. 1:11, 17; 2:8, 19; 15:1. 21:9; 22:13).
Stephen Charnock: The
throne of God outlives the dissolution of the world.
MacArthur: The use of the
singular term kingdom of the world instead of the plural “kingdoms”
introduces an important truth. All of the world’s diverse national,
political, social, cultural, linguistic, and religious groups are in
reality one kingdom under one king. That king is known in Scripture by
many names and titles, including the accuser (Rev. 12:10+), the
adversary (1 Pet. 5:8), Beelzebul (Mt. 12:24), Belial (2Cor 6:15), the
dragon (Rev. 12:3, 7, 9), the “evil one” (Jn 17:15), the god of this
world (2Cor 4:4), the prince of the power of the air (Eph 2:2), the
roaring lion (1Pe 5:8), the ruler of the demons (Mark 3:22), the ruler
of this world (John 12:31), the serpent of old (Rev. 12:9+; 20:2), the
tempter (1Th 3:5), and, most commonly, the devil (Mt 4:1) and Satan (1Ti
5:15). (Macarthur
J. Revelation 1-11. and
Revelation 12-22. Moody
or
Logos
or
Logos
or
Wordsearch
or
Wordsearch -
Excellent conservative commentary)
He has made
us to be a kingdom, priests to His God and Father; to Him be the
glory and the dominion forever and ever. Amen. (Rev
1:6-note,
compare similar truth in Rev 5:10-note)
Comment: All who believe live in the sphere of God’s rule, a
kingdom entered by faith in Jesus Christ.
Tony Garland:
Whether we are to be “kings and
priests” or “a kingdom [of] priests,” it is clear that believers will
co-rule with Christ during His coming earthly reign (Rev 20:4-6). This
future reign will not come to pass until after Antichrist has his time
on the world stage and a judgment is made in favor of the saints (Da
7:18, 25-27). Both now and in the future, our function is primarily
priestly. That is, we are to minister to God. Here we run into an
extremely important distinction which has not been adequately
appreciated among many who lead God’s people. Our primary responsibility
is to minister to God and not to men. Our focus is to be God-ward rather
than man-ward. We are to “offer up spiritual sacrifices to God through
Jesus Christ” (1Pe 2:5). As we take care to minister to God, He will
minister to men through us.
Robert Thomas: Though
believers are currently viewed as a royal priesthood (1Pe. 2:5, 9; cf.
Ex. 19:6), this is only preliminary to the fullness of the way they will
function alongside Christ in the Millennial Kingdom.
Then (after the 1000 year reign of
Christ in His
millennial kingdom)
comes the end, when He (Christ)
delivers up the kingdom to the God and Father, when He (Christ)
has abolished all rule and all
authority and power. (1Co
15:24)
Comment: Rev 20:7-9
(see notes
20:27,
20:8,
20:10) which
represents the final insurrection against God at the end of the 1000
year reign and is the time when Christ will abolish "all rule and
authority and power" that is opposed to God.
For this you know with certainty,
that no immoral or impure person or covetous man, who is an idolater,
has an inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and God. (Eph 5:5)
Comment: Paul teaches
here and in parallel passages (1Cor 6:9,10, Gal 5:21) that the one who
practices sin as their general lifestyle is not saved and has no
inheritance in the future kingdom. BDAG writes that these three parallel
passages "show that for Paul the kingdom is essentially future, since
Christians await the complete victory of the spirit over the flesh."
Listen, my beloved brethren: did not
God choose (the language of "election") the poor of this world to be
rich in faith (cp Mt 5:3) and heirs of the kingdom which He
promised to those who love Him? (James 2:5)
MacArthur: Here James
intends the kingdom in its present sense of the sphere of
salvation—those over whom Christ rules—as well as its future millennial
and eternal glory.
Rene Pache has an
interesting analysis of the progression of the Kingdom of God
throughout Scripture. Pache writes that...
The
progression of the “kingdom of God” is gradually revealed. What
is this kingdom in principle if it is not the sphere where God reigns?
In the Scriptures we can trace for it seven distinct steps:
1.
