Live the revolution: treasures.
The Revolution Jesus is leading us into has to work its way into our systems of valuing - exposing what we treasure.
Jesus presses this issue because He is fully aware of the duality resulting from trying to live in both Kingdoms - of Mammon and of God - at the same time. The result will be crippling anxiety and paralyzing worry. So… His solution is to choose relentless focus on the Kingdom of God and to let that choice inform our attitudes and behaviors around money, time, and other measures of value.
By Bill Dogterom
Live the revolution: The Lord’s Prayer.
Today we focus in on The Lord’s Prayer, Jesus’s teaching on what is called prayer in Matthew 6:5-15, and how prayer is for everyone at all times. We also learn about the radical state of practicing the presence of God through prayer without ceasing as exemplified by the life of Brother Lawrence.
By Paul Maertens
Live the revolution: for the audience of one.
Having shown what a kingdom heart and the kingdom life looks like, Jesus concludes His Sermon on the Mount with a series of warnings about inhibiting the kingdom life.
The first concerns the desire for approval from anyone other than God our Father. When our motivation to give, pray and fast is clouded by what others think of us, we need to beware. Kingdom People are called to devote themselves to the audience of One - our loving Father in heaven. When we do this we receive the greatest of rewards - more of him - his presence, peace, love, and power.
By Ed Flint
Live the revolution: love they neighbor.
What does this revolution actually look like in real life? Torah Law was always about love — love of God, self and neighbor — but somewhere along the way it had became something to manage, manipulate, and weaponize. In six startling case studies, Jesus takes Israel’s Law, and traces the trajectory from the seed in the heart to the fruit in the world, and brings his focus to the image of God in every one of us.
Jesus goes after contempt, objectification, power abuse, image-management, retaliation and tribal loyalty. This is not moral tightening or any sort of new rules: it is relational restoration, the root of all kingdom justice! With bonkers (and so misunderstood!) contextual wisdom, turning cheeks and walking extra miles actually become ways of expressing agency, calling out injustice and inviting even our enemy into relationship. Challenging teaching, for our challenging times!
By Hannah Flint
Books referenced in talk
The Divine Conspiracy: Rediscovering Our Hidden Life in God by Dallas Willard
The Narrow Path: How the Subversive Way of Jesus Satisfies Our Souls by Rich Villodas
Live the revolution: beyond the goodness of Pharisees.
Matthew 5:17-20
Having announced his kingdom, invited all to enter it, and described that people of the kingdom as salt and light, Jesus elaborates on how kingdom people live.
Our goodness is to surpass that of the Pharisees. This is life beyond legalistic righteousness. So, Jesus hasn’t come to tell us to live righteously, he has come to make us into the sort of people who live righteous lives. His interest is in the heart, not outward appearance.
The challenge to us is this: does following the law come naturally? We become such a person only when we allow the power of God’s love to transform us daily into the kingdom people we have become.
By Ed Flint
Live the revolution: salt and light.
Jesus turns things upside down when it comes to who is invited into his kingdom - it’s everyone, really everyone. What’s more, the invitation to receive the blessing of his kingdom is not dependent on anything that we might deem a qualification or a disqualification. But Jesus doesn’t end his teaching there. And neither must we. Entrance into his kingdom is just the first step.
Jesus continues his Sermon on the Mount by painting a picture of what Kingdom people look like. Fundamentally, they are ontologically changed. Kingdom people are salt and light. They don’t try to be, or should be, or can be salt and light. They are. Such a radical change only happens when we allow God to resurrect us. And we can only be resurrected if we’re willing first to die to what we were.
Salt stops things decaying, makes things pleasurable, and helps things grow. Light is the presence of Jesus shining out of us and redeeming the world. The world needs us to be who we are - salt of the earth and light of the world.
By Ed Flint
Live the revolution: blessedness.
When it comes to "living the revolution" the question arises - for whom is the revolution good news? Who gets to join in - and who is excluded? So, from the outset of His revolutionary invitation, Jesus makes it clear - even those who have been discarded and set aside socio-culturally are able to join Him in turning the world right side up.
But, it will come at cost - they, once joined, can no longer define themselves by exclusion! Qualification is in Jesus' hands - not theirs. And so is the mission to which He sends us.
By Bill Dogterom
Live the revolution: introduction to the sermon on the mount.
Many of Jesus’ most familiar teachings come from the Sermon on the Mount, the aim here is not to treat it as a list of moral instructions, but to understand the new day Jesus was announcing. Set against a deeply divided and oppressed Israel, Jesus’ announcement that “the kingdom of heaven has come near” was not a threat of judgment, but a declaration that the long wait for God’s action was over. The Sermon re-centers the Law, not as a path to salvation, but as a vision of life under God’s reign—and Jesus’ rhetoric shows it was never meant to be achievable through human effort.
From the opening line of the Beatitudes onward, He makes clear that the kingdom is available to all who can admit they can’t do this on their own (spoiler - that’s all of us - that’s the whole point!) Rather than driving us to despair over our shortcomings, the Sermon on the Mount trains us to live within a reality Jesus opened up to every one of us, through God’s presence and the power of His Spirit.
By Hannah Flint
Books referenced:
The Divine Conspiracy: Rediscovering Our Hidden Life in God by Dallas Willard
The Narrow Path: How the Subversive Way of Jesus Satisfies Our Souls by Rich Villodas