Hello and welcome to Wisdom for the Heart, the Bible teaching ministry of Stephen Davie. Stephen is the President of Wisdom International and he's been teaching God's Word for over four decades. to learn more or to access Stephen's articles, books, daily devotionals, and more. Visit WisdomOnline dot org. There's a link in the show notes.
Now here's Stephen. The word meek appears in James chapter 1, verse 21, which reads, Receive. With meekness, The word. In other words, when confronted by the Word of God, the response. Uh of of the meek.
Is not to defend themselves, but submit themselves to the truth. There's humility in that, Lord, you've got me here. Here's the word. Not claim, well, I'm not as Bad as all that. No.
I will receive it humbly with meekness. Throughout this Sermon on the Mount, we call it, beginning in Matthew chapter 5, he will reverse the wisdom of the world. Those who come in last area. Our first. Giving is really receiving.
Dying is really living. Losing is finding The least is actually the greatest. Weakness is Strength. Serving is actually Ruling. Blessed are they.
Happy are they. He says nine times in the beginning, the opening of this rather radical sermon. The word blessed from the Greek word mechaius can be translated truly, genuinely happy. And you remember he began with a shocking statement back in verse 3: Happy are the beggars, blessed are the poor in spirit. Literally, happy are those who recognize they are completely bankrupt in spirit.
Why? Because they are the ones who are admitted. into the kingdom of heaven The end of verse 3. The first part of verse 4, he goes on further, sort of to turn over to the apple cart of conventional wisdom as he says: Blessed are the brokenhearted, blessed are those who mourn. Why?
Because those who mourn their desperate condition. Understanding they are indeed bankrupt, come to God with nothing in their hands, and they find genuine comfort.
Now, the Lord will deliver another rather surprising step toward true happiness in verse 5, where he will say, Blessed are the meek. For they shall inherit the earth. You've got to be kidding. The meek. Get buried in the earth.
They don't inherit the earth. Doormats are to be stepped on. Matthew Henry, the Puritan pastor of the late 1600s, wrote. Modern audiences recoil at this. He writes, Common sense dictates that people who are meek will suffer insult and abuse, unable even to find some small corner where they can draw their breath.
We know by nature that we must hunt with the hounds. Because to be a sheep is to risk becoming someone else's dinner.
Well put. Most modern dictionaries, by the way, will define the English word here, meekness, in ways like these: deficient in courage. One who lacks spirit and backbone, my online dictionary that I googled into defined it with words like docile, overly submissive. Spiritless. Spiritless, docile, submissive, a doormat.
Like the kid, you probably heard about it, you know, got fed up. With the bully, you took his lunch money, took it away from him every single day on the bus as he went to school, and every day another dollar, $5 a week. Then the boy saw an ad for karate lessons. Remember, he got so excited until he found out they cost $5 a week, so he just went back to paying the bully. Right?
Easier to just pay up. I love the courage of this kid. True story, which I I suppose it means the other story wasn't true, but this is, I know, true. I read both of them. Here's another one.
Here's a 15-year-old kid, almost robbed in New York City, the news report said. He was walking from the bus depot. to his father's apartment in Upper Manhattan. When he realized He was flanked by two young thugs. They pulled a gun on him.
Demanded that he hand over his wallet, and he said, No. They threatened him. Listen, we've got a gun pointed at you.
Now give us your wallet. He said, No, no way. They tackled him, went for his back pocket. He hung on, hollering, fighting back until some people came to help and the guys ran away. One of the rescuers said, They had a gun.
Why didn't you just give them your wallet? He said, no way, my learner's permit's in there. Yeah. I'd rather die than not be able to drive. That's more like it.
I like that spirit. You know, that guy's not meek. The meek don't inherit the earth, the meek get their lunch money taken away. The me get their wallet and they lose their learner's permit. You would expect the Lord to say, You want to be happy?
You want to be on top of the world?
