The Shocking Beatitudes

Today’s Gospel focuses on the 8 beatitudes (Mt 5:1-10). It’s the roadmap to attaining true happiness. “Blessed be” is another way of saying ‘objectively happy’, since happiness and holiness are the flip sides of human fulfillment. This understanding of happiness, which begins in this life and is completed in the next, comes from the inside out as a response to grace. It is more like Aristotle’s eudaimonia than modernity’s temporary pleasure. Since it is primarily spiritual, the beatitudes flip the world’s understanding of happiness on its head.

The world teaches you happiness comes through pride, apathy to others, assertiveness, chasing money, seeking vengeance, satisfying lust, wielding power, and avoiding controversy.

Jesus in the beatitudes, however, confounds His disciples by reversing their assumptions:

For pride He substitutes humility; for apathy, mourning; for assertiveness, meekness; for love of money, love of righteousness (truth and justice); for vengeance, mercy; for lust, purity of heart; for wielding power, peacemaking; and for avoiding controversy, standing on principle.

Not only does Jesus flip the script on fallen man’s idea of flourishing, but he also emphasizes that persecution experienced for following Him adds exponentially to true fulfillment:

“Blessed are you when they insult you and persecute you and utter every kind of evil against you falsely because of me. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward will be great in heaven” (Mt 5:11-12).

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