What are we hungry and thirsty for?
When I was a newborn baby, I hungered and thirsted for a mother’s milk, a clean diaper, the warmth of a mothers arms, and the sound of her heartbeat.
When I was a child, I hungered and thirsted for foods that tasted good to my tongue, toys and friends to play with, and adults to do everything for me.
When I was a teenager, I hungered and thirsted for foods, entertainment and activities that could be enjoyed socially with friends, time away from adults, and a cities time when I could “be an adult and do adult stuff”.
When I was a foolish young adult, I hungered and thirsted for the opposite sex, whatever might get me closest to them, and whatever might catch their attention.
As I’ve grown and matured into less of a child and less of a fool, I’ve learned to hunger and thirsty for things that aren’t necessarily “of this world”.
The Word of God tells us this about what we “hunger and thirst for”:
Matthew 5:6 AMP
[6] “Blessed [joyful, nourished by God’s goodness] are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness [those who actively seek right standing with God], for they will be [completely] satisfied.
https://bible.com/bible/1588/mat.5.6.AMP
This study ponders the biblical account of David as an example of a man who hungered and thirsted for righteousness, and is worth a read of you have the time: https://www.learningladyhood.com/blog/davids-hunger-and-thirst-for-righteousness
The author of Learning Ladyhood states:
“When I think of a person in Scripture who exemplified this idea of hungering and thirsting after righteousness, I think of David. Although he was not at all perfect, he nevertheless displayed a heart that longed to do things right: that was willing to fight for righteousness, literally and figuratively, and that mourned when he failed to live out the righteousness he knew God expected of him.”
Isn’t it wonderful that the Word of God offers this satisfaction to those who “hunger and thirst for righteousness” rather than “those who think themselves righteous”?
The biblical account of David’s life is treacherous and far from perfect — yet He longed for and sought God with passion and boldness. This is a great encouragement to me, because I seem to myself to have far more in common with the foolish mistakes I see David and other mere men of the Bible making than the perfection of God and Christ Jesus’ life example. Yet, I have something else in common with these “fellow fools and sinners” — I long for God and for righteousness. I recognize that I get in my own way, and that I need something beyond my own fleshly desires that crave fulfillment from things in this world.
There is a part of us that we Christians can grab hold of that is “not of this world”. It is why we can say boldly that we are just a traveler in this land, but it is not our home. It is why, even as our flesh screams out at us to fulfill our desires by following the temptation to sin, we can boldly stand firm against it to walk in a different Way.
If you still only know how to hunger and thirst for the desires of your flesh and of this world, have you seen yet that there is a high price to every “free gift” the enemy offers you?
Have you found that even though sin feels good for a season, it always loses its taste and costs more than it is worth in the end?
Do you need a new type hunger for a type of bread and water that is truly life sustaining?
His name is Jesus Christ, Yeshua HaMashiach, and He takes us a different Way where we are blessed and we are satisfied in ways this world can never fulfill by itself.
In fact, the world with all of its treasures turn into traps and poison when we try to close our fist around them. But with Him, they become blessing that goes abundantly more than enough for us to live open handedly as a blessing to the nations. That would be a bold claim for a mere man to make, but it is a solid, reliable promise from God that you will find in His Word. Amen.
