Focal Passage: Matthew 5:13-20, 43-48
You can tell a lot about something by the influence it leaves behind. Have you ever been around a campfire and then walked in somewhere around someone who wasn’t? It won’t be long before they say something about the smell you are putting off.
Recently, we had some concrete laid at our house and overnight, before it fully cured, a racoon left several footprints on the concrete indicating it had been there. There may be no greater examples of influence in our world than salt and light. Salt changes the flavor of whatever it touches. Light changes the atmosphere of a room the moment it’s switched on. Both make a tremendous impact. In the same way, Jesus teaches that a life truly shaped by Him doesn’t stay hidden. It leaves a mark.
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus tells His followers, “You are the salt of the earth and you are the light of the world” (Matthew 5:13-14). Notice He doesn’t say you should become salt and light. He says you already are. In other words, true righteousness begins with identity before it ever shows up in behavior.
When our lives are shaped by Christ, the world should taste and see something different. Our actions, attitudes, and relationships point people toward God. Jesus says our good works should shine so that others “give glory to your Father in heaven” (v. 16). Righteousness is never about drawing attention to ourselves (like the religious leaders referenced later). It always aims upward.
Then Jesus makes a statement in v. 17 that likely surprised His listeners. Jesus doesn’t lower God’s standard, He fulfills it. And He tells His followers that their righteousness must exceed that of the religious leaders (v. 20). That doesn’t mean doing more religious activities. It means living with transformed hearts. The Pharisees mastered outward performance, but Jesus was after inward surrender. True righteousness doesn’t ask, “How little can I obey?” but instead asks, “How fully can I reflect the heart of my Father?”
Then Jesus presses even deeper. He challenges His followers to love their enemies and pray for those who persecute them (vv. 43-44). That kind of love doesn’t come naturally. Jesus explains that loving this way mirrors the Father, who gives sunlight and rain to both the righteous and the unrighteous. In other words, true righteousness doesn’t just show up in easy relationships, it reveals itself most clearly in hard ones.
Jesus ends with a stunning call: “Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (v. 48). This is not a demand for sinless perfection. It is a call to wholeness, maturity, and Christlike love. It’s an invitation to live with hearts shaped more and more like our Father’s.
True righteousness is not about impressing God. We can’t do that. It’s about reflecting God. And the only way that kind of life is possible is through Jesus. He is the one who fulfilled the Law for us and now lives within us. When Christ reigns in your heart, His light shines through your life. And through you, others are drawn to the glory of the Father. B&R

