Matthew 5:1-12 · The Beatitudes
Saints Alive!
Matthew 5:1-12
Sermon
by Theodore F. Schneider
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This is the day when our vision of the church sweeps the horizons of history and of heaven, all at the same time. We embrace with gratitude uncountable yesterdays. They have been the arenas of faithfulness for God and for his people. In these days God has worked our salvation faithfully and with mercy. In these days generation upon generation of the saints have lived and faithfully served, preserving until our day the saving grace of God's Word and sacraments. At the same time, we see the horizon of heaven, the first light of a new day, the dawn of the fulfillment of God's will in all of creation, a day when all creation joins in the hymn: "Amen! Blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honor and power and might be to our God for ever and ever! Amen."

This is the day when we call to mind the size and solidarity of the holy church, a community of God's people extending beyond all the usual boundaries of time and of race, culture, language, nationality, partisan politics, human sexuality and even socioeconomic status. It is a day when we remember the whole company of the saints in heaven and on earth, all of God's people who await the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and a new heaven and a new earth in which righteousness dwells.

This is the day when the church, with a strong affirmation, lays claim to the living hope we have through the resurrection of our Lord, Jesus Christ. We give thanks for the life and witness of all the faithful departed. We have affirmed it before and we affirm it again in the words of Paul: "If for this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most to be pitied."

This is the day when we reach beyond time as we know it, leaping over the open pits of our own graves and the graves of those we love to a new understanding of Easter's resurrection. All Saints' Day is but a further "commentary on Easter," carrying us beyond the good news of our personal survival to the exciting affirmation of God's ultimate justice, history's righteous fulfillment. Can we believe it? There is better news than resurrection! It tells us to what and for what we shall be raised. We shall be raised in the mercy of God to share in the fulfillment of God's righteousness. There is no lost good after all, and things will finally be set right. This is a day that sets into perspective the words of John:

Beloved, we are God's children now; it does not yet appear that we shall be, but we know that when he appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is (1 John 3:2).

What We Shall Be

It was Easter morning. The nave of Saint Luke would be filled to overflowing every hour from 8 a.m. until noonday. On the front of the bulletin there was a single brief paragraph, strategically placed:

There are just two kinds of people here this morning: Those who believe in the resurrection, and those who wish they could.

Central in the preaching of the New Testament church is the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The religious leaders found him guilty of blasphemy. They accused him of treason as well. Civil authorities believed it expedient to permit his execution. So, the judgment was rendered on the life and ministry of Jesus, the carpenter from Nazareth. The crowd was of one voice: "Crucify him!" And it was done! "He suffered death and was buried."

On Easter God intervened, overruling the decision of the authorities and the crowds, raising up his Christ. The resurrected Christ deputized his disciples: "You are witnesses of these things." He sent them to preach in his name to all nations, beginning in Jerusalem. All the world would be the new jury and the "witnesses would tell the story over and again." So Peter preaches in the book of the Acts of the Apostles:

But you denied the Holy and Righteous One, and asked for a murderer to be granted to you and killed the Author of Life, whom God raised from the dead. To this we are witnesses (Acts 3:14-15).

Though we find Jesus' resurrection a comforting assurance that death may have some "survivors" after all, the resurrection affirms much more for us.

1. It affirms God's faithfulness. He does what he promises!

2. It affirms the validity of Jesus' teachings - all of them!

3. It affirms God's victory and power over death.

4. It affirms the destiny of believers.

So affirmed, we are rightly counseled to trust God. The writer of the epistle to the Hebrews 11:1 tells us: "Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen." Such is our trust of God! Isaiah writes: "Trust in the Lord forever, for the Lord God is an everlasting rock ... In the path of thy judgments, O Lord, we wait for thee (Isaiah 26:4, 8)."

With the affirmations of Easter we are given new meaning and a new urgency for our lives. We are provided with a sense of direction for the faithful: "For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we shall certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his (Romans 6:17)."

A Prologue To Discipleship

Matthew places the Beatitudes at the very beginning of Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, and this sermon comes very nearly at the beginning of his ministry. In the closing verses of the fifth chapter of the gospel, having finished the calling of his disciples, Jesus begins teaching in the region of the Galilee and in the synagogues of that region. People brought the sick to him for healing, and great crowds were gathering from as far as Jerusalem, the Decapolis, Judea and areas beyond the Jordan.

