The
Blessedness of Christ's Kingdom
After pronouncing his blessing on poverty, the Lord added Blessed are those who mourn, for
they shall be comforted.
Dearly beloved, this mourning that is promised eternal comfort has
nothing in common with the afflictions of this world. No-one is made blessed by
the kind of lamentation that the whole human race indulges in. The sighs and
blessed tears of the saints have another cause. Holy sorrow comes from
contemplating one’s own sins and the sins of others. It does not weep at the
actions of divine justice but at the sins committed by human wickedness. It is
the one who does evil here who is to be pitied, not the one who suffers it: for
what the evil man has done thrusts him down to punishment, while what the just
man has put up with leads him up into glory.
Then the Lord added Blessed
are the meek, for they shall have the earth for their inheritance. To the
meek and gentle, to the lowly and unassuming, to all who are prepared to endure
injury – to these the earth is promised. This is not a small or unimportant
inheritance, as if “the earth” were somehow distinct from a dwelling-place in
heaven: in fact, you must understand it as meaning that only the meek will
enter the kingdom of heaven. This earth that is promised to the meek, that is
to be given to the gentle to possess, is the body of the saints, whose humility
will raise them up and clothe them in the glory of immortality, united at last
with the Spirit of unity. Then the outer self will belong to the inner self at
last, a peaceful and secure possession.
The meek will possess this inheritance in everlasting peace and their right to it will never grow less. Our present perishable nature must put on imperishability and this mortal nature must put on immortality, so that a danger to the soul becomes a reward and what was onerous becomes an honour.
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Yea, Blessed Are They Which do Hunger and Thirst (by St. Bernard of Clairvaux)
A Samaritan Woman Came to Draw Water (by Saint Augustine)
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Yea, Blessed Are They Which do Hunger and Thirst (by St. Bernard of Clairvaux)
Source: The
Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
By Saint Leo the Great on
the Beatitudes
Photo taken from Wikimedia Commons
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