Hint: Matthew 5:3-12 โ 'Blessed are the poor in spirit...'
What is the first line of the Lord's Prayer?
What is the Golden Rule, as Jesus stated it?
Hint: Matthew 7:12 โ it sums up the Law and the Prophets.
What did Jesus say His disciples are to the world?
Hint: Jesus used salt and light pictures in Matthew 5:13-16.
In the Sermon on the Mount, what did Jesus teach about anger?
Hint: Jesus taught that heart-sins matter, not only outward actions.
What did Jesus teach about prayer in secret?
Hint: Matthew 6 warns against praying just to be noticed.
What did Jesus warn about storing treasures on earth?
Hint: Jesus said to store up treasures in heaven instead.
What picture did Jesus use to teach trusting the Father for daily needs?
Hint: Matthew 6 points to birds of the air and lilies of the field.
What did Jesus teach about judging others?
Hint: Jesus used the picture of a speck and a log in Matthew 7.
What ending picture closes the Sermon on the Mount?
Hint: The wise builder hears Jesus's words and does them.
The Beatitudes bless people the world usually overlooks, such as the poor in spirit and those who mourn. What is Jesus doing by opening His sermon this way?
Hint: Matthew 5:3-12 pairs each unexpected condition with a promised blessing.
Jesus tells His disciples they are 'the salt of the earth' and 'the light of the world.' What is the main point of using these two images together?
Hint: Matthew 5:13-16 explains what happens to salt that loses its flavor and light that is hidden.
Jesus teaches His disciples to pray, 'Give us this day our daily bread,' rather than asking for a large stockpile of provisions. What attitude does this specific request encourage?
Hint: Matthew 6:11 comes right after petitions about God's kingdom and will, before turning to human need.
Jesus taught, 'If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also.' What is Jesus calling His disciples to do with this teaching?
Hint: Matthew 5:38-39 contrasts this teaching with the old standard of 'an eye for an eye.'
Jesus tells His disciples not to worry about food or clothing, pointing to birds and wildflowers that God cares for without their laboring for it. What is the underlying reasoning behind this teaching?
Hint: Matthew 6:26 makes an argument 'from the lesser to the greater' about God's care.
Jesus warns His listeners against building their lives on a 'foundation of sand' rather than 'rock' at the very end of the Sermon on the Mount. What does He say actually distinguishes the wise builder from the foolish one?
Hint: Matthew 7:24-27 makes the difference explicit: 'everyone who hears these words of mine and does them.'
Jesus teaches, 'Do not judge, so that you will not be judged,' yet elsewhere He tells His disciples to correct one another. How do these teachings fit together?
Hint: Matthew 7:5 tells the hearer to remove the log from his own eye before helping with the speck in another's.
Jesus warns that many will call Him 'Lord, Lord' and even claim to have prophesied and cast out demons in His name, yet He will say, 'I never knew you.' What point is this warning making near the end of the Sermon?
Hint: Matthew 7:21-23 ties this warning to 'the one who does the will of My Father.'