Daniel Ploof

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Matthew 5:4 (Mourn)

“Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted” (Matthew 5:4).

The second installment of Beatitudes Jesus proclaimed in His Sermon on the Mount focuses on the process of mourning, and this is an easy verse to take out of context when we are faced with the issue of death.

Logically, when we read this verse, immediately our minds filter to the comfort God promises when we lose a loved one. As difficult as the circumstance may be, Christians tend to cling to this verse for healing when faced with the reality of living life apart from someone whose impact on their life is immense.

Make no mistake, there is nothing wrong with leaning upon Christ in times of mourning for strength and comfort, but what Jesus is addressing in Matthew 5:4 is a passionate mourning over the issue of sin and how that impacts a man’s heart.

Remember that the Beatitudes build upon one another, creating a staircase of character attributes that gauge the spiritual temperature of man. Each blessing is a building block that depends on that which precedes it. So in consequential form, it is safe to conclude that the process of mourning sin is integral to becoming poor in spirit.

Great sorrow leads to great joy, and without sorrow there is no joy. This is true in how we see ourselves in the light of the truth of God’s Word and it holds true in how we must mourn the sins of others. Look around you—there is no shortage of sinful thoughts and actions surrounding you every day.

Yet do you take time to mourn sin or have you become desensitized from it? Are your morals and values convoluted within the melting pot of political correctness and inclusivity? Do you mourn over and pray for God’s deliverance of salvation when you encounter people who blatantly live in contradiction to Biblical truth?

Sadly, it is common-place even in the church to cast judgment upon those living in sin, but do you sincerely pray for them? Do you share the Gospel of Christ’s healing by pointing out their faults or by evangelizing through the depravity of your own soul and life experiences?

True evangelism comes from a humble heart that is poor in spirit through mourning of sin. If you desire to address the issue of sin in this world, begin with your own heart and mind and allow the transforming power of the Holy Spirit change you from the inside out.

If we desire to be sanctified in the image of Christ, we must mourn over sin as He did. Scripture tells us He was a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief who wept over the city of Jerusalem (Luke 19:41-44) and shed tears of blood in the garden of Gethsemane as he willingly accepted his fate as sin-bearer of mankind (Luke 22:39-46). Therefore, this is the image of mourning we must adopt within our own lives as we live within a sinful world.

But let us not diminish the destructive nature of sin but mourn over it—both in the world we live in and within our own hearts and minds. Only then will we understand the joy God promises to those who are simultaneously willing to speak truth in love to others while taking their own medicine on a daily basis.

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