GUEST ARTICLE
"Blessed
Are the Merciful"
"Blessed
are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy" (Matthew 5:7).
We
live in a world of human need. There are physical needs,
emotional needs, and spiritual needs. We also live in a
world of sin. People hurt each other, neglect responsibilities,
fight, argue, and do as they please. These sins create
many more needs--the need for cleansing, the need for comfort,
the need for healing, the need for security, the need for
love, and the need for forgiveness.
In
this beatitude, Jesus shows us how to find blessing in
a needy and very hurting world: show MERCY. We cannot change
the whole system. In this world there will be offenses,
sins, abuse, oppression, atrocities. Things will happen
to people that never should happen. And because of that,
there will be poor people, suffering people, miserable
people, wretched people, as long as we are in this world.
"Blessed
are the merciful!"
How
blessed are those who are moved by the needs of people!
Mercy is more than a feeling of sympathy. The Greek word
has the force of action; to be merciful means to be moved
by compassion. The merciful are those who respond to human
need, those who move among the suffering, those who give
what they have to help those who have not.
To
show mercy requires a particular economic outlook. Like
the good Samaritan, we must take time out of our workday,
lay the needy on our donkey, pour our oil upon his wounds,
and use our resources to provide his bed. Our material
goods are not given to us to be laid up in storehouses
for personal comforts, but as trusts from a merciful Father
to be used for the kingdom of God.
To
be merciful, we need a particular way of seeing. In a needy
world, we easily grow calloused to people. We easily train
our eyes to look for what we want from others instead of
looking for what others may need from us. We need the eyes
of Jesus. "When he saw the
multitudes, he was moved with compassion on them, because
they fainted, and were scattered abroad, as sheep having
no shepherd" (Matthew 9:36).
Merciful
eyes see more than surface needs. Rejection, loneliness,
despair, discouragement, self-will, self-pity, fear, moral
failure--these needs are not as visible, but they are real,
and they are all around us. When we walk down the street,
when we stroll through a mall, when we visit with neighbors,
what do we see? Are our eyes open to the deeper levels
of human need? Can we see with the eyes of Jesus?
Blessed
are the merciful! They
know the joy of giving, sharing, and sacrificing. They
know the joy of looking into faces where hope has been
renewed, where faith has been restored, where gladness
and joy have replaced gloom and misery. They know the
joy of deep friendships and rich fellowship.
Blessed
are the merciful! They
also know the joy of receiving mercy. Nobody is above
need. Nobody is above needing compassionate response.
Those who show compassion receive compassion. They receive
it from those to whom they have shown compassion. But
best of all they receive it from the heavenly Father.
Their sensitivity to people in need makes the Father
in heaven very sensitive to them when they are in need.
"Blessed
are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy!"
- -John Coblentz, Deeper Life
Ministries Newsletter, August 1995
http://www.anabaptists.org/places/dlm/dlm-895a.html
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