Blessed Are the Poor in Spirit

Matthew 5:3 June 4, 2023 Pastor Chris Oswald
Audio coming soon
Thesis True spiritual flourishing begins with felt spiritual poverty—a day-to-day desperate dependency on God that shatters the delusion of self-sufficiency and establishes us in the reality of our helpless need for Christ in every moment.
Series
Type
Expository
Tone
pastoraldidacticprophetic
Method
grammatical-historicalapplicatory
What's in this sermon

The shape of the argument

36 units across exposition, application, illustration, theological claim, and conclusion. The pastor's argument is built from these moving parts.

Pastoral correction · unit #29
"Direct evangelistic application: some in the congregation are unconverted and need to stop striving and cry out to Christ for salvation."
Doctrinal loci· 12 surfaced
Soteriology · 13 Hamartiology · 7 Sanctification · 7 Anthropology · 6 Providence / Sovereignty · 5 Bibliology · 4 Christology · 2 Ecclesiology · 2 Pastoral Theology · 2 Theology Proper · 2 Eschatology · 1 Pneumatology · 1
Bible citations· 15
Daniel 7:13-14 | Matthew 5:3 | Romans 7 | Galatians 5 | 2 Corinthians 1:8-9 | 2 Corinthians 12:7-10 | Ephesians 2 | John 6:37 | Isaiah 55:1-3 | Luke 18:13 | Hebrews 12:11 | 2 Corinthians 2:16 | Romans 5:6-8
Illustrations· 1
  1. Understanding Biblical Poverty Through Third World Experience personal story · unit #8 — Personal story of traveling in the Third World serves as a hermeneutical bridge, showing the pastor how to read the Bible's poverty language rightly by seeing actual poverty firsthand.
Theological claims· 10
  1. The modern relativistic definition of poverty will distort our understanding of Jesus's teaching about spiritual poverty. unit #3
  2. Spiritual poverty—understood through the lens of biblical poverty—captures in a single stroke the entire biblical teaching on the human condition apart from Christ. unit #9
  3. Felt spiritual poverty is sanity—it means seeing the world, yourself, and God as they actually are, while pride is delusional madness. unit #10
  4. Felt spiritual poverty sanctifies by weakening indwelling sin, because the flesh is terrified of dependence on God and constantly drives us toward self-sufficiency—but living in felt poverty pronounces the Creator-creature distinction and chokes the flesh's aspiration to equality with God. unit #11
  5. Felt spiritual poverty produces assurance of salvation because conscious daily dependence on God is the natural posture of a child with the Father—and when you function in this created role, there is peace and assurance unrivaled in any other state. unit #13
  6. Spiritual poverty is the key to salvation—you cannot be saved until you put down all striving and acknowledge your utter dependence on Christ's atonement, and this moment is your first true sanity. unit #19
  7. When Christians fall into persistent sin, God is using the resulting misery to restore felt spiritual poverty—you fell into the ditch partly because you stopped feeling spiritually poor, and you will escape partly by feeling it again. unit #21
  8. God has appointed suffering as part of the good works prepared for believers, and suffering is the means by which God breaks through the mere idea of dependence and restores felt spiritual poverty. unit #23
  9. God sends affliction to teach us the truth of our spiritual poverty—affliction is pedagogical, not punitive. unit #24
  10. Serving people with Christlike love over time exhausts our resources and reveals how little we can do for them—we cannot produce the spiritual outcomes we most desire, making us dependent on God to work on our behalf. unit #26
Quotations· 10
"the language of poverty is first and foremost the language of neediness. The poor we meet in the New Testament are characteristically not merely the economically disadvantaged, but rather those in need of charity to sustain their lives. Not simply relative deprivation, but real distress marks their state." — One commentator (unit #6)
"if you want to have a madman in your head, embrace pride. For you shall never find one more mad than he." — Charles Spurgeon (unit #10)
"Come ye sinners, poor and needy, weak and wounded, sick and sore. Jesus ready stands to save you, full of pity, love, and power. Let not conscience make you linger, nor of fitness fondly dream. All the fitness he requireth is to feel your need of him. Come, you weary, heavy-laden, lost and ruined by the fall. If you tarry till you're better, you will never come at all." — Joseph Hart (unit #19)
"Not the labor of my hands can fulfill the law's demands. Could my zeal no respite know? Could my tears forever flow? All could never sin erase. Thou must save and saved by grace. Nothing in my hand I bring, simply to the cross I cling. Naked come to thee for dress, helpless look to thee for grace. Foul, I to the fountain fly, wash me, Savior, or I die." — Rock of Ages hymn (unit #19)
"no one is more miserable than the Christian who for a time hedges in his obedience. He does not love sin enough to enjoy its pleasures, and he does not love Christ enough to relish holiness. He perceives that his rebellion is iniquitous, but obedience seems distasteful. He does not feel at home any longer in the world, but the memory of his past associations and the tantalizing lyrics of his old music prevent him from singing with the saints. He is a man to be most pitied." — D.A. Carson (unit #21)
"Mark then, Christian, Jesus does not suffer so as to exclude your suffering. He bears a cross not that you may escape it, but that you may endure it. Christ exempts you from sin, but not from sorrow. Remember that and expect to suffer." — Charles Spurgeon (unit #23)
"affliction is the best book in my library." — Martin Luther (unit #24)
"all that the Father gives me will come to me. And the one who comes to me I will by no means cast out." — Jesus (unit #30)
"come buy wine and milk without money and without cost. Why spend money on what is not bread and labor on what does not satisfy? Listen to me, listen to me. Eat what is good and your soul will delight in the richest of fare. Give ear and come to me, hear me that your soul may live." — Isaiah 55 (unit #30)
"I, the preacher of this hour, beg to bear my witness that the worst days I've ever had have turned out to be my best days. And when God has seemed most cruel to me, he has been most kind. If there is anything in this world for which I would bless him more than for anything else, it is for pain and affliction. I am sure that in these things the richest, tenderest love has been manifested to me." — Charles Spurgeon (unit #33)
Read it

