Sometimes I find that I’ve become so familiar with the words of Jesus that I overlook just how
turn-the-world-upside-down they are. Consider the earthshaking implications of
just two of the famous Beatitudes:
“Blessed are you who are hungry now,
because you will be filled.
Blessed are you who weep now,
because you will laugh.”
The economy of the Kingdom of God is a strange one.
You’re actually better off when you have less or when you have lost. You are
better off because to be filled after being empty is better than always having
been full.
I guess in a way this makes sense. Imagine sitting down
at dinner to eat your favorite food (tacos, am I right?), but consider how
different you’d feel if you hadn’t eaten since breakfast in contrast to if
you’d be been snacking all day and didn’t have an appetite anymore. You
actually enjoy eating more if you are hungry. Or think of how sweet a drink of
water is when you are parched, or how immensely pleasurable it is to lie down
and sleep after a hard day of work. Sometimes we actually enjoy things more
when we’ve been lacking them.
However, this mindset runs completely counter to the way we usually think in this world. Consider the latest ads you’ve seen on TV or billboards. How do the values they suggest compare to what Jesus talks about here?
Jesus says that those who are happy are those who are poor, hungry, weeping, and despised… yet we spend most of our effort seeking to be rich, well-fed, laughing, and admired. What is Jesus trying to say? I don’t think he is not saying “Don’t seek happiness” but rather, “Don’t seek happiness that will only last on this earth” and “Even if you are not ‘happy’ now, you can still be ‘happy’ because your emptiness will be filled, resulting in more happiness than if you had never experienced emptiness.”
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This is mystery, to be sure. It is also a mystery why we
rarely live in accordance with the truth that Jesus has given us. Think of a
time recently when something you wished for didn’t happen and you were left
with that hollow ache of disappointment. We tend to get stuck there and live as
if that emptiness is the truth, when in reality it is only the prelude to God
filling us with boundless joy.
I do not mean to diminish the suffering we encounter here
on earth, but rather to point out that to the degree in which our suffering is
great (and it is), the power of God to redeem our pain is even greater!
Which brings us to the greatest mystery in the economy of
the Kingdom of God: our own redemption. I don’t know if any of us can fully
wrap our mind around this, but join me in trying to let it sink in:
We are closer to God in our redeemed state than if we had
never fallen.
Takes my breath away.
We think that the product of our sinful acts is only more
corruption, and without Jesus this would be true, but through Him, the power of
redemption is stronger, not just than sinfulness, but even than sinlessness!
If you doubt, turn your eyes to the Cross. Upon the
canvas of our sinfulness is painted the most beautiful picture of love ever
seen. But that sacrifice was not just a display, it is an invitation for you to
accept Jesus. He loves you and He is the only one who can redeem all things – yes, even that.
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