SOME TIME AGO I read about a young woman who wanted to go to college. Her heart sank when she read one of the questions on the application blank. "Are you a leader?" it asked.
Being a conscientious person, she wrote, "No," and sent in the form, expecting to be rejected. To her surprise, she received a letter from one of the college officials that read, "A study of the application blanks reveals that this year our college will have 1,452 leaders. Therefore, we are accepting your application since we feel it imperative that we have one follower."
We live in a day when it is not difficult to find someone willing to be Him. head cook, but few are willing to wash dishes. I remember my daughter complaining that few wanted to help decorate the school floats, yet dozens wanted to ride them in the parade. Organizations never lack for those willing to be bosses, but those willing to saw boards and drive nails are always scarce.
Rare are the meek
Jesus said, "Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth" (Matt. 5:5, NIV). Today He might say, "Blessed, and rare, are the meek, for they are becoming ex- tinct." It's easy to believe that the meek will inherit heaven when they die. No one questions that. But few really believe the meek will inherit the earth
It doesn't require much reflection, however, to understand the strength of genuine meekness. The meek are likable people. They don't bore us by bragging of their accomplishments, and they are quick to congratulate us on ours. We like that! They laugh at our corny jokes and live by the prayer, "Lord, keep me from becoming talkative and possessed with the idea that I must express myself on every subject."
A lesson on meekness
Once while at Capernaum, Jesus asked His disciples what they had been arguing about along the way (see Mk. 9:33). Jesus, of course, knew what they had been discussing, but He wanted them to tell Him.
The disciples were too ashamed to admit that they had been arguing about which of them was greatest. So Jesus took a little child and sat him in their midst and said, "I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven" (Matt. 18:3, NIV).
I think it is difficult to be meek in today's society when so much of what we read and hear teaches us to be forthright and assertive. Perhaps we need Meek Centers to help counter this movement. But probably no one would go. It should be no surprise that counseling centers are popping up everywhere to help people cope with the frustration (psychological turmoil) they experience from trying to attain superiority over others.
An outstanding psychiatrist, Dr. Alfred Adler, taught that most modern nervous and emotional disorders are a result of a definite striving after power. The average person, in a mad drive for power, is in a daily race with others for earthly goals. Consequently, one's day is often beset by failures, frustrations, and banged up feelings and fenders!
Stop and analyze what's been happening to you. Why do you feel tired and down in the dumps?
Perhaps it's because someone recently let the air out of your ego. We often suffer exhaustion and a sense of failure not because of the work we've done, but because, consciously or subconsciously, we are trying to prove our superiority. We want others to know that our ideas are superior, our doctrines are the correct ones (are there any others?), our church is the best, our ball team is number one, and our political party will save the world from ultimate destruction.
You name the subject and we'll argue until we're blue in the face that what we have to say about it is the last word. And when we die, wisdom, like the dinosaurs, will surely vanish from the earth. We've forgotten the verse of Scripture that says, "If anyone thinks he is something when he is nothing, he deceives himself" (Gal. 6:3, NIV).
The strength of meekness
Recently, I officiated at the memorial service for the meekest man I've ever known. This man was so meek that he was strong - perhaps the strongest man, spiritually speaking I've ever met. His meekness was his strength, for he was a living example of what God can do when a life is turned over to Him. In this man you saw the strength of meekness (which the world abhors), because in this man you saw Jesus.
Dr. Alvin Shifflett
This article originally appeared in the January 1986 issue of
The Evangelist