Blessed Are the Rest of Us

How Limits and Longing Make Us Whole

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Pub Date 9 Apr 2024 | Archive Date 26 Apr 2024

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Description

When Micha Boyett's son was born with Down syndrome and later diagnosed with autism, she was drawn into the ancient teachings of the Beatitudes. There, she found an invitation to honor her limits in a world that values performance, perfection, and strength. Jesus instead calls his followers to embrace meekness, mercy, and the longing for justice. The Beatitudes helped Boyett discover her wholeness in God's love rather than in her own accomplishments.

In Blessed Are the Rest of Us, Boyett shares her insights with readers--especially those who are burned out, tired of performing, living with grief, feeling exhausted, or powerless. She invites them into an understanding of God and themselves centered on belovedness rather than accomplishment. Here is her message: in God's dream for the world, blessing has nothing to do with ease; it's about flourishing, and Jesus promises we find flourishing in our limits and in our longing to see the world made whole. Each chapter centers on the refreshing good news of one beatitude, poetically woven with stories of Boyett's life.

Beautifully reassuring and liberating, this book calls readers to rest in God's rich and abundant love.

When Micha Boyett's son was born with Down syndrome and later diagnosed with autism, she was drawn into the ancient teachings of the Beatitudes. There, she found an invitation to honor her limits in...


Advance Praise

“Micha Boyett’s Blessed Are the Rest of Us conjures spiritual solutions for very real problems. A graceful, moving book that should be required reading.”—Mary Karr, author The Liars’ Club, Cherry, Lit, and The Art of Memoir

“This is breathtaking. Such beautiful writing.”—Nadia Bolz-Weber, bestselling author, speaker, and public theologian

“Micha Boyett’s Blessed Are the Rest of Us conjures spiritual solutions for very real problems. A graceful, moving book that should be required reading.”—Mary Karr, author The Liars’ Club, Cherry...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781587436093
PRICE US$19.99 (USD)
PAGES 208

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Average rating from 15 members


Featured Reviews

Thanks to NetGalley for the e-arc. I love the premise and argument of the book but I found myself skim reading.

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Blessed Are the Rest of Us, by Micha Boyett reads more like a memoir than a Christian or Religious tome, and therefore left me a bit disappointed. While her story is beautiful and worthwhile, I was hoping for more of a deep dive into the Beatitudes. I was, however, able to pick helpful information out of some of her analogies and experiences, so that was enjoyable. Otherwise, I skipped through some of it and zeroed mostly in on her biblical interpretations.

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I enjoyed this a lot! Wasn’t what I expected but was good nonetheless! Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for an e-arc!

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This book was a touching memoir with just a touch of 'beatitudes'. Unfortunately I had selected the book to review because I was interested in the topic of the beatitudes, so it didn't hit the mark for me. However, the author is a very talented writer who conveyed her life story and struggle beautifully, almost poetically. Although this book wasn't what I expected, I can see that it would be helpful and inspiring to parents who are dealing with difficult child-rearing.

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I received a free copy of, Blessed Are the Rest of Us, by Micha Boyett, from the publisher and Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. Micha Boyett son has down syndrome and autism. While this would be hard for any parent, Micha leaned on her faith and the beatitudes, to guide her through. This is a good read, I relearned the beatitudes, all over again.

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Micha Boyett has written a book with an unflinching description of her life with her family including her son with Down’s Syndrome and autism. Along the way she connects her family’s life with the Beatitudes.

This discussion is enlightening and calls us to a more caring and attentive life.

Thank you to Net Galley and the publisher for this ARC

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An interesting read indeed. I requested this book first because it deals with the Beatitudes. I like seeing different Bible books being used to tell a story. Take this book as if it is a memoir. You are being guided through the struggles and appreciation of love while managing Down syndrome. This is open your heart.
I just reviewed Blessed Are the Rest of Us by Micha Boyett. #BlessedAretheRestofUs #NetGalley

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Thank you to Net Galley for the copy of Micha Boyett’s soon to be published book, Blessed Are the Rest of Us. I have been encouraged and inspired by Micha’s writing and insights for over a decade, especially excited which she agreed to guest author a post on my blog many years ago. Watching her navigate the birth of her son with Down’s Syndrome was constant lessons and inspiration in real time, so I feel like part of me has really been eagerly awaiting this book for a long time. As always, this book is heartfelt, vulnerable and real. Micha writes with truth and weaves in the Beatitudes in a way that gave that passage of scripture new meaning for me. So thankful for Micha’s prophetic voice, always given with humility and depth.

