What does it mean that blessed are the meek (Matthew 5:5)?

TL;DR

“Blessed are the meek” means Jesus flips the world’s definition of power, declaring that those who humbly submit to God rather than grasp control are the ones who will ultimately inherit the earth. Though the proud may seem to win now, Jesus—the perfectly meek King—will return in glory, and those who follow Him will share in His eternal reign.

WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?

Matthew 5:5, which says, "blessed are the meek," is within the passage known as “the beatitudes” (Matthew 5:3–12). “Beatitude” comes from the Latin beatus, meaning “blessed” or “happy.” These beatitudes describe the characteristics of those who are of God's kingdom, each beginning with a character trait and ending with a corresponding blessing. Being meek means having power under control, and the promise is that the meek will inherit the earth. Meekness as a characteristic for inheriting the earth is counterintuitive to wisdom of this world, as the strong and aggressive often get the most out of this life. In fact, the meek are generally the ones subdued. However, Jesus, despite being fully God with the power and authority that entails, meekly humbled Himself (Philippians 2:6–7). He humbly submitted even to the point of death, for which God gave Him authority over all (Philippians 2:8–10). A follower of Christ is to be meek like their Master. We can do so because the Spirit lives within us, producing gentleness, kindness, and patience—key ingredients for meekness (Galatians 5:22–23). Jesus came meekly the first time but He will one day return as the eternal King (Revelation 19:11–20:5). When He does, His people will reign with Him over the world (Revelation 20:6). This is what Jesus meant about the meek being blessed: those who follow Him will inherit the earth.

FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT

FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT

IMPLICATIONS FOR TODAY

Everything about society says that the goal is to be the strongest, the sexiest, the richest, the most powerful. Those are all about “look at me!” and “see how great I am!” Yet, Jesus said that God favors the humble, the meek, those who have power under control.

That doesn’t mean we are to be weak people, soft on theology or eternal truths. But we are not to be arrogant either. We are to consider others better than ourselves (Philippians 2:3) and live in such a way that points people to Jesus (Matthew 5:16). In short, it’s all about Him—not about us.

Jesus was the ultimate example. Though fully God, He added on humanity, humbling Himself by submitting His will to the Father’s will (Luke 22:42). Even when killed and despite having authority over His accusers, He meekly allowed them to accuse Him (Isaiah 53:7) and crucify Him (John 10:17–18).

Meekness is a characteristic of kingdom citizens because the kingdom’s King is meek. He was not powerless but restrained Himself so He could save others. Let us also be like our King, extending patience and mercy to those around us.

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