The Beatitudes

HOMILY WEEK 23 03 – Year II

Living the Beatitudes

(1 Cor 7:1-31; Ps 45; Lk 6:20-26)

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The Beatitudes are the Magna Carta of Jesus’ teaching. Part of the Sermon on the Mount in both Matthew and Luke, they present Christ as the new Moses, building on the Ten Commandments of the first Moses on Mt. Sinai.

Unlike the Beatitudes in Matthew, Luke complicates them with blessings and woes. Both deal with basic attitudes towards life.

An attitude can be defined as our habitual way of thinking, feeling and acting in the world. The Returning to Spirit (RTS) program developed by Algonquin facilitator Marc Pizandewatc speaks of our Way of Being. He is also talking about our basic attitude.

One priest’s Way of Being was “Mr. Fix-it.” That tendency to control and fix people was not helping him in his ministry, causing frustration as people resisted his efforts to change them. One woman’s Way of Being was “Drama Queen.” She resisted that loudly when others applied that attitude to her at an RTS training session, but eventually she calmed down, accepted it and was set free to heal with that attitude that was not helping her in her work either.

The Beatitudes are the polar opposite of the temptations that Jesus faced in the desert after his baptism in the Jordan – possessions, pleasure, prestige and power. Living the Beatitudes can set us apart from a world that so easily succumbs to these same temptations that the Chosen People fell prey to throughout their history.

Sometimes, to grasp more deeply what we are so familiar with, it helps if we look at it from a different perspective. To that end, I was inspired to compose the Beatitudes in reverse. Here is the result:

Unhappy are the proud in spirit, theirs is a lonely world.

Unhappy the aggressive, they will lose what they thought they had.

Unhappy those who stuff their feelings and never cry, they shall live in numbness.

Unhappy are the unjust and unfair, they will never be satisfied.

Unhappy are the merciless; they will never experience mercy.

Unhappy the impure and lustful; they shall never see God.

Unhappy those who cause dissension; they will be called children of darkness.

Unhappy those who persecute others and pretend all is well; there is a lonely world.

Hopefully, hearing these Beatitudes in reverse, can help us appreciate the content of the Beatitudes Jesus gave us in his Sermon on the Mt, and integrate that into our lives.

The Eucharist that we celebrate now is our food for our healing journey, empowering us to live out the Beatitudes as best we can, wherever the Spirit will take us in the future.

 

Updated: September 11, 2024 — 2:51 am

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