In our world, divorce is commonplace, even among Christians. Not surprisingly, then, Jesus’ teaching about divorce is controversial. In this episode and the next, we’ll unpack that teaching against the background of the Law of Moses and how it may have been misinterpreted and misused in Jesus’ day.
Jun 25, 2025•8 min•Ep. 23
What does it mean to be a faithful Christian? How high does Jesus set the bar for true righteousness? Jesus has already taught the commandment against adultery in a way that was far more radical than what the people had learned from the Pharisees. As we’ll see next, Jesus gets more radical still: he suggests that serious sacrifice may be necessary if one is to be obedient. Does he really mean what he says?
Jun 25, 2025•8 min•Ep. 22
We live in a world dominated by electronic devices. Through them, marketers and advertisers continually manipulate our desires. And while we may consider ourselves innocent of violating the commandment against adultery, we may not be innocent of unbridled desire. In this episode, we’ll explore how Jesus’ reference to the sixth and seventh commandments may also be a reference to the tenth: the commandment against covetousness, the desire for things that don’t belong to us.
Jun 25, 2025•7 min•Ep. 21
In the Ten Commandments, God’s people are forbidden to commit adultery. Yet even someone with as legendary a reputation as King David was guilty of that sin. In this episode, we’ll zero in on the story of David and Bathsheba to ask what might seem like a question with an obvious answer: what was the nature of David’s sin? The teaching of Jesus suggests that we may need to look deeper.
Jun 25, 2025•8 min•Ep. 20
One of Jesus’ examples about the need for reconciliation describes a person being taken to court for an unpaid debt. He says nothing about the legal merits of the case. But if we were in that position, would we have the humility to admit our fault? And would we have the desire to make amends as needed?
Jun 25, 2025•7 min•Ep. 19
Jesus unsettled his hearers with the idea that the heart of the commandment against murder was about unrestrained anger. You would think that what he would say next is to recommend that everyone work on managing their anger. But he pulls another surprise: to live righteously, people should seek reconciliation with those who are angry at them .
Jun 25, 2025•8 min•Ep. 18
When it came to following the Law, some folks probably thought they were doing as well as could reasonably be expected for someone who hadn't been trained as a Pharisee. Most of his hearers, for example, would have thought themselves innocent of violating the law against murder. But Jesus upends even that assumption by asking if his hearers ever got angry enough to call someone an “idiot.” For even that would make them guilty before God.
Jun 25, 2025•8 min•Ep. 17
Before Jesus could teach the true nature of righteousness, he had to reassure his hearers that his teaching upheld God’s law—and he expected his hearers to be obedient to the Law as well. In a way that must have been shocking to his hearers, he declared that they wouldn’t get into the kingdom unless they were more righteous than the scribes and Pharisees. But what does that mean?
Jun 25, 2025•9 min•Ep. 16
In the gospels, Jesus had argument after argument with the Pharisees. They were respected as the interpreters of God’s Law, but their teaching had led the people away from the kind of righteousness God wanted. At the beginning of the sermon, then, Jesus has to make clear to the people that even as he challenges what the scribes and Pharisees taught, he is upholding God’s law down to the last detail.
Jun 25, 2025•7 min•Ep. 15
The gospels, especially the gospel of John, portray the world as a place darkened by sin. And in John’s gospel, Jesus will declare himself to be the light of the world. But here in the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus calls his hearers to be the light of the world. They are to live in a righteous way that brings glory to God the Father.
Jun 25, 2025•9 min•Ep. 14
You may have friends or relatives that you think of as "salt of the earth" kind of people. It’s meant as a compliment, to say that they’re honest, trustworthy, and so on. It’s a way of saying that the world needs more people like that. The saying goes back to Jesus and the Sermon on the Mount. It’s one of two metaphors he uses to give his hearers a vision of the life and character to which God is calling them.
Jun 25, 2025•8 min•Ep. 13
Perhaps the most striking and counterintuitive of the Beatitudes is Jesus’ statement that those who are persecuted for righteousness and their allegiance to Jesus should rejoice! How is that possible? In this episode, we’ll use the apostle Paul as an example of someone who suffered greatly for the gospel, and yet was still able to consider himself blessed.