Full transcript

29,237 characters 36 units ~32 min reading time

0 · Opening prayer after scripture reading (Daniel 7:13-14)

I saw in the night visions, and behold, with the clouds of heaven there came one like a Son of Man. And when he came, he came to the Ancient of Days and was presented before him. And to him was given dominion and glory and a kingdom, that all peoples, nations, and languages should serve him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion which shall not pass away. And his kingdom, one that shall not be destroyed. Let's pray. Oh great God, what a privilege to sing and be reminded that if we are in Christ, we are part of a kingdom that cannot be shaken, a kingdom which is ruled by the most just and perfect King. We praise you, Lord Jesus, and thank you for bringing us in. Now, Lord, bless the preaching of your word. In your great name we pray. Amen.

1 · Frames the sermon by directing the congregation to the primary text (Matthew 5:3) and handling logistical matters (dismissing children)

You can be seated, and if you'll open your Bibles to the book of Matthew chapter 5— and if there are any kiddos remaining in the sanctuary that would like to be dismissed, now is your time— Matthew chapter 5, and our text will be in verse 3.

2 · Reads the primary text twice for emphasis, establishing the foundation for the entire sermon's argument

Matthew chapter 5, verse 3, which simply says, from the mouth of Jesus, blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

3 · Establishes the stakes of the interpretive task: correct understanding of 'poverty' is essential to grasping Jesus's teaching, and modern definitions will mislead us

Now, a great deal of our understanding and appreciation for this text depends on where we get our definition of poverty from. If we take our definition of poverty from modern sources, which are you know, thoroughly sort of infiltrated with relativism and so forth. If we take our definition of poverty from modern sources, then our understanding of what Jesus is saying is going to be way off.

4 · Contrasts modern relativistic poverty (bottom rung of socioeconomic ladder) with biblical poverty, setting up the definitional work necessary for exposition

So what we're going to do to begin with is just try to understand what did Jesus mean when he was talking about poverty? What's the kind of poverty that Jesus had in mind? Well, What we need to mostly understand is that when we think of poverty, we tend to think of a relativistic sort of poor in relationship to others who have more kind of a way. Being poor is kind of what we would say is whatever the bottom of any socioeconomic ladder is, that's poor. That's not how the Bible talks about poor.

5 · Provides the corrected biblical definition of poverty: absolute inability to meet basic needs without external help, life-threatening dependence on charity

The biblical definition of poor is something more like talking about people who will die unless someone else helps them meet their needs, right? So the modern conception of poor is like, well, whatever is the lowest rung of the socioeconomic ladder. And the biblical definition of poor is someone who cannot meet their basic needs and requires someone else to help them with that, to do that for them.

Where this fits

Recent preaching context

The three sermons immediately preceding this one in the preaching schedule.