Paradise...(Ge 1:31)
2. The
theocracy of Israel...
3. The
Kingdom announced by the prophets... (1Sa 7:8; Isa. 11:1-16)
4. The
Kingdom offered and rejected in the Gospels... (Mt 4:17; Lk
17:21;10:9-11)
5. The
Kingdom hidden in the heart... (Jn 3:3-5; Col 1:13)
6. The
thousand year reign... (Rev. 20:1-10+)
7. The
eternal Kingdom in heaven... (2Ti 4:18; 2Pe 1:10-11). (The Inspiration &
Authority of Scripture (Salem, WI: Sheffield Publishing Company, 1969),
106)
Other resources:
Kingdom of God
•
Kingdom Of God (Of Heaven), The
•
Kingdom of Heaven
The Kingdom of Heaven belongs to the poor in
spirit. Because they don’t deserve it, God gives it to them as a
free gift! They are heirs of the “kingdom of heaven”, which is a kingdom
of grace here and now and a kingdom of glory and grace in the hereafter.
Alexander Maclaren writes
that
The ‘kingdom of heaven’
is the rule of God through Christ. It is present wherever wills bow to
Him. It is future, as to complete realization, in the heaven from which
it comes, and to which, like its King, it belongs even while on earth.
Obviously, its subjects can only be those who feel their dependence, and
in poverty of spirit have cast off self-will and self-reliance. ‘Theirs
is the kingdom’ does not mean ‘they shall rule,’ but ‘of them shall
be its subjects.’ True, they shall rule in the perfected form of it; but
the first, and in a real sense the only, blessedness is to obey God; and
that blessedness can only come when we have learned poverty of spirit,
because we see ourselves as in need of all things. (entire
sermon)
D Martyn Lloyd-Jones
explains the kingdom of heaven by noting that..
You will find certain people saying
that there is a difference between the 'kingdom of heaven' and
the 'kingdom of God'; but my difficulty is to know what the
difference is. Why does Matthew talk about the kingdom of heaven rather
than the kingdom of God? Surely the answer is that he was writing
primarily for the Jews, and to the Jews, and his chief object, perhaps,
was to correct the Jewish conception of the kingdom of God or the
kingdom of heaven. They had got into this materialistic way of looking
at the kingdom; they were thinking of it politically and in a
military sense, and our Lord's whole object here is to show that
His kingdom is primarily a spiritual one. In other words He says to
them,
'You must not think of this kingdom primarily as anything
earthly. It is a kingdom in the heavens, which is certainly going to
affect the earth in many different ways, but it is essentially
spiritual. It belongs to the heavenly rather than to the earthly and
human sphere.'
What is this kingdom, then? It
means, in its essence, Christ's rule or the sphere and realm in which He
is reigning. It can be considered in three ways as follows. Many times
when He was here in the days of His flesh our Lord said that the kingdom
of heaven was already present. Wherever He was present and exercising
authority, the kingdom of heaven was there. You remember how on
one occasion, when they charged Him with casting out devils by the power
of Beelzebub, He showed them the utter folly of that, and then went on
to say, 'If I cast out devils by the Spirit of God, then the kingdom
of God is come unto you' (Matt 12:28). Here is the kingdom of God.
His authority, His reign was actually in practice. Then there is His
phrase when He said to the Pharisees, 'the kingdom of God is within you,
or, 'the kingdom of God is among you' ("is in your midst" Luke
17:21). It was as though He were saying,
'It is being manifested in
your midst. Don't say "look here" or "look there". Get rid of this
materialistic view. I am here amongst you; I am doing things. It is here.'