Jun 25, 2025•9 min•Ep. 12
What does Jesus mean when he says "Blessed are the peacemakers"? As we’ll explore in this episode, we might understand God to be reclaiming the world from the brokenness of sin, restoring the world to the wholeness it was meant to have. We cannot, as humans, fix the world. That’s God’s job. But we can participate in his work by doing our part to bring moments of peace in our relationships.
Jun 25, 2025•7 min•Ep. 11
Jesus says that the “pure in heart” are blessed. His words are reminiscent of Psalm 51, in which David repents of his sin with Bathsheba. But it’s not necessarily just a matter of sin; a pure heart is also an undivided heart. We live in a world of endless distraction, with our attention constantly pulled in multiple directions. Do we ever take time to focus entirely upon God?
Jun 25, 2025•8 min•Ep. 10
In the Beatitudes, Jesus teaches that the “merciful” are blessed. A righteous person is also a forgiving person, as we will see in Jesus’ parable of the unmerciful servant from Matthew 18. Do we recognize how much we’ve already been forgiven? And do we live accordingly in our relationship to others?
Jun 25, 2025•9 min•Ep. 9
The first half of the Beatitudes declare a truth that anyone familiar with the Old Testament already knows: God is the champion of the poor and needy. Things aren’t as they should be, and the righteous person longs for God to set things right. But this isn’t a passive wish; the righteous will want to get in on the action, to join God’s work of bringing peace (the rich Old Testament concept of shalom ) to a broken world.
Jun 25, 2025•7 min•Ep. 8
As we’ll see as we go through our study of the sermon, Jesus is teaching his hearers about the nature of true righteousness. This is reminiscent of the Old Testament prophets like Micah, who accused the people of empty religion. The theme of righteousness also bookends the Beatitudes—and what we’ll see in the Beatitudes is a progression from humility to a righteous life.
Jun 25, 2025•7 min•Ep. 7
Remember the idea of bookends? Even the Beatitudes have their own bookends. These bookends let us know that the Beatitudes themselves have the kingdom of heaven as their theme. But when we look at how the bookends are different from rest of the Beatitudes, we learn something more: the blessing they describe is one that necessarily involves hope.
Jun 25, 2025•7 min•Ep. 6
To understand the so-called “Beatitudes,” it’s helpful to read them alongside the similar statements of both blessing and woe that we find in Luke 6. Old Testament scholar Walter Brueggemann gives us a helpful way of understanding these strange pronouncements: they are words of blessing for the “have-nots” of society who need some good news from God. But what about the “haves”? How will more privileged people take what Jesus has to say?
Jun 25, 2025•9 min•Ep. 5
The sermon opens with a set of “beatitudes” or statements about blessing. But what Jesus says about people who can be counted as “blessed” may seem odd—he describes things that don’t sound anything like blessedness. But if we’re going to understand what Jesus is saying, these strange statements have to be read against the background of the Old Testament.
Jun 25, 2025•7 min•Ep. 4
The Sermon on the Mount contains multiple references to the kingdom of heaven. From that alone, one might see that the kingdom is the central theme. But there’s another way to see this. The sermon both begins and ends with references to the kingdom. These are the “bookends” of the sermon, and in the Bible, bookends like this typically tell you the theme of what comes between.
Jun 25, 2025•7 min•Ep. 3
In Matthew’s gospel, Jesus’ sermon about the kingdom of heaven doesn’t appear out of nowhere. Matthew tells the story of Jesus in such a way that the kingdom is the theme right from the start, in the genealogy of chapter 1, the beloved Christmas story of chapter 2, and even the temptation story of chapter 4. And both John the Baptist and Jesus preached that the kingdom of heaven had come near. All of this comes before the Sermon on the Mount, as Matthew’s lead-in.
Jun 25, 2025•9 min•Ep. 2
The Sermon on the Mount, found in chapters 5 through 7 of the gospel of Matthew, contains some of the best-known and most challenging teaching of Jesus. In it, he teaches the essence of what he calls “the kingdom of heaven.” In this first episode, we’ll explore how Jesus not only preached the kingdom, but was himself the King.
Jun 25, 2025•8 min•Ep. 1