The Beatitudes by Arthur W. Pink
The Beatitudes and Christ
Our
meditations upon the Beatitudes would not be complete unless they turned our
thoughts to the Person of our blessed Lord. As we have endeavored to show, they
describe the character and conduct of a Christian. Since Christian character is
formed in us by the experiential process of our being conformed to the image of
God's Son, then we must turn our gaze upon Him who is the perfect pattern. In
the Lord Jesus Christ we find the brightest manifestations and the highest
exemplifications of all the various spiritual graces that are found (as dim
reflections) in His followers. Not one or two but all of
these perfections were displayed by Him, for He is not only lovely, but
"altogether lovely" (Song 5:16).
May the Holy Spirit, who is here to glorify Him, take now of the things of
Christ and show them unto us (Joh 16:14-15).
First let us
consider the words, "Blessed are the poor in spirit." How marvelous
it is to see how the Scriptures speak of Him who was rich becoming poor for our
sakes, that we through His poverty might be rich (2Co
8:9). Great indeed was the poverty into which He entered. Born of
parents who were poor in this world's goods, He commenced His earthly life in a
manger. During His youth and early manhood, He toiled at the carpenter's bench.
After His public ministry had begun, He declared that though the foxes had
their holes and the birds of the air their nests, the Son of Man had not where
to lay His head (Lu 9:58). If we trace out the
Messianic utterances recorded in the Psalms by the Spirit of prophecy, we shall
find that again and again He confessed to God His poverty of spirit: "I am
poor and sorrowful" (Ps 69:29); "Bow down Thine ear,
O Lord, hear Me: for I am poor and needy" (Ps
86:1); "For I am poor and needy, and My heart is wounded within
Me" (Ps 109:22).
Second, let
us ponder the words, "Blessed are they that mourn." Christ was indeed
the chief Mourner. Old Testament prophecy contemplated Him as "a Man of Sorrows, and acquainted with grief" (Isa
53:3). When contending with the Pharisees over their slavish
observance of the Sabbath, and while seeking to teach them, by precept and
example, a proper understanding of God's holy institution, He "grieved for
the hardness of their hearts" (Mr
3:5). Behold Him sighing before He healed the deaf and dumb
man (Mr 7:34). Mark Him weeping by
the graveside of Lazarus (Joh 11:35). Hear His lamentation over
the beloved city: "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem... how often would I have
gathered thy children together" (Mt
23:37). Draw near and reverently behold Him in the gloom of
Gethsemane, pouring out His petitions to the Father "with strong crying
and tears" (Heb 5:7). Bow down in awe and wonder
as you hear Him crying from the cross, "My God, My God, Why
hast Thou forsaken Me?" (Mr
15:34). Hearken to His plaintive plea, "Is it nothing to
you, all ye that pass by? behold, and see if there be any sorrow like unto My
sorrow" (La 1:12).
Third, behold
the beauty of Christ in the saying, "Blessed are the meek." A score
of examples might be drawn from the Gospels that illustrate the lovely
lowliness of the incarnate Lord of glory. Mark it in the men selected by Him to
be His ambassadors. He chose not the wise, the learned, the great, or the
noble. At least four of them were fishermen, and one was in the employment of
the Roman government as a despised tax collector. Witness His lowliness in the
company that He kept. He sought not the rich and renowned,
but was "a friend of publicans and sinners" (Mt
11:19). See it in the miracles that He wrought. Again and again He
enjoined the healed to go and tell no man what had been done for them. Behold
it in the unobtrusiveness of His service. Unlike the hypocrites, who sounded a
trumpet before them when they were about to bestow alms on some poor person, He
sought not the limelight, but shunned advertising and disdained popularity.
When the crowds would make Him their idol, He avoided them (Mr 1:45; 7:24). "When Jesus therefore
perceived that they would come and take Him by force, to make Him a king, He
departed again into a mountain Himself alone" (Joh
6:15). When His brethren urged Him, saying, "Shew Thyself to
the world," He declined and went up to the feast in secret (Joh 7:2-10). When He, in fulfillment
of prophecy, presented Himself to Israel as their King, He entered Jerusalem in
a most lowly fashion, riding upon the foal of an ass (Zec 9:9; Joh
12:14).
Fourth,
consider how these words are best exemplified in Christ: "Blessed are they
which do hunger and thirst after righteousness." What a summary this is of
the inner life of the man Christ Jesus! Before the Incarnation, the Holy Spirit
announced, "And righteousness shall be the girdle of His loins" (Isa 11:5). When Christ entered this
world, He said, "Lo, I come to do Thy will, O God" (Heb
10:9). As a boy of twelve He asked, "Wist
ye not that I must be about My Father's business?" (Lu
2:49). At the beginning of His public ministry He declared,
"Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not
come to destroy, but to fulfill" (Mt
5:17). To His disciples He declared, "My meat is to do the will
of Him that sent Me, and to finish His work" (Joh
4:34). Of Him the Holy Spirit has said, "Thou lovest righteousness, and hatest
wickedness: therefore God, Thy God, hath anointed Thee with the oil of gladness
above Thy fellows" (Ps 45:7). Well may He be called
"THE LORD OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS" (Jer
23:6).