Wherever the reign of Christ is being
manifested, the kingdom of God is there. And when He sent out His
disciples to preach, He told them to tell the cities which received them
not, 'Be ye sure of this, that the kingdom of God is come nigh unto
you.' (Luke 10:9, 11, cf Luke 19:11, 21:31)
It means that; but it also means
that the kingdom of God is present at this moment in all who are true
believers...In writing to the Colossians he gives thanks to the
Father 'who hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath
translated us into the kingdom of his dear Son' (Col 1:13-note). The
'kingdom of his dear Son' is 'the kingdom of God, it is 'the kingdom of
heaven', it is this new kingdom into which we have entered. Or, again,
in his letter to the Philippians he says, 'Our conversation is in
heaven,' or, `Our citizenship is in heaven.' We are here on earth, we
obey the powers that be, we live our lives in this way. Yes; but 'our
citizenship is in heaven; from whence also we wait for a Saviour' (Php
3:20-note). We who recognize Christ as our Lord, and in whose lives He is
reigning and ruling at this moment, are in the kingdom of heaven and the
kingdom of heaven is in us. We have been translated into the 'kingdom of
his dear Son'; we have become a 'kingdom of priests. (cf 1Pe 2:9-10-notes
1 Peter 2:9;
2:10,
Revelation 1:6,
5:10)
The third and last way of looking at the kingdom is this.
There is a sense in which it is yet to come.
It has come;
it is coming;
it is to come.
It was here when He was exercising authority; it is here
in us now; and yet it is to come. It will come when this rule and reign
of Christ will be established over the whole world even in a physical
and material sense (The
Millennial Kingdom). The day is coming when the kingdoms of this world
will have become 'the kingdoms of our Lord, and of His Christ (Rev
11:15), when...
Jesus shall reign where’er the sun
Does his successive journeys run;
His kingdom stretch from shore to shore,
Till moons shall wax and wane no more.
(Play Isaac Watt's precious hymn -
Jesus Shall Reign
sing it out unto the Lord)
It will then have come, completely and entirely, and everything will be
under His dominion and sway. Evil and Satan will be entirely removed;
there will be `new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth
righteousness' (2Pe 3:13-note), and then the
kingdom of heaven will have
come in that material way. The spiritual and the material will become
one in a sense, and all things will be subject to His sway, that 'at the
name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in
earth, and things under the earth; and that every tongue should confess
that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father' (Php 2:10,11
-note).
(Lloyd-Jones,
D. M.
Studies in the Sermon on the Mount) (Bolding
added)
.A T Robertson wrote that...
“The kingdom of heaven” here means
the reign of God in the heart and life. This is the summum bonum
and is what matters most. (Word
Pictures in the New Testament)
MacArthur observes that what Jesus declared in this opening
beatitude...
was shocking; it was
unexpected and unacceptable. It was inconceivable to them (the primarily
Jewish audience) that, as God’s (chosen) people, they had anything to do
to inherit God’s kingdom but simply wait for and accept it. The Messiah
was their Messiah, the King was their King, the Savior was their Savior,
the promise was their promise. Every Jew was destined for the kingdom,
and every Gentile was excluded, except for a token handful of
proselytes. That was the common Jewish thinking of the day, which John
totally shattered. (MacArthur,
J: Romans 1-8. Moody)
Pritchard goes on to add...
God wants rejects for
His family. He wants rejects who see their failure and run to Him for
help. To the spiritually bankrupt, Jesus opens the door of the Kingdom
and says,
“Come right in. This place
was made for you.”
That explains why this
is the first Beatitude. In giving this simple truth, Jesus has shown us
the way of salvation. Blessed as the poor in the spirit, for they shall
be saved. But cursed are the proud, for they shall be condemned.
The world says,
Blessed are the strong, for
they shall rule the earth.
Blessed are the mighty, for they shall rise to power.
Blessed are the rich, for they shall inherit the earth.
Blessed are the influential, for they shall be favored.
Blessed are the popular, for they shall be loved.
Blessed are the gifted, for they shall be followed.
Blessed are the beautiful, for they shall be admired.