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Thanks to Brazos Press (Baker Publishing) and NetGalley I had the privilege of reading a DRC of Blessed Are the Rest of Us by Micha Boyett. All opinions are my own and I have pre-ordered a hard copy and will be gifting copies of this book for many years. Even though I read the book over a month ago, I’ve waited to review it because I loved it so much that I wanted to treasure my private experience a little longer.

This beautiful book spoke to me more deeply than I have experienced in a very long time. I am not a mother. I do not have close, personal experience with severe disability. In many ways, my life experience has been quite different from that of the author. And that is one reason this book was so special; my favorite books have always been those that open me to worlds beyond my own. Boyett offers a glimpse into her life as the mother of a child with disabilities in a way that feels uncomfortably relatable at times. The honesty with which she shares the struggles and joys and true, hard blessedness of her life allowed me to experience a new level of compassion—with-ness—I hope I can live out in many contexts. It is not her experience itself that wrenched my heart, it is the humanity and humility with which she shares herself and her experiences.

While I appreciated reading about a life experience different than mine, Blessed Are the Rest of Us would be hugely encouraging to people with experiences more similar to Boyett. Especially when religious communities too often exclude, ignore, pity, and even shame people with disabilities, Blessed Are the Rest of Us could be a lifeline to people struggling to feel blessed or beloved or feeling they must defend their child’s worth. I will even recommend this book to my non-religious friends whose children have disabilities, because I think they will be heartened by it. And I will recommend it to every Christian I know, parent or not, because of what Boyett has to teach us all.

This book would have been good, even great, if it had been a straightforward memoir. However, Boyett takes it to another level by framing it with a beautiful theology of the beatitudes. As an aside, I’ve been looking for a good book on the beatitudes for years, and this is the first one I’ve come across that I would feel comfortable reading with a small group serious about spiritual growth. The theology enriches Boyett’s personal story, and her story enriches the theology. Since reading this book not a day has gone by when I haven’t contemplated what it means to be blessed through the layers of theology and life experience Boyett unveiled for me. Instead of cringing at the mere thought of (superficial, privilege-based) blessedness, I am beginning to appreciate the blessings Jesus offered and continues to offer, the blessings for “the rest of us,” the blessings I might even be able to participate in. I was already aware of my privilege in so many areas, and my attendant responsibilities. But I will be forever grateful to Boyett for the image of that privilege as the ease of mostly swimming downstream, and her gracious invitation to choose to swim upstream alongside others.

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In Blessed Are the Rest of Us, Micha Boyett looks at the Beatitudes and how meditating on them has impacted the ay she's experienced and thought about her family's life, particularly the life of her autistic youngest son who also has Down syndrome. I loved Boyett's first book, but the most I can say about this one is that it's fine. It's another book about the Beatitudes and while Boyett's perspective may make the book unique among its many peers, very little of what she's saying felt fresh or particularly revelatory.

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Blessed Are the Rest of Us is a memoir that flips back and forth through many time periods and circles around Micha's three sons, particularly her oldest and her youngest. I appreciated her story, but was disappointed to find it isn't actually a deep dive on the Beatitudes... it really just uses them as the framework to share her story from receiving Ace's diagnosis to the present day. If it were described and marketed as a memoir, I would bump it up as I would have seen it to better keep the promise of the book... but as others have said, it was unexpected because it doesn't match its description. Still, it's a story worth reading.

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A beautiful memoir and celebration of life in the midst of diagnoses and disabilities many will never fully understand. I liked the premise of this, but found myself skimming and less engaged than anticipated.

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