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About The Book
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The Sermon on the Mount is perhaps the most famous passage in the Gospel of Matthew. Even unbelievers like Mahatma Gandhi appreciate the teaching of the Sermon and applaud the high morality it espouses. Others see in statements like love your enemies and turn the other cheek a powerful rhetoric against war and violence. Most Christians are familiar with the Sermon and see it as delineating important ethical principles for Christian living. Familiarity with the Sermon however can ironically prevent Christians from understanding its true message and significance. Some for instance see the Sermon merely as a body of ethical teachings that has some practical relevance. Many find some of its imperatives too idealistic. In this book Chia asks basic questions as he reflects on the Sermon on the Mount: What is the main focus of the Sermon? Does the Sermon present a code of conduct for Christians or is the Sermon really about the dawn of a new eschatological community inaugurated by Jesus Christ? Chia maintains that the Sermon can be properly understood and its significance firmly grasped only when it is read in the light of Christ and Gods eschatological kingdom. The Sermon presents the attitude values and conduct of the new community that Christ has gathered in his name. But this new reality that has dawned awaits fulfillment at the consummation of the kingdom of God. In the ambivalence of the already and not yet the Sermon depicts Christian discipleship as an impossible possibility. Yet the Sermon clearly challenges Christs disciples to be a community of character and to embody an ethic which is inimical to that of the world. Roland Chia is the Dean of Postgraduate Studies and Lecturer in Historical and Systematic Theology at Trinity Theological College (Singapore). He is also the author of Revelation and Theology: The Knowledge of God according to Balthasar and Barth and Hope for the World: A Christian Vision of the Last Things. And he is the consulting editor of Cultural Encounters: A Journal for the Theology of Culture and contributing editor of the New Dictionary of Theology.