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Junk To Jewels
Chapter 4
Blessed Are
The Poor
With God, poverty
in any form is simply the gateway to abundance. We need to renew our mind to think like God on this subject.
The world has a
way of making us feel totally defeated and without hope when we are going
through bad times. If we are
experiencing afflictions, we can feel like God wants to keep us poor forever,
or that He had designed us for mediocrity. However God has a totally different view! He says that being "poor" is
the door through which we enter His Kingdom, His blessings, and His
remedies. His goal for us is
abundant life.
What does poor
mean?
Poor in spirit is
not having resources adequate to meet the demands made upon you. "Blessed are
the poor in spirit, For theirs is the kingdom of heaven" (Matthew
5:3). The definition of
"poor" according to Strong's Concordance [1] is: "1) reduced to beggary, begging,
asking alms, 2) destitute of wealth, influence, position, honour, 2a) lowly,
afflicted, destitute of the Christian virtues and eternal riches, 2b) helpless,
powerless to accomplish an end, 2c) poor, needy, 3) lacking in anything, 3a) as respects their spirit, 3a1) destitute of wealth of
learning and intellectual culture, which the schools afford. (men of this class most readily give
themselves up to Christ's teaching and proved themselves fitted to lay hold of
the heavenly treasure)." Poor
in spirit is not having resources adequate to meet the demands made upon you
for life.
God
loves to fill empty vessels.
In 2 Kings
chapter 4, the prophet Elisha told the poor widow to go borrow as many empty
vessels as she could. All the
empty vessels were supernaturally filled with oil, and when
she told her son to go find another vessel he told her that there were none
left. God did not run out of oil,
she simply ran out of emptiness.
Bring God your emptiness, admit it, be honest with Him, show Him your
hunger and thirst, and watch Him be God!
The following
devotion by author Watchman Nee says it well. [2]
"If that is the case, our God whom we serve is able to deliver us from the burning fiery furnace, and He will deliver us from your hand, O king" (Daniel 3:17). How does the Church reach her goal? Only by traveling the pathway from pressure to enlargement, from poverty to enrichment. You ask: What do we mean by enlargement through pressure? When three are shut into a furnace and the three become four that is enlargement through pressure. Some find a furnace rather close quarters for three, so they seek a way of escape; others accept the limitation, and in accepting it, make room for a Fourth. Not to let difficulties shut us out from God, but to let them shut us in to him, that is enlargement through pressure. Some, through pressure, reach God's end; others come to an end in the pressure. Some die in straitness; others, through straitness, find fullness of life. Some murmur when trials befall, finding in them only restraint, limitation and death; others praise God for the trials, and in doing so discover the pathway to enlargement, liberation, and abundance of life.
What
if we don't think we are poor?
I believe many
Christians remain shallow and mistake their own strengths for God's
blessings. Some people are very
strong in will and intellect and have powerful emotions. They are often capable to defend against
the trials in life that are meant to break down these very qualities of the old
nature and the flesh. Their
self-love and powerful souls are often capable to prevent the working of the
Cross in their lives.
This idea is
easily misunderstood. They would
say that God is blessing them and that God does not bring trials and ordained
sufferings. I would partially
agree. God wants to bless us and
He does not send things to hurt us.
However, I do believe in ordained trials and sufferings, which are all
meant to make us "poor in spirit" so that we may be candidates for
God's true blessings.
Many Christians
in First World countries feel that God is blessing them, when actually they
have just hooked on to the prosperity of the world's system. That is not God's best. There are two kinds of prosperity. The first is based upon the world's
system, which is graduation upwards.
It utilizes the strength of the soul, the mind, will and emotions to
survive and prosper. The second is
based upon the Kingdom of God, which is based upon blessings coming from
resurrection. However death is
required prior to resurrection.
When we receive a blessing from Kingdom principles it is eternal and
cannot be compared with blessings from the world.
