The Beatitudes by Arthur W. Pink
The Seventh Beatitude
"Blessed
are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God"
This seventh
Beatitude is the hardest of all to expound. The difficulty lies in determining
the precise significance and scope of the word peacemakers. The Lord Jesus does
not say, "Blessed are the peace-lovers," or "Blessed are the
peace-keepers," but "Blessed are the peacemakers." Now it is
apparent on the surface that what we have here is something more excellent than
that love of concord and harmony, that hatred of strife and turmoil, that is
sometimes found in the natural man, because the peacemakers that are here in
view shall be called the children of God. Three things must guide us in seeking
the true interpretation: (1) the character of those to whom our Lord was
speaking; (2) the place occupied by our text in the series of Beatitudes; and
(3) its connection with the Beatitude that follows.
The Jews, in
general, regarded the Gentile nations with bitter contempt and hatred, and they
expected that, under the Messiah, there should be an uninterrupted series of
warlike attacks made on these nations, till they were completely destroyed or
subjugated to the chosen people of God {an idea based, no doubt, on what
they read in the Book of Joshua concerning the experiences of their
forefathers}. In their estimation, those emphatically deserved the
appellation of "happy" who should be employed under Messiah the
Prince to avenge on the heathen nations all the wrongs these had done to
Israel. How different is the spirit of the new economy! How beautifully does it
accord with the angelic anthem which celebrated the nativity of its Founder:
"Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward
men!" (Dr. John Brown).
This seventh
Beatitude has to do more with conduct than character,
though, of necessity, there must first be a peaceable spirit before there will
be active efforts put forth to make peace. Let it be remembered that in this
first section of the Sermon on the Mount, the Lord Jesus is defining the
character of those who are subjects and citizens in His Kingdom. First, He
describes them in terms of the initial experiences of those in whom a Divine
work is wrought. The first four Beatitudes, as has been previously stated, may
be grouped together as setting forth the negative graces of their hearts.
Christ's subjects are not self-sufficient, but consciously poor in spirit. They
are not self-satisfied, but mourning because of their
spiritual state. They are not self-important, not lowly or meek. They are not self-righteous, but hungering and thirsting for the
righteousness of Another. In the next three Beatitudes, the Lord names their
positive graces. Having tasted of the mercy of God, they are merciful in their
dealings with others. Having received from the Spirit a spiritual nature, their
eye is single to behold the glory of God. Having entered into
the peace that Christ made by the blood of His cross, they are now anxious to
be used by Him in bringing others to the enjoyment of such peace.
That which
helps us, perhaps as much as anything else, to fix the meaning of this seventh
Beatitude is the link that exists between it and the one that immediately
follows. In our previous chapters, we have called attention to the fact that
the Beatitudes are obviously grouped together in pairs. Poverty of spirit is
always accompanied by mourning, as is meekness or lowliness by hungering and
thirsting after the righteousness of God. Mercifulness toward men is united to
purity of heart towards God, and peacemaking is coupled with being persecuted
for righteousness' sake. Thus Mt 5:10-12
supplies us with the key to Mt 5:9.
By
approaching the seventh Beatitude from each of the three separate viewpoints
mentioned above, we arrive at the same conclusion. First, let us consider the
marked contrast between the tasks that God assigned to His people under the Old
Covenant and New Covenant respectively. After the giving of the Law, Israel was
commanded to take up the sword and to conquer the land of Canaan, destroying
the enemies of Jehovah. The risen Christ has given different orders to His
Church. Throughout this Gospel dispensation, we are to go into all nations as
heralds of the cross, seeking the reconciliation of those who by nature are at
enmity with our Master. Second, this grace of peacemaking supplements the six
graces mentioned in the previous verses. Perhaps the fact that this is the
seventh Beatitude indicates that it was our Lord's intent to teach that it is
this attribute that gives completeness or wholeness to Christian character. We
must certainly conclude that it is an unspeakable privilege to be sent forth as
ambassadors of peace. Furthermore, those who fancy themselves to be Christians,
yet have no interest in the salvation of fellow sinners, are self-deceived.
They possess a defective Christianity, and have no
right to expect to share in the blessed inheritance of the children of God.
Third, there is a definite link between this matter of our being peacemakers
and the persecution to which our Master alludes in Mt
5:10-12. By mentioning these two aspects of Christian character and
experience side by side in His discourse, Christ is teaching that the
opposition encountered by His disciples in the path of duty is the result of
their faithfulness in the service to which they have been called. Thus we may
be certain that the peacemaking of our text refers primarily to our being
instruments in God's hands for the purpose of reconciling to Him those who are
actively engaged in warfare against Him (cf. Joh
15:17-27).
We have dealt
at some length on the reasons that have led us to conclude that the peacemakers
referred to in our text are those who beseech sinners to be reconciled to God (2Co 5:20), because most of the
commentators are very unsatisfactory in their expositions. They see in this
Beatitude nothing more than a blessing pronounced by Christ on those who
endeavor to promote unity, to heal breaches, and to restore those who are
estranged. While we fully agree that this is a most blessed exercise, and that
the Christian is, by virtue of his being indwelt by Christ, a lover of peace
and concord, yet we do not believe that this is what our Lord had in mind here.
The believer
in Christ knows that there is no peace for the wicked. Therefore, he earnestly
desires that they should acquaint themselves with God and be at peace (Job 22:21). Believers know that peace
with God is only through our Lord Jesus Christ (Col
1:19-20). For this reason we speak of Him to our fellow men as the
Holy Spirit leads us to do so. Our feet are "shod with the preparation of
the Gospel of peace" (Eph 6:15);
thus we are equipped to testify to others concerning the grace of God. Of us it
is said, "How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace, and bring glad tidings of good things!" (Ro 10:15). All such are pronounced
blessed by our Lord. They cannot but be blessed. Next to the enjoyment of peace
in our own souls must be our delight in bringing others also (by God's grace)
to enter into this peace. In its wider application,
this word of Christ may also refer to that spirit in His followers that
delights to pour oil upon the troubled waters, that aims to right wrongs, that
seeks to restore kindly relations by dealing with and removing difficulties and
by neutralizing and silencing acrimonies.
"Blessed
are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God." The
word called here seems to mean "acknowledged as." God shall own them
as His own children.
He is
"the God of peace" (Heb 13:20).
His great object, in the wonderful scheme of redemption, is to "gather
together in one all things in Christ," whether they be things "in
heaven," or things "on earth" (Eph
1:10). And all those who, under the influence of Christian truth,
are peacemakers show that they are animated with the same principle of action
as God, and as "obedient children" {1Pe
1:14} are cooperating with Him in His benevolent design (Dr.
John Brown).
The world may
despise them as fanatics, professors of religion may regard them as
narrow-minded sectarians, and their relatives may look upon them as fools. But
the great God owns them as His children even now, distinguishing them by tokens
of His peculiar regard and causing His Spirit within them to witness to them
that they are sons of God. But in the Day to come, He will publicly avow His
relationship to them in the presence of an assembled universe. However humble
their present situation in life may be, however despised and misrepresented by
their fellow men, they shall yet "shine forth as the sun in the Kingdom of
their Father" (Mt 13:43). Then shall transpire the
glorious and long - awaited "manifestation of the sons of God" (Ro 8:19).