Tag Archives: Spiritual Formation

Beatitude = Profound Contentment

9 Jun

Inflation

This is not monopoly money. It is a genuine 100-billion-dollar banknote issued by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe in 2008.

At the height of the country’s hyperinflation, this staggering sum was just enough to buy a loaf of bread and a pint of milk …. provided you ran to the store. If you waited too long, the currency would devalue so rapidly that you would leave with bread, the milk priced far out of reach.

The modern use of the word “bless” has undergone its own hyperinflation. 

  • After a sneeze: “Achoo!” — “Bless you.”
  • When someone makes a tiny mistake: “Aw, bless him, he tried.”
  • Condescension: “Well, bless your heart.”
  • Responding to mild inconvenience: “Bless you, that sounds exhausting.”
  • Thanking someone for something trivial: “Bless you for bringing napkins.”
  • Celebrity acceptance speeches: “God has really blessed me with this award.”
  • Athletes after winning: “Feeling blessed.”
  • Prosperity language: “We’re blessed with a new SUV.”
  • Hashtags: “#blessed” attached to luxury vacations or gym selfies.
  • End of a letter, instead of sincerely: “Blessings to you and yours.”
  • Clichés: “Have a blessed day.” 
  • Humorous idioms: “Bless this mess” on home décor signs.
  • CondesenscIon: “Bless your little heart.”
  • Pity mixed with affection: “Bless him, he doesn’t understand.”
  • Irony: “Oh, bless…” meaning “you poor fool.”

When a word is used to mean everything, it ultimately means nothing.

Gold 

Gold on the other hand, increases in value The idea of blessing involves the bestowment of divine favor and the conferring of divine benefits. It means enjoying everything that God bestows on those He adopts into His family, including all the benefits of belonging to His royal family. A modern rendering of this idea would be an exclamation: “Oh, the supreme bliss of…!”. (The verb is absent in the original Greek, so it is acceptable grammatically, to read them as exclamations.)

Fools Gold

What!?

Whoever heard of the poor in spirit, the meek, or the persecuted as partakers of supreme bliss?. Our culture is the exact opposite: “Kick, bite, scratch, revile” and “look after #1”. 

For them, these exclamations are found in stained glass windows, where an obscure saint with a mournful face has a weird, otherworldly spotlight on his head. 

Platinum

The nature of this bliss is supreme because it is independent of prosperity and outward circumstance. It has to do with character and the Kingdom that is within—the rule of God over your anger, selfishness, greed, and hatred. It is the growth of character into Christlikeness, experiencing the love and life of Christ, who even in agony maintained communion with His Father. This bliss is not food and drink, but righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit.

The Hebrew Foundation: Ashrei

Jesus was steeped in the Psalms and very likely had Psalm 1 in mind. It opens with “Blessed! (here the verb is missing and it is probably an exclamation). “Blessed!  This  man!” it is not expressing a religious wish or a prayer for a blessing to be bestowed. It is not a wishful thought, it is a treadmill in a gymn. The Hebrew word is ashrei, an objective declaration of a state of being. “Blessed! This is what rightly ordered, flourishing human life looks like: His delight is in the law of the Lord, meditating on it day and night. He comes through this relentless practice to resemble a tree planted by streams of water, yielding fruit in due season, with leaves that do not wither.

The Greek Translation: Makarioi

The Hebrew scriptures were translated into Greek, they chose the word makarioi to capture ashrei. They bypassed terms that merely mean “praised” or “well-spoken of” or “happy”. In ancient Greek culture, Makarios described a distinct state of deep well-being and fullness of life. It was the word used to describe the gods, who were untouched by ordinary human misery or the shifting winds of circumstance. 

An Unshakable Joy

Because this bliss is supreme, no one and not a single thing can rob us of it. Worldly happiness promotes concern, trouble, and dissatisfaction based on greed and envy. The Beatitudes are not only independent of circumstances, the hardest circumstances actually fuel the bright flame of bliss. We see this in the martyrs, like Perpetua who exclaimed that her execution was her “coronation”. A village of Anabaptist  believers were roped around a stake, waiting for the licking flames to execute them, when a man galloped up and shouted “Wait! I too am one of them!” Then he leapt into the ring of fire.

Here and Now

Furthermore, this bliss is present. There is no sense of “suffer now and be rewarded later”; it is here and now that we enjoy it. These are not spiritual smelling salts for dying saints, but a kick in the pants to exhibit the life of Christ in fellowship with Him in everyday, trying circumstances.

EMT OR HEART SURGEON

Ultimately, this defines the word “Christian”. A Christian is one who is full of bliss. How is this possible? All my natural instincts run contrary to this. It is critical to grasp that Jesus is not prescribing these things as if through sheer will we could live up to them. He is describing people who are in a relationship with Him. He is not performing an angioplasty to clear clogged arteries, He is offering a heart transplant. 

