The Beatitudes: The Portrait of Kingdom Citizens (Matthew 5:1–12)*
Jesus ascends the mountain and, like Moses before him, delivers words that will define a covenant people—but he speaks not as a mediator relaying another's law, he speaks with the authority of the Lawgiver himself. The crowds are present, but Matthew is careful to note that "his disciples came to him" (v. 1); this sermon is first and foremost catechesis for those who already belong to him, even as it invites the crowd to consider what such belonging costs and offers. The Beatitudes are not eight independent virtues to be pursued piecemeal, nor a ladder of achievement by which one climbs into divine favor. They form a single, cumulative portrait of the same person—the regenerate citizen of the kingdom—viewed from eight angles. The order is not accidental. It begins on the inside, with the soul's posture before God, and moves outward into relationships and finally into suffering. Read as gospel rather than law, the Beatitudes describe what grace produces in a life, ...