Well then, you need to know the powerful and be well connected, and you will inherit the planet. But instead, he says. Happy are The helpless. Blessed are the meek. But Meekness is Weakness.
Right? Nothing could be further from the truth. Let me try to explain that. The Greeks used this word translated meekly. Prouse.
in a number of interesting ways, which sheds quite a bit of light on what Christ has in mind First, it was used to talk of a comforting fire in a fireplace. When controlled, the fire brought warmth. and was comforting. Out of control, fire brings what? Destruction.
The word was also used to refer to a gentle breeze. Just the right amount of wind could move your boat downriver, it could cool down a hot afternoon. too much wind We call it names like Hurricane Katrina, right? brings death and destruction and loss. The word was also used in Christ's day for medicine.
A patient struggling with a fever. could be given medicine that was Prouse. That is capable of relieving the burning fever so that the patient. could sleep.
Now what do all these have in common? They are all things that can be comforting and helpful. Helpful if they are contained. And experienced in the right amount too much, they become deadly. See, meekness is not weakness.
Truth is, the biblical ideal of meekness is Power. Under Control. Meekness is strength. Contained. Meekness is having the ability to strike back.
and resisting the urge. See, that's real strength, isn't it? One author Said it's not about It's not about me. It's not about being defiant about me. It's not about standing up for me.
It's not about defending me. In fact, he went on to say: meekness is being done with me. Good way to remember it. It isn't weakness, it is the power of Christ. Cleansing the temple with a whip.
to defend the honor of His father It is the silence of Christ before Pilot. Unwilling to defend himself. What strength Power. Meekness then is dying, as it were, to me. This is replacing the The spirit of me attitudes with the principle of be attitudes.
And by the way, would you notice the promise again? He says here: the meek are going to what? They're going to inherit. The earth. The word inherit, by the way, is a future tense verb.
You are going to in the future rule the planet. And that is consistent with everything else we learn in the Word of God about the coming kingdom. But now think about the fact that you don't receive an inheritance until somebody dies, right?
Well, in this case, it is we Who die? We die to self. We die to our demands, we die to our rights, we die to our way and our will. And in dying to self, we find true happiness because as long as we are living for self, we will never, ever find happiness. Happiness.
As long as we are defiantly defending ourselves, we will never find happiness. As long as we are standing for our rights, we will never find happiness. But when we are finished, with ourselves. We are actually free to revel. In the truth, that one day we're going to fully share in the inheritance of the one who also was humble.
And meek. This is the promise of Paul to the Corinthians.
So then he says, Let no one boast in men. Don't boast in yourselves, for all things belong to you. Already, whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas or the world or life or death or things present or things to come, all things belong to you and you belong to Christ.
So happiness then can come, it can literally become your spirit when you have been stepped on and mistreated. And abused and ignored? How? By recognizing that one day, because of your relationship to this one who was meek. Jesus Christ, you will one day rule the earth.
Imagine that the slaves of Christ rule. The earth. One day.
Well, evidently, Paul thought it was a pretty exciting. Prospect. As he delivers the truth in his epistles.
So, how do you know if you're dying to self? How do you know if you're developing meekness? I thought about this. How do you have a tangible way of identifying whether there's any progress, especially in something like? This.
So I've come up with a little meekness examination.
Okay, three questions. It's a pop quiz. You'll live through it. Here's the first question. How do you respond?
when confronted with the truth. How do you respond when confronted with the truth? The word meek appears in James chapter 1, verse 21, which reads, Receive. With meekness, The word. In other words, when confronted by the Word of God, the response.
of the meek. Is not to defend themselves, but submit themselves to the truth. There's humility in that, Lord, you've got me here. Here's the word. And I will receive it humbly with meekness.
Not stand up for myself, not not defy you, not Not claim, well, I'm not as bad. Bad as all that. No, simply admit it. When you're confronted with the truth, There is meekness, James 1:21. Here's the second question: How do you respond when challenged?
