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The beatitudes, according to Meier, "mirror
Jesus himself, the truly happy man, the embodiment of the joy the Kingdom brings."
Key Word: makarios, "blessed,"
orig. described the gods who sat on Mt. Olympus;
Text Summary: Jack Dean Kingsbury
Through the call of Jesus Messiah . . . the disciples
of Jesus become sons of God and brothers, who are given to share in his company and so to
live in the sphere of Gods gracious rule. As they follow Jesus, he imparts to them
his teaching. The content of his teaching is the will of God, so that it is binding on the
disciples and on the church for all time to come. In teaching the will of God, Jesus
teaches the law, and in the process intensifies and radicalizes it even to the point where
he, the Son, places himself above Moses. Whether it is a matter of the law or of the
tradition of the elders, the word of Jesus is consequently what is normative for the
disciples and the church.
How do Jesus opening lines impact us--believers from all walks of life?
How do successful, together Christians hear this passage as
opposed to the poor?
Notice who gathers around Jesus. (1) The disciples-an
intriguing assortment of persons that reflect a variety of temperaments. (2) the oxloi,
the crowds. Presumably they have come to receive healings and
exorcisms. Most if not all of these people form the amharetz, the people of the
land, the common folk, those most in need of good news.
Move into the text - note the
beatitudes qualities: present to future; saints are made in the present and awarded
crowns in the future!
Move back into the text to
discover the meaning of the 1st beatitude - Blessed are the
poor in spirit . . . for those who dont have it together, for those who are
painfully aware of their need of God--saints in the making!
Pronounce a blessing
on all those who know they need Gods sustaining, comforting, encouraging
intervention.
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