Confessing the Beatitudes

sculpture from Dublin memorialFed or Stuffed? The Rebuke in Luke
Both in Luke and in Matthew, Jesus makes the same promise to those who are famished, either for food or for justice: “They shall be chortazo (kor-TAH-zoh)”, fed. This verb, which means “to feed,” derives from a word that means “pasture” or “grass.” In much of the Bible, the word is used exclusively for the pasturing of animals.[1] One way to translate this is “they shall be filled” or “they shall be satisfied.” Jesus’ use of chortazo, both in Matthew and Luke, hearkens to the promise that God will shepherd God’s people, leading them, as the beloved Psalm 23 says, to green pastures beside still waters. Those who are famished, or famished and parched for justice, will receive a response from a loving, life-giving God who provides for their needs as a shepherd provides pasture for flocks of sheep. By promising that those who are famished will be fed, Jesus renews the promise of provision given long ago to God’s people (Gen. 1:29–30).

When we turn to Luke 6:25a, Jesus seems to be contradicting himself. “Shame on you who are filled now,” he says. Here, the English translations are not our friends. Reading them at face value, we might think that Jesus is simply reversing roles. Those who are empty will be full, and those who are full will be empty. However, when we take a closer look, we realize that Jesus intentionally uses two different words for “full.”

In the rebuke, Jesus uses the word empimplemi (em-PIMP-lay-mee), a word that might be translated “sated” or “stuffed.”[2] In other words, while Jesus uses a verb about pasturing flocks for the promise, in his rebuke he uses a verb that means “stuffing oneself.” Jesus heaps shame on those who fill their bellies full while others around them are famished. If one is eating that much, surely one has enough to share with the famished. Jesus’ distinction between the one being fed by a just God and the one whose belly is stuffed in the face of hunger is the same distinction that he has made throughout these four beatitudes—a distinction between the affluent and the destitute.

Discussion Question
Do you hear the rebuke in Luke 6:25a differently now that you know that Jesus uses two different Greek words for the word “filled”? How would you describe the difference?

 

Dublin memorialPoetry and Parallels
Many of you, by now, might suspect that the Beatitudes, both in Matthew and in Luke, are poems. As contemporary readers of English poets, we have certain expectations of poems, whether the poets are Emily Dickinson or Queen Latifah. The people of Jesus’ day would have had expectations of poems, also; they would have expected poems to contain lines that paralleled each other. Parallel lines of poetry help the poet reinforce his point by repeating it, by explaining it in more detail, or by showing its opposite.

So how does Jesus, the poet, use parallelism? First, Jesus uses parallelism to explain each of his teachings in more detail. He begins by explaining who is honored, and, in the second half of each beatitude, goes on to explain why they are honored. So, the destitute and destitute in spirit are not honored for their destitution, but because God’s reign is made of them. The mourners and weepers are not honored for their grief, but because God will comfort them. The humbled ones are not honored for their humility, but because they are the true heirs of earth. Those who are famished for food and justice are honored not for their want, but because God will pasture them. In each of these teachings, Jesus makes it clear that these groups are not honored for what they are facing, but because God will intervene on their behalf.

But Jesus also uses parallelism to repeat himself, for the destitute and destitute in spirit are also the mourners and the weepers. The promise that God’s reign is made of them signals the apocalyptic promise that God will wipe every tear from their eyes (Rev. 7:17, 21:4). In the same way, the humbled ones also are those who are famished for food and justice; and it is from their inherited portion—the earth—that God will pasture them until they are fed. Further, all four of these honored groups, taken together, give us a picture of a single group of people: a group that often is forgotten by society. The promises given each one in Matthew, taken together, also reinforce a truth, a truth that will lead us into confession: although society may forget these sisters and brothers, they are central to the heart of God.

Discussion Questions
What new insights do you have about the first four beatitudes after learning about parallelism? What might be true about the next four beatitudes?

Read the Accra Confession, sections 28–33. How do our Reformed sisters and brothers seek to honor the famished and parched for food and justice?

 

Dublin memorialProcessus Confessionis:
Recognizing, Learning, and Confessing What Is True

As we turn to confession once more, we face the good news that God cares for those whom the world forgets: those who are hungry and thirsty, and those who are famished and parched for justice. God promises not only to recognize these sisters and brothers, but also to provide for them as a shepherd provides for sheep and, as the psalmist promises, lead them to green pastures beside still waters. Our Savior Christ instructs us, as his disciples, to honor these famished sisters and brothers, knowing they are the special concern of God.