The following
is quoted from Watchman Nee from his book The Release of the Spirit.[3]
No life manifests more beauty than the one who is broken! Stubbornness and self will have given way to beauty in the one who has been broken by God. For example, consider Jacob in the Old Testament. We see how even in his mother's womb he struggled with his brother. He was subtle, tricky, and manipulative. But his life was full of sorrows and grief. As a youth, he fled from home. For twenty years, Laban cheated him. The wife of his heart's love - Rachel - died prematurely. The son of his love - Joseph - was sold into slavery. Years later, another one of his dearly loved sons, Benjamin, was detained in Egypt. Repeatedly, he was dealt with by God, meeting misfortune after misfortune. He was stricken by God once, twice and thrice. Indeed, his whole history is said to be a history of being stricken by God. Finally, after many recurring dealings, the man Jacob was transformed. In his last few years, he was quite transparent. How dignified was his answer to Pharaoh! How beautiful was his end when he worshipped God leaning on his staff. How clear were his blessings to his descendants! After reading the last page of his history, we want to bow our heads and worship God. Here is one who is matured, who knows God so experientially. Several decades of dealings have resulted in the breaking of Jacob's outward man. In his old age, his life of brokenness is a picture of beauty.
Each one of us has much of the same 'Jacob-nature' in us. Our only hope is that the Lord may blaze a way out of us, breaking our outward man - breaking it to such a degree that the inward man may come out and be seen. This is precious! This is the way for those who serve the Lord. Only by this process can we serve the Lord, and only by this procedure can we lead men to the Lord. All else is limited in its value. Doctrinal and theological knowledge does not have that much usefulness. What is the use of mere mental knowledge of the Bible if the outward man remains unbroken? Only the person through whom God can come forth is useful.
Jacob's name was
changed to Israel (God prevails) when his thigh was broken in an all night
wrestling match with the angel.
The thigh is the strongest part of the body, the flesh. Jacob walked with a limp the rest of
his life, but he was a warrior for God!
Let us value our broken thighs and our limps!
God will overcome
not only our difficult circumstances, but even more importantly, He wants to
and will overcome our difficult personality traits, those parts or our old
nature that are not like Jesus.
The Kingdom of
God operates on different principles than the Kingdom of the world.
The world
operates on increase and upward promotion for the strong. The Kingdom of God works on death first
and resurrection next, our weakness making room for God's power. Without death there can be no
resurrection! James 2:5 says,
"Listen, my beloved brethren: Has God not chosen the poor of this world to
be rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom which He
promised to those who love Him?"
Jesus gives
great value to bruised people.
One of the prophecies about Jesus as
written in Isaiah 42:3 was, "A bruised reed He will not break, And smoking
flax He will not quench; He will bring forth justice for truth." In those days a bruised reed referred
to an object that had no value and should just be discarded. People would take reeds that grew near
the water's edge, cut a piece of it, cut some holes in it, and thus they would
have made a flute or a recorder on which they would play music. These instruments were very fragile and
would bruise easily. Once they
were damaged the owner would break it and discard it. It would be much easier to make a new one than to attempt to
repair the bruised one.
The smoking flax was a wick from a
lamp that was so worn out that it would no longer burn, it would simply
smoke. Therefore the owner would
discard it and purchase or make a new one.
The prophecy says that Jesus would
not do that. He would see a
bruised person and see their value.
He would see the prostitute, the tax collector, and see their
potential. He would see the
victims of divorce and failure, the financial failures, the moral failures, and
instead of discarding them, He would heal them and fix them. He would see people who were burned out
with trying to make their lives work and consider them the finest potential for
His Kingdom. As a matter of fact,
He felt that they had more potential for His Kingdom than the strong, proud and
successful.
Reader, take hold of this concept! This is our God! He loves you as you are. If you have failed, if you have not
been able to make life work, you have just the potential God wants. When you allow this to soak in, you
will realize the love He has for you, and how valuable you are to Him. Knowing that God loves you just the way
you are is the most powerful step in healing. A person will never really be spiritually and emotionally
healed until the love of God towards them becomes their identity. If you are continually attempting to
establish your identity by your work, your appearance, your ministry, your
friends, or even by your spouse, you will be miserable. You need to know that Jesus the creator
loves you in your poverty and sees great potential in you.
When we see the apostle John in
Heaven, we might expect him to identify himself in many different ways. He might say that he knew Jesus
personally on earth, or that he wrote the Book of John, and the epistles of
John, or that it was he who wrote the Book of Revelation. But I think he will simply tell us what
he said many times in his writings, that he was simply one of His disciples
whom Jesus loved. "Now there
was leaning on Jesus' bosom one of His disciples, whom Jesus loved" (John
13:23).
The rich
young ruler.
It is a blessing to start off
poor. Jesus never said that we
would stay that way. If Jesus came
to bring good news to the poor, then good news must be that they do not have to
stay poor forever. However, we
need to start there in order to be blessed. Blessings are a derivative of suffering, or being
"poor." The Rich Young
Ruler is a good example.
"Then Jesus said to His disciples, 'Assuredly, I say to you that it
is hard for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. And again I say to you, it is easier
for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the
kingdom of God'" (Matthew 19:23,24).
I can personally testify that each time I become "poor" in
some area of life, that is when I experience the Kingdom of God for that area.
Jesus spoke this to his disciples
after his encounter with the Rich Young Ruler. This man "had it made." He was rich, young, in strong authority like a governor or
magistrate. He was also a very
religious Jew who prided himself on keeping the laws. He was not suffering, however he did have a longing in his
heart for more. The issue I want
to bring to your attention is the contrast that Jesus made between the rich and
the poor.
The disciples were confused by the
encounter with the Rich Young Ruler as recorded in Matthew chapter 19. They thought he was the example to be
followed. Jesus went on to explain
the principle of the Kingdom of God to His disciples by telling them a parable
story as recorded in Matthew chapter 20.
Let us take a peek into what Jesus
was telling these disciples in this parable. He was comparing "rich" and "poor"
people and their privileges.
Matthew
20:1-10 says,
1. "For the kingdom of heaven is like a landowner who went out early in the morning to hire laborers for his vineyard.
2. Now when he had agreed with the laborers for a denarius a day, he sent them into his vineyard.
3. And he went out about the third hour and saw others standing idle in the marketplace,
4. and said to them, 'You also go into the vineyard, and whatever is right I will give you.' So they went.
5. Again he went out about the sixth and the ninth hour, and did likewise.
6. And about the eleventh hour he went out and found others standing idle, and said to them, 'Why have you been standing here idle all day?'
7. They said to him, 'Because no one hired us.' He said to them, 'You also go into the vineyard, and whatever is right you will receive.'"
Obviously the landowner hired the strong, young, and qualified workers first. Wouldn't you? Notice however, that the weak did not give up. They stayed in the marketplace waiting for someone to hire them. There must have been another group of people who were on the streets begging, or even laying in bed sleeping.
Perhaps these weak people had some sort of physical handicap. Perhaps they were just poor in circumstances. Maybe they were too old. Perhaps they had a negative attitude towards themselves and life. But one thing for sure, they were the "poor in spirit."
8. "So when evening had come, the owner of the vineyard said to his steward, 'Call the laborers and give them their wages, beginning with the last to the first.'
9. And when those came who were hired about the eleventh hour, they each received a denarius.
10. But when the first came, they supposed that they would receive more; and they likewise received each a denarius."
The weak people
who worked for only one hour received the same compensation as the strong ones
who worked all day. They also
received their compensation first. Remember that this parable is about the Kingdom of God. Therefore I submit that the wages, or
the reward paid, is the functioning of the Kingdom of God in the practical
daily lives of those who qualify.
