
There was once a man who spent his life doing the right things. He was a reliable man who tended his father’s farm. Day after day, he rose early, along with the servants, to work the fields until sunset. His strength, his suntanned complexion, spoke of his persevering, painstaking labour. So did the plentiful harvest he helped to reap.By all appearances, he was an exemplary man: hardworking, efficient, persevering, faithful, fruitful.
But in spite of all this, the man still lacked something. The joy and contentment that should have come with his hard workwere absent. This became apparent the day he heard that his father had organized a celebration to mark the return of his younger brother.
In his eyes, his younger brother had done everything wrong: he had asked for his inheritance, then left home for a distant land. He had indulged in wild living and squandered all his inheritance. When the young man had become destitute, he returned home and begged his father’s forgiveness.
Lk 15:29-31: “Look! All these years I’ve been slaving for you and never disobeyed your orders. Yet you never gave me even a young goat so I could celebrate with my friends. But when this son of yours who has squandered your property with prostitutes comes home, you kill the fattened calf for Him!”
Why does our striving sometimes hinder us from knowing the God we work so hard to please?For a possible answer to this question, let’s turn to Matthew 5:5. This is the passage that refers to the Beatitudes. Jesus is telling His disciples that they will be blessed for who they are, not for what they do.
Surrender involves two actions: --[if !supportLists]-->·
Letting go, which requires continually releasing control over our lives and relinquishing our plan in favour of God’s will. It may mean letting go of a bad habit, an addiction, an approval-seeking behaviour or anything else we’ve used to find fulfillment apart from God. ·
Relaxing. The call to surrender is also a call to relax in the Father’s unconditional love, into which we are forever invited. Our striving, grasping, positioning, manipulating, performing and mask-wearing can all slip away as we yield to the goodness of our Father. He loves us and accepts us as we are. In relaxing, our souls find true rest.
Open hands. Finally, a meek heart resembles open hands that are ready to receive. The older son missed out what he already had in the father’s household. He was so consumed and blinded by his efforts to earn the father’s riches that he couldn’t receive the father’s freely given love, presence and acceptance. The father wanted to give so much more than just an inheritance to his sons. He longed to give himself. In the same way, our Heavenly Father wants to give Himself to us. He longs to be admitted into our hearts. But He does not force His way. Rather, He waits for us to open the doors and receive Him (Rev 3:20).
Yet, unless our hearts are destitute, unless our knees are bent before God in surrender and in submission, it will be hard to stretch out our hands, to wait for and receive the gift of love and mercy that God is always ready to give. As we welcome our neediness and surrender our control to God, we are released to receive all that He waits to bestow on us. Through the hidden blessing of meekness, we inherit the earth – and all the joy our Father wants to share with us, His beloved children.
