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Blessed are you
The Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time – Year C
Collect
O God, who teach us that you abide in hearts that are just and true, grant that we may be so fashioned by your grace as to become a dwelling pleasing to you. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Reflection
The Word of God for the Sixth Sunday in Ordinary time is a message of happiness and joy, which reveals to us the way that leads to the same joy for which humanity ceaselessly seeks throughout life. The road that we must take, which leads to this joy, is not a road that we are used to taking. It is the way that Jesus reveals to us in the Beatitudes.
As St Ambrose observes, the Beatitudes in Luke’s Gospel are a concise version of the same discourse on the Mount, which is found in greater detail in Matthew’s Gospel. Luke was writing for the Gentiles and therefore left out what could only be understood by the Jews. While Matthew combined a number of Jesus’ teachings into one discourse, Luke spreads Jesus’ teachings throughout his Gospel.
Today’s account begins with Jesus, who after spending the night in prayer and having chosen His Twelve Apostles, goes down to the plain. Jesus’ popularity was apparent. The people were attracted to Him; they longed to hear Him and be healed of their sicknesses. They came from all over Palestine.
“Then He looked up at His disciples …” The verses of the beatitudes come forth from Jesus’ gaze on His disciples, which describe their condition. They were poor, hungry, sorrowful, hated, and persecuted. The beatitudes were aimed at qualifying those who followed Jesus.
In the first Beatitude, the Kingdom of God belongs to the poor. Every type of poverty is included: social inequality, those who are marginalised, those who are lonely and so forth. In the second Beatitude, those who hunger are also blessed because, in the future, they will be filled.
In the third Beatitude, those who weep because they have been mistreated, rejected, and are powerless, will be blessed. The fourth and final Beatitude is for those who are insulted and reviled: Jesus enthusiastically encourages them to leap for joy because their reward will be great in Heaven.
Jesus now switches to the condemnations. Above all else, when Jesus speaks these words of woe, He does so with a sense of discontent towards those who trust in themselves. When He speaks about the rich, Jesus feels irritated by those who trample on the dignity of other people. It is a tragedy for those who humiliate others and leave them hungry. The same can be said for those who ridicule other people or treat them as being inferior to themselves.
In today’s Gospel, Jesus invites us to choose the road that leads us to eternal joy even though, presently, this road could be one of suffering, heartbreak, insults, and hatred. Jesus also warns us to stay alert so that we do not take the road the world proposes to us.
Prayer
Jesus, may our hearts be open to Your Word and enlightened with the values and ideals you revealed to us today in your discourse. Help us to discover what truly lies in our hearts. Give us a new heart, purified from egoism, pride, the desire to dominate others, pleasures of the senses, and the craving for success, so that we may obtain the joy which truly satisfies our heart. Amen.