Blessed Community
Today’s gospel lesson is the Beatitudes.
It is part of the Sermon on the Mount.
The Sermon on the Mount is comprised of 3 chapters of the gospel according to Matthew.
Although the sermon is very compact in Scripture, it is widely believed to have been given over a longer period of time, sometimes to a large audience and sometimes just to Jesus’ disciples.
The sermon encapsulates Jesus’ teaching—the message he was trying to convey during his public ministry.
Many people read the Beatitudes and think it is Jesus’ musings on people with certain characteristics.
But it would be more accurate to say that the Beatitudes are a guide.
A guide to how we are meant to live in the world.
The thread that runs through all of today’s lessons is the Kin-dom of God.
In Micah, we read, “simply do justice, love kindness, and humbly walk with your God.”
In 1 Corinthians, Paul writes that our life in Christ is about wisdom, justice, sanctification, and redemption.
And the Beatitudes also talk about peace, mercy, and justice.
Each passage talks about ideal characteristics.
Characteristics of the Kin-dom.
Characteristics of a covenantal life.
A covenant between us and God and a covenant between each other.
A covenant that is timeless and transcends generations.
Although I haven’t counted for myself, I’ve read that Jesus mentions the Kin-dom of God over 100 times in the gospels.
That includes all the variations of kingdom or reign and God or heaven.
So, clearly, the Kin-dom is important to Jesus.
As his followers, it should be important to us as well.
The Kin-dom is important, not because it speaks of paradise and life after death.
The Kin-dom is important for us now—in our time.
The Kin-dom is a blueprint for how we are supposed to live together in community.
We can go through the Beatitudes one-by-one and see what they tell us about living in community.
The first one begins “Blessed are those who are poor in spirit.”
The poor in spirit is not concerned with wealth.
It’s not about faith.
Jewish New Testament scholar, Amy-Jill Levine says the poor in spirit are those who recognize their dependence on others and others dependence on them.
That may seem like a leap from what you have traditionally thought but she bases it on how the original text was worded in Greek and how it would have been heard by a first-century Jewish audience.
The poor in spirit are those who enjoy privilege and use it to help others without the same privilege.
In our context, the poor in spirit could be upper- and middle-class people who use their resources to help those who are struggling financially.
Or Americans who use their citizenship to protect immigrants from being persecuted.
The poor in spirit understand interdependence within the community.
The poor in spirit understand that we need one another.
And, to those people, belongs the Kin-dom of God.
The second Beatitude refers to “those who mourn.”
Mourning does not just mean grief over death.
We can mourn the loss of a job, a home, or a marriage.
We can mourn the rise of injustice, the departure from the ideals of the country we love, or the pain inflicted on a neighbor.
But in a community, that mourning is shared.
We console one another.
We bring food when the grief is too overwhelming to shop or cook.
We are Jesus—the Comforter—for each other in our pain.
The Beatitudes go on, “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for justice.
Blessed are those who are merciful.
Blessed are those who work for peace.”
It’s important for us to recognize that each of those blessings is focused outward.
Justice, mercy, and peace have no meaning for individuals.
Justice, mercy, and peace exist only in community.
They are characteristics of relationships.
They refer to how we treat on another.
They are the properties of an ideal community.
God’s intent for us is to live in community.
Jesus modeled that community with his disciples.
They traveled together.
They ate together.
They taught and they healed and they served together.
But most important of all, they were united in love—love for Jesus and love for one another.
Early Jesus followers modeled the same kind of communal living.
The Apostle Paul also talks a lot about community.
He calls it the Body of Christ.
We are reading about Paul in Bible Study right now.
You may not know it but much of our Lutheran doctrine is based on Paul’s letters.
And all his letters—except one—were written to communities.
For Paul, the community is familial—we are part of the family of God.
That is why he often refers to people as brother or sister.
It’s the same reason that I say Kin-dom instead of Kingdom.
It is meant to reflect our relationship as siblings—united in love as children of God—in stark contrast to the hierarchical nature of Empire.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a Lutheran pastor who also happens to be one of my heroes, also wrote a lot about community, specifically the church community.
He says, “The church must participate in the worldly tasks of life in the community—not dominating but helping and serving.”
He clarifies that helping and serving is our Christian vocation—how we are to emulate Jesus.
But he cautions that the church must beware the vices of pride and envy as well as the worship of power.
They were the sins of the Reichskirche then and they are the sins of Christian Nationalism now.
Instead, the church must act with authenticity to build trust, faithfulness to remain true to God, and humility to acknowledge we are fallible.
For a long time, I’ve thought that it’s not all that important for people to come to church.
I know good, faithful people for whom church is just not necessary.
Maybe it doesn’t fit their schedule.
Maybe they were harmed by a past experience with a church.
Or maybe it is too structured for them to sit through.
But, while writing this sermon, I have come to realize that the church has an important role to play in building and maintaining community.
Church is where closed people can become open—where isolated people can become open to this idea of community
And that transformation—from closed to open—is the work of the Spirit.
Bonhoeffer says we may come to Jesus alone, but the Spirit calls us into community.
People in community not only exist with one another, but also for one another.
Living with one another means we experience each other’s pains and joys.
Living for one another means we pray on behalf of our neighbor and selflessly act on their behalf.
In a thriving church community, where people live not only with one another but also for one another, the Spirit transforms individuals into a cohesive assembly that takes care of one another.
If there was a silver lining to the pandemic, it is that it taught us how to be church outside the walls.
I’m going to ask you to go a step further—to think about our church community even more expansively.
Not only is this community not about the building, but it is also not just 25-30 people that come to church every Sunday.
We need to think about the church community in broader terms.
We need to cast a broader net.
For us, it’s not just the people that come to worship on Sunday.
It’s also the community members who come here for Vacation Bible School or Dia de Muertos or photos with Santa.
It’s also the folks in recovery who come here for meetings.
It’s also the people experiencing homelessness who go across the street for shelter.
Our church community is big, it’s diverse, and it’s messy.
But we are all connected.
I’d like to close with some Beatitudes of my own.
Blessed are the selfless; your reward is in your service to others.
Blessed are the kind and the compassionate; you will heal the wounded and that healing will make your own hearts full.
Blessed are the shelter monitors, the pantry workers, the recovery sponsors, the therapists, the social workers, and everyone that works in service to the community; you are God’s hands and feet in this world and we appreciate you.
Blessed are the migrants; you will find the better life that you seek.
Blessed are the trans people; you will find joy in your uniqueness—and teach others about authenticity in the process.
Blessed are the righteously angry; you will seek justice and nurture the seeds of the Kin-dom.
And blessed are the peacemakers; you remind us what we so often forget—we are all saint and sinner, capable of both good and evil.
I pray that we are each a blessing to one another.
That we understand that, as a community, we are interdependent.
Blessed are those who are a blessing to others.
And blessed are those who accept blessings from others.
May this meditation on God’s word keep our hearts and minds on Christ Jesus.