From this new heart a butterfly begins to emerge. Then it spreads its wings and experiences true freedom; freedom from the angst that defines our age.

The Presence of God

The contemporary world measures a “blessed life” almost exclusively by visible, external metrics:

  • Comfort and physical health;
  • Wealth and material success;
  • Influence and social admiration.

Jesus shifts the focus from circumstance to functional alignment. He defines this well-being by how an entity relates to its design:

  • A compass needle is functional when it points north;
  • A train operates correctly when it remains on the tracks;
  • A branch flourishes when it remains joined to the vine.

We flourish when we are rightly aligned with our Creator.

Biblical blessedness is not the absence of suffering; it is the presence of God.

Series: Introduction to Profound Contentment

1 Hologram https://progressingpeople.wordpress.com/2026/05/21/the-beatitudes-becoming-the-hologram/ Becoming the Hologram

2 Illusion https://progressingpeople.blog/2026/06/02/beatitude-profound-contentment/

Navigating Life When Faith Doesn’t Make Sense

17 Feb

Pilgrim in Process: When Faith Sighs

Navigating the Salt Basins and High Sierra Peaks

The pioneers who trekked across the salt basin in Utah and crossed the Sierras faced obstacles that killed some and turned others back. For the spiritual pilgrim, the journey involves similar barriers: the salt basin represents unanswered prayer, while the Sierras represent answers to prayer. It may seem counterintuitive, but answers to prayer can often become our greatest obstacles. Every prayer is answered—whether granted, refused, or delayed—but it is the “bewildering answers” that are completely unacceptable to us that cause us to stumble.

1. The Human Cry

Habakkuk’s ancient frustration feels remarkably modern. He looked at a world where destruction and violence were constant, strife abounded, and the law seemed paralyzed. His cry was raw and honest: “How long, Lord, must I call for help, but you do not listen? Or cry out to you, ‘Violence!’ but you do not save?”. Habakkuk was not posing abstract theological riddles; his world was literally crumbling. The nation was decaying from within, and a ruthless predator was approaching from without.

Practical Application: Don’t be afraid to bring your “sighs” to God. Habakkuk’s example shows that faith often begins with an honest complaint about the injustice and wrongdoing we see in our own lives and the world.

2. The Shocking Answer

When God finally answered Habakkuk, it was a “geopolitical earthquake”. God told him to be “utterly amazed” because He was doing something unbelievable: He was raising up the Babylonians. God described them as a “ruthless and impetuous people,” a “feared and dreaded” nation that promoted their own honor and worshiped their own strength as their god. Habakkuk had to wrestle with the reality that God was personally behind the rise of a ruthless enemy marching toward Jerusalem.

Personal Touch: It is a staggering thought that God’s answer to our cry for help might be to send a “Babylonian”—a difficult circumstance or a person that acts as a “wake-up call” when we have grown “dull of hearing”.

3. The Entitlement Trap

Why do we stumble over these shocking answers? Often, it is because we fall into a trap of entitlement. Just as a teenager might turn a one-time relaxed curfew into a “right” or a “bargaining chip,” we often turn God’s grace into a personal merit that we feel we have earned. This logic thrives whenever “My will be done” replaces “Thy will be done”. When this happens, we begin to view God as a “Supermarket” where blessings are expected on demand—an ornament to our lives rather than the sovereign Lord.

Practical Application: Take a moment to audit your prayers. Are you treating God as a Sovereign Lord to be trusted, or as a “Supermarket” where you are shopping for conveniences? Entitlement produces anger when refused; faith produces trust.

4. The Grand Design

Scripture reveals that history is not a chain of random events, but a Grand Design arranged toward redemption. In the “fullness of time,” God used centuries of preparation—Greek language, Roman roads and order, philosophical curiosity, spiritual desire awakened—to weave His redemptive plan.

If God carefully directs the rise of empires, His purpose reaches into the details of our personal lives to conform us to the likeness of Christ.

  • God is the Architect; you are the campus.
  • The “bulldozers, sawdust, and nail guns” of life are not signs of destruction, but the Architect’s tools serving an eternal purpose.
  • These trials become the “steel framework” of your life—a bulwark against life’s storms.

As a Pilgrim in Process, we must learn that prayer matures from making demands to seeking intimacy. The goal is not to bend God to our will, but to know Him, trust Him, and rest in His purposes.

Does the idea of God as an “Architect” change how you view the “bulldozers” currently at work in your own life? Which are you facing right now: a silent “salt basin” or a “Sierra peak” answer that feels like an obstacle?

Let’s Talk

I would love this to become a conversation. Please share your anecdotes, questions and insights in the comments.

Points to Ponder

In the context of your “Pilgrim in Process” journey, do you find that your current “sighs” are born out of a frustration that God isn’t following your blueprint, or a desire to understand His?

Does the idea of God as an “Architect” change how you view the “bulldozers” currently at work in your own life? I’d love to hear your thoughts on how you navigate those “salt basins” of unanswered prayer.