Worthy Brief - June 25, 2026

 Worthy Brief - June 25, 2026 


Where grief meets kingdom comfort! 


Matthew 5:4  Blessed are those who mourn, For they shall be comforted.


Isaiah 61:1-3  "The Spirit of the Lord GOD is upon Me, Because the LORD has anointed Me To preach good tidings to the poor; He has sent Me to heal the brokenhearted, To proclaim liberty to the captives, And the opening of the prison to those who are bound;  2 To proclaim the acceptable year of the LORD, And the day of vengeance of our God; To comfort all who mourn, 3 To console those who mourn in Zion, To give them beauty for ashes, The oil of joy for mourning, The garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness; That they may be called trees of righteousness, The planting of the LORD, that He may be glorified." 


There is a grief the world does not know what to do with. It is not merely the sorrow of personal loss or disappointed hopes. It is the grief of a heart that has begun to see too clearly -- the mourning of those whose eyes have been opened to the ruin of what God created to be glorious. When Yeshua (Jesus) says, “Blessed are those who mourn,” He is declaring ashrei over those whose grief has become a form of Kingdom sight.


Through the Hebraic understanding of ashrei, we could hear His words this way: Oh, what a great blessing belongs to those who mourn, for they shall be comforted. To the natural mind, this sounds impossible. Mourning does not feel blessed. Tears do not feel like favor. Yet Yeshua is revealing a Kingdom reality: there is a kind of mourning that proves the heart is still alive to God.


The Greek word behind “those who mourn” is penthountes, a word carrying the weight of deep, open grief -- the kind associated with death. In the Hebraic world, the mourner, the avel, was not dismissed as weak. Mourning had a recognized place in covenant life. Israel understood lament because Israel understood love. To mourn rightly was not weakness; it was the honest response of a heart that loved what had been broken.


The prophetic anchor of this Beatitude is Isaiah 61, the passage Yeshua would later read in Nazareth to announce His own mission. There the Spirit of the Lord is given “to comfort all who mourn,” to console those who mourn in Zion, and to give them beauty instead of ashes, the oil of joy instead of mourning, and the garment of praise instead of a spirit of heaviness. Yeshua is drawing from the promise that the Anointed One would come not merely to acknowledge mourners, but to transform their mourning.


This is the inheritance of the avelim -- the mourners. Their sorrow is not answered with numbness. It is answered with reversal. Ashes are exchanged for beauty. Mourning is exchanged for gladness. Heaviness is clothed with praise. The comfort promised by God is not the management of sorrow; it is the invasion of sorrow by redemption.


The Hebrew word connected to this comfort is nacham. It does not speak only of soothing emotions. It carries the sense of a turning, a change in posture, a renewed determination. When God nachams, He does not merely calm His people while leaving them in ruin. He moves toward them with covenant faithfulness. He reorients the story. He steps into devastation and begins to reverse what sin, loss, exile, and brokenness have done.


That is why Yeshua can pronounce blessing over those who mourn. Kingdom mourning is not despair. It is grief that still believes God will redeem. It looks at sin, death, injustice, rebellion, and the brokenness of creation and says, “This is not what God intended.” It remembers the goodness of God’s design and aches for the Kingdom to come in fullness.


This mourning begins close to home. We grieve our own sin, not merely because of consequences, but because it wounds fellowship with God. We mourn the places where our hearts have been cold, distracted, self-sufficient, or resistant to His rule. This is not condemnation; it is mercy awakening us. A heart that can mourn sin is a heart that can still be healed.


But Kingdom mourning also expands outward. We mourn a world groaning under the weight of the fall. We mourn families fractured by bitterness, nations shaken by violence, people enslaved by darkness, and lives created for glory living far beneath their calling. We mourn not as critics standing above the broken, but as intercessors standing before the King. Our tears become prayers, and our grief becomes agreement with heaven.


The world teaches us to escape mourning: numb it, distract it, entertain it away, keep moving. But the Kingdom does not form shallow hearts. It forms tender ones. Yeshua is not blessing sorrow that collapses into hopelessness. He is blessing mourning that refuses to make peace with the ruin sin has caused because it still believes in the redemption God has promised.


So the blessed life continues here: not with a hardened heart that refuses to feel, but with a heart tender enough to mourn before God. Ashrei are those who mourn. Oh, what a great blessing belongs to those who bring their sorrow before the King, because their mourning is not the end of the story. It is the place where covenant comfort begins.


Do not despise the grief God allows to awaken in you, because some tears are evidence that your heart is becoming aligned with His. You were not called to be numb in a broken age, but tender before the King. Bring your mourning into His presence and let Him meet you with nacham — not shallow comfort, but covenant reversal. The God who sees the ashes also carries the oil of gladness. Oh, what a great blessing belongs to those who mourn, because their grief is not the end of the story; it is the doorway where the comfort of the Kingdom begins to break in.


Your family in the Lord with much agape love,


George & Baht Rivka (Maryland)

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