For years, I read Jesus’s longest sermon — the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew 5-7 — as a challenging call to personal holiness:
Trust God. Love enemies. Flee anxiety. Honor parents. Resist lust. Give generously. Battle self-righteousness. Speak no lies. Pray regularly. Produce good deeds.
On one level, there’s nothing wrong with this. The world would be a better place if more individuals abided by Jesus’s words.
But several years ago, I came to the realization that Jesus (or Matthew) didn’t intend for us to read his sermon through such a self-focused lens. It first dawned on me when I learned of the tradition of Christian communities memorizing the sermon — from the early church to the Puritans on the Mayflower. The latter saw the sermon as the informal constitution of their community.
In other words, it wasn’t a sermon for me, telling me how I should live. It was a sermon for us, telling us how our communities should be organized.
The real breakthrough came when I read scholars who noted the comparisons between the Sermon on the Mount and the events that took place at Mount Sinai after the Exodus (Exodus 19-23):
Going even further, if we compare the sermon to other key covenantal texts from the Old Testament (such as Leviticus 18-19 and Deuteronomy 5-32), the comparisons are both staggering and suggestive.
Jesus wasn’t teaching private morality (as good as that may be). He was expounding a new constitution for the people of God.
Today, governments write constitutions. A constitution is a written charter or contract that provides laws and principles to govern a nation.
The ancient world used covenants in a similar way. However, these covenants were not between the government and the governed; they were most frequently between greater kings (called Suzerains) and lesser kings (called Vassals).
In these “Suzerain–Vassal” covenants, the greater king would promise the lesser king security and protection in exchange for love, obedience, and financial tribute. In the covenant, the Suzerain swore allegiance before the gods and listed out the blessings that came with keeping the covenant, as well as the curses that came with breaking it. A copy of the document was then stored in a special place as a memorial (and form of accountability) of the covenant.
Following the Exodus, God models his relationship with Israel on the Suzerain–Vassal treaty. However, there are important differences, which have come to have massive implications for human history.
When constitution-writing became cool in post-Enlightenment Europe and North America, constitution writers relied heavily on the principles established in Exodus, Leviticus, and Deuteronomy.
But those weren’t the only sources these writers used. They also drew from the constitution of the New Testament: the Sermon on the Mount.
Jesus’s sermon lacks some key aspects one would expect to see in a constitution: namely, laws and principles of governance.
Why didn’t he include these pieces?
Yet, the Sermon on the Mount does include aspects of the covenant established at Sinai. As in Exodus, Jesus’s words are a communal call for God’s people to form a just, moral, neighborly, generous, honorable, worshipful, honest, caring, self-sacrificial, and fair society within the societies of the world.
His constitution is less about setting up a new state and more about setting up a counterculture of love and self-sacrifice.
All of this reveals that Jesus is remarkably political, though not in the way most people understand the term. He is not partisan. He is not power hungry. He is not authoritarian.
Instead, he honors the individual rights of people. He calls his followers to persuade others. And, if they consent to be governed by Jesus, to form communities where they are.
This is how Christians change the world. We speak out with the prophet’s voice against injustice.
We teach with the priest's voice of kindness and persuasion. We obey our king, Jesus, when we live winsome lives of love together. We don’t look to FOX or CNN or whoever to guide our views on current events and ethics. Instead, we submit to Jesus, look at the patterns of communal life he set out, and walk in accordance with him.
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