Lesson 2, Activity 3

Discussion Questions

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Christian Learning Center Forums Why is it important to understand who Jesus’ teachings in the Sermon on the Mount were meant to apply to?

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  • Kenneth

    Member
    10/12/2024 at 00:06

    To question to whom Jesus is speaking in the Beatitudes is foolishness. Jesus came to bring the Kingdom of Heaven to us, symbolized in His departure so that the Comforter will come. As James 4:5 says the scriptures tell us that God is so jealous concerning us that He put His spirit in us because He wants us for himself. (ERV) Romans 8 will say that whoever does not have His Spirit is none of His. Jesus came to speak to “His.” Believers. Every color, creed, race, all who will believe in Him as He says in John 3 to “…whosoever believes shall not perish but have eternal life.” The dispensationalist have accurately discerned the Truth that all of Jesus’s teachings were originally for Israel, yet they must ascertain that YHWH, from the beginning (Revelations 13:8) had already decided to save the whole world, AND this covenant is wrapped in Abraham as Paul will reveal in Galatians 3 when he reveals that God said “seed” singular, speaking of Jesus Christ. His Abrahamic Covenant began with the Nation of Israel (seed as the sand- natural seed) and proceeded to the whole world (stars in the sky-spiritual seed). As a note, when the Israelites claimed Abraham as their father, Jesus denounced their claim with a scriptural condition, stating “If Abraham was your father you would know me, but since you don’t know me, Abraham is not your father. The devil is your father!” (John 8:44) Now John and all of Jesus disciples are Jewish so this is not a blanket statement to cast over the nation. This is Jesus defining the covenant of redemption for those who BELIEVE in HIm. He was referring to those Jews who did not believe in Him, and if He were here today, He would be referring to anyone who does not believe in Him as the scriptures teach. So the notion that the sermons on the mount is for the Jews is obliterated with that statement. Jesus exhorts that Abraham is the route by which He would come into the world (typology of the sacrifice of Isaac who is a type of Christ) and the place where Abraham saw God’s plan in Christ. Those Jews who reject Jesus are not of the covenant of redemption established between God and Abraham in Genesis 15. So, Jesus’s teachings are revelations of those who are Kingdom-minded. Not perfect. Abraham who lied, Isaac who told the same lie as his father Abraham, Joshua who made a covenant with the Gibeonites after God said to not do so, David who committed adultery, powerful Elijah who ran from Jezebel in fear for his life, Gideon who after waging a great war in God’s name incidentally created an ephod which will lead Israel into idol worship, Samson touching the dead, drinking wine, and eventually telling the secret of cutting his hair in his nazaritic covenant, all due to lust for Philistine woman. None of these were perfect yet they were all Kingdom chosen and Kingdom minded. God came to reveal His Kingdom to us on Earth and to give us the ability to live in that Kingdom now in the power of the Holy Spirit. Those who are so minded…will find themselves, however imperfectly…in the beatitudes.

  • Ashonda Green

    Member
    10/07/2024 at 18:04

    This is important because if we are followers of Jesus, we would obey it. . We must know who this applies to so that, them who are professing to follow Jesus would know kingdom living, giving them no excuse to say i did not know how to live. Jesus teaches it clearly so that all will know.

  • SHANNON MILLER

    Member
    09/18/2024 at 10:54

    I think because people are typically more apt to say–this doesn’t apply to me, he is talking to so and so-this must be for them. When in actuality he is talking to every single one of us.

    • Kenneth

      Member
      10/12/2024 at 00:08

      Aman!

  • Kimberly Essenburg

    Member
    09/11/2024 at 16:48

    Can I say, “These are for special super-disciples, so I don’t have to do them”? Can I try to make other people conform? (political/general ethical application). Are they only aspirational to show our need of a savior? The professor would say No. They are for the community of people who aspire to follow Jesus. So I pay attention to the log in my own eye.

  • Alison Schoch

    Member
    09/06/2024 at 13:39

    It is important for all people. Jesus was not just speaking to a select few but his message was for everyone.

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