Deeper Look at the Sermon on the Mount, A repaired
The Sermon on the Mount is probably the
best-known part of the teaching of Jesus,
though arguably it is the least understood, and
certainly it is the least obeyed. It is the nearest
thing to a manifesto that he ever uttered, for it
is his own description of what he wanted his
followers to be and to do. To my mind no two
words sum up its intention better, or indicate
more clearly its challenge to the modern world,
than the expression “Christian counterculture.”
For the essential theme of the whole Bible
from beginning to end is that God’s historical
purpose is to call out a people for himself; that
this people is a “holy” people, set apart from
the world to belong to him and to obey him;
and that its vocation is to be true to its identity,
that is, to be “holy” or “different” in all its outlook and behavior