Knowing joy which is independent of circumstances.

How do you read the Beatitudes? Are they just so much pie in the sky where the rubber can’t possibly meet the road? In other words, are they just some surreal ideal entirely disconnected from real living?

With the Beatitudes, the King summarizes elements of the privileged, enviable state of having God’s approval and favor as a citizen of His kingdom. To be blessed like this is to be spiritually prosperous and deeply contented. It is to know joy which is independent of circumstances.

We must understand, though, that our feeling of all these is always only in limited measure. The kingdom citizen does not always feel blessed, for we live in fallen flesh in a very dysfunctional world. Thus we might be inclined to read the Beatitudes with dubious doubts and cynical suspicions, imagining them as misty mirages of joy and problematic paradoxes of contentment. Though these appear as unattainable opposites of real life on this pitiful planet, the blessings of Jesus in the Beatitudes stand secure on His nature and character.

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Notes from my brief public devotional in Psalm 119:105-112

Psalm 119:105-112 was my early morning reading this past Sunday (May 5, 2019).

I knew I was on to have the evening devotional in our home church. I decided I would use this passage. I also decided I would just wing my public commentary based on my early morning thoughts (an approach that’s very out of the ordinary for me).

I had a Mission Board meeting to attend that afternoon, so I went early and spent some time rereading the passage and gathering my thoughts better.

Well, it was a relatively short meeting and I got home much earlier than I had anticipated. I decided to quickly “pencil out” a few notes for myself.

That evening, after some introductory comments regarding this particular Psalm, I read Psalm 119:105-112: Continue reading