Jan 30, 2022
Passivity and lack of zeal in using God-given gifts for service is not a minor failing but a serious sin that allies the believer with the forces of destruction, and only Christ's sacrificial work can forgive this slackness and transform us into zealous servants who prove Jesus is the center of all things.
Proverbs 18:9
Aug 22, 2022
Love requires both patience and kindness working inseparably together, with patience serving as the delivery system for intentional, costly kindness even toward those who test us.
1 Corinthians 13:4
Jan 21, 2023
Christians overcome fear and embrace hardship not by eliminating fear or relying on human strength, but by depending on the Holy Spirit to illuminate God's sovereignty, particularly His sovereignty in salvation, which establishes that God has already done the hardest thing and can be trusted with all lesser trials.
June 4 · This sermon
Blessed Are the Poor in Spirit
True spiritual flourishing begins with felt spiritual poverty—a day-to-day desperate dependency on God that shatters the delusion of self-sufficiency and establishes us in the reality of our helpless need for Christ in every moment.
Matthew 5:3
Take it further

Discuss · apply · pray

Small-group discussion

6 questions for your group this week

  1. When Jesus says 'blessed are the poor in spirit,' what does the sermon mean by spiritual poverty, and how is it different from the way our culture typically defines poverty?
    Matthew 5:3
    → Can you think of a season in your own life when you felt this kind of spiritual poverty—when self-sufficiency became impossible and you knew you were dependent on God?
  2. The sermon claims that felt spiritual poverty is 'sanity'—seeing the world, yourself, and God as they actually are. What delusions about your own spiritual strength or self-sufficiency do you find yourself believing most often?
  3. According to the sermon, spiritual poverty weakens indwelling sin's grip because 'the flesh is terrified of dependence on God.' Why would our sin nature resist the posture of dependence, and what does it try to make us believe instead?
    Galatians 5
    → When have you noticed yourself being driven toward self-sufficiency rather than toward God, and what was happening in you spiritually at that time?
  4. The sermon presents four seasons when Christians encounter spiritual poverty: at conversion, when stuck in sin, during suffering, and while serving others. Which of these seasons are you walking through right now, and what is God teaching you about your need for Him?
    Hebrews 12:11
  5. The sermon says that when we fall into persistent sin, God uses the resulting misery to restore felt spiritual poverty. How does understanding affliction as pedagogical rather than punitive change the way you interpret your own struggles with sin?
    Romans 7
  6. In light of the gospel—Christ's finished work on our behalf—how does recognizing your complete spiritual poverty at conversion become the foundation for assurance of salvation and for conscious daily dependence on God?
    Romans 5:6-8
    → What would it mean for you this week to live out of felt dependence on God rather than from the confidence that you can handle your spiritual life on your own?
Draft · pending review
Daily readings · Monday–Friday

5-day reading plan

This week we walk through the paradox of spiritual poverty: how felt dependence on God restores sanity, breaks sin's power, anchors assurance, and becomes the posture through which God's grace flows most freely.

Monday Romans 7

Paul's cry—"Who will rescue me from this body of death?"—is the prayer of spiritual poverty. He has tried striving, tried self-sufficiency, and discovered the brutal truth: apart from Christ, even our best efforts are enslaved to sin. When we stop pretending we can fix ourselves and feel the weight of that truth, we step into sanity.

Tuesday 2 Corinthians 12:7-10

Paul's "thorn in the flesh" reveals how God uses affliction to shatter self-sufficiency and force us into conscious dependence. Three times he pleaded for removal—the natural cry of flesh resisting dependence—until he grasped that God's power is perfected in weakness. When we stop fighting our poverty and embrace it, the grip of our flesh loosens, and grace floods in.

Wednesday Ephesians 2

Before conversion, we are not merely "sick" or "lost"—we are spiritually dead, alienated from God, objects of wrath (Eph. 2:1-3). This is total spiritual poverty: we have nothing to offer, no currency to purchase grace, no righteousness of our own. The gospel arrives only when we stop pretending otherwise and feel the full weight of our need.

Thursday Isaiah 55:1-3

"Come, all you who are thirsty, come to the waters... buy wine and milk without money and without cost." The invitation presupposes spiritual hunger and poverty—you come with empty hands, not with payment or credentials. God calls those who know they are starving, who have abandoned the pretense of self-sufficiency, to come and drink freely of His grace.

