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One More Beatitude

October 31, 2020 Pastor: Rev. George Fyler

Matthew 5:1-12 (Rev. 14:13) ~ One more Beatitude.

All Saints’ Day – Christ Lutheran Church, Cleveland – 11/1/2020

INI

            To the nine beatitudes given in our Lord’s sermon on the mount I suggest we add a tenth from the Revelation to St. John: And I heard a voice from heaven saying, “Write this: Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord henceforth.” “Blessed indeed,” says the Spirit, “that they may rest from their labors, for their deeds follow them!” (Rev 14:13)                                                                        

“Blessed” … that’s our word for the day.  It is an appropriate word for All Saints’ Day, the day we remember the martyrs of the faith together with our own blessed dead who have gone through the great tribulation of this life and death and have joined ranks with that great heavenly multitude no one can number from every nation, tribe, people, and language.  Truly, “Blessed are they.”

            “Blessed” is English for the Greek word makarious.  All of today’s texts uniquely heighted our understanding of what we think it means to be “blessed.”  When we say blessed, we usually think happy, healthy, wealthy, fortunate as we “count our blessings” and consider how “blessed we are.”  All this certainly is a part of the word makarios.  But there’s more.  To be makarios, is to be on the privileged receiving end of God’s good gifts.

            God’s way of blessing isn’t the same as the way the world thinks of blessedness.  Consider these:

            “Blessed are the poor in spirit,” the spiritual beggars, those who have nothing to offer God.  “Theirs is the kingdom of God.”

            “Blessed are those who mourn,” who feel the pangs of death, who mourn the wages of sin, whose tears water the earth,for they will be comforted.”

            “Blessed are the meek,” who present the other cheek to their enemies, who do good to those who hate them, whose strength is perfected in weakness, who trust the hidden power of the cross,for they shall inherit the earth.”

            “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,” they have no righteousness of their own, they long for something better than they can create on their own;they will be satisfied” with a righteousness not their own, one that comes through trust in Christ and His righteousness.

            “Blessed are the merciful,” who forgive those who sin against them, whose hearts are turned in compassion toward others regardless of reward; they shall receive mercy.”

            “Blessed are the pure in heart,” who have washed their hearts in the blood of the Lamb who was slain for them, for they shall see God.”

            “Blessed are the peace makers,” who stand in the breach between warring parties, who reconcile instead of retaliate, “for they shall be called sons of God.”

            “Blessed are the persecuted for righteousness’ sake,” who suffer for the sake of the kingdom, who confess Christ not to their gain but to their loss, whose lives reflect the Suffering Servant who laid down His life to save the world, “for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”

            “Blessed are you,” baptized believing one.  Blessed are you when others revile you,” make fun of you, kick you, exclude you, insult you, and slander you “falsely because you bear the name of Christ.  Rejoice and be glad.  Your reward is great.”  You are in company with the prophets who came before you.”  It’s not you “the others” are insulting, it’s Christ.  That’s cause for rejoicing because you and Christ are one.  Your trust will be vindicated.  “Your reward is great in heaven.”

            “Blessed are you,” Jesus taught His disciples from the mountain that day.  …  It certainly doesn’t seem like the world’s idea of “blessed,” does it?  Poor, mourning, meek, hungry, thirsty, merciful, pure-hearted peacemaking, persecuted.  Where’s the payoff … the wealth … the vacation home … the party life … the glamour … the status … the celebrity?  This is God’s way of blessing — back handed, upside down, inside out, opposite, hidden.

            To get the way of “blessed” right you must first “get Jesus right.”  Notice I DID NOT say “get right with Jesus” as today’s false prophets wail — I said, “get Jesus right.”  He alone embodies these things in Himself.  You don’t, nor do I.  We are anything but meek, merciful, pure-hearted peacemakers.  Not by nature.  Not in ourselves.  Christ alone is all of this.  He embodies these beatitudes perfectly.  He is poor in spirit. Though rich, He became poor so that by His poverty you are rich.  He mourns, weeping over our sin, our rejection, our death, as He wept over Jerusalem and over the tomb of Lazarus, and in His mourning, is your comfort and joy.  He hungers and thirsts for our righteousness, and out of His hunger, you are fed.  He is merciful, pure-hearted, peacemaking, showing mercy by laying down His life for the world, making peace by His blood, offering His pure life as the sacrifice for your sin.  He is the persecuted One, falsely accused, falsely convicted, yet in His conviction you are acquitted, justified, declared righteous before God.

            Jesus lives the beatitudes perfectly to His own death and for those baptized and believing in Him they become yours as well.  You are “blessed” to the fullest extent of that word in Jesus, and only as you understand that and cling to that, do you understand what it means to be “blessed.”  Only in Jesus can hunger and thirst and persecution and mourning be called “blessing” and those who experience these things be called “blessed.”

            Those beatitudes bring us to these words from Revelation 7.  “Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on.”  Yes, you heard it correctly.  Blessed are the dead.  And not simply any dead, because all indeed do die.  But blessed are the dead who die in the Lord.  To “die in the Lord” means your Lord has wrapped you by his Word with water in the name of the Holy Trinity with promises of forgiveness of sins, life, and salvation.  The Lord Jesus has bound you to himself.  He has gone the way ahead of you.  He has gone to death and the grave, and those who follow Him, trusting Him, are called blessed in their death.

            The wage of sin is death; make no mistake about it.  Death is the fundamental consequence of sin.  We die because we sin.  There is nothing “blessed” about death itself.  But Jesus has done something remarkable with Death.  He has taken the wage of our sin, our biggest enemy, the thing we fear and dread the most, and He has made it a source of blessing.  Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on.”

            “From now on” refers to the time following Jesus’ death, resurrection, and ascension.  The last days, the end times in which you and I live.  Christ has conquered.  Christ has gone into death and became Death’s undoing.  Like a fish swallowing a baited hook, Death swallowed up Jesus on the cross, but Jesus turned out to have the upper hand over Death and swallowed it up in victory.  Like the great fish that swallowed up Jonah and held him for three days, Death could not hold Jesus but had to spit Him out alive.

The Spirit says those who die in the Lord rest from their labors. Their work is done, but their works are not forgotten. Their deeds do follow them.  Take note.  The deeds of the blessed dead “follow them.”  They don’t precede them, as though they needed their works to get into heaven.  That would not be the way of the “poor in spirit.”  Instead, their deeds follow them like the long train of a bride on her gown.  All the works that God had done through them, all the fruit the Spirit bore in them, all the good that Jesus worked as fruitful branches joined to Him, follow them in all their shining glory.

            In the reading from the Revelation, John is privileged to see the heaven side of things.  Not the suffering that we see, but the glory, the triumph, the life that is ours in Jesus.  He sees a great multitude, a crowd no one can number, what we refer to as “all the company of heaven.”  They are wearing robes washed white in the blood of the Lamb.  They are baptized in blood and wear their baptismal robes as their righteousness before God.  Our faithful departed, those we loved who have died in the Lord, bring this image of the Revelation to mind.  They are there in that multitude. And listen to how it is with them: They are before the throne of God, and serve Him day and night in His temple, and He who sits on the throne will shelter them with His presence.  They shall hunger no more, neither thirst anymore; the sun shall not strike them, nor any scorching heat.  For the Lamb in the midst of the throne will be their shepherd, and he will guide them to springs of living water, and God will wipe away every tear from their eyes.”

            They are, as the word for today says, “blessed.”  And you are … in the same word … by the same Baptism … in the same faith … “blessed” in Jesus.

In the name of the Father and of the (X ) Son and of the Holy Spirit.  Amen

  1. D. G.