Seeing the crowds, Jesus gathers the disciples and goes up on a mountain. The opening of his sermon appears to be directed only to the disciples, the "inner circle," those who have left everything to follow Jesus. They are being prepared for their discipleship, and for the ministry they will share with Jesus.

Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven. Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted. Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth. Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied.

It must have dawned upon them quickly. No mere collection of sentimental platitudes, these sayings were frontal attacks upon most of our assumptions about how things are in the "real" world. The pattern appears to be humiliation now and glory later. Such a proposal makes no sense whatsoever unless God can be trusted to "deliver" on his promises - "his side of the bargain."

As the ministry of Jesus unfolds, it becomes clear that the Beatitudes reflect the style of Jesus' own life and ministry, and what his disciples will be expected to follow. These words become a prologue to the gospel Jesus will preach, the examples he will set, and the counsel he will give. We recall the question: "Teacher, what good deed must I do to have eternal life?" Jesus said to him: "If you would be perfect, go, sell what you possess and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come, follow me (Matthew 19:16, 21)."

On first reading, poverty of spirit, mourning and humility appear to be spiritual virtues in themselves, but it is not so. Underneath each one of the Beatitudes is the call to live our lives in full trust of God. Spiritual "have nots," who know that they have no righteousness of their own, are those who will hunger and thirst for God's righteousness. Because God can be trusted, they shall be satisfied!

It is only when we have this confidence in the promises of God that we can begin to understand (much less consider following) Jesus' example and his mandate. The Beatitudes must be studied in the context of a community of trust, of vision and of hope. Neither platitudes nor political platforms, but they are serious expectations of those who live confidently in the light of Christ, and of his resurrection.

To be disciples of our Christ, we must pray for that solid trust that gladly accepts whatever condition in which we find ourselves as places in which God can and does act. In such matters, our faith in our Father's plans for the future does much to inform and enable the faithfulness of a given moment.

The Work Of Faith

From the first four of Jesus' "Beatitudes," it appears that the followers of Jesus are more nearly "victims" than "disciples." They are the spiritual "have nots" who must trust and depend wholly upon God and his promises. However, Jesus has in mind for us something more than our passively staying out of trouble ... trusting God, being deeply sorry for the suffering of the world, practicing self-control, and longing for perfect righteousness. The works of faith are not passive. They are active and outreaching.

Now the disciples, solidly established in faith and with a firm hold on God's promises, are free to live in love, being of a single mind (pure heart), showing mercy, and actively doing the hard work of peacemaking, even accepting persecution with purpose and with rejoicing.

Being of a single mind about the things of the kingdom, the disciples are called to be merciful, just as they have received and experienced God's mercy. More than a gracious attitude of good will, "being merciful" includes having empathy for another's suffering and participating with another in setting things aright. It is an act of healing.

So, too, is peacemaking. Making peace involves proclamation, diplomacy, self-control, a willingness to forgive and to promote the work of forgiveness among others. Again, the issue is an active participation with God in healing.

For the Hebrews, "peace" is more than the absence of conflict. Shalom, the greeting readily shared in the Middle East today, bids the prayer of "peace." This single-word blessing is always more than a prayer that another be spared from evil and hurtful things. It prays as well that he may be blessed by the presence of all good things. It is sometimes translated: "May all things be for you as God wills."

Jesus' Beatitudes appear to "flow" into the work of peacemaking. Those who do works of mercy and charity, all the while mourning the suffering of the world's brokenness and hungering for righteousness, are by their nature makers of peace. In Saint Augustine's Summa Theologica he has written:

Peace is the work of justice indirectly, insofar as justice removes the obstacles to peace; but it is the work of charity (love) directly, since charity, according to its very notion, causes peace.1

Confident in God's promises and with a clear hold upon what is promised to come, Christ's disciples endure persecution, slander, and alienation for the sake of the kingdom. Though one is a victim of such activities, a disciple accepts this suffering as an opportunity for the proclamation of the gospel. Saint Paul has written:

We are treated as impostors, and yet are true; as unknown, and yet well known; as dying, and behold we live; as punished, yet not killed; as sorrowful, and yet always rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet possessing everything (2 Corinthians 6:8b-1O).

