
If we humans would write beatitudes based on what we instinctively think brings us blessing and happiness, they may read something like this: “Blessed are they who have plenty of money, for they will never be in need. Blessed are those for whom difficulties resolve and things always work out well, for they shall be at peace. Blessed are those whose efforts always bear fruit, for they shall have a fulfilling life.”
The Beatitudes at first seem to be a contradiction of blessings. Jesus tells us that one is blessed when he gives himself away, rich when he makes himself poor, satisfied when he seeks God before all else, rewarded when he is persecuted. Some of the very things we naturally try to avoid and that the world steers us away from are the things that God asks us to embrace for the sake of our holiness and His Kingdom.
For years now, I have begged God to give me a break from the struggles I face, and He seems to just allow more difficulties instead. “Blessed” is perhaps the last word I would use to describe how I feel about this. I try to make sense of things that seem utterly senseless but instead have found myself growing more confused and irritated, struggling more than ever to trust our Lord. I long for ease and comfort and for life to just go smoothly for a while.
However I also see how, through these struggles, God is calling me and giving me grace to know my own littleness and weakness and my great need for Him. To mourn and grieve the losses I have endured and my own selfishness and mistakes. To act in love toward those who have injured me and to be merciful toward them. To hunger for right relationship with God and to love Him above all else. To see and respond to others’ needs, and to desire His Will and His glory above all else, even if that means enduring even more difficulty. In other words, He is calling me into Beatitude.
None of this is easy. It is well beyond my own ability, but it is in being stretched in this way, looking to Jesus’ example, especially in His Passion, and asking for His help that the path to holiness lies. Worldly security, ease, and control will never pave the way to God’s Kingdom. They will not make me a person after His Heart, worthy of being called His child. They may bring some measure of comfort and satisfaction, but that comfort will never endure.
We are made for more. God desires for us blessedness and happiness that lasts, holiness and a deep satisfaction that only come from relationship and union with Him. Jesus teaches us the way with His words and then shows us the way by His actions. He gives us grace to follow Him. Though He never says it will be easy, He does tell us that our reward will be great in Heaven.
Si los seres humanos escribiéramos las bienaventuranzas basándonos en lo que instintivamente creemos que nos trae bendición y felicidad, podrían leerse algo así: “Bienaventurados los que tienen mucho dinero, porque nunca pasarán necesidad. Bienaventurados aquellos para quienes las dificultades se resuelven y las cosas siempre salen bien, porque estarán en paz. Bienaventurados aquellos cuyos esfuerzos siempre dan fruto, porque tendrán una vida plena”.
Las Bienaventuranzas, a primera vista, parecen ser una contradicción a las bendiciones. Jesús nos dice que uno es bienaventurado cuando se entrega, rico cuando se empobrece, satisfecho cuando busca a Dios por encima de todo, recompensado cuando es perseguido. Algunas de las cosas que naturalmente tratamos de evitar y de las que el mundo nos aleja son las cosas que Dios nos pide que abracemos por el bien de nuestra santidad y de su Reino.
Durante años, le he rogado a Dios que me dé un descanso de las dificultades que enfrento, y parece que, en cambio, solo permitirme más dificultades. “Bienaventurada” es quizás la última palabra que usaría para describir cómo me siento al respecto. Intento encontrarle sentido a cosas que parecen completamente absurdas, pero en cambio me encuentro cada vez más confundida e irritada, luchando más que nunca por confiar en nuestro Señor. Anhelo tranquilidad y comodidad, y que la vida simplemente transcurra sin problemas por un tiempo.
Sin embargo, también veo cómo, a través de estas luchas, Dios me llama y me da la gracia de reconocer mi propia pequeñez y debilidad, y mi gran necesidad de Él. A lamentar y llorar las pérdidas que he sufrido, mi propio egoísmo y errores. A actuar con amor hacia quienes me han herido y a ser misericordiosa con ellos. A anhelar una relación correcta con Dios y amarlo por encima de todo. A ver y responder a las necesidades de los demás, y a desear su voluntad y su gloria por encima de todo, incluso si eso significa soportar aún más dificultades. En otras palabras, Él me está llamando a la Bienaventuranza.
Nada de esto es fácil. Está mucho más allá de mi propia capacidad, pero es en este esfuerzo, mirando el ejemplo de Jesús, especialmente en su Pasión, y pidiendo su ayuda, que se encuentra el camino a la santidad. La seguridad, la comodidad y el control mundanos nunca allanarán el camino al Reino de Dios. No me harán una persona conforme a su Corazón, digna de ser llamada su hija. Puede que me traigan algo de consuelo y satisfacción, pero ese consuelo nunca perdurará.
Somos hechos para más. Dios desea para nosotros la bienaventuranza y la felicidad duraderas, la santidad y una profunda satisfacción que solo provienen de la relación y la unión con Él. Jesús nos enseña el camino con sus palabras y luego nos lo muestra con sus acciones. Nos da la gracia para seguirlo. Aunque nunca dice que será fácil, sí nos dice que nuestra recompensa será grande en el Cielo.
Kimberly Andrich writes from the perspective of having a hidden, chronic illness and experiencing a deep, continuous conversion through being yoked to Jesus in the day-to-day trials and joys of life. She is a wife, mother of 5, and daughter of the King. Kimberly also writes for Catholicmom.com and on fallingonhisgrace.substack.com.
Feature Image Credit: James Tissot, art.diocesan.com/stock-photo/the-sermon-of-the-beatitudes-959/
The views and opinions expressed in the Inspiration Daily blog are solely those of the original authors and contributors. These views and opinions do not necessarily represent those of Diocesan, the Diocesan staff, or other contributors to this blog.
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