The Gospel according toMatthew 5Chapter V 5
· 48 verses · 6 minute read
About this chapter
Matthew 5 — The Beatitudes and the Sermon on the Mount
Matthew 5 opens the Sermon on the Mount—the most celebrated discourse in all of religious history. Jesus begins with nine "blessed" declarations (Greek makarios, meaning something closer to "full flourishing" than mere "happiness"). Each beatitude inverts the world's values: blessed are the poor in spirit, those who mourn, the meek, the merciful. This sermon is not a checklist of demands to earn God's favor; it is a portrait of the kind of person the Kingdom of God produces. The remainder of the chapter intensifies the Law of Moses: do not merely refrain from murder—refuse to harbor hatred. Do not merely avoid adultery—guard your eyes from lustful desire. Jesus calls his followers salt (halas) and light (phos) of the world—not refuges from the world, but agents of transformation. The climax arrives in verse 48: "Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect." The word teleios means "complete, mature, having reached its purpose"—not an impossible moral perfection, but relational wholeness with God. This chapter stands as the greatest program of human transformation ever written.
Early in Jesus's public ministry (c. AD 28), on a mountain overlooking the Sea of Galilee. Matthew writes for Jewish readers, presenting Jesus as a new Moses delivering the new Torah from a mountain.
Read this when you need to recalibrate what it truly means to follow Christ—or when worldly success threatens to seduce your soul.
Key verses in Matthew 5
Explore each verse of Matthew 5
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