We don't have to wait to die to live in the Kingdom of God. We are only pilgrims on this
earth. We are actually citizens of
the Kingdom of God. Why not enjoy
the benefits now?
We are candidates
for God's power operating through His Kingdom when we reach the end of our own
resources. Kingdom living is Word
living; it is living in real-time contact with Jesus through the Holy
Spirit. My family and I are living
testimonies of this truth!
"We must through many tribulations enter the kingdom of God"
(Acts 14:22).
Here is the
point. Those who qualify as being
weak or poor in the world's standards will live in the foretaste of the Kingdom
of God now, on this earth, before they die! Hebrews 6:5 says, "and [they] have tasted the good word
of God and the powers of the age to come." Some people, like the Rich Young Ruler, may experience the
Kingdom of God, but only after they die (I hope he did.). The last will be first and the first
last. By the way, this parable in
no way endorses being lazy or asking for handouts. I believe these poor people had the discipline of staying in
there, and hoping beyond hope!
Continuing in
Matthew chapter 20:11-16
11 "And when they had received it, they complained against the landowner,
12 "saying, 'These last men have worked only one hour, and you made them equal to us who have borne the burden and the heat of the day.'
13 But he answered one of them and said, 'Friend, I am doing you no wrong. Did you not agree with me for a denarius?
14 Take what is yours and go your way. I wish to give to this last man the same as to you.
15 Is it not lawful for me to do what I wish with my own things? Or is your eye evil because I am good?'
16 So
the last will be first, and the first last. For many are called, but few chosen."
Jesus was talking
about God's grace. God just wants
to show us that He is good. He
favors those who are down in circumstances. His solution was not to make them dependent upon something
on this earth; His solution was to give them entrance into the Kingdom of
God. The weak people in the
parable in Matthew 20 were the desperate ones who needed to be rescued. The master came and he had them
participate according to their own ability, which apparently was not very
much. However he did not pay them
according to their ability, he paid them according to his goodness and
grace.
Look at this picture. The rich man in the picture became rich
by his own power. Which position
would you rather be in? The
response of many people would surprise you!
Which position would you rather
be in?

e. r he in l b s ' God
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This picture describes the faithful
overcomers. They must stand for a
long time, they have little power, but they have an open door.
"And to the angel of the church
in Philadelphia write, 'These things says He who is holy, He who is true, He
who has the key of David, He who opens and no one shuts, and shuts and no one
opens: I know your works. See, I
have set before you an open door, and no one can shut it; for you have a little
strength, have kept My word, and have not denied My name.''' "Behold, I am coming quickly! Hold fast what you have, that no one
may take your crown" (Revelation 3:7,8,11).
It is
not a blessing to stay poor.
"The thief
does not come except to steal, and to kill, and to destroy. I have come that they may have life,
and that they may have it more abundantly" (John 10:10). God wants His blessings to overtake
you. Being poor is only a blessing
to the extent that it is a starting point, but it is not the end. In Matthew chapter 6:25-34 Jesus was
exhorting people not to strive and worry about temporal blessings such as what
to eat and what to wear because that was not His design for His children. That is what the Gentiles do. A Gentile is a person who has no blood
covenant with God. He said,
"But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these
things (that Gentiles labor for) shall be added to you" (Matthew
6:33). As we pursue the overcoming
lifestyle, we should expect God's blessings to overtake us from our backsides,
that is to say, as a surprise.
Blessings are not something that we pursue, they are something that
pursue us as we seek Him.
[1] The New Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible.
Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publisher, 1995.
[2] Nee, Watchman.
A Table in the Wilderness, Daily Meditations,
Wheaton, Ill; Tyndale House Publishers. Fort Washington, Pennsylvania; -
Christian Literature Crusade. p.p.
January 25
[3] Nee, Watchman. The Release of the Spirit. Riverside, CA. Sure Foundation Publishers, 1965, p.p. 20,21.