Jesus says,
“Blessed are the poor in
spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”
It is no mistake that “poor
in spirit” comes first. This is the first and fundamental quality
of the spiritual life. This is where discipleship begins. This is
the key that unlocks the door of heaven. (Matthew
5:1-3 The Making of a Disciple) (Bolding added)
See also related discussion on
the Kingdom of Heaven
a phrase which is
found 32x in 31 verses in the NAS - Mt 3:2;
4:17; 5:3, 10, 19f; 7:21; 8:11; 10:7; 11:11f; 13:11, 24, 31, 33, 44f,
47, 52; 16:19; 18:1, 3f, 23; 19:12, 14, 23; 20:1; 22:2; 23:13; 25:1)
Kingdom of God - is found 66x in 55v in the NAS - Mt 12:28; 19:24; 21:31,
43; Mark 1:15; 4:11, 26, 30; 9:1, 47; 10:14f, 23ff; 12:34; 14:25; 15:43;
Luke 4:43; 6:20; 7:28; 8:1, 10; 9:2, 11, 27, 60, 62; 10:9, 11; 11:20;
13:18, 20, 28f; 14:15; 16:16; 17:20f; 18:16f, 24f, 29; 19:11; 21:31;
22:16, 18; 23:51; John 3:3, 5; Acts 1:3; 8:12; 14:22; 19:8; 28:23, 31;
Ro 14:17; 1 Cor 4:20; 6:9f; 15:50; Gal 5:21; Col 4:11; 2 Th 1:5.
><>><>><>
Real
Riches...
An artist searching for a man to
model as the prodigal son saw a beggar in the street and asked him to
come to his studio and pose for him, promising to pay him. At the
appointed time the man appeared, neatly shaven and all dressed up. "Who
are you?" asked the artist. "I am the beggar," answered the man. "I
thought I'd get cleaned up before I got painted." "I can't use you as
you are now," said the artist, and dismissed him.
All who come to Jesus for salvation must come just as they are. Simple
trust in Christ—with no claim of their own merits—that's what God is
looking for. This attitude is also a key to growth in grace and a life
of useful service. After we are saved, we may begin to think that we
must clean ourselves up in order to prove ourselves worthy. Although we
must "work out" our own salvation, pride and conceit blind us to the
truth that it is God who works in us "both to will and to do for His
good pleasure" (Phil 2:12-note;
Phil 2:12-note).
Paul put it like this: "He who glories, let him glory in the LORD" (1
Cor. 1:31). Our part is to yield to His working in us.
Continued spiritual progress requires that we honestly recognize our
continual spiritual poverty. Although we are saved once and for all, we
must maintain that basic sense of need that prompted our initial
response to Jesus in order for God's Spirit to remain in control. God
can use only those who rely on Him and maintain a prodigal posture
throughout all of life. —D. J. De Haan. (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
To be rich in God
is better than to be rich in goods.
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Pleasing God
On a scale of 1 to 10, how
would we rate the condition of our spiritual life? Even though we may
desire to please the Lord, our efforts are so inadequate, our motives
often selfish, our faithfulness questionable. No matter how much we do,
we fall so far short!
Perhaps these thoughts will encourage you: First, remember how God sees
us. Because of Christ's work on the cross, we are completely forgiven
and perfect in His sight.
But then there's our present love-trust relationship with Christ.
Perhaps we see ourselves as a meager "1." We can still please God,
though, if our attitude is right. He knows we're not capable of perfect
performance, but He expects the right attitude of heart. Jesus didn't
say, "Blessed are those who achieve their potential and never make a
mistake." He said, "Blessed are the poor in spirit, . . . those who
mourn, . . . the meek." We may have just made a mess of our life, and
there may be painful consequences to pay, but we can still please the
Lord if we repent and humbly confess our sin.
Because we are in Christ, we are always a "perfect 10." And that should
motivate us whenever we get discouraged over our slow spiritual growth.
--M R De Haan II (Our
Daily Bread, Copyright RBC Ministries, Grand Rapids, MI. Reprinted by
permission. All rights reserved)
No
condemnation now I dread;
I am my Lord's and He is mine!
Alive in Him, my living Head,
And clothed in righteousness divine. --Wesley
On God's grading scale,
we
all rate zero without the Perfect One.
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F B Meyer on THE KEY TO THE KINGDOM
"Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of
heaven."--Matt. 5:3.
