Matthew 5:13-20 (5th Sunday after Epiphany) – February 8, 2026

Matthew 5:13–20 calls the church to faithfulness rooted in God’s story rather than self-expression. Jesus fulfills the law by deepening it, placing disciples within a shared tradition that forms identity over time. Salt and light emerge not from performance, but from a community shaped by scripture, memory, and God’s enduring work.

Matthew 5:1-12 (4th Sunday after Epiphany) – February 1, 2026

This commentary reads the Beatitudes as Gospel recognition rather than moral instruction. In Matthew, Jesus names and blesses people as they already are—mourning, weary, vulnerable—proclaiming God’s kingdom present amid violence, fear, and uncertainty, not as reward, but as promise and belonging.

Matthew 5:1-12 (4th Sunday after Epiphany) – January 29th, 2023

Both Matthew and Luke use the Beatitudes with a purpose and in aligning our preaching with their purpose, we can open a world of preaching opportunity. But if we preach on our preference and overly compare these two different Gospels, then we give permission to accept one and throw the other out, when in reality they are used for two entirely different purposes.

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