If the
Beatitudes were based on works, “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they
shall see God” would be the most hopeless of them all.
Why?
Because I
don’t have a lot of problem admitting things about being poor in spirit. And it
seems to come naturally to me to mourn my sins and offences against God. And feeling
meek in relation to fixing things myself (impossible) and knowing I must
surrender to the authority of Christ seems to happen without resistance. Hungering
and thirsting after righteousness in the belief that I will be satisfied by
faith instead of good works seems to happen without much trying. And even
feeling merciful towards others is something I’m always learning to work into
my daily life with a sense that I really want this and know God will help me do
it.
But “pure
in heart”? That seems to trigger so much guilt, shame, and fear, that it
would be easy to let a good-works mindset tell me I am a hopeless scumbag of
sin who could never expect to see a smile on God’s face because of all the
impurities within me!
And that is
why I love using the term “good news” more than its counterpart, “the
gospel”. In English, “the gospel” is the term we typically use to
speak of the message of salvation. However, in the Greek we are translating
from, the word translated “the gospel” sounds like “euangelion”.
It is where we get our word “evangelism”. And the primary meaning of the
word is “good news”, specifically, the good news of the kingdom of God
in Jesus Christ our Lord.
In the
familiar account of an angel announcing the birth of Jesus Christ, the
expression “good news of great joy” is used. Here the “good news”
comes from the same Greek word that is elsewhere translated “gospel”.
And my point is that many of us understand that “the gospel” is about Jesus
Christ saving us from our sins, but we don’t naturally hear it as “good news
of great joy”, often because we have so much negative baggage about our
sins and failings that we simply don’t think of it that way.
However,
when we come to the Beatitudes, we must have an understanding that they are
taught to people who had already heard the gospel, the good news of great joy
that God has given us his Son as our Savior. Jesus had already made it clear
that, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and
believe in the gospel.” Or, repent and believe in the good news of great
joy that the Savior has come!
How does
this help us who often feel like failures in our walk with God hear the
blessing of “the pure in heart” as good news? After all, if it is only
with a pure heart that we “shall see God”, and we know there is that “if
people really knew us they would hate us” part of ourselves lurking deep
within, how could we ever have the purity of heart that will see God? After
all, God’s own word says, there is “the holiness without which no one will
see the Lord.” To have a heart that is pure-heartedly holy seems completely
out of reach. At least to me.
That is
where we must do a double-check that we are hearing Jesus’ Beatitudes through
the good news of great joy that we have a Savior who is Jesus Christ our Lord.
It is in this good news that we can acknowledge that we are sinners in need of
a Savior because we have a Savior who came into the world to save sinners!
And, it is
in this good news of great joy that we can understand and accept that it is “by
grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is
the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast.” I am
totally fine with the idea that I have nothing to boast about. But without the
gospel that would be hopeless. However, in the gospel, not having works to add
to my salvation is not hopeless. Having an impure heart that needs saving is
not hopeless. Having a salvation that “is not your own doing” IS… NOT…
HOPELESS!!!
One thing
we must never forget is that our salvation is three-dimensional. These three
dimensions of salvation are referred to as justification, sanctification, and
glorification. Justification declares us righteous in God’s sight at the moment
of our new birth. Sanctification works righteousness into us as we grow up in Christ.
And glorification prefects righteousness in us so that every child of God will
be as righteous as Jesus in eternity.
We must
apply this to “blessed are the pure in heart” so that we see all three
of these dimensions at the same time. This is where our hope lies, in a
salvation that sees us as pure in heart now, that helps us grow to be purer in
heart every day, and that guarantees our perfect purity of heart when we see Jesus.
Let’s apply
the justification side of our salvation to “blessed are the pure in heart”.
Paul said that all those who are disciples of Jesus Christ have “the
righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ”. He adds that for anyone
who “believes in him who justifies the ungodly, his faith is counted as
righteousness.” This is what makes the good news “of great joy”. This
is why the prostitutes and tax-collectors were entering the kingdom of God
while the religious elite were not. These sinners understood something of this
message that they were received by faith in a way they would never be welcomed
by good works.