Friday John 6:37

"All that the Father gives me will come to me, and whoever comes to me I will never drive away." Our assurance does not rest on our ability to hold fast to God, but on His promise to hold us fast. When we live in felt poverty—coming to Him daily with empty hands, acknowledging our need—we experience the security of a beloved child who knows his Father will never reject him.

Draft · pending review
Pray together this week

A Prayer of Felt Dependence

Father, we come before you humbled by the weight of our own insufficiency. We confess that we have believed the lie of self-sufficiency—that we are capable, resourced, and able to meet our own deepest needs. Even as we affirm it doctrinally, we live as though we were gods unto ourselves, grasping for control and striving to prove our independence. We have mistaken pride for strength and called our delusion sanity. Forgive us for the madness of supposing we can save ourselves or sanctify ourselves or sustain ourselves apart from your grace.

Yet in the gospel, you have shattered this illusion forever. Christ came in our poverty and met the full weight of our spiritual bankruptcy on the cross. In his substitutionary atonement, he accomplished what our striving could never achieve—he satisfied your justice and purchased our complete dependence on you as our Father (John 6:37). We are not our own; we have been bought with a price. And the Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead now dwells in us, making real each day the truth that we are utterly dependent on you, not for our condemnation but for our joy.

We ask you, gracious Father, to grant us felt spiritual poverty—not the mere idea of dependence, but the lived reality of it. Break our self-sufficiency where we still cling to it. When we fall into sin, use the resulting misery to restore in us the consciousness of our need. When you send suffering into our lives, teach us through it that we cannot sustain ourselves, and that you have appointed this very suffering as the means of our sanctification and our deeper peace (Hebrews 12:11). And as we serve others with Christlike love, exhaust our resources so that we learn afresh that only you can produce the spiritual outcomes we most desire—making us gloriously dependent on your power working through our weakness.

Make us a people who wake each morning conscious of our poverty and grateful for your immeasurable grace. We commit ourselves to walk this week in the sanity of dependence, knowing that our greatest blessing lies not in what we can do, but in what you have done and continue to do. To you, all-glorious God, be the glory forever.

Draft · pending review
Sunday-evening family table

When Did You Feel Like You Couldn't Fix It?

For the parent

This prompt invites your family to name a real moment when they felt helpless or stuck—unable to solve a problem on their own. Listen for their honesty, then gently connect that feeling to spiritual poverty: the way Jesus wants us to feel our constant need for Him, just like we felt our need in that moment.

Tell us about a time recently when you tried really hard to fix something or solve a problem, but you just couldn't do it on your own—you needed help from someone else. What was that like? How did it feel when you finally asked for help?
Works for ages 6+; younger children may describe physical situations (can't open a jar, can't reach something), while older kids will naturally move toward emotional or relational struggles
Draft · pending review
Couples · three questions over coffee

Blessed Are the Poor in Spirit

  1. What part of Chris's message about spiritual poverty most stirred your heart—where did you feel God's Spirit speaking directly to your own sense of need?
  2. As a couple, where do you find yourselves tempted toward self-sufficiency rather than conscious dependence on God, and how might that be affecting the way we serve and love each other?
  3. Who among us needs to be reminded this week that we cannot produce the spiritual outcomes we most desire—and how can we pray for each other to live in that felt poverty together?
Draft · pending review
Memory verse this week

Matthew 5:3

Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

Why this verse: This is Jesus's opening declaration of the Beatitudes and the sermon's primary text—the very foundation upon which Chris Oswald builds the entire teaching that true spiritual flourishing begins with felt spiritual poverty and desperate dependence on God. Memorizing this verse anchors the congregation in the counterintuitive gospel truth that blessedness flows not from self-sufficiency but from the recognition of our utter helplessness apart from Christ.

Draft · pending review
Where this was preached

About the church

Providence Community Church
Lenexa, KS
Sundays · 10:00 AM
About us · What we believe
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# Providence Community Church

A church preaching expository sermons through the books of the Bible.

## Sermons
- [The Sin of Slackness (Proverbs 18:9, 2022-01-30)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2022/01/january-30-2022-sermon)
- [Patient Kindness (1 Corinthians 13:4, 2022-08-22)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2022/08/8222022)
- [Rely on God's Spirit, Rehearse God's Sovereignty (2023-01-21)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2023/01/rely-on-god-s-spirit-rehearse-god-s-sovereignty)
- [Blessed Are the Poor in Spirit (Matthew 5:3, 2023-06-04)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2023/06/blessed-are-the-poor-in-spirit)

## About
- [About the church](/about)
- [Plan a visit](/visit)

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