Recently, I was reading the Beatitudes in the Gospel of Luke (Luke 6: 20-31). The Beatitudes are the address by Jesus to his disciples in which Jesus tells them who is blessed. The address opens with, “Blessed are you who are poor, for yours is the kingdom of God.” Jesus goes from there to include others who are blessed – the hungry, those who weep, people who are hated on account of the ‘Son of Man’. Considering this passage, I realized that I didn’t have as full a grasp on what it means to be blessed, as I would like. Generally, I know that to be blessed is a good thing, but what does it actually mean for the person who is blessed?
Some versions of the Bible use happy in this passage rather than blessed. However, to my mind, 'happy' does not capture the full meaning of blessed – happy sounds like a passing thing which is contingent on external conditions. However, blessed seems to have a sense of a deeper state.
The earliest reference to blessing in the bible is in the creation story. God blesses the living creatures and says, be fruitful and multiply. He then blesses humans and tells them the same thing – be fruitful and multiply. So, it would appear that to be blessed means you are going to be fruitful in life which at that time meant having many offspring. Later we have the rather infamous case of Jacob – that patriarch of the church, stealing the blessing from his brother Esau – not great family values there. One commentary noted that the meaning of the blessing that Jacob stole:
was to grant leadership to the one who received it, with Jacob becoming the head of a powerful family and nation, and with nations and brothers bowing down to him. This included not only material wealth but also spiritual significance and the continuation of God's covenant with Abraham, a legacy Jacob would carry forward.
The covenant between God and God’s chosen people included God’s promise of land and offspring. In effect, to be blessed, at least at that time meant to be fruitful and multiply as in the original blessing.
So, in this case what does it mean to be fruitful? This can have the meaning of receiving material prosperity i.e. having lots of material possession and material wealth. This kind of meaning has led to the mistaken theology of the prosperity Gospel in my view.
I believe that Jesus used the term blessed in the framework of the Beatitudes to describe the inner quality of a faithful servant of God. This blessedness is a spiritual state of well-being and prosperity—a deep state of peaceful contentment that cannot be shaken by external events such as poverty, hunger, or conflict because God is present with us through these difficult times. We are blessed by God, therefore, we can be blessed by God in all things but not for all things.
May you be blessed on your journey.
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