Ko te maaka hua

Kaore i te maha nga korero mo te ngakau mahaki i roto i te hahi, no te mea ehara te ngakau mahaki i te hua tino rongonui na te Wairua. I roto i te ao e noho nei tatou, people don’t want you to be meek, but be self-assertive, independent, standing up for yourself, and having an own opinion. Meekness is not encouraged at schools, in teachings, I te mahi, and not even in homes. When you are meek, there is big change that you will be bullied at school. And when you are not self-assertive at your job, your colleagues will walk all over you and take advantage of you. You have to stand up for yourself. Te ao (pūnaha) opposes God(s) (pūnaha); they can’t go together. But what does the Bible say about meekness and the meaning of the fruit of the Spirit meekness?

What does meekness mean?

Meekness comes from the Greek word ‘praotēs’ (G4236 Strong’s Concordance) ko te tikanga: ngawari; na roto i te haehaa: – ngawari.

When you are meek, your are gentle and have humility in your heart. No matter how many miseries or wrongs you have endured, you will stay meek and full of forgiveness.

The opposite of meekness is pride, āhua whakahīhī, whakakake, self-assertive, rebellion etc. You see the worldly characteristics (whakahī, āhua whakahīhī, whakakake, self-assertive, rebellion etc.) versus the Godly characteristics (ngawari, te haehaa, meekness etc.).

God is meek

Thou hast also given me the shield of Thy salvation: and Thy right hand hath holden me up, and Thy gentleness (ngawari) hath made me great (Himene 18:36)

God is a loving Father; mārū, te mahi, full of mercy, forgiveness and patience. When you read the Old Testament, you’ll see how meek and gentle God really is. He tapu te Atua, he tika. Therefore God can’t be a Partaker of the world and of sins and iniquities.

Koinei te take whanau ano is essential instead of an option, to be reconciled with God and have a relation with the Father. Te kore te whakahou, people can’t commune with the Father. Only those who have become a new creation;  Tuhinