Blessed are those who
hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled. Sometimes
preachers may use this phrase to support their prosperity gospel, a false
teaching that promises material riches once you become a Christian. Or, you may
have heard people quote only a portion of it – Blessed are those who hunger and
thirst…for they will be filled. They distort Jesus’ words to mean that all poor
people will be blessed with an abundance of food and drink because they are poor. Such teaching has misled thousands![i] I am going to safely assume that the majority of those who read this write-up have known true, deep physical hunger – a kind of
physical hunger and thirst that has long hoped for any food and water, and will
desperately eat dirt and non-potable water to satisfy the pain of hunger and
thirst. Some of the people Jesus spoke to on the Mount were physically hungry
and thirsty so, no doubt, their ears perked up when Jesus made that statement.
Some of them may have been present when Jesus fed the 5,000.
As a single mother early into my wage-earning season, I knew a physical hunger that I had never experienced before: my earnings did not go far, and no matter how frugal I was, it was very difficult financially to put nutritious meals on the table everyday after paying rent, and transportation to work. So I chose to not eat dinner many nights so that my children would have leftovers to eat the rest of the week. I would sometimes walk the 3 or 4 miles to get to the city where I could get on the bus to work without paying the additional toll for riding into the city from out of state. It would be more than a year or so before I could get financially steady enough to be able to afford a continued stock pantry and refrigerator.
But was this the
hunger and thirst Jesus was speaking about? No, for Jesus says:
“who hunger and thirst for righteousness.” Have you ever wanted to go
somewhere or do something so much that you could “taste” it? That’s the level
of hunger and thirst Jesus is figuratively talking about. What does hungering
and thirsting for righteousness mean? In the Bible righteousness refers to God’s
justice and His supreme knowledge, standard, and character of what is right; God’s
Righteousness is also called Jesus Christ!
Jesus’ primary concern for His listeners was spiritual; He was focused on the
heart, mind, and soul of His hearers. They had been so oppressed for so long by
the legal demands of the teachers of the Old Law that God’s
righteousness was muted. And then the Roman authorities were even more
oppressive, discriminatory, grossly unfair, and considered the Jewish people to
be of less value. The people needed Jesus
to tell them about God and His righteousness and justice –
His goodness, His love, and so revive in them the stories of their forefathers
who were faithful to that God. Having that hunger and thirst stirred up in them
would give them a strong desire to know the God Jesus preached, the one King
David sang about all the time.
In the Bible there is a story about a person who
had that happen to her: Do you know the story of the Samaritan woman at the
well? You’ve got to read it! It is in John
4, verses 1-30, and 39-42.
The dialogue is priceless! Jesus intentionally happens to be there when
she came to the well to draw water. She was not with the ‘cool group’ – many of
the women of the town would not associate with her because of her lifestyle.
After Jesus speaks to her and tells her about her life to her face, instead of
being insulted, she felt amazed to be in the presence of a prophet like Him!
Jesus turned her daily trek to fetch water into an epiphany of sorts for her,
for she, along with others in the Samaritan town, were eagerly awaiting the arrival of
the foretold Messiah – The One Who is to Come. When Jesus reveals Himself to
her, her hunger and thirst for an encounter with the long foretold Messiah is
sated; she is in awe that such as He would reveal Himself to such as her! So
much so that she runs back to town, leaving her water jar – a valuable piece of
property, to tell her friends that she has met The Messiah. Have you ever been that excited to hear Jesus' words? Have you ever been
that excited about something that you stopped everything you were doing in
order to tell someone what just happened?
She hungered and thirst to see and know God’s righteousness both in the
flesh and in deliverance. She
got both. She was more than sated, she was filled
to overflowing. She would now never need to “thirst” again.
Explore
1. Asking
the question again: Have you ever been as excited as the Samaritan woman about something
amazing that caused you to stop everything you were doing in order to tell
someone what just happened? What was it and who did you tell?
2. Do
we know what it feels like to deeply hunger and thirst for God and His justice
or righteousness (in the Bible the words 'justice' and 'righteousness' are used interchangeably)? Why do
you answer that way?
3. Jesus
tells the Samaritan woman that He is the well of Living Water; in the book of Revelation,
He provides saving waters (see Revelation
21:6
and Revelation
22:17). Have you ever heard before about Jesus being Living
Water and/or providing saving waters? What do you think about that?
4. Have
you ever personally experienced Jesus as Living Water or Water of Life? If so,
were you “filled to overflowing”?
[i] [i]One of the Church's duties is to help others in distress when and where it can. Compare James 1:27.
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Bonus - "Jireh" - by Maverick City; "O Come to the Altar," Trey McLaughlin and SOZ
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