Friday, February 13, 2026

Beatitudes | Waking Up to Christlikeness Flourishing Today




The Beatitudes:
Let's memorize and 
be mastered by Jesus' Way
of courage and compassion.

One day, a Zen priest, who abided by the Four Noble Truths and Eightfold Path of Buddhism, shared with his new Christian friend that he adores Jesus. The priest then asked the Christian,

“When you wake up each day,
what do you seek to do and be?”

How might you answer this question?

At the time, the Christian answered with “I try to love God with my whole being and love neighbor as myself.” It seemed like a good answer, but then the friend began to feel like he didn’t answer what he does each day to love. He came to the conclusion that:

"What I need is waking up 
to a whole new way of being 
each morning."

And as another author wrote,

Those in Jesus’ Kingdom 
don’t work for blessing, 
but from blessing. 

We wake up to receiving blessing, 
not earning blessing,
and then sharing blessing.

In beginning 2026 with wonderings about how Emmaus City Church is supposed to live into our themes of peace, prayer, contentment, and sacred waiting for the year, my heart and mind continue to come back to the Beatitudes. So when I read this story this past week, it stuck with me, and I continue to wonder how we can embody the answer to the Zen priest's (or any of our friends' or neighbors') question with how we wake up to each day to be and do Jesus' courageous and compassionate Way as displayed in the Beatitudes.

When we wake up each day,
could the Beatitudes be 
what we put on,
what we we eat,
what we remember,
what we do
in Christ and with Christ
for the life of the world?

Below are some thoughts I collected in preparing to preach on the Beatitudes text in Matthew 5:3-12 on St. Valentine's Saturday, February 14, 2026 in light of Transfiguration weekend. If they are in line with Christlikeness, may they become more than reflections in words and in our minds in the year ahead. My prayer is that we throughout Emmaus City Church would be a living reflection of Jesus' Kingdom of heaven that is near and now by waking up to His Way displayed in the Beatitudes.

Waking Up to
Jesus' Way of Trust & Rest
in the Age of Me
(i.e. I've Got to Be & Do It All)

Blessed are the poor in spirit, 
for theirs is the Kingdom of heaven.

or 

Blessed are those who control their image, 
for theirs are the castles of the cell.

Waking Up to
Jesus' Way of Lament
in the Age of Distraction

Blessed are those who mourn,
for they will be comforted.

or 

Blessed are the indifferent and distracted,
for they will never get hurt.

Waking Up to
Jesus' Way of Humility & Dignity
in the Age of Pride & Power

Blessed are the meek,
for they will inherit the earth.

or 

Blessed are the forceful,
for they will overpower the weak.

Waking up to
Jesus' Way of Restorative Justice
in an Age of More for the Wealthy

Blessed are those who hunger
and thirst after righteousness,
for they will be filled.

or 

Blessed are those who are 
greedy for more,
for they will ensure others have less.

Waking up to
Jesus' Way of Compassion
in an Age of Tolerance

Blessed are the merciful,
for they will be shown mercy.

or

Blessed are the demanding,
for they will crush those 
who can't keep up
(ex. intolerance for 
the intolerant to change).

Waking up to
Jesus' Way of Wholehearted Focus
in an Age of Self Promotion

Blessed are the pure in heart,
for they will see God.

or

Blessed are the unsure 
and divided in heart,
for they will be who others
tell them to be.

Waking up to
Jesus' Way of Peacemaking
in an Age of Outrage

Blessed are the peacemakers,
for they will be called children of God.

or 

Blessed are the war makers,
for they will be called victors
(but never called friends).

Waking up to
Jesus' Way of Surrender
in an Age of Comfortable

Blessed are the persecuted
because of righteousness,
for theirs is the Kingdom of heaven.

or 

Blessed are those who never suffer
for theirs is a kingdom without a cross.

May we have a true encounter with Jesus each day, waking up to the invitation to His Way. Why?

The basic message of the Sermon 
(on the Mount, Beatitudes) 
is not about "what works" 
but rather the way God is. 

Jesus is the Sermon on the Mount.

He's the picture of 
abundant life available 
to us now.

This is good news!
The Sermon on the Mount is
God's possible impossibility,
because we are now empowered
to live in a world fashioned
in accordance with God's peace.

+ Stanley Hauerwas,

Prayer for Jesus' Kingdom Come

Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, help us and hold us so that we may be mastered by Jesus’ Way of compassion and courage: to live with open hands, mourn what’s broken, serve with honor, use power for good, look wtih compassion, walk in honesty, reach past differences, suffer for love, and live fearlessly. Let us wake up to reality of Your Kingdom coming now and that will be established fully forever one day. In King Jesus' mighty name we pray. Amen.

Excerpts above compiled and adapted
from R. Villodas' The Narrow Path,

with insight from J. Pennington's
The Sermon on the Mount
S. Hauerwas' Jesus Changes Everything, and
M. Scandrette's The Ninefold Path of Jesus,
along with some original reflections. 

Call to Action

Wake up (read and pray) each morning to:

+ Beatitudes: Matthew 5:3-12
+ Fruit of the Spirit: Galatians 5:22-23
+ Cruciform Hymn: Philippians 2:5-11

Then ask God to help you to wake up to and live out Jesus' courageous and compassionate Way for such a time as this.

Keep Singing

Common Hymnal, 2017 A.D.

Blessed are the ones who do not bury
All the broken pieces of their heart.
Blessed are the tears of all the weary
Pouring like a sky of falling stars.
Blessed are the wounded ones in mourning,
Brave enough to show the Lord their scars.
Blessed are the hurts that are not hidden,
Open to the healing touch of God.

The Kingdom is Yours,
The Kingdom is yours!
Hold on a little more,
This is not the end!
Hope is in the Lord,
Keep your eyes on Him!

Blessed are the ones who walk in kindness
Even in the face of great abuse.
Blessed are the deeds that go unnoticed,
Serving with unguarded gratitude.

Blessed are the ones who fight for justice,
Longing for the coming day of peace.
Blessed is the soul that thirsts for righteousness,
Welcoming the last, the lost, the least.
(Chorus)

Blessed are the ones who suffer violence
And still have strength to love their enemies.
Blessed is the faith of those who persevere.
Though they fall, they'll never know defeat.
(Chorus)

Take a Moment to Laugh

with Jonathan Roumie
(Bonus: Bloopers)

With many blessings,

 Rev. Mike "Sully" Sullivan


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