About your faith. Specifically with unbelievers. How do you respond at the job? When there are those who challenge your faith, listen to what Peter wrote in 1 Peter 3. The word appears there again.
Be ready always to give an answer for the hope that is in you, yet do it with. Meekness. Having a good conscience. For it is better to suffer for doing good, if that should be God's will, than for doing evil. Evil.
So here again is that nuance of dying to self rather than defiantly standing up for self. And it appears as sort of this voluntary helplessness in the face of those who could grind you into the The dirt. Respond to With meekness when challenged, in particular, about your faith. Get along who wrote that? The Apostle Peter.
Out of control. Sword swinging, ear chopping off Peter. You talk first, think last, Peter. Emotions under control? What fun is that, Peter?
Which should give us all hope. Not only in the principle of meekness, but in the person who wrote the principle. Evidently Peter had grown in meekness over the years. Which means we can Two. How do you respond when confronted with the truth?
How do you respond when challenged about your faith? Third, final question. How do you respond when another Christian falls into sin? Does your phone bill go up? You're leading the pack outside the city gates to gather stones?
You're writing out your notes for the speech of your life. Paul told us how to respond in Galatians 6:1. The word appears there. Listen, if anyone is caught in a sin, You who are spiritual, get a club and let them have it. Oh, I'm sorry.
Um,. That's the reverse version. You who are spiritual. There's the key. Restore him in the spirit of what?
Meekness, power under control. Strength contained. Just the right dose of medicine. Warmth. Perhaps you're thinking, well, I'd like to do better on the next pop quiz.
How can I develop more meekness?
Well, before you write down ten ways to become more meek. Buy a coffee mug, I will be meek. You know, and drink your coffee out of that and Just remember this. Just one reminder: meekness is a fruit. of the spirit.
It's translated gentleness. You don't drum up meekness. You have the Spirit of God develop meekness. over a lifetime like Peter. As you surrender to him.
Let's cover one more. way to overcome the meatitudes. Look at verse six. Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness. For they shall be the satisfied.
Now, the first question we have to answer is: what does he mean by righteousness? Blessed are those who hunger and thirst after righteousness. Righteousness. Is this objective righteousness? Is this the righteousness of God imputed to your account by faith in Christ alone?
Is this what you received at conversion? It can't be, we already have that. Righteousness. It is the gift of God through faith in Jesus Christ. Romans 3:21 to.
And twenty-two. We have already been declared righteous. In that sense. Right with God. Is it some kind of social?
Righteousness. In the just treatment of the poor and oppressed?
Well, it could be.
However, I think we're given a clue in that every one of the seven occurrences of righteousness in this Sermon on the Mount, every one of them refers to subjective. Righteousness. Not objective, not social, but subjective. It doesn't have to do with being right with God as much as it has to do with living right for God. God.
That's the idea. Hungering and thirsting after righteousness has to do with passionately longing for a life that pleases God. And when God is pleased, You are pleased. Paul wrote, it is my ambition. Uses that word three times in the New Testament.
It is my high passion. It is my resolution to be pleasing to God. 2 Corinthians 5, verse 9. Your greatest happiness is God's happiness. Your greatest pleasure is in bringing God pleasure.
What satisfies you most is satisfying. God You want to be truly happy.
Well, both of these beatitudes clearly tell us that the way to be happy is to live for somebody other than ourselves, primarily living for God, right? And in so living, setting self aside. Not pursuing the things of self, being done with me, passionately pursuing a life that pleases God. Guess what's discovered in that journey? True.
Happiness. Jonathan Edwards Talked about the longing that we ought to have for God. And the happiness that comes, he wrote. This man pastored in the mid seventeen hundreds. The enjoyment of God.
is the only happiness. with which our souls will ever be satisfied. Fathers and mothers, husbands, wives, or children, or the company of earthly friends are but shadows. Enjoyment of God. is the substance.
Family and friends are but scattered beams. God is the Son. These are but streams. But God is the fountain. These are but drops.
