Moments in the life of a Pastor

Walking with God


1 Comment

23. Strength Under Control – Part 2

Matthew 5:5 – “Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.”

In Psalm 37 the aging King David compares and contrasts the lifestyle and outcomes of the wicked and the righteous. Between those who live to please only themselves and those who have surrendered their wills to God. He reminds us that while the wicked may appear to prosper, they will soon fade like the grass. Though they draw their swords and bend their bows, and rely on violence and human strength, their day of accountability is coming and like smoke, they will vanish away. David reminds us that those who commit their way to the Lord, who take delight in His will and His ways, who choose to be still before Him and not take matters into their own hands, who patiently trust in Him, refraining from anger and forsaking wrath have this promise in verse 11: “The meek shall possess the land, and delight themselves in abundant prosperity.” So what does this Psalm have to teach us about meekness? That we need to commit our way to the Lord, and when we trust in Him He will act, verse 5. Meek people are not weak people they are those who trust God and have the blessed assurance that He is for them and not against them. While they may not know what tomorrow will bring, they know who holds tomorrow. Verse 6 reminds us that, “He will bring forth your vindication as the light, and your right as the noonday.” Meek people are those who instead of trying harder are trusting Him. Instead of taking matters into their own hands they have given their burdens, their fears, anxieties, frustrations, and worry over to God and are trusting in Him to sustain them. Verse 7 instructs us to, “Refrain from anger, and forsake wrath! Fret not yourself; it tends only to evil.” Meek people are willing to wait patiently for God and trust in his timing, instead of exploding with anger and frustration or allow bitterness and resentment to simmer in their hearts over the apparent triumphs of those who oppose them. Instead of trying to justify themselves they leave matters in God’s hands, exhibiting a quiet confidence that He has their life circumstances firmly in His loving care and will work all things out both for His purposes and their best. Since “the earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof”, meek people know they do not need to try to grab at it or try to take it by force, because ultimately it is the blessed inheritance of those who have made the Lord their God and in His time it will be given to them. In James 1:19-21 we read, “Understand this, my dear brothers and sisters: You must all be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to get angry. 20 Human anger does not produce the righteousness God desires. 21 So get rid of all the filth and evil in your lives, and humbly accept the word God has planted in your hearts, for it has the power to save your souls.” Here James is referring to two kinds of people, those who seem to live on the defensive and are easily irritated and quickly become angry without taking the time to really hear what another is saying. The word of God is often lost on them because they take that word as a personal attack. And those who are meek, and by contrast chose to listen carefully, because they are teachable. They allow the word of God to soak into their souls as they reflect and ponder on that word so that God’s righteousness might be revealed in their lives. It is important to note that this passage clearly states that the meek are “slow to anger”. It does not state that the meek never get angry. In fact, at times they do and they need to because not all anger is in and of itself a bad thing. There is righteous and unrighteous anger. Remember that when Moses, the meekest man on earth, came down from Mt. Sinai with the 10 Commandments he had received from God and saw the people dancing around and worshiping the golden calf they had made, in holy and righteous anger he threw down and broke the stone tablets. When Jesus went into the temple in Jerusalem and saw the cheating and corruption of the money changers, He was consumed with Holy anger. He made a whip out of ropes, threw over the money changers tables and chased them out of the temple courtyard saying, “My Father’s house shall be a house of prayer, but you have made it into a den of robbers.” When the meek get angry, it is not because their personal feelings have gotten hurt or because their noses have been bent out of shape, remember instead of getting hung up on their hurts they take those hurts and heartaches to the Lord and allow Him to heal them. They give no place to the enemy and don’t allow hurts to stir up bitterness and resentment because “the anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God”. No, their anger is based on the Almighty, they are angry over what angers Him. There are some things that should anger us when I see people abusing women that should make me angry. But the key becomes what we do with that anger so that its emotional energy becomes productive, not destructive. Is the result of your anger destructive or constructive, is it profitable or just painful? Are we being like Jesus, who turned God’s house from a place of profit into a place of prayer? As Matthew 5:5 states the meek are blessed and truly happy, for they shall inherit the earth. You see the meek are able to be at peace because they know that God has everything under control. And even if they have to endure some adversity here and now, they know that ultimately His purposes will be worked out. They trust God and are confident that wickedness and evil will not have the final word, but that truth and righteousness will prevail. Meek people understand that the earth and all that is in it remains the property of the Lord and that He has chosen to make it the inheritance of those who chose to walk in humility with Him. Contrary to the lies that the world wants you to listen to, the truth is that the mighty are those who are meek. What about you, are you following in the footsteps of Jesus and walking in meekness or are you trusting in self and striding in pride. As we submit to the supremacy of Christ he starts to cultivate a heart of humility in us and mold us into people of strength as He takes us from weak to meek.


Leave a comment

22. Strength Under Control – Part 1

Matthew 5:5 – “Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.”

