To read the texts click on the texts: 1 Kings 17:1-6; Mt 5:1-12
Beginning today, the gospel reading will
be from the Gospel of Matthew except on feasts or special occasions. The Church
begins from Chapter 5 of Matthew. The three chapters beginning from 5,1 and
ending at 7,29 contain one of the most famous discourses of Matthew known as
“The Sermon on the Mount”.
Since we will be reading this Sermon for
almost three whole weeks on weekdays, it is important to have some background
of what the Sermon is about.
The first point that we note is that
this is the first of the five great discourses in the Gospel of Matthew. Each
of these five ends with the phrase, “and when Jesus had finished…” (7,28; 11,1;
13,53; 19,1; 26,1). It begins by showing Jesus as a Rabbi teaching ex-cathedra
(5,1) and ends by showing Jesus as the Messianic prophet addressing the crowds
(7,28).
The second point that must be kept in
mind is that the Sermon is a composition of Matthew. An analysis of similar
texts in the Gospels of Mark and Luke indicate that many verses found here in
Matthew are found in Mark and Luke in different contexts. This does not mean
that Jesus did not say these words. It means that Matthew has put them together
in this manner.
The third point is the theme, which will
determine how one will interpret the Sermon as a whole. Most are agreed that
the theme of the Sermon is found in 5,17-20, in which Jesus speaks about having
come not to abolish but to fulfil the Law and Prophets, and issues a challenge
to those listening to let their “righteousness” be greater than that of the
scribes and Pharisees in order to enter the kingdom.
Today’s text contains what is commonly
known as the “Introduction” to the Sermon and contains the Beatitudes, which
are the communication of a blessing. The mountain is a “theological topos” in
the Gospel of Matthew (Luke’s Sermon is from “a level place cf Lk 6,17) and
therefore means much more than simply a geographical location. Matthew does not
name the mountain, but by choosing it as the place from where Jesus delivers
the Sermon, he probably wants to portray Jesus as the New Moses delivering the
New Law from a New Mountain. While Jesus in the Gospel of Luke “stands” and
delivers the Sermon (Lk 617), in Matthew, Jesus sits down. This is the posture
that the Jewish Rabbis adopted when communicating a teaching of importance or
connected with the Law. In Luke the crowd is addressed from the beginning of
the Sermon and addressed directly, “Blessed are you poor…” (Lk 6,20), but in
Matthew, it is the “disciples” who come to Jesus and whom he begins to teach.
The address is indirect, “Blessed are the poor in spirit” (5,3). While
Luke has four beatitudes with four corresponding “Woes”; Matthew has seven plus
an additional beatitude, with no corresponding woes. The reason why the “eight”
is called an additional beatitude is because the first and the seventh both end
with the phrase “theirs is the kingdom of heaven” forming what is known as an
inclusion. Beatitude is an expression of congratulations, which recognises an
existing state of happiness. While the rewards described in the first and
seventh beatitudes are in the present tense, they are in the future tense in
the other five beatitudes. The sense is that it is God himself who will do all
of this for them. By choosing to bless the disadvantaged, the Matthean Jesus
indicates the thrust of his mission, which is primarily a mission to the
disadvantaged.
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