Preached at Silverton Friends Church
July 24, 2025
Where I was a child in Africa, there was an imbalance in power between tribes. The ruling tribe were about 20 percent of the total population. When democracy came after the colonial power left, the parliament was populated in proportion to the population, 20% traditional rulers, 80% from the remaining tribes. The historical rulers found this unacceptable and jailed or killed those elected from the 80%. My family was in the country at this time in the mid-1960s (I was 8 or 9 years old). This was followed later by a military coup which cemented in place that power for the 20%. In 1972, refugees from the earlier brutality reentered the country bent on revenge. Armed with machetes and perhaps some rifles, they targeted and killed members of the president’s family and people of his tribe, estimates between 800 and 1,200 dead. The government responded with vigor and automatic weapons and helicopters. The army arrested many innocent middle-class folks from the 80% with above 8th grade education; they imprisoned some, often with torture, and executed others. Between 200,000 and 300,000 dead, an estimated 300,000 refugees, and a country thrown back many decades in its development. If you want more specifics, the Wikipedia article on Burundi can provide them.
This cycle of oppression, vengeance, and reprisals has been repeated across human history, and we can see it today. No wonder the law of an eye for an eye, one life for one life, was and is a step forward for humanity.
I was affected by both of these events. In the first one, I saw bodies along the roadside and knew my parents’ fear. In the second, I heard machine gun fire in the nights before I left for my boarding school in Kenya, and I lost personal acquaintances and friends.
There was a singular sense of helplessness among the missionaries. They had no weapons to resist with, and they could not communicate with each other, given the lack of telephones and the confiscation of shortwave radios. Some were deported. I asked several of them, retired to the same retirement community, to share their experiences. One spoke of visiting people in prison who had been tortured. Another still mourned his deportation. All had been scarred, and they did not have the language to communicate the depth of that scarring.
You can see why I’m jumpy today about current events. I think about various possible scenarios and what I can or should do. Maybe you folks do, too. So today, we will look at two of the Beatitudes, bearing in mind that Jesus spoke to an occupied people, ruled by the Roman emperor and his governors, and locally oppressed by the military. Any rebelliousness was mercilessly put down and the rebels crucified. Therefore, I believe these Beatitudes can help us negotiate our way through our realities.
Matthew 5:6-7
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.
Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.
As is usual with Jesus, he borrows from the Jewish scripture to make these points, and what he borrows can help us apply them.
The word righteousness in Hebrew includes justice and truthfulness, and its root includes making or being straight, making or being innocent. It is opposed to wickedness, the root of which includes making a commotion or stirring things up, causing fear or terror. Both are words that look at actions as well as the composition of the inner person, right doing vs wrong doing, right being vs wrong being.
The book of Job and the Psalms are full of descriptions of righteousness. Job 29:12-17 details Job’s intervention on behalf of the poor and powerless, Job 31 details his rejection of lust and greed and power grabbing, his generosity and advocacy for the powerless, his fairness to employees and to his enemies, his honesty and sincerity. His actions in secret line up with his public self. We can add to this David’s words that God the Shepherd leads him into paths of righteousness. St. Paul says that Abraham’s confidence in the character and word of God to him counted for righteousness, meaning it made him just the person God meant him to be.
The word in Greek from the New Testament likewise includes the idea of doing what is just and right, and also of being what one is meant by God to be.
These are things we can aspire to. Following the lead of the Good Shepherd, choosing to trust God with our present and future, doing what is straight and honest and fair and just, caring for those with less than we have, feeding the hungry. We are a part of the promise in Luke 6:21, where Jesus says, “Blessed are you who hunger now, for you shall be filled.”
I will add that hungering and thirsting for righteousness means to me not only growing personally in doing and being right, but also my longing to see righteousness more operational in my society and my world. There are things I can do in my day to move myself and my world in that direction, and of course, I can and must pray for God to bring about a more righteous world.
The following Beatitude sits alongside hunger for righteousness: Blessed are the merciful.
I’m sure it is obvious that Jesus knew some would implement their hunger for righteousness in ways that were oppressive, violent, and cruel. We can see this throughout the history of the religions of the Book—Judaism, Christianity, Islam. Crusades, holy wars, Inquisitions, forced conversions, martyrdoms, holocausts, and so on. No wonder Jesus followed it up with mercy.
Jesus’s testament is also full of references to mercy. There are many references to the merciful character of God throughout, and many prayers for mercy for both individuals and for nations (sometimes in the same prayer as the request for judgment or vengeance on enemies). Psalm 107:1 celebrates God’s mercy which endures forever, a phrase which recurs throughout the Psalms. Mercy is a part of God’s goodness. Psalm 103 is a beautiful praise song to God for how God cares for us and pities us; God knows our frame, and remembers that we are dust. In Luke 6:36, Jesus says, “Be merciful just as your Father also is merciful,” and he surrounds those words with these, “Do unto others as you want them to do unto you,” don’t judge, don’t condemn, forgive, give.
