This is from my Daily Devotional that I receive in my email from Faith Gateway. The book that it comes from is Becoming Like Jesus by Matt Chandler. The link to purchase your copy of the book is at the bottom of the excerpt.
Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God. — Matthew 5:8
On a hike with Lauren on Sonora Island on an anniversary trip, we came across a massive tree that looked like it had caved in on itself. There was something strange about it though. The bark was still hard and looked healthy, but the insides had rotted out. I would learn later that this is actually called “heart rot,” a fungal disease that decays a tree from the inside out, even while the bark still appears strong and healthy. From a distance, everything looks alive, but the core is hollowed, the strength gone, the integrity lost. That’s what Jesus confronts in this beatitude: a heart that looks good on the outside but is diseased within. “Blessed are the pure in heart” is not a call to outward polish. It’s an invitation to inward wholeness.
There’s a moment in every child’s life, usually somewhere between the early years and adolescence, when they discover they can fake it. They learn they can say one thing while feeling another. Smile while hiding pain. Nod while disagreeing. Obey while quietly resenting. I remember being around nine years old when I figured out some of my family’s dynamics and adjusted to them. In that moment, we stumble into one of the deepest fractures of the human condition: the split between the outer and inner life.
Jesus, in His most famous sermon, doesn’t leave room for such division. He doesn’t say blessed are the well-behaved, the publicly moral, the doctrinally precise. He says,
Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God. — Matthew 5:8
Not blessed are the “pure in conduct” but “pure in heart.” Not “blessed are the rule-keepers” but “blessed are the integrated, the honest, the unhidden.” This beatitude cuts to the core. It unmasks the religious facade. It exposes the power games of outward holiness. And it whispers to the weary and hidden: “There’s more for you.”
Purity of Heart: Not Perfection but Integrity
Let’s be clear: This beatitude isn’t about moral perfection. If it were, no one would see God. Jesus is not describing the spotless, the sinless, or the always holy. He’s describing the unmixed. The word for “pure” here is καθαρός (katharoi), and it means clean, undivided, whole. To be pure in heart is to have no duplicity, mixed motives, or secret life walled off from the light of
God’s presence.
Søren Kierkegaard said it this way: “Purity of heart is to will one thing.”1 That one thing is God Himself. Not His blessings. Not His platform. Not His power. Him.
To be pure in heart is to want Him more than you want to be impressive, liked, safe, or vindicated. And that’s terrifying, because if we’re honest, most of us want other things more. This is why purity of heart cannot be manufactured by religious effort. We can clean the outside of the cup all day long. We can behave, post Bible verses, and check accountability boxes. But
only the gospel can cleanse what’s beneath the surface. The gospel doesn’t just give us new habits; it gives us a new heart.
The purity Jesus speaks of in the Beatitudes isn’t a call to moral perfection but to a single- hearted devotion. “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God” (Matthew 5:8) doesn’t bless the externally impressive but the internally undivided. To bring our desires, motives, and longings into honest alignment before the face of God.
This isn’t something we can manufacture through discipline alone.
As Augustine put it, “The mind commands the body and is instantly obeyed. The mind commands itself and meets resistance.”2 We need new hearts, not better intentions. The gospel alone can create this kind of integrity, because only grace can free us from the self-curation that hides behind religious performance. As D. A. Carson notes, “Jesus does not bless the intellectually brilliant or the morally polished but those whose hearts have been cleansed by the mercy of God.”3 Do you see the movement through the coil and beatitudes here?
Purity of heart is born when we receive the mercy of God!
Purity of heart sharpens spiritual vision. Those who are honest with God begin to see Him more clearly—in His Word, in His people, even in pain and beauty. This promise reaches its fullness in the beatific vision—“They will see God”—but it begins now, in glimpses. The divided heart is too distracted to notice; the pure heart, though often broken, is attentive. Jonathan Haidt explains that we are not primarily rational creatures but intuitive ones. “What we love shapes what we see.”4
Jesus purifies not just our behaviors but our loves, redirecting our affections so we want what He wants. That makes sanctification less about image management and more about relational nearness. But this kind of formation doesn’t happen in isolation. Purity is forged in the friction of gospel community—in shared confession, honest friendship, and mutual pursuit of holiness. As Dietrich Bonhoeffer warned, “He who is alone with his sin is utterly alone, but healing comes when sin is brought into the light.”5
The church must be less like a performance hall and more like a rehab ward for recovering image-bearers. Purity of heart grows slowly through practices like confession, repentance, Scripture meditation, and Sabbath. It’s a lifelong journey of becoming more real, more whole, more present. And the great reward of this work is not applause or admiration but the radiant vision of the One who made us: “They shall see God.”
1. Søren Kierkegaard, Purity of Heart Is to Will One Thing, trans. Douglas V. Steere (Harper & Row, 1956), 11.
2. Augustine, Confessions, trans. Henry Chadwick (Oxford University Press, 1991), Book VIII, sec. 9.
3. D. A. Carson, Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount and His Confrontation with the World (Baker, 1999), 24.
4. Jonathan Haidt, The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion (Pantheon Books,
2012), 3–4.
5. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Life Together, trans. John W. Doberstein (Harper & Row, 1954), 112.
]Excerpted with permission from Becoming Like Jesus by Matt Chandler, copyright Matt Chandler.