As a young seven-year-old African-American girl Ruby was taken to a mixed school, the first of its kind in the USA. Mobs lined the pathway to the school, and were held back by police as they hurled insults at parents and children. Inside the school, child-psychologists waited to talk to any child that might be frightened or traumatised. Think of how the children must have felt.

One day Ruby was seen to stop briefly and say something under her breath. The counsellors asked her the matter was, and what she had been saying. Ruby replied that she asked God to forgive them because they didn’t know what they were doing. Ruby had her heavenly Father looking after her, and the Great Shepherd walking with her by His Spirit.

In Numbers 6:24 we read of Aaron, the High Priest, saying to the people of Israel, “The Lord bless you.” The root meaning behind this picture of blessing is that of one person bending down and presenting a gift to another. Think of a Father bending down to help a child and we begin to get the picture.

In the incarnation (Phil 2:5ff) we see God stooping low and coming into the world in order to provide a way of reconciliation to those who were, by nature, His enemies. God wants the very best for us; He wants to bless us.

Blessing is about receiving from God, and what God gives is Himself. Look at Luke 11:13, where Jesus said: “If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him!”

Throughout scripture we see that God always takes the initiative in blessing, which speaks of receiving from God so that we can be the very best we can be. Our heavenly Father always blesses according to his riches (Phil 3:19) and always because of His grace and mercy.  When God asks us to do something so that we will be blessed, our action does not earn blessing, but enable us to receive what is already present because of God’s love. In Christ, God comes alongside us in order to make a way for us to come out from condemnation and be blessed.

In the story of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:33), we see the Samaritan kneeling down to help a man who had been beaten, stripped of his clothes and left for dead. In the Ancient Near East a person was recognised by their accent and the clothes they wore, hence this man’s identity was no longer clear – yet still the Samaritan helped even though the injured man could have been a potential enemy. So what is the point here?

In many ways our wrongdoing and own way of dealing with issues made us like a person who’d lost their true identity, yet still God came. We were against His ways, yet still He offered us life through His Son Jesus Christ. The whole point in the story of the Good Samaritan is not, who is my neighbour, but who am I going to be a neighbour too?  Who am I going to bless with the blessing God had given to me?

In a day and an age where so many are giving advice, and quick-fix plans, or opinions as to why we are in difficulty, it can be hard to make sense of life. Meditate on the truth: Jesus seeks to be with us, and encourage us. We, in turn are to be a blessing to others in our marriages, friendships and the way we reach out to others. Sometime we need to remember it is not always what we say that counts first and foremost, but what we do by way of reaching out and supporting others. After all, we are being supported right now.

All that God has for the church has been given through Christ, the head of the church (Ephesians 5:23); all blessing is found in Him and because of Him.

“It is because of him that you are in Christ Jesus, who has become for us wisdom from God — that is, our righteousness, holiness and redemption.” 1 Cor 1:30-31

Be blessed!

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