
THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT
A Commentary by John Stott.
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Matthew
7:12 |
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The logic of the `so' or `therefore' (“oun”) with which this verse begins is not plain. It may look back to the previous verse and imply that if God is good to all who seek him in prayer, his children must be good to all likewise. Or it may refer further back to the “judge not” command, and take up the underlying argument against censoriousness and hypocrisy. In any case it seems that Jesus uttered this principle at different times and in different contexts, for in Luke's version of the Sermon it comes immediately after the three little cameos which illustrate the command to love our enemies. (Lk.6:31.). Certainly such love is beyond us apart from the grace of God. It is, in fact, his own love and is one of the `good things' he gives us through his Holy Spirit in answer to our prayers. (verse 11 - Lk. 11:13). Much has been made by
various commentators of the fact that the Golden Rule is found in a
similar - but always negative - form elsewhere. Confucius,
for example, is credited with having said, `Do not to others what you
would not wish done to yourself;' and the Stoics had an almost identical
maxim. In the Old Testament Apocrypha we find: `Do not do to anyone what
you yourself would hate,' (Tobit 4:15, NEB), and this it seems is what
the famous Rabbi Hillel quoted in c.20 BC when asked by a would-be
proselyte to teach him the whole law while standing on one leg. His
rival Rabbi Shammai had been unable or unwilling to answer, and had
driven the enquirer away, but Rabbi Hillel said: ` What is hateful to
you, do not do to anyone else. This is the whole law; all the rest is only commentary.' Because this is the best-known example of the supposed parallelism between the Jewish Talmud and the Sermon on the Mount, a further comment may be in place. Some have gone so far as to claim that “everything” in the Sermon is also in the Talmud, plus a great deal more. Professor Jeremias reacts in this way: `That is exactly the case: that in the Talmud "a great deal more" is to be found, and that one must seek the grain among a great deal of chaff, the scanty golden grain that may be compared with the words of the Sermon on the Mount.' Alfred Edersheim, writing towards the end of last century, was even more outspoken. He agrees that there is `wit and logic, quickness and readiness earnestness and zeal' in the Talmud, but that at the same time there is a real `contrariety in spirit and substance' between it and the New Testament. Indeed, `taken as a whole, it is not only utterly unspiritual, but anti-spiritual'. Returning to the
Golden Rule, there is really an enormous difference between the negative
and rather grudging maxim of Hillel (`Do not do to others what is
hateful to you') and the positive initiative contained in the
instruction of Jesus ( `Do to others what you wish they should do to
you'). Even then it may
sound a rather low standard, like `Love your neighbour as yourself'.
Actually, however, it is a high standard because self-love is a powerful
force in our lives. Edersheim called such neighbour-love `the nearest
approach to absolute love of which human nature is capable'. Also
it is a remarkably flexible ethical principle. Self-advantage
often guides us in our own affairs; now we must also let it guide us in
our behaviour to others. All
we have to do is to use our imagination, put ourselves in the other
person's shoes, and ask, `How would I like to be treated in that
situation?' As Bishop Ryle wrote, `It settles a hundred difficult points
... It prevents the necessity of laying down endless little rules for
our conduct in specific cases.' Indeed, it is a principle of such wide
application that Jesus could add, “for this is the law and the
prophets”. That is, whoever directs his conduct towards others
according to how he would like others to direct theirs towards him has
fulfilled the law and the prophets, at least in the matter of neighbour-love.
(cf.5:17; Rom.13:8-10). We noted at the
beginning of this chapter that the Christian counter-culture is not just
an individual value-system and life-style, but a community affair. It
involves relationships. And the Christian community is in essence a family, God's
family. Probably the two strongest elements in our Christian
consciousness are an awareness of God as our Father and of our
fellow-Christians as our brothers and sisters through Christ, although
at the same time we can never forget our responsibility to those outside
the family whom we long to see brought in. So in Matthew 7:1-12
Jesus has introduced us to these basic relationships. At their centre is
our heavenly Father God to
whom we come, on whom we depend and who never gives his children other
than good gifts. Next, there is our fellow believers. And
the anomaly of a censorious spirit (which judges) and of hypocritical
spirit (which sees the splinter in spite of the plank) is that it is
incompatible with Christian brotherliness. If our fellow Christians are
truly our brothers and sisters in the Lord, it is inconceivable that we
shall be anything other than caring and constructive in our attitude
towards them. As for those outside the family, there is the extreme case of the `dogs' and `pigs', but they are not typical. They are an exceptional group of stubborn people who are `dogged' and even `pigheaded', one might accurately say, in their decisive rejection of Jesus Christ. Reluctantly we have to drop them. But if verse 6 is the exception verse 12 is the rule, the Golden Rule. it transforms our actions. If we put ourselves sensitively into the place of the other person, and wish for him what we would wish for ourselves, we would be never mean, always generous; never harsh, always understanding; never cruel, always kind. -----------------------------------------------------------
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