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Luke 6:17-26                                                 

 

You might begin your study of Luke’s beatitudes with a comparison to Matthew’s. Not only does the terrain change-from mountain top to plain-but Luke’s is much briefer than Matthew’s. Other differences between Luke and Matthew to consider:

Beatitudes in Matthew and Luke

"Blessings" in Matthew "Blessings" in Luke
a. Poor (in spirit) Poor
b. Mourn Weep (now)
c. Meek  
d. Hunger (after righteousness) Hunger (now)
e. Merciful  
f. Pure in heart  
g. Peacemakers  
h. Persecuted  
i. Reviled, persecuted Hated, excluded, reviled, demeaned
defamed on Jesus’ account on Son of Man’s account


Unlike Matthew’s poor "in spirit," and hunger "after righteousness", Luke is blunt; certainly less spiritualized. A final Lukan addition include reversals-"the arrival of God will be marked by a complete reversal of fortunes for the rich and the poor, the powerful and the powerless, the full and the empty." [1]

 

Blessed are the sat upon, spat upon, ratted on. -Paul Simon

By proclaiming blessed those who in the human order are thought hopeless, and by pronouncing woes over those human beings regarded as well off, Jesus opens the kingdom of the heavens to everyone. -Dallas Willard

Dallas Willard asks who would be on our list of "hopeless blessables" in today’s world. Can you, following Jesus’ lead as a teacher, concretize the gospel for those around you? Who would you regard as the most unfortunate people around you? [2]

 

Please see the DPS homily for this passage that is posted for this week.

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[1] Interpretation Series:  Luke (Louisville:  Westminster/John Knox Press, 1990), p. 88.
[2] Dallas Willard, The Divine Conspiracy (Harper/Collins, 1998), page 122.