“But the fruit of the Spirit is…meekness…” (Galatians 5:22-23).

God is more concerned about what we are than what we can do. He is actively at work in our lives and His purpose is to change us from the inside out. In Galatians chapter five He lists the fruit that He is working to produce in each one of our lives.

One of those important qualities on that list is meekness. What an important quality meekness is. You can’t get along in a marriage, a family, or a church without it! It is an indispensable quality that provides for peace and stability in our relationships.

Meekness involves the yielding of our personal rights and expectations to the Lord. Again, this is not a natural quality. Our natural reaction is to fight for our rights – and we often do – producing destructive anger and a trail of broken relationships.

We wouldn’t get angry unless our own personal “rights” were being threatened. But “…the wrath of man worketh not the righteousness of God” (James 1:20). Our anger never accomplishes anything good. It is always carnal. It is always destructive.

The antidote to anger is meekness.

It begins with teaching your children how to share their toys or candy with their siblings. But it leads all the way up to the total dedication and yielding of every area of your life to God’s control.

Meekness is a manifestation of spiritual maturity.
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An Indian once compared a Godly missionary to a mango tree. In order to get the fruit the Indians would throw stones and clubs at the tree. At the end of the season, the tree stood battered and scared, but the next season it would produce even more fruit.

That’s meekness: bearing fruit in a hostile world!

I expect that most of us today will have an opportunity to learn and demonstrate the quality of meekness. Don’t just focus on that present irritation or conflict. Understand the bigger picture of what God is doing by using those same conflicts to develop in you the meekness of Jesus Christ.

Morris Hull
Home Life Ministries

See our related post on teaching meekness to younger children at www.characterjournal.com/peacemaker-of-the-day/

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