In Acts 17:6 in response to Paul and Silas’ preaching of the Gospel and the conversion of numbers of Jews and devout Greeks and many of the city’s leading ladies, the leading Jews gathered a crowd of rabble rousers to arrest and drag them from their host’s house before the city authorities. When they were unable to find Paul and Silas, who had been secretly hidden by their hosts and helped to escape, they dragged Jason, the host, and some of the new converts before the magistrates. And the charge that they brought against these new believers was this: “These men who have turned the world upside down have come here also…saying that there is another king, Jesus.” Wherever the church has truly been the church and believers have been faithful in their witness as followers of Jesus Christ, not allowing the world to squeeze them into its mold, the result has always been turning the world upside down. This is precisely the message Jesus preached to His disciples in the Beatitudes and the rest of the Sermon on the Mount. For it is here that we discover a truth that flies in the face of our modern thinking, a wisdom that is so contrary to the mindset and ways of this world. In God’s Kingdom, those who want to go up need to go down, for the way of exaltation is the way of humility. The way to be first is to be last. True strength is found in weakness. True riches in poverty or bankruptcy, and true and lasting comfort in mourning. Jesus revealed in the first Beatitude, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of God” that the ground floor port of entry into the Christian life is when we acknowledge our utter spiritual bankruptcy before God. For whatever currency, and however much of it we may have acquired for ourselves in this world, it has no purchasing power in the Kingdom of God. So we must come to God acknowledging our poverty. The next step on God’s stairway to abundant life is that of mourning our condition, where our hearts grieve over the pain we have brought to the heart of God. This is where we start seeing our sin and rebellion from God’s perspective and begin to grieve over it. Instead of comparing ourselves to those more wicked than we are, we see ourselves in the light of Christ and His perfectness and our hearts are broken in sorrow and repentance. While we are all tempted to compare and contrast by looking at those we think are worse sinners than us, in the hopes of grade on a curve and looking good compared to others. We need to remember that God doesn’t grade on a curve but on a cross, where we are all sinners who fall short of His glory. This is where we come to the next step, where God pronounces blessing and happiness on the meek and promises that they will inherit the earth. So let me ask you what images come to your mind when you think of “the meek”? In an aggressive, arrogant, self-assertive and self-seeking world that has elevated individual rights almost to a place of universal supremacy, meekness today is tied to timidity and weakness. We see meekness as being weak and spineless, being a doormat for others. The dictionary confirms this perspective by offering the primary definition of meekness as “hesitancy” and offering as synonyms the following: docility, timidity, insecurity, sheepishness, shyness. But it’s here where the world misses the boat because nothing could be further from the truth. The Biblical meaning of meekness is literally “strength under control.” In the Greek language, words were extremely precise and expressive. When the Greeks developed a word, they not only gave it a careful definition, they almost always illustrated it. Their definition for “strength under control,” was used to describe a wild stallion that had been tamed or broken. The tamed stallion still has the same power only now it was productive power instead of destructive. God wants to cultivate meekness in our lives so that instead of being wild animals who end up hurting and bruising others we can help and bless them. To be meek does not mean to be weak and wimpy, it means to have strength but to have it under control. In Numbers 12 we have a story of Miriam and Aaron, Moses’ sister and brother questioning Moses authority as the spokesperson from God, saying “Has the Lord indeed spoken only through Moses? Has He not spoken through us also?” Now verse 3 of that chapter describes Moses in this way: “Now the man Moses was very meek, more than all men that were on the face of the earth.” Moses was no wimpy “Mr. Milktoast.” For no weakling would ever have been capable of standing up to Pharaoh the power house of the known world. Or leading over a million people out of Egypt and through the Sinai desert for 40 years, with all the mumbling, grumbling and criticism of such a stiff-necked, rebellious people. No Moses was a mighty and courageous man who had allowed God to place a bit in his mouth and willingly placed the reins of control in God’s hands. In this story, instead of taking matters into his own hands, either to defend himself and justify his position or attack them for their jealousy, he left the matter in God’s hands, and the Lord responds by speaking directly to all three of them at once, leaving no doubt about His choice of Moses as His spokesman and causing Miriam to be covered with leprosy. But it’s here that we see the most amazing aspect of meekness, power under control, for instead of Moses responding with self-righteous or boastful at being vindicated and saying, “That’ll teach you for trying to mess with me!” Moses cries out to the Lord on her behalf, “Heal her, O God, I beseech thee.” Showing that the meek do not take delight in the punishment of the wicked for they know their own frailty and dependence on God’s mercy. Interestingly there are only two people in the Bible who were called meek, Moses and Jesus, and neither of them were weak men. Both were very strong masculine men but their power was in the hands of the Master. Jesus is the One through whom the entire universe was made and to whom all power and authority rightly belong. The One before whom the demons trembled and fled. The One who spoke to the wind and the waves – saying, “Peace. Be still!” and they obeyed Him. The One who could command a dead man lying in a tomb to come back to life and come out and Lazarus not only heard his voice but responded in absolute obedience. The One who said to Peter at His arrest in the Garden of Gethsemane, after Peter had just hacked off the ear of the high priest’s servant, “Put away your sword. Don’t you know that I could appeal to my Father and He would immediately have sent me twelve legions of angels?”Matthew 26:53. Who when Pontius Pilate said to Him before His crucifixion, “Don’t you know that I have power to release you and power to crucify you?”, Jesus replied, “You would have no power over me unless it had been given you from above…” John 19:11. Here is strength beyond anything the world could muster, awesome power, yet power that was willingly and sacrificially placed under the Father’s control so that His eternal purposes for each of us might be fulfilled. That’s the true definition of meekness. When God “gentles” us, we become powerful under His control. So let me ask you whose hands are the reins of your life in, is your strength controlled by self or by the Savior?