The Charter Of The Kingdom

It should now be clear that the Beatitudes are more than platitudes or impossible rules for another age. In these words the New Testament church recognized the pattern of Christ's own life and pattern of the life that is to be lived in the light of the resurrection and the power of the Spirit. They are not "guidelines" for the kingdom that is coming; they are the "charter" of the kingdom of God that is already here. Insofar as the saints of God commend themselves to our world, these patterns are the evidence of the kingdom's presence and its power.

It's no wonder, then, that the church from the early centuries - as far back as Saint John Chrysostom and his preaching days in Antioch - has set aside at least one day each year to remember with thanksgiving the departed saints who now rest.

At the same time the church lifted these prayers and hymns of thanksgiving, she called to remembrance the lives and examples of the saints for the education, edification and encouragement of the living. Having managed, to a greater or lesser degree, to be faithful to Christ's example, and to his charter for life in the kingdom, these "saints" were an inspiration to all the living. This "remembering" is at once an act of gratitude and of edification. This the church ought to do. And it does!

Saints Alive!

But hold on just a minute. Not all of the saints are dead. Though the original festivals called to mind the martyrs, the known and the unknown, the unnamed and never canonized, there are others to be remembered this day, too. According to the New Testament, the title of "saint" is not reserved solely for the perfect.

Saints are not alone the martyrs, the dead, and the "canonized." The New Testament calls all baptized Christians "saints." It is not a matter of spiritual and moral victories, but a gift of the grace of God that works in Baptism. Though sinners, we have been redeemed and made holy by the grace of God. The "saints" include the extraordinary and the ordinary, the common as well as the uncommon and the unnamed cloud of witnesses about which the writer of Hebrews speaks (Hebrews 12:1). Moreover, it includes the living as well as the dead. One need not die to be a "saint."

The challenge of life in the kingdom, vividly drawn for us in the Beatitudes, is not solely a definition of the life yet to come, the property of the "saints triumphant," a "code" for the life to come. The Beatitudes are the charter of the kingdom today, here and how.

Living with God's gifts of grace as the birthright of our baptism, we are called, just as the classic saints of old, to struggle with our bewildering time and its confusing issues. The kingdom of God is at hand, and our Lord explained the responsibilities of our citizenship.

A Final Word For The Living Saints

It is not, after all, a matter of earning our salvation, nor of believing that only superhuman piety can prevail. In our baptism, we have God's promise. He has given us his word. We need only cling to it. But then, that's just how Jesus began the Beatitudes in the first place.

O the bliss of the man who has realized his own utter helplessness, and who has put his whole trust in God ...2

This is a day of thanksgiving for all the saints ... and especially for those who now rest from their labors. The prayer of the church is said again: "May the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace."

We remember them with thanksgiving.

But finally, today's good news, as it is every day, is God! God's grace makes this day one of hope and not of superstition, of joy and not of mourning, of vision and not of dreaming, of truth and not of resignation - a celebration of life that sets aside the dirge of death.

Today is the day we sweep the horizons of history and of heaven, all at the same time. All that happens this day is caught up in this one fact: God remembers. He remembers us and he remembers his promises.

He recalls his promises and leads his people forth in joy with shouts of thanksgiving. Alleluia. Alleluia.3

Blessed are those who trust wholly in God, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Indeed so!


1. Myron R. Chartier, "Peacekeepers or Peace Makers," The Clergy Journal, Vol. 61, No. 7, May/June 1985, (Austin, Church Management, Inc., 1985), p. 16.

2. William Barclay, The Gospel of Matthew, Vol. 1, (Philadelphia, The Westminster Press, 1958), p. 87. This is Barclay's paraphrase of the opening of the first Beatitude.

3. "Thank the Lord," The Lutheran Book of Worship, (Philadelphia, Augsburg/Fortress, 1978), p. 115.

C.S.S. Publishing Company, UNTIL THE KING COMES, by Theodore F. Schneider