
The Sermon on the Mount is often preached as a set of moral ideals, with Jesus portrayed as contradicting or replacing the law of Moses. Phrases like “but I say” are commonly used to suggest a new or higher law. Yet Jesus was not opposing the law—He was calling Israel back to obedience to it in its entirety, distinguishing between “heavier” and “lighter” commandments, not abolishing any of them.
In this concise and corrective study, Darius Good presents the Sermon on the Mount as a legal and covenantal restoration, not the birth of a new religion. Speaking as a Jewish teacher born under the law, Jesus exposes the loopholes, traditions, and misapplications that had corrupted justice, marriage, righteousness, and mercy in first-century Israel. His teaching sought to restore faithful observance of the law, from the greatest commandment to the least.
Drawing on biblical text and historical and cultural context, this book reveals how distorted interpretations—especially regarding divorce, adultery, oaths, and retaliation—produced real victims, particularly women and the poor.
Far from an abstract spiritual manifesto, the Sermon on the Mount is a bold call to repentance, justice, and covenant faithfulness—one that still challenges modern Christianity to separate doctrine from tradition, and truth from doctrend.
Jesus did not change the law. He exposed what had been changed.
PRODUCT DETAILS:
ISBN-13:9798994315507
Publisher: Good Treasure Publishing
Publication date: January 3, 2026
Pages: 96
Product dimensions: 6 x 9
AVAILABLE NOW:
Paperback - $9.99
Ebook - $5.99
Audio Book
Pastor Darius teaches from his book The Sermon on the Mount. These revelatory teachings can be heard on his podcast The Good Treasure Podcast Show. These teachings can be heard on your favorite platforms.
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THE SERMON ON THE MOUNT SERIES EPISODES
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Did you know selling purple in Rome during Jesus’ time could be illegal? Christian teachings have drawn many inaccurate conclusions from misunderstanding Jewish and Roman law and culture. Understanding that world changes how you read the Bible — context doesn’t change Scripture, it clarifies it.
At the beginning of the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus didn’t start with random statements—He clearly outlined His message.