But God is the ocean. Wow.
Now, the paradox of this beatitude is that you are satisfied with that which then. Makes you hungry. Odd, isn't it? You're hungry for right living and satisfied in living in which which makes you hunger only The more. But what does that sound like?
Sounds to me like Thanksgiving. You been there? You're satisfied, you can't eat. Another bite, you are satisfied beyond reasonable dimensions. A couple of hours later, what are you doing?
Making a sandwich. What does that prove? You're a glutton. No, no, no. That's not what it proves.
What that proves is you are alive. You're living! You get hungry? Ye eat, you're satisfied. Guess what happens?
You get hungry, you eat, you're satisfied. Guess what happens? Some of us are quicker than others. You get hungry, you eat. Proof that you are alive is the fact that you are.
Constantly hungering and And and thirsting and being filled and quenched. Only to be quenched again. Mm-hmm. To be satisfied again. David wrote it this way: My soul is consumed with longing after thine ordinances at all times.
So, the question that comes out of this beatitude to me is twofold. What are you hungry for? And how hungry are you? If you're really hungry. For right living for God which pleases Him.
You'll find satisfaction. And that will deepen your longing. to live a life that satisfies him. And that will find satisfaction. One decision at a time.
One step at a time. The question is, how hungry? Far away. Aristotle wrote of a time when one of his young students came to him and said, Aristotle, master, you have wisdom that I so desire to have. How can I have it?
Aristotle responded with you really want it? The young man said, Master, I do. Aristotle then said Follow me. He headed across the porch out of the building where they were standing and Headed across the courtyard, without even hesitating, walked directly into the pool of a fountain. Nearby, waist-high water.
The young man hesitated at the edge and then followed after him, sort of girding up his. His gown, and about halfway in, Aristotle suddenly turned, grabbed the young man by the neck, nap of the neck, and forced his head underwater. The young man, of course, was flailing away and kicking and trying to get his head above water. And Aristotle just held it there until the last possible moment, pulled the young man up, dragged him over to the edge, sat him on the side, and said, while the man sputtered away, catching his breath, Young man, what was it that you wanted more than anything when I held you underwater? And the young man said, Air, sir.
Air. Aristotle said if you long for wisdom, like you longed for air. You will have it. See, I think The average Christian would say, Yeah, I want to. I want to live for God, doesn't everybody?
Supposed to say that I'm in church. I'm here, by the way. Do you really want it? How badly do you hunger to please God? See, a starving man doesn't want food.
and a new car. He just wants food. A thirsty man uh doesn't want water and a new pair of shoes. He wants. Water.
Nothing else matters. You don't have to add anything to the list to satisfy. Ask the average Christian: do you want to please God with life? Oh, yeah, oh, yeah, absolutely. But I want this and this, and this, and this, and this, and this, and that, and that, and that.
I wonder why. God never really seems to come through for me. The problem is we're not quite famished enough. For holy living And our lack of hunger and thirst for righteousness becomes then our greatest. Obstacle.
to true. Happiness. And so praying a prayer like this is entirely legitimate. Lord, Give me a longing to long for you. Ever prayed that?
Give me a thirst. to thirst after you. Make me Thirsty. and hungry. to please you.
We start at the fundamental issue of appetite. Give me A hunger to hunger for. You. And to those happy ones. God satisfies.
Let me rewrite these two Beatitudes. This way. Blessed are those who refuse to stand up for their own rights. willingly helpless. as they refuse to exercise their power.
Even when it means they get crushed in the stampede of life, happy in knowing that one day they will rule the world. Christ. Happy are those whose primary appetites in life are living for God's pleasure. assured that God will satisfy them. and deepen their hunger to grow and be filled and grow yet more and be filled again, over and over and over and over, until Perfected in holiness.
completed with satisfaction In heaven. Forever. That was Stephen Davey, and this is Wisdom for the Heart, a production of Wisdom International. Learn more at wisdomonline dot org.