Today, Richard Rohr’s meditation stated succinctly and clearly an insight into spirituality that I have been pondering for fifty years, but have never been able to express as clearly as today’s meditation did.
We were often taught that Jesus was talking about: “Blessed are the poor, the meek, those who suffer, those who grieve, etc., etc. BECAUSE THEY WILL BE REWARDED AFTER DEATH IN HEAVEN.”
Here, the meditation clearly states that Jesus was saying that the poor are blessed and fortunate because if they live in the presence of God, they will not suffer from being poor. They will be filled with joy, as Francis of Assisi was.
Blessed are the meek, the kind, the non-violent because they realize that they already possess the earth. It was given to them by their Father in heaven.
This is the meditation that we need to begin and end each day with. Happy Blessings.
“What Does It Mean to Be Blessed? Heaven begins now, for any saints willing to sign up.” —Barbara Brown Taylor, Always a Guest
Spiritual writer Barbara Brown Taylor considers the promise of “blessing” that is central to Jesus’ teaching in the Sermon on the Mount:
“We don’t have to wonder what a blessed life looks like. Jesus laid that out right at the beginning of his most famous sermon, though his description is so far from what some of us had hoped that we would rather discuss the teaching than act on it…. In this life, most of us pedal pretty hard to avoid going in the direction of Jesus’ Beatitudes. We read books that promise to enrich our spirits. We find all kinds of ways to sedate our mournfulness.
“According to Jesus, the blessings of the kingdom are available here and now—and later:
“The first words out of Jesus’ mouth are not ‘Blessed shall be’ but ‘Blessed are.’ ‘Blessed are the poor in spirit’—not because of something that will happen to them later but because of what their poverty opens up in them right now. ‘Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness’—not because God is going to fill them up later but because their appetites are so fine-tuned right now….
“When people who can’t stop crying hear Jesus call them blessed right in the basement of their grief, they realize this isn’t something they are supposed to get over soon. This is what it looks like to have a blessed and broken heart….
“When people who are getting beat up for doing the right thing hear Jesus call them blessed while the blows are still coming, they are freed to feel the pain in a different way. The bruises won’t hurt any less, but the new meaning in them can make them easier to bear. Who knows? They may even change the hearts of those landing the blows, while they bring the black-and-blue into communion with each other like almost nothing else can.
“This is what the Beatitudes have to do with real life. They describe a view of reality in which the least likely candidates are revealed to be extremely fortunate in the divine economy of things, not only later but right now. They are Jesus’ truth claims for all time, the basis of everything that follows, which everyone who hears them is free to accept, reject, or neglect. Whatever you believe about him, believe this about you: the things that seem to be going most wrong for you may in fact be the things that are going most right. This doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try to fix them. It just means they may need blessing as much as they need fixing, since the blessing is already right there. If you can breathe into it—well, that’s when heaven comes to earth, because earth is where heaven starts, for all who are willing to live into it right now.”