HAD Salome and her sons remembered this beatitude, they would never have
asked Christ to make them sit, one on His right, and the other on His
left in His kingdom. They would have seen that it was not for Christ to
give thrones by an act of His royal prerogative, but that places of
power were conditioned by the preparation of heart in those who aspired
to hold them. The throne is given to those for whom it is prepared; but
they must previously have been prepared, and the preparation of heart
involves the poverty in spirit from which the golden ladder of
beatitudes climbs upward to blessedness.
Earthly thrones are generally built with steps up to them; the
remarkable thing about the thrones of the eternal kingdom is that the
steps are all down to them. We must descend if we would reign, stoop if
we would rise, gird ourselves to wash the feet of the disciples as a
common slave in order to share the royalty of our Divine Master. F. B.
Meyer. Blessed Are Ye.
><>><>><> F B
Meyer on THE PASSIVE SIDE OF THE BLESSED LIFE (Matt. 5:1-12.)
Let us study our Lord's
ideal of character with the prayer that He would graciously repeat it in
us, and that He would be in us that which He commends; for it is only as
He gives us Himself in all the fulness of His perfected manhood that we
can apprehend that for which we were apprehended, and be that which He
desires. Do you realize this, my reader? Have you made room for Him, and
are you allowing Him to possess you wholly, till He becomes in very deed
your life? The vine must abide in the branch, or these fruits will be
impossible. "Apart from Him, nothing."
To be poor in spirit
is to be vacant of self and waiting for God. To have no confidence in
the flesh; to be emptied of self-reliance to be conscious of absolute
insufficiency; to be thankfully dependent on the life-energy of the
living God, that is poverty of spirit; and it has been characteristic of
some of the noblest, richest, most glorious natures, that have ever
trodden the shores of Time. Happy are they who are conscious of a
poverty which only the Divine indwelling can change into wealth, and who
are willing to confess that they would rather be in hell and have God,
than in heaven and not have Him.
It is, indeed, remarkable
that some of the most richly dowered in mental and moral wealth have
been most eager to confess that they were nothing, babes in the world of
being, children picking up stones on the shores of boundless oceans,
scholars on the lowest form of the school, to whom mature growth and
knowledge seemed as yet indefinitely distant.
The way to become poor
in spirit is to realize that thou hast no power of thine own by
which to bless and help others, and to open thy whole being to the
incoming and through-flowing of the wealth of the ever-blessed God. It
was thus that the Master Himself lived and wrought. Though He was rich
in all the Divine plenitude of His Divine nature, "He became poor," "and
emptied Himself." In other words, He determined not to speak His own
words, follow His own scheme and plan, or work His mighty works in His
own might, but became the channel and instrument through which His
Father spoke, wrought, and reconciled the world unto Himself. 0 soul of
man, there is no other course for thee and me! Not to draw up the water
with which to quench men's thirst from the depths of our own souls, but
to be channels through which the river of God may flow, as the water of
faraway lakes is brought to the myriads of our great cities. To confess
that thou art nothing, but that Christ is all; to know that thou canst
do nothing effective to bless men, but that Christ can, and will, do it
by thee, that is the secret of this poverty of spirit which unlocks the
treasures of the kingdom of heaven.
Many ancient authorities
place meekness next, and it seems the natural order, for the soul
that realizes its own nothingness and helplessness is likely to be meek.
The meek are so occupied with their desire that God's grace should pass
through them to their fellows that they are prepared to sink all
considerations of their own standing and position so long as nothing may
interfere with the effect for which they long. Their only thought is to
carry their point, to bless men who do not want to be blessed, to
vanquish hate by love, and rebellion by loving-kindness and tender
mercy. They cannot afford, therefore, to be always standing on their own
dignity and defending their own rights. These are willingly cast into
the furnace to augment the flame, that the obdurate metal may be fused.
"Being reviled, we bless; being persecuted, we endure; being defamed, we
entreat. We are made as the filth of the world, the offscouring of all
things; but all things are for your sakes, that the abundant grace
through the thanksgiving of many may abound to the glory of God."
