The Beatitudes – Thirsty and Hungry for Righteousness
The Beatitudes – Part 2
- Happy are the Ones Hungering and Thirsting for the Righteousness, Matthew 5:6
- They are characterized as hungering and thirsting
- They do not possess righteousness
- Hunger and thirst come from lack
- After 40 days in the wilderness, Jesus was hungry, Matthew 4:2
- The disciples become hungry on the Sabbath, Matthew 12:1
- Primarily used of the lack of food and water, Revelation 7:16;
- Those who came to Christ during His earthly ministry would not hunger or thirst, John 6:35; Romans 12:20
- A Christian already possesses a quality of the Righteousness of God in Christ, 2 Corinthians 5:21; 1 Corinthians 1:30
- They will be satisfied (used of eating and drinking until one is full)
- They are characterized as hungering and thirsting
- Happy are the Merciful, Matthew 5:7
- “Mercy” is relief from the affects of one’s own sin
- An expression of God’s mercy results in salvation, Titus 3:5
- God’s show of mercy upon Paul, 1 Timothy 1:13, 16
- God’s show of mercy upon the Gentiles, 1 Peter 2:10
- God has shut up all in disobedience so that He may show mercy to all, Romans 11:30 – 32
- Mercy is not shown to a man on the basis of his desire to receive it, Romans 9:16-18
- Mercy and the Christian
- Christians receive mercy on the basis of God’s mercy apart from works of righteousness, Titus 3:5
- Mercy is upon a Christian who walks by the rule of the New Creation (The Christ), Galatians 6:15, 16
- God showed us mercy while we were still dead in our trespasses, Ephesians 2:4, 5
- A trespass is within the mind
- Sin ultimately results from a trespass
- We can draw near to the Throne of Grace where we receive mercy, because Christ is our High Priest, […]