Living the Sermon on the Mount Matthew 5 & 6
The process of life seen to fulfillment, may only be viewed after the fact. Hindsight is often thought about with regret accompanied by the phrase … if only I had … or possibly, … I didn’t think of it until after … .
Then there is the ever popular karma or meaning the same, the phrase what goes around comes around. In my opinion, the life of karma — creating future good for one’s self by doing good deeds and banking them for the future, knowing that the “around” is history repeating itself, the idea that I will get another chance in another life to be better than I am — is quite a chaotic way to live. It is also a very self-centric way of life, with each act done to better one’s chances rather than for altruistic reasons.
Chance — the roll of the dice, the luck of the draw, the pulling of the lottery ticket, and on and on… none of which allows for any control except the lack of– what kind of control is no control at all? Plain and simply, it cannot be. One of the most wasteful ways to spend money are on the pull-tabs. People buy those things by the buckets. With a stoic look of mindless effort, they will sit and pull the paper off of one tab after another, waiting for the golden goose to lay its golden egg. I just don’t see the merit in activities such as these.
Where then can we find order? There is only one place, and that is with the one who created all in the beginning. Yes, an initial belief comes from faith, you might tell me. Logically, though, there is no other option. The proof is all around–all I need to do is open my eyes and use them, use my senses to touch, taste, feel, smell and see them. Look at it this way for further evidence: How can something come from nothing? It can’t! Without a creator, how can we explain our world?
The creator, God, a being with no beginning and no end, who is, was and ever shall be, gave us and all that exists life. He gave us humans dominion over all that exists, and with that dominion we were given choice. All that is within God is good — the penultimate good. Yet, from almost the very beginning of God’s creativeness there has been another side that comes with being given power. It is the vanity, the desire to be in control above all others, and it is the direction that points away from God to the self.
Did God create our wars? Did He desire His creation to split itself apart, and split and split until only shards remain? It is impossible to even think this within the framework of good — and certainly, there are very few if any who will not acknowledge that there is the notion of good. What then does God do with the messes we create–the destruction, the abuse of our human powers, the harm we cause all around us, and the splintering of his creation? Because God is good, there is justice for those who have been caused harm.
First, justice is not karma and it isn’t fate. Justice is reconciliation and healing for what has been harmed. How would God be good if in the end or along the way our destructiveness was not made right, the wrong wiped out? Frankly, I have no use for karma or fate because I have no desire to live in a world spinning out of control with no one in charge.
Our good God, gave us not only the hope of future justice, the promise of complete justice in the future, He also gave us through the free gift of His son the opportunity to begin that future right now, this very minute by turning away from the world and toward Him. All that is necessary is to say, “I’m sorry, forgive me,” to the creator and His Son to whom He gave the penultimate control over all the earth, Jesus Christ.
When a life points to God, the person lives in the glow–the light–of the creator, and becomes light also. There is joy, peace and harmony that cannot be contained or diminished.
Where do you find this light? Well, sometimes it can be tough. There are people who say they are Christian, but their lives don’t show themselves as Children of God. These are either in process or never have truly commited to living as Jesus taught. Jesus calls himself the Shepherd, the one who protects his faithful from harm — from evil, from the “wolves in sheep’s clothing.” Sometimes the call on who is who and what is what can be pretty tough. What he teaches is this: we can know what someone is about by what they do and how they live their lives.
Now, you may think it not to your liking to end some of the stuff you do–drinking, having a lot of party fun, meeting people and going home with them, getting what you want no matter what– the fact is, and I write from experience now, when the time is right in the process of life you will have no desire to do these kinds of things anymore. That’s part of the beauty of God’s goodness.
Here is the other part of it, and I don’t confess this to make myself look good, because I am far from perfect. I have a strong desire to live by the words of the Sermon on the Mount. Have you read it? You can find it in the Bible’s New Testament–Matthew 5 and 6. You may wonder why I am declaring this, and it’s because this is one way growth comes–when God puts in your mind and soul a desire so compelling it can’t be ignored.
Well, that’s enough for now– may our Lord and Savior, creator of all that is, bless you richly with goodness today.
…. babamarusia
Thinking again on the process of life, consider this. Life lived for good acknowledges the creator, who is God, and throughout one’s life the process of coming back into the goodness is taking place. There is only one way to the purity of all that is good, one way to a future without end, and that is to live as a child of God. Jesus said, “I am the light of the world,” and that’s the truth. Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.