The way to become meek is
to be absorbingly taken up with the love of Christ for me. Be lowly
before God, allowing His love to enter and fill thy heart, and thou wilt
find it easy to be meek towards man. Thy pride will be driven out by the
expulsive power of the new affection. Thou wilt be prepared to accept
flouts and sneers, if only thou canst bless and help others; even as God
who answers not the blasphemous and hard things that are said against
Him, but continues to send His rain and cause His sun to shine to bring
men back in penitence to His heart.
It would be a great
mistake, however, to suppose that the meek are cowardly, deficient in
strength of purpose or force of will: they are among the strongest and
most strenuous of men. But they are strong in patience and strenuous in
seeking the salvation of others. Let the cause of righteousness,
justice, or truth be in question, none are so unbending or stalwart as
they. Of the wrongs done to themselves they are disposed to take no
count, but they dare not refrain from bearing witness, both by speech
and act, whenever the sacred majesty of truth is assailed and in danger
of being trampled under foot.
It is natural that the meek
should become those that mourn. They feel keenly the evil of sin and the
sanctity of sorrow; like Him who sighed as He touched the tongue of the
dumb, groaned as lie came to the grave of His friend, and wept as He
beheld the city.
Of all mourners, Jeremiah is one of the most plaintive. There is no
lyric on the page of history to be compared with the Book of
Lamentations:
"Mine eye runneth down with
rivers of water." "Mine eye poureth down and ceaseth not." "Mine eye
affecteth my soul."
When we turn from the sin
of the world, the woes of men, the high-handed wrong of the great, and
the abject poverty, sorrow, and anguish of heart of the oppressed, to
the sin of our own hearts, the broken ideals, the frustrated purposes,
the perpetual contrast between what we would be and what we are, surely
our tears must have more salt in them, and cut deeper courses in their
flow.
There surely is no need to
show the way for mourning such as this. Look above thee and see the
Christ stand, so pure, so chaste, so glorious in the light in which He
arrays Himself as with a garment, and thou wilt abhor thyself and repent
in the dust. Look around thee, and try to estimate the weight of a
world's apostasy, the deluge of tears, the hurricane of sighs, that
mount up to heaven. "Ah, it's a sair world, my masters!"
But the mourners are not
content to shed tears only, they hunger and thirst after righteousness.
St. Augustine says that they hunger and thirst after the Righteous One,
" Jesus Christ the Righteous." They were made for Him, and will never be
satisfied until they attain to the fruition of all their hopes, to know
Him, and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His
sufferings.
Without doubt such is their
supreme desire, and as included in this they hunger and thirst for the
ultimate triumph of righteousness in their own hearts and in the world
of men. Every moan of pain, every consciousness of failure, every
temporary triumph of reactionary and destructive forces, elicits the
more urgent and persistent prayer, "Thy Kingdom come." The personal
coming of the Lord is desired not primarily because the Bride desires
the Bridegroom, but because the subject longs for the triumph of that
Kingdom which is righteousness, joy, and peace in the Holy Ghost.
This aspiration is noble.
Some hungers are ignoble, despicable, and base. But this is shared in by
God Himself, whose Spirit longs with inexpressible desire to bring to an
end the present condition of things in the vindication and manifestation
of His sons. The angels, as they behold the evil and pain of our earth;
the champion of the rights of men, who wrestles with the hydra-headed
and protean evil of his age; the wronged womanhood of the harem and the
street; the dumb creation groaning and travailing with enormous and
cruel wrongs, all join in this blessed hunger and thirst, the aspiration
which amounts to a sure and certain hope that cannot be ashamed.
Thou needest not be taught
this, for thou hast often felt it. Amid the violet light of a dying
summer's day, when soft and lovely music, songs without words, is
filling the entranced and listening air, when some heroic stand for
liberty is drowned and quenched in blood, when the white robes of the
soul have been stained and polluted by some recent fall, then the soul
hungers with an intolerable pain, and thirsts, as the wounded hart for
water-brooks, that righteousness should set up its blessed and
all-conquering reign. F. B. Meyer. The Directory of the Devout Life
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