And now,
after the evidence of the crucifixion of Christ, it is abundantly clear that
God “made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the
righteousness of God.” And that is why our faith is counted as
righteousness. That is why our faith is counted as “pure in heart”. That
is why “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our
sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” This happens in our
justification by faith as we trust in Jesus Christ and “become the
righteousness of God” in our Savior.
And then it
continues in our sanctification as we constantly keep short accounts with God
about our sins, always confessing them to God whenever we fail him, and always
knowing that he is always forgiving us, and always cleansing us of our sins.
Paul
described this sanctification dimension of our growth in righteousness so beautifully
when he wrote that we are “being transformed into the same image” as our
Savior “from one degree of glory to another.” We are already “the
righteousness of God” in Christ according to our justification by grace
through faith, but every day we are BEING transformed into the same image of
our Savior in degree after degree of glory. And that is why we can have daily
hope of being “the pure in heart” because we know we are seen that way
by God in our justification, and we know God is purifying our hearts every day
in our sanctification.
And that
brings us to the third dimension, the “living hope” of one day feeling
completely pure in our hearts without any fear of ever having impurity within us
ever again. Here we look to the apostle John as he describes the return of Christ
and says, “we know that when he appears we shall be like him, because we
shall see him as he is.” That is what the Bible calls our “glorification”.
It may feel utterly unbelievable that we could ever be fully like Jesus in
righteousness, particularly in purity of heart, but that is what is promised to
us in our so great salvation. We SHALL be like him. Period. No exceptions for
anyone who has received Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior.
A very
necessary aspect of us relating to God in our salvation is described like this,
Therefore, my beloved, as you have always
obeyed, so now, not only as in my presence but much more in my absence, work
out your own salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you,
both to will and to work for his good pleasure.
Knowing
that our justification by grace through faith has already made us “the
righteousness of God” in one way, and our glorification by grace through
faith will complete the pure-hearted work of God in another, our daily focus
must be on how we join God’s work of making us more like Jesus every day of our
lives. If God is daily working to transform us into the image of his Son from
one degree of glory to another, what are we to do to attach to him in what he
is doing?
Paul’s
answer is that we must work out our own salvation with fear and trembling based
on the fact that God is already working in us so that we would both will the
things he wills by his good pleasure and do the things he is pleased to lead us
to do. God is at work first, and he is at work now, so we actively look at how
we are to work these things out into our lives in joyful fellowship with our Father.
And the way
John told us to join God in his work is, “everyone who thus hopes in him
purifies himself as he is pure.” In other words, everyone who knows we have
been made pure in heart in our justification, and that we will be made
completely pure in heart in our glorification, joins God’s work in the present
by constantly purifying ourselves as we keep seeing the glory of the purity of
God. We confess our sins to God every time we fall into them because we truly
want purity of heart rather than the corruption of sin.
The bottom
line is that all the Beatitudes are a description of what it looks like in our
lives when God is blessing us with his grace. Our faith will feel poor in
spirit. Our faith will mourn our sin. Our faith will meekly surrender to the
authority of Christ as our Savior. Our faith will hunger and thirst for the righteousness
of God offered to us in the gospel as a free gift of grace. Our faith will
begin expressing itself in mercy to others as we have experienced the abundance
of God’s mercy towards us. And our faith will delight to grow in pure-hearted
righteousness from one degree of glory to another in the safety that we are
already the righteousness of God in Christ, and will most definitely be as
pure-heartedly righteous as Jesus when he returns and we see him as he is.
Today, let’s expect to see God call us to greater steps in purity of heart than
we have ever taken, and praise him for the so great salvation that enables us to
take those steps.
And because
this good news is received and experienced by grace through faith, let’s
rejoice in the hope we have in Christ that we can become more pure-heartedly
like him today than we have ever been before.
The words of the LORD are pure words,
like silver refined in a furnace on the ground,
purified seven times.
(Psalm 12:6)
© 2024
Monte Vigh ~ Box 517, Merritt, BC, V1K 1B8
Email: in2freedom@gmail.com
Unless otherwise noted, Scriptures are from the
English Standard Version (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. ESV® Text
Edition: 2016. Copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of
Good News Publishers.)