Fifth, note
the words, "Blessed are the merciful." In Christ we see mercy
personified. It was mercy to poor lost sinners that caused the Son of God to
exchange the glory of heaven for the shame of earth. It was wondrous and
matchless mercy that took Him to the cross, there to be made a curse for His
people. So, it is "not by works of righteousness which we have done, but
according to His mercy {that} He saved us" (Tit
3:5). He is, even now, exercising mercy on our behalf as our
"merciful and faithful High Priest" (Heb
2:17). So also we are continually to be
"looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life" (Jude 1:21). because He will show mercy
in the Day of Judgment to all who believe upon Him (2Ti
1:18).
Sixth,
contemplate the words, "Blessed are the pure in heart." This, too,
was perfectly exemplified in Christ. He was the "Lamb without blemish and
without spot" (1Pe 1:19). In becoming man, He was
uncontaminated, contracting none of the defilements of sin. His humanity was,
and is, perfectly holy (Lu 1:35). He was "holy,
harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners" (Heb
7:26). "In Him is no sin" (1Jo
3:5). Therefore, He "did no sin" (1Pe
2:22) and "knew no sin" (2Co
5:21). "He is pure" (1Jo
3:3). Because He was absolutely pure in
nature, His motives and actions were always pure. When He said, "I seek
not Mine own glory" (Joh 8:50), He summed up the whole of
His earthly career.
Seventh,
ponder the words, "Blessed are the peacemakers." Supremely true is
this of our blessed Savior. He is the One who "made peace through the
blood of His cross" (Col 1:20). He was appointed to be a
propitiation (Ro 3:25), that is, the One who would
appease God's wrath, satisfying every demand of His broken Law, and glorifying
His justice and holiness. He has also made peace between Jews and Gentiles (Eph 2:11-18). Even now Christ Jesus is
seated in majesty upon the throne of His father David (Ac
2:29-36), reigning as the "Prince of Peace. Of the increase of
His government and peace there shall be no end, upon the throne of David"
(Isa 9:6-7). When Christ returns to
raise the dead and to judge the world in righteousness, then He shall purge
this war-torn earth of sin and of all the effects of the Fall (Ro 8:19-23). We may look confidently
to that time when the Lord Christ shall thus restore peace in the "new
heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness" (2Pe
3:13).
Eighth,
meditate on these words: "Blessed are they which are persecuted for
righteousness' sake." None was ever persecuted as was the Righteous One,
as may be seen by the symbolic reference to Him in Re
12:4! By the Spirit of prophecy He declared, "I am afflicted
and ready to die from My youth up" (Ps
88:15). At the beginning of His ministry, when Jesus was teaching in
Nazareth (His home town), the people "rose up, and thrust Him out of the
city, and led Him unto the brow of the hill whereon their city was built, that
they might cast Him down headlong" (Lu
4:29). In the temple precincts, leaders of the Jews "took up
stones to cast at Him" (Joh 8:59).
All through His ministry His steps were dogged by enemies. The religious
leaders charged Him with having a demon (Joh
8:48). Those who sat in the gate spoke against Him, and He was the
song of the drunkards (Ps 69:12). At His trial they plucked
off His hair (Isa 50:6), spat in His face, buffeted
Him, and smote Him with the palms of their hands (Mt
26:67). After He was scourged by the soldiers and crowned with
thorns, He was led carrying His own cross to Calvary, where they crucified Him.
Even in His dying hours He was not left in peace, but
was persecuted by revilings and scoffings.
How unutterably mild, by comparison, is the persecution that we are called upon
to endure for His sake!
In like
manner, each of the promises attached to the Beatitudes finds its
accomplishment in Christ. Poor in spirit He was, and His supremely is the
Kingdom. Mourn He did, yet He will be comforted as He sees of the travail of
His soul (Isa 53:11). He was meekness
personified, yet He is now seated upon a throne of glory. He hungered and
thirsted after righteousness, yet now He is filled with satisfaction as He
beholds that the righteousness which He worked out has been imputed to His
people. Pure in heart, He sees God as none other sees him (Mt
11:27). As the Peacemaker, He is acknowledged as the unique Son of
God by all the blood-bought children. As the persecuted One, great is His
reward, for He has been given the name above all others (Php
2:9-11). May the Spirit of God occupy us more and more with Him who
is fairer than the children of men (Ps
45:2).