The Sermon on the Mount, is, according to New Testament scholar, Luke
Timothy Johnson, ‘the essence of Christianity.” Although Jesus is said
to have given the Sermon 2,000 years ago, millions of people still
aspire to follow its exhortations.
I am a career
and personal coach. From that perspective and at the risk of sacrilege,
I believe that a number of the Sermon’s urgings are inimical to career
and personal success and contentment, even if construed in the loftiest
sense. To that end, in response to 10 statements in the Sermon on the
Mount, I offer as my PsychologyToday.com article today, given my far lowlier perch and status, a Sermonette
on the Mound.
Because this is Psychology Today, I focus not on the sermon’s deistic aspects, only on its advice for living.
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