Take time to read slowly and meditatively through Matthew 5:1-12 and/or Isaiah 61. Then read Dallas Willard’s thoughts on the beatitudes, quoted below from his book The Divine Conspiracy and then do the exercises below:
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Today, read Isaiah 61 and do the following exercises:
Now that we’ve read the Sermon on the Mount in its entirety, let’s go back and focus this week on the first part, the Beatitudes. Read Matthew 5:1-12 and do the following exercise:
Clarence Jordan was an American New Testament scholar who lived in the first half of the 20th century. Among other accomplishments, he wrote a series of translations of several NT books called “The Cotton Patch translations.” Being from the south, Jordan felt the words of the New Testament we’re especially applicable to the turmoil that was occurring there at that time (1940′s through 1960′s), and so, should be written and read in the vernacular of the south. And so, Jordan wrote several translations of NT books in the slang of the south, even substituting place names for familiar areas on the Southern United States. In the Cotton Patch version of Luke Jordan renders Luke’s version of the beatitudes in a mid-century southern accent: