Matthew 5:13-20 The Bucket List (Sellery) – Bible study

Sermon Matthew 5:13-20 The Bucket List

By The Rev. David Sellery

Dear Friends,

A few years back Hollywood discovered a sure-fire formula for a big box-office payoff: Caste a couple of aging mega-stars as seniors who put together a do-before-you-die list of outrageous escapades. Then have them carry-on like out-of-control adolescents while they drain the bottomless well of old-age jokes. The premise is valid if you view this life as all there is. In that light, I suppose, it makes perfect sense to put together your own bucket-list and live it up while you can. Get it all in. Get it all done next stop, oblivion. But God doesnt see it that way.

Hes got his own list for us. We are here for a purpose his purpose. And that purpose is certainly not to check-off a list of comic high-jinx before we kick the bucket. We know that this life is not all there is. We are not a random collection of egos on the make. We are Gods beloved here to return his love in this world and be happy with him in the next. We are only visitors here, just briefly passing through, following Jesus on our way home to the Father.

In last weeks gospel we began our study of the Sermon on the Mount with the Beatitudes. This week we continue with a revelation of why we are here. What is our purpose? What is Gods to-do list for us? Jesus tells us:“You are the light of the world” (v. 14).That certainly is a glorious way to express Gods favor.But it comes with an enormous obligation. We must:“let (our) light shine before men; that they may see (our) good works, and glorify (our) Father who is in heaven” (v. 16). That is the reason why we are here to love God and through us to extend his love to others. Thats a very short to-do list, but it will take a lifetime to fulfill.

Gods to-do list is not a list of suggestions. It is the will of God. Jesus tells us:“You are the salt of the earth, but if the salt has lost its flavor…, it is then good for nothing, but to be cast out and trodden under the feet of men” (v. 13).We receive the gift of grace for a reason. Christ is calling us to discipleship. His grace is ours to be shared. The purpose of our discipleship is to create more disciples leading family, friends, neighbors, colleagues closer to Gods love.

We horde or waste his grace at our peril. Our loving God is a just God. He is not to be trifled with. His priorities must be our priorities. His will is not something we can get around to when we find the time.Thy will be done:is a constant refrain of our prayer. It must be the constant focus of our lives.

The Sermon on the Mount is so powerfully succinct and comprehensive that one can be tempted to look on its well-plowed precincts as the be-all and end-all of the new covenant and benignly ignore all that has come before. But Jesus is quick to warn us off such a lazy approach to our faith. Christianity is not a rejection of Judaism. Jesus tells us:“I didn’t come to destroy, but to fulfill” (v. 17). So add another item to Gods to-do list for us: We must know God, if we are to love God. And the more we know, the more we love. That is why we devote our lives to the study of scripture both Old and New Testament. It is our window into the wonder of God. It is the pillar of our faith.

The reason Christians dont have a bucket-list is because we dont kick the bucket. Rather, we have a to-do list of Gods purposes and Gods gifts. We never check them off. We just keep sharing them all the way home.
SCRIPTURE QUOTATIONS are from the World English Bible, a very good translation in the public domain.

Copyright 2014 David Sellery. Used by permission.