Inhabiting the concept of mercy in the Hebrew are the ideas of sparing someone, bearing with someone, commiserating with someone, showing compassion or sympathy, being kind to the miserable and afflicted, caring and helping. And the promise Jesus made echoes what David says in Psalm 18, “With the merciful you will show yourself merciful.”
In just a few words, I want to bring this into the realm of how we live together in society, in other words, politics.
I recently read Tzvetan Todorov’s book Facing the Extreme: Moral Life in the Concentration Camps (New York: Henry Holt and Co., 1996). Todorov grew up in a Bulgaria that was both communist and totalitarian, and later emigrated to the West. As for many Europeans, World War II casts a long shadow for him as he tries to understand how so many ordinary people did so much evil. He points out that consoling ourselves by maintaining that humans are fundamentally good can unwittingly abet the spread of evil. Indeed, if we are honest with ourselves, we will see that “‘the line separating good and evil passes not through states, nor between classes, nor between political parties either—but right through every human heart—and through all human hearts’” (136). [Todorov here quotes from Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, who grew up in Soviet Russia and wrote about the gulags.] This realism about humanity helps us see more clearly both the need to be righteous and the need to have mercy.
Todorov says that it is necessary to judge the guilty for their precise acts and responsibilities, and also that we must “recognize our similarities to them, we must not demonize them, we must not generalize their guilt to all others of their group or nation” (229). This clear-sightedness and fairness are characteristics of righteousness.
Todorov looks at those responsible for concentration camps, particularly those who worked in them. He notes that the proportion of the guards who were fanatics and sadists was similar to the general populace, and that the majority of guards were conformists, “willing to serve whoever wielded power and more concerned with [their] own welfare than with the triumph of doctrine [in this case, Nazism]” (123-24). He says that what made the evil of concentration camps so dangerous was that it was easy for ordinary persons to ignore or tolerate (125). When I visited Dachau in Munich, I was shocked to see it embedded in a residential neighborhood, and to discover that the neighbors simply chose to ignore what it was for.
Todorov sees that conformity can make evil easy to tolerate and even do. In contrast, those who give themselves to saving people in mortal danger, the rescuers, are often non-conformists, distinguishing for themselves between good and evil, living by their keen consciences, recognizing the common membership of all in the human community, devoted to defending not ideals but people of flesh and blood. They do not want to be considered heroic, and they refuse to emulate the enemy by mirroring their hatred. “The good person does not ignore evil, but he [or she] hates the system, not the individuals who serve it” (224-25).
People do evil because of ordinary vices: they separate conduct from conscience, they depersonalize other humans, and they enjoy exercising power over others, particularly the power of life and death. Depersonalization includes “reducing them to nakedness, filth, starvation, stripping them of their names, giving them numbers or euphemisms, killing in large numbers, refusing to meet their eyes” (164).
The opposite actions can be seen as acts of resistance: clothing them, washing them, feeding them, calling them by name, recognizing the individual, meeting their eyes. These actions personalize others. (Jesus also taught that these actions characterize the righteous.) Also, we resist evil when we repudiate lies and expose the truth. The ordinary virtues are dignity, which derives from internal consistency; caring; and working for understanding and beauty. These attitudes and actions resist evil.
This reminds me of Jesus, who knew what was in the hearts of humanity and therefore did not place his confidence in them, but who also was moved with compassion and indignation to speak truth and to heal. He embodied and embodies righteousness and mercy in human form, revealing his Father, described in Psalm 59, “Righteousness and justice are the foundation of your throne; mercy and truth go before your face.”
These two ideas—righteousness and mercy—are not opposites, even though in our human frailty we can fall off the path that takes in both. We can be fanatics in either direction. But righteous actions and merciful actions are often the same actions. Job’s description of his righteousness includes many actions we can see are merciful. Psalm 37:21 says, “The righteous shows mercy and gives.” Proverbs 21:21 says “[The person] who follows righteousness and mercy finds life, righteousness and honor.” And Jesus says,”Be like your Father, who sends rain on the just and the unjust.”
When we pray for God’s will to be done on earth as it is in heaven, we could hardly visualize it better than this from Psalm 85: “Mercy and truth have met together; Righteousness and peace have kissed.”
What we are talking about at the core is living out of our whole humanity, the integrity that keeps inner and outer selves in harmony, the vision that sees the human in each other person and the divine in all God’s works, and lives by that vision and by the inhabiting grace of God’s Holy Spirit.