Pure, 9 February 2025

Blessed are the Pure in Heart
Kirk Schneemann
College First Church of God
Blessed: The Beatitudes
February 9, 2025
Matthew 5:8
 
Series Big Idea: The greatest sermon in history is radical, revolutionary, and relevant.
 
Big Idea: God is on your side when you’re pure in heart, when you stop playing games and come clean with the real you.
  
When I was a little boy, one of my favorite things to do at my Grandma Schneemann’s house was take a bath. I know, some kids like to get dirty. It’s not that I didn’t like to get dirty, but grandma always played this little game where she’d put a wet washrag on my back and I had to reach back and try to get it off.
 
I can vaguely remember the sights and sounds of those interactions, but I’ve been told the most triggering sense is smell. To this day, whenever I smell
Ivory soap, I’m transported back twenty—thirty—ok, more than fifty years ago to time with my grandma.
 
It seems like everyone in my generation had a grandma that used Ivory soap. Oddly enough, I never remember it in my house growing up, but it was grandma’s soap. Developed in 1879 by Harley Proctor (who started a little business with his friend Mr. Gamble!) it still floats and boasts that it is 99.44%
pure.
 
What does it mean to be pure? As we continue our series on the Beatitudes or blessings announced by Jesus in Matthew chapter five, we read these words,
 
Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God. (Matthew 5:8)
 
 
I love God! I really love God. There’s one significant challenge to a relationship with God: we cannot experience Him with our senses.
 
You can’t
smell God, though I love to smell the beautiful flowers He has created.
You can’t
touch God, though you can touch a human created in His image.
You can’t
taste God, even though the scriptures metaphorically say, “Taste and see that the LORD is good.” (Psalm 34:8)
You can’t
hear God, though He speaks through the Bible and, occasionally, in other ways.
You can’t
see God, though according to this verse those who are pure in heart will see God.
 
Would you like to see God? People saw God the Son, Jesus Christ, for thirty-three years. The glory of the Father, however, is more than our eyes could behold.
 
There’s a great story in the Old Testament book of Exodus where God is pleased with Moses.
 
Exodus 33:18           Then Moses said, “Now show me your glory.”
 
Exodus 33:19           And the LORD said, “I will cause all my goodness to pass in front of you, and I will proclaim my name, the LORD, in your presence. I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion. 20 But,” he said, “you cannot see my face, for no one may see me and live.”
 
Exodus 33:21           Then the LORD said, “There is a place near me where you may stand on a rock. 22 When my glory passes by, I will put you in a cleft in the rock and cover you with my hand until I have passed by. 23 Then I will remove my hand and you will see my back; but my face must not be seen.”
 
We cannot see God’s face in these bodies, with these eyes. I’ve often thought it would be like staring at the sun. You can physically do it, but it will have terrible consequences.
 
Someday, we will have new, resurrected bodies that will be able to experience God in new ways. That’s part of our hope for the next life, a deeper, more sensory encounter with our Creator.
 
Job, in the midst of his terrible suffering in what many consider to be the oldest book in the Bible, said,
 
Job 19:25         I know that my redeemer  lives,
                   and that in the end he will stand on the earth.
26      And after my skin has been destroyed,
                   yet in my flesh I will see God;
27      I myself will see him
                   with my own eyes—I, and not another.
                   How my heart yearns within me!
 
He wants to see God. He yearns for deeper intimacy with the Almighty. Do you? If you do, pay attention to this announcement from Jesus, this declaration of reality:
 
Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God. (Matthew 5:8)
 
Let’s go back to
pure. One dictionary defines purity as, “not mixed or adulterated with any other substance or material.” The Greek word used here, katharos, means clean or clear or pure.
 
Not long ago we started hearing about
“clean eating.” The idea behind it is avoiding artificial ingredients and processed foods, instead eating real foods, things you can pronounce! If you’ve ever looked at the ingredients in convenience store snacks, it sounds more like a science experiment than body fuel! I must confess after exposure to clean eating, I occasionally want to nibble on some “dirty” food!
 
I think that leads to Jesus’ point here. It’s not always easy or natural to be clean and pure. Temptation comes our way each day, seemingly each moment. We are not perfect. We’ve all sinned and fall short of God’s glory (Romans 3:23), His standard of perfection found only in Jesus. As we’ve noted previously, this left us hopeless until Jesus came, lived a perfect life, died for us offering forgiveness, and rose from the dead, conquering sin and death.
 
We cannot be pure on our own efforts. I’m not perfect. I’m not pure. But because of Jesus, we can be clean. Natalie Grant sings in her recent song, “Clean,”
 
There's nothing too dirty That You can't make worthy You wash me in mercy I am clean Washed in the blood of Your sacrifice Your blood flowed red and made me white My dirty rags are purified I am clean
 
Being clean is good. The people around us generally prefer us to be clean! We know the importance of clean hands, especially during flu season. We wash our cars, brush our teeth, and even bathe our pets because we want them clean.
 
But sometimes things—or people—appear to be clean, but they’re not pure. They’re not the same inside as outside. They have a divided heart. A divided heart can never be pure.
 
Jesus was a friend of sinners, yet he was an enemy to many of the religious. This is a very sobering reality for me as a pastor! Once when Jesus was talking to a group of pious Pharisees, he said,
 
“Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You clean the outside of the cup and dish, but inside they are full of greed and self-indulgence. 26 Blind Pharisee! First clean the inside of the cup and dish, and then the outside also will be clean. (Matthew 23:25-26)
 
Have you ever opened a cupboard and grabbed a mug or bowl…only to find leftover food inside? It might look great on the outside, but you put it in the sink and find a clean vessel.
 
Religion is concerned about externals, making a good impression, putting on a show, looking the part. Jesus constantly spoke of the heart. It was the center of his teaching. He never said, “Blessed are the intellectuals.” He didn’t say, “Blessed are the achievers.” His declaration was not, “Blessed are the impressive or those who look good on the surface.” He said, “Blessed are the pure in heart.”
 
Dr. Michael Wilkin notes,
 
Purity or cleanliness was an important religious theme in Jesus’ day. Observing all the Old Testament laws of being clean could bypass the most important purity of all, purity of the heart. Jesus declares here that a pure heart is what produces external purity, not vice versa.”
 
The Message translates our verse,
 
“You’re blessed when you get your inside world—your mind and heart—put right. Then you can see God in the outside world. (Matthew 5:8, The Message)
 
The pure in heart have an undivided heart. They are the same on the inside and outside. They don’t pretend on Sunday morning and live a lie the rest of the week. They are real, through and through.
 
So What?
 
Like Ivory soap, none of us is 100% pure. Someone once said pure motives is an oxymoron, a contradiction of terms. I want to be standing here today to be 100% for the glory of God, but if I’m honest, there’s at least 1% of my motivation at this moment is because I want you to like me, to feed my ego, to say kind things about me and my preaching. But I
want to be pure in heart. I want to know and see God. C.S. Lewis said,
 
"It's safe to tell the pure in heart that they shall see God, for only the pure in heart want to" - C.S. Lewis
 
God is on your side when you’re pure in heart, when you stop playing games and come clean with the real you.
 
Jesus announces that
God is on your side when you’re pure in heart, when you stop playing games and come clean with the real you. We need to return to childlike wonder, admit the reality of our brokenness, and reach out to Jesus for healing, for wholeness, for shalom, for forgiveness, for cleansing. The psalmist wrote,
 
Create in me a pure heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me. (Psalm 51:10)
 
Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God. (Matthew 5:8)