Here is my Thank-You gift to readers and listeners of my Flashđ„ Devos + Podcast for July. This good book by a dear friend offers a fresh perspective on the Beatitudes. I pray that Andrewâs honesty and commitment to change reaches your heart, too. Check it out! â„
Finding Presence in the Midst of Pain
Blessed Are the Others: Jesusâ Way in a Violent World by Andrew DeCort
Reviewed by Marianne Abel-Lipschutz
Andrew DeCortâs Blessed Are the Others sketches the crucial work of reconciling with God about suffering through the Beatitudes. Jesus proclaimed this âdivine justice manifestoâ to inspire right relationships of mutual flourishing. DeCort draws widely on his international career as a public theologian, pastor, professor, and scholar in this practical and engaging book.
He weaves stories from texts, memoirs, and the writings of James Baldwin, Etty Hillesum, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and others whose witness about devastation illustrate Beatitudinal wisdom. âJesus says thereâs no need to suppress the painful reality of being poor humans,â he writes. You can read Blessed Are the Others and weep. Just donât stop there.
Youâll find answers to the pivotal question we all have about the miraculous transformation of grief into goodness. âHow does Jesus invite us to flourish in the face of our universal experiences of suffering, conflict, and loss?â Blessed Are the Others explores the Beatitudinal Way as âan endlessly generative, culturally divergent path of humane happiness.â This profound book is easy to hold but hard to believe. DeCortâs disruptive vision of the Beatitudes can make us squirm.
He repeats a glorious and unsettling message: the Beatitudes apply to all of us. âThese are not random well-wishes as we often seem to assume. Jesus is describing an interconnected path and intentional process of becoming human,â DeCort writes of the austere design of these eight movements or blessings. âEach blessing is accompanied by a promise that speaks to a core fear that we face in choosing to walk this way. The whole path reflects Jesusâs deep sensitivity to the embodied human soul.â
The Beatitudes challenge us to cultivate interdependence by âdoing our work,â healing the poverty and destitution that scorch our personalities. This is not a simple âCome to Jesusâ message. We must bring love to the outsiders within us, DeCort maintains, the parts of ourselves we fear, the internal hatreds and rejections that complicate our inner lives. If not, we will project those wounds, âotheringâ those around us, âpainishingâ [sic] them for our suffering. DeCortâs writing on transcending this grief is memorable.
âEach blessing is accompanied by a promise that speaks to a core fear that we face in choosing to walk this way. The whole path reflects Jesusâs deep sensitivity to the embodied human soul.â
DeCort elaborates on his life-altering encounters with loss, terror, and abandonment during more than a decade in Ethiopia with his wife, their self-exile, and time in North America. After years of resistance, he finally allowed himself âto enter into that haunted house of my own pain.â In counseling, simply composing a therapeutic list of losses shattered his defenses. âAs I tried to write that letter to God, electricity surged through my body and up my arms. I felt like I was going to blackout and fall backwards in my chair,â he recalls. âI wept hysterically, hyperventilating with overwhelming distress. It was the closest Iâve ever come to feeling like I was about to die.â
Nevertheless, he encourages us to brave the world beyond our fears so we can âenter into the ultimate unionizer of humanity: our grief.â DeCort cautions us: this spiritual work will separate us from the crowd:
âThis theology leads to a revisionary way of becoming human. Itâs poverty-processing, tear-soaked, nonviolent, hungry-and-thirsty, compassionate, God-seeing peace and justice. Humane happiness isnât winning. Itâs learning how to relate to one another as if weâre all actually beloved and the Beatitudinal Way is actually blessed. Jesusâs community found these divergent revisions to be blasphemous betrayals. They called it âsubverting the nationâ and worthy of death (Luke 23:2).â
I loved how DeCortâs study layers the Beatitudes like tree rings that embody the heart of God within us, promising that as we integrate total belonging, we will stand and bear witness while honoring joy in the midst of the crimes of our times. âCreative resistance to violence is one of Jesusâs most groundbreaking teachings,â DeCort asserts.
âJesus proved in the most intimate, ultimate way possible with his own body that humans can do their very worst. And still, God isnât violent and doesnât save with violence. Godâs salvation is the presence of love, even in pain, free of vengeance.â
I highly recommend DeCortâs beautiful book for the ways he coaches us to pursue the difficult work of surrendering to the promises of God. Fifteen pages of resources and questions for reflection at the back offer prompts to explore the Beatitudinal Way in group discussions, in daily life, and in reading scripture more effectively. Through these exercises, I learned to apply the principles Jesus died for and stay grounded in reality.
âIf youâre poor â in body, spirit, or otherwise â God is unconditionally committed to you,â DeCort assures us with pastoral compassion, emphasizing that our cosmic destiny is fullness of life. âIf you feel like youâre falling apart or thereâs nothing left to live for but pain, you will end up fully at home with God. If youâre hopeless, youâre held by heaven. Youâre going to be eternally okay.â
Paperback: BitterSweet Collective, 2024Buy Now: [ BookShop ] [ Amazon ] [ Kindle ]
Thanks to the Englewood Review of Books for publishing this review first on July 2, 2025! https://englewoodreview.org/andrew-decort-blessed-are-the-others-review/
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