Worthy Brief - June 26, 2026

 Worthy Brief - June 26, 2026

When strength comes under the King! 

Matthew 5:5  Blessed are the meek, For they shall inherit the earth. 

The ancient world prized the wrong kind of strength. Empires rose through conquest, kings measured greatness by territory seized, and the powerful pressed their heel upon the meek as though it were the natural order of things. Into that world -- and into ours -- Yeshua (Jesus) declared something radically different: the earth belongs to the meek. Not to the aggressive. Not to the ambitious. Not to those who take. To the anav.

Yet meekness is often misread. Modern ears hear it as weakness -- passive, timid, easily pushed aside. But that is not the biblical portrait. The Hebrew word behind this Beatitude is anav, and it carries no suggestion of powerlessness. It describes a person whose strength has been surrendered to God, whose power is no longer ruled by pride. Moses is the great example. Scripture calls him “very meek, more than all people who were on the face of the earth” [Numbers 12:3]. Yet Moses confronted Pharaoh, led Israel through the wilderness, and stood between the people and divine judgment. His meekness was not the absence of strength. It was strength under submission.

In this Beatitude, the Greek word for meek is praus -- a word used to describe strength brought under control, like a war horse under bit and bridle. The animal’s power remained fully intact; what changed was its submission to the rider’s hand. In the same way, the meek person has not lost strength. His strength has come under the rule of Another. He is fully alive and fully submitted -- and it is precisely this person whom Yeshua names as heir of the earth.

This is why the Beatitudes move in the order they do. The poor in spirit have already surrendered the illusion of self-sufficiency. Those who mourn have looked honestly at what is broken and refused the comfort of pretense. Now the anav step forward -- not crushed, not passive, not diminished, but alive under the government of God. They are the ones who have discovered that true authority is not seized but received, not grasped but given. The Kingdom does not reward those who force their way to the front. It gives the earth to those who have already given themselves to the King.

That promise reaches back into Psalm 37:11: “But the meek shall inherit the earth, and shall delight themselves in the abundance of peace.” Yeshua is not improvising; He is confirming a covenant promise. The proud may occupy territory for a season, but the anavim are the rightful heirs. An inheritance is not stolen -- it is received. The meek do not need to claw, manipulate, dominate, or force every door open. They trust the Father who gives the inheritance in His time and in His way, and their confidence rests not in their ability to take, but in His faithfulness to give.

The meek do not have to win every argument, defend every slight, answer every accusation, or force every opportunity. They do not live anxiously grasping for position because they know their inheritance is secure in the King. They can be gentle without being weak, humble without being insecure, patient without being passive, and bold without being proud.

When we understand this blessing through the lens of ashrei, we begin to see meekness the way the Kingdom sees it. Ashrei is not shallow happiness, but the deep flourishing of a life rightly aligned with God. It is the settled blessedness that belongs to those who no longer need to seize the earth, because they belong to the King who will give it. The blessed life is not found in grasping but in receiving, not in conquest but in surrender. The world looks at meekness and assumes defeat; the Kingdom looks at meekness and sees the face of the heir.

You are not called to be diminished -- you are called to be surrendered. The Kingdom does not need you smaller; it needs you submitted. The strength God has placed within you is not the enemy of your inheritance -- it becomes holy when it is yielded to the King. Stop grasping for what only the Father can give, and place your power, your gifts, your voice, your future, and your authority in His hands. Walk as the anav — strong, humble, steady, and fully under the direction of the King. Ashrei are the meek. Oh, what a great blessing belongs to those who no longer need to seize the earth, because they belong to the King who will give it.

Shabbat Shalom -- have a great weekend worshipping the King, we'll see you first thing on Monday! 

Your family in the Lord with much agape love,

George & Baht Rivka (Maryland)

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