Shed A Tear
Matthew 5:3-16
sermon by
Paul George Retired Pastor
Church of the Nazarene
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Those who are blessed are those who mourn. Mourning is hateful and irksome
to the human nature. Jesus said the happy people in this world are those who
mourn. If they mourn, how can they be blessed? Only the child of God has the
key to this paradox, for "happy are they who sorrow" is at complete variance
with the world’s logic. Men have, in all places and in all ages, deemed the
prosperous to be the happy ones, but Christ pronounces blessed those who are
poor in spirit and who mourn.
It is obvious that it is not every form of mourning Jesus is referring to.
There are thousands of mourners in the world who do not come within the
scope of this verse. There is a natural, a sinful mourning which is a
disconsolate and inordinate grief, refusing to be comforted, or a hopeless
remorse like that of Judas when he betrayed Jesus. There is a "godly
sorrow," of which the Holy Spirit is the Author.
The "mourning" Jesus is referring to is a spiritual one. The previous verse
indicates clearly the line of thought here: "Blessed are the poor in spirit,
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." "Blessed are the poor," not the
financially poor, but the poor in heart: those who realize they are
spiritual bankrupt the opposite of the Laodicean which says, "I am rich, and
increased with goods, and have need of nothing." In like manner it is
spiritual mourning Jesus is referring to. Further proof of this is found in
the fact that Jesus pronounces these mourners "blessed." They are blessed
because the Spirit of God has wrought a work of grace within them, and they
have been awakened to see and feel their lost condition. They are "blessed"
because God does not leave them at that point, "they shall be comforted."
Mourning Jesus refers to is the initial mourning which precedes a genuine
conversion. There must be a real sense of sin and a godly sorrow before the
remedy for it will even be desired. Thousands acknowledge that they are
sinners, who have never mourned over the fact. The prodigal in Luke 15
before he left the far country said, "I will arise and go unto my Father and
say unto Him, Father, I have sinned against heaven, and before you, and am
no more worthy to be called your son." The publican of Luke 18 "smite upon
his breast" and said "God be merciful to me a sinner"? The prodigal and
publican felt a sense of sin in their heart.
The mourning Jesus is referring to springs from a sense of sin, from a
tender conscience, from a broken heart. It is a godly sorrow over rebellion
against God and hostility to His will. In some cases it is grief over the
worldly things the heart has trusted, over the self-righteousness which has
caused complacency. It comes from an agonizing realization that it was our
sins that nailed Jesus to the cross. It is these tears and groans which
prepare the heart to truly welcome and receive the Savior. It is mourning
over the felt destitution of our spiritual state, and over the iniquities
that have separated us and God. Such mourning always goes side by side with
poverty of spirit.
But this "mourning" is by no means to be confined to the initial experience
of conviction it is
a present and continuous
experience. The Christian has much to mourn over, the sins which he commits
both of omission and commission that should be a sense of daily grief to
him, or should be, and will be if his conscience is kept tender. The surging
of unbelief, the swellings of pride, the coldness of his love, and his
failure to produce good fruit should make him cry "O wretched man that I
am."
"Blessed are they that mourn" refers to the convicted soul sorrowing over
sins. Jesus does not say they are blessed because they mourn. They are
blessed because they will be comforted. True comfort is not to be found in
self, but in Jesus. When the Holy Spirit produces in the heart a godly
sorrow for sin, He does not leave us there, but brings us to look away from
sin to the Lamb of God, and then we are comforted.
This gracious promise of comfort is fulfilled first in the removal of the
burden of guilt that is an intolerable burden on the conscience. This
comfort is the peace of God which passes all understanding, filling the
heart with the assurance we are "accepted in the Beloved."
It is a continual comforting by the Holy Spirit, the Comforter. The one who
sorrows over his departures from Jesus is comforted by the assurance that
"if we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and
to cleanse us from all unrighteousness" (1 John 1:9). The one who mourns
under the chastening rod of God is comforted by the promise, "afterward it
yields the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them which are exercised
thereby" (Hebrews 12:11). The one who grieves over the dishonor done to his
Lord is comforted by the fact that Satan’s time is short, and soon will
bruise him beneath His feet.
Third, the final comfort is when we leave this world and are done with sin
for ever. Then shall "sorrow and sighing flee away." To the rich man in
hell, Abraham said of the one who had begged at his gate, "now he is
comforted (Luke 16:25). The good news is the comfort of heaven will more
than compensate for all the mourning of earth.
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