Yet, even as we acknowledge the providence of God, Jesus’ rebuke of the stuffed can shine a bright and unpleasant light on our context. We live in a nation where everyone is constantly on a diet. We take pills and read books on how to eat less food and how to live more simply. Even our pets, our dogs and cats, have more choices for food than they can possibly eat. Yet, the poor live among us—those who do not get enough to eat, or who suffer malnutrition. In fact, in our rich nation, some among us regularly go to bed truly famished.

In the global south, realities are even starker. Claudio Carvalhaes, at the 2009 Big Tent event of the PC(USA), pointed this out in his sermon. “We make up,” he said, “four percent of the world’s population and eat up forty-nine percent of its resources.” As Presbyterians, we acknowledge this as true. During the 2008 General Assembly, our commissioners studied the global food crisis in which we live. They learned that, while we in the United States struggle with expanding waistlines, three billion of the planet’s people live on less than $2 U.S. per day![3] They learned that the causes of the global food crisis include costly fuel, scarcity of water, lack of land, and climate change. They invited us, who are followers of Christ, to “meaningful coordinated actions” on behalf of those who are famished for food and who are famished and parched for justice.[4]

In the face of this fourth beatitude, I confess with gratitude that the God of our ancestors truly is a shepherd who promises that those who are famished for food and for justice ultimately will be fed, just as a shepherd feeds her sheep. Jesus Christ, who came among us as the Good Shepherd, calls all of his disciples to honor their famished sisters and brothers, knowing they are the particular concern of God. Yet, even as I celebrate the goodness of God, I am faced with the truth that I often have far more to eat than I need. Even as I celebrate the justice of God, making relationships right, I confess that I often ignore cries for justice as beyond my concern or beyond my ability to help. Yet, I trust that the God who leads the famished to be fed also will lead me in paths of justice. Following the lead of the Christ who calls me, I will seek to honor—with my prayers and my gifts, my voice and my actions—these famished sisters and brothers of mine.

Sisters, beloved of God, what is your confession?

Discussion Questions
Individually or as a group, write your confession, confessing the truth about God, your community, and those who are famished for food and justice. Include in your confession implications for your discipleship.

Given the fourth part of your confession, what small steps will you take as a community of faith to honor those who are famished among you?

Prayer
God of the harvest, many are hungry. Many more thirst for justice. Awaken us to how we contribute to the hunger and thirst of our neighbors. Teach us to feed your people with food and justice, even as you fed your people with manna, that all may be satisfied. Amen.

Follow Margaret Aymer’s blog: Blogging the Beatitudes!
Read Margaret’s article, “On Minas, Occupations, and Tony Perkins”

______________________

Notes
1. Topel, 99–100 (see Lesson Two, note 4, p. 21).

2. Ibid., 120.

3. See “Global Food Crisis,” a resource developed by the office of the Presbyterian Hunger Program for the 218th General Assembly (2008) of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). It is available alongside other Confessing the Beatitudes materials at http://horizons. pcusa.org/bible.htm. Visit http://gamc.pcusa.org/ministries/hunger for more on the Hunger Program.

4. Bruce Reyes-Chow, moderator of the 218th General Assembly (2008) of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), to the assembly.

 

Margaret Aymer
 
 
 
Margaret Aymer is associate professor of New Testament and chair of Biblical Studies at the Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta, Georgia. She is an ordained minister of Word and Sacrament in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), serving within the Presbytery of Greater Atlanta. Margaret is the author of First Pure, Then Peaceable: Frederick Douglas, Darkness and the Epistle of James (New York: T&T, 2007), as well as various academic and liturgical articles and resources. She serves as the chair of the board of AIDS Alliance for Faith and Health, an Atlanta-based nonprofit helping those infected with and affected by HIV to thrive. Margaret is married to Laurent M. R. G. Oget of France, a software engineer.
 
 
 

Back to Table of Contents

photo of book "rethinking columbus"
Previous Story

Arizona Schools "Confiscate" Mexican American Books, Art

photo of civil rights leaders, including Dr. King, meeting with Lyndon Johnson
Next Story

Why I Am Still a Christian