Carbon
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Beatitudes - From a Reformed perspective, the Beatitudes (Matthew 5:3–12) are not a checklist of requirements to earn salvation, but rather indicative declarations describing the character of those who already belong to the kingdom of God. They define the "blessedness" of believers—a secure, spiritual joy bestowed by grace—marking them as citizens of Heaven.
- Indicative, Not Imperative: The Beatitudes describe what kingdom citizens are (e.g., "poor in spirit"), rather than acting as a list of commands on how to become blessed.
- A Portrait of Grace: They define a person who has received saving grace and, as a result, exhibits specific spiritual characteristics—such as humility, hunger for righteousness, and mercy—which contrast sharply with worldly values.
- The Inversion of Values: Jesus declares as "blessed" those whom the world often considers miserable—the poor in spirit, the mourning, and the persecuted—because their focus is on Christ and his righteousness.
- Kingdom Life: They are the "ethos" or the "manifesto" of the kingdom of heaven, detailing how citizens of that kingdom live and think, often acting as a "mirror" of Christ’s own character.
- Future Promise: The rewards promised (inheriting the earth, seeing God) are both current realities and future, final inheritances in the consummated kingdom.
