Blessed are you homeless for you will find a place to stay in frigid temperatures. Blessed are you who are evicted for you will have one of your own. Blessed are you unemployed for you will land secured jobs. Blessed are you who work by the sweat of your brow to save cash and feed your family. Blessed are you who shop local to help our economy. Blessed are you who shed tears for you will be consoled in the arms of our compassionate Lord. Blessed are you who go hungry for a soup kitchen in town will feed you. Blessed are you who put your lives on the line. Blessed are you who would rather suffer than sell your soul. Blessed are you who are marginalized due to your allegiance to Christ. Blessed are you who are laughed at and mocked for your strong commitment to Catholicism. Blessed are you who are looked down upon for being religious. Blessed are you when you’re isolated and singled- out because of your fidelity to the gospel. Blessed are you who work for peace and justice but remain true and unaffected in spite of the dehumanizing attacks and painful criticisms leveled against you. Blessed are you who dedicate your lives to alleviate poverty, to end drug trafficking and abuse, to reduce unemployment, to help the youth and the juvenile and take care of the elderly. Blessed are you who generously support the needy. Blessed are you who spend your robust resources to the least among us. Blessed are you for your financial support and contribution your local catholic community. Jeremiah says, you’re like a tree planted in streams of living water: well-grounded, nourished, solid and unbreakable. You’re like a well-oiled machine and battle-tested.
Luke’s version of the Beatitudes is called the Sermon on the Plain best described as reversal of fortunes. It is addressed to a large number of people using the second person ‘you’ to be direct and personal. It is shorter than Matthew’s but thematically arranged and highly organized in such a way as to illustrate the various situations, conditions and the hard realities in life with four blessings and curses: poor-rich, hungry-satisfied, weep-joyful, persecuted-respected. God provides blessings and also pass judgments. God is the voice and the defender of the lowly that’s why he unequivocally favors the poor, the hungry and the suffering. It is true that your life now is the result of your decisions (good or bad, big or small). We can speculate and rationalize the many causes of poverty (either because they’re destined by the choices made or simply victims of social inequality and injustices, among others) but at this juncture, we’re told that this social class (the disinherited, the dispossessed and the disenfranchised) has a special place in God’s heart.
Woe to you who turned godless in prosperity. I don’t mean materialism per se leads to spiritual emptiness. Instead, arrogance/over self-confidence kills faith. Woe to you who do nothing to your beat- up neighbor. Woe to you who lost moral compass in the comfort of life. As you know, a loose life (with no sense of morality) slowly takes you down the drain. Woe to you who put absolute trust in human power and riches, without regard to anything spiritual and religious. Woe to you who disowned your childhood religion. If you have doubts about your faith, don’t switch! Instead, talk to your parish priest and he’ll advise you to search the depths and richness of your tradition. In the words of Jeremiah, you’re like a tree planted in barren bush, baseless and groundless, a life that will easily put anyone in deep trouble.
Ultimately, blessed are you who got out of your bed early on Sunday to join the community in the solemn offering and worship of our God. Blessed are you who come to Mass and later run errands and perform household chores. Blessed are you who consider the one-hour or so Sunday Mass as the most important one-hour of the entire week. Blessed are you who take Sunday Mass, a non-negotiable aspect of life for it will punctuate and set the tone for the week. Blessed are you who religiously devote yourselves to the church and recognize the primary role of God in your lives. Amen.
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May God bless you abundantly!
Bishop Edward J. Weisenburger