The Beatitudes
(A Strange Recipe for Happiness)
To the church in the diaspora[1]
& to the church of the unchurched
Jeremiah 17: 5-8 I Corinthians 15:12, 16-20 Luke 6: 17, 20-26
Introduction
My first
sermon
As a newly
ordained priest still in seminary training, I preached my first sermon on the
Feast of All Saints,
The gospel for
the Feast of All Saints that day was (as it still is today) the gospel of the
Beatitudes from Matthew. Fearing that the terror of preaching my first sermon would
impair my memory in lining up Matthew’s eight beatitudes, I wrote the initials
of each Beatitude on my fingernails--four on one hand and four on the other. (A
good preacher worth his salt never used notes in those days.) Then I proceeded to preach eight little sermons
on the eight Beatitudes!
The two
accounts differ in tone
The Beatitudes are
those “blessed” sayings of Jesus, like blessed are the poor, blessed are the
hungry, blessed are those who mourn, etc. Those sayings were put together in a
kind of litany form and were recorded for us both by Matthew and Luke (Mt 5:
1-12; Lk
Both accounts
differ in tone. Luke’s beatitudes are
more nitty-gritty, and Matthew’s are more spiritual.
Luke’s Jesus
says, “Blessed are you poor, for the
Matthew, on the other hand, is more spiritual.
His Jesus says, “Blessed are you who are poor in spirit,
for the kingdom of heaven is yours” (Mt 5: 3)! Matthew’s Jesus spiritualizes poverty. He claims that those who have
nice homes on
Again, Luke’s Beatitudes are nitty-gritty.
His Jesus says, “Blessed are you who go hungry, for you will be filled” (Lk
The two accounts
differ in place
The two
accounts of the Beatitudes differ also in place. Where did Jesus preach the Beatitudes? On a
mount or down in a valley? Strange to say, the litany of beatitudes which we traditionally
call The Sermon on the Mount in
Luke’s gospel took place down in a valley.
Luke writes, "Jesus came down
from the mountain and stood on a large level plain and there began to
preach saying, `Blessed are the poor….’” (Lk
Matthew, on the
other hand, says, “Jesus went up the mountain and there began to preach saying,
`Blessed are the poor in spirit….’” (Mt 5:1). So we’ve traditionally called it
“The Sermon on the Mount.” Matthew sees Jesus on a mountain like a second
Moses. Just as Moses promulgated Old Testament
Law from the lofty heights of
The two
accounts differ in number
The two
accounts differ also in number. In Luke
there are only four Beatitudes (Lk
A counter-cultural eye
One day Jesus and the
apostles were in the temple near the treasury. The apostles were feasting their
eyes on the rich and famous tossing in their huge donations. But the eyes of Jesus lighted upon a poor
little widow dropping in her two copper coins. Jesus called over to the others
saying, "Come here and feast your eyes on this. This little lady gave more
than all the others put together" (Mk
Our culture with its
mighty mass media has our kids and us feasting our eyes upon the very rich and
famous or upon movie stars and sport stars whom we overrate and overpay. Jesus feasts his eyes upon a poor widow casting
in two copper coins into the temple treasury and calls over to us to feast our
eyes upon her as well. The eyes of Jesus were countercultural. They swam up
stream. They saw what other eyes did not see. Blessed are those whose eyes are
countercultural!
A countercultural Samaritan
Jesus who had a
countercultural eye told a parable about a countercultural Samaritan. One day a
Jew was going from
Jesus was countercultural
when he, a Jew, told a good story about a “bad” Samaritan. The Good Samaritan
was also countercultural when he stopped to pour the oil of compassion into the
wounds of a “bad” Jew. Blessed are those
whose hearts are countercultural!
A counter-cultural CEO
When CEO Aaron Feuerstein’s fabric mill burned down
in December of 1995, he didn’t take the insurance money and run. Instead he
stuck with his 2400 employees and continued to pay his employees in full, at a
cost of 1 ½ million dollars a week and at an average of 12 ½ dollars an hour.
In a culture that spawns the mountainous corporate greed of Enron, Aaron is a
countercultural superstar. Even Corporate America was stunned by the fiscal
insanity of such a superstar. It
couldn’t resist the temptation to name him “CEO of the Year.” Blessed is a rich CEO who is poor in spirit!
A counter-cultural consumer
A few years ago Jerry Quinn broke into the news recently. He
was 52 years young, owner of a bar and restaurant in
In a culture which leads
our kids and us down the path of wild consumerism in which we buy not only the
things we need but also all the things we want and all the things we don’t
need, Quinn is a counter-cultural superstar. Yes, he owns a bar and a
restaurant, but he is blessed because he is, indeed, poor in spirit.
Our culture
keeps telling us, “If you like it, do it. If you don’t like it, don’t do it. If
it takes efforts, avoid it. If it’s painful, it’s bad. If you want it, don’t
wait for it.” In such a culture it is difficult to make much sense out of the Beatitudes
which declare blessed a poverty we should never want to eradicate,
a hunger and thirst we should never want to quench, and tears we should never
want to dry up. In a culture
which feasts its eyes upon the rich and the famous and all the superstars of
Super Bowl XLI, it is difficult to cultivate countercultural eyes which feast
upon a poor widow casting her copper coins in the
temple treasury or upon a Samaritan being good to a Jew or upon a rich CEO like
Aaron Feuerstein or a rich entrepreneur like Jerry Quinn who are poor in spirit.
Conclusion
A strange recipe for
happiness
Well, it’s been fifty-six long years since
my first big preaching production when I needed eight fingernails upon which to
write eight Beatitudes, and when I proceeded to preach eight little sermons. Since then I’ve grown wiser. I now preach
only one sermon at a time! It might not be brief, but it is certainly only one
sermon.
Whether the
Beatitudes are four or eight or even eighty in number, they bear but one
message: Go countercultural!
Go and bless what the world doesn’t bless and even curses. Do that for your own
sake first, and then do that for the sake of your children who will never go
countercultural if you don’t go there first. Go countercultural. The Beatitudes
are a strange recipe for happiness. They take you down the road that leads to
[1] Diaspora is a Greek word
meaning dispersion. Originally it referred to the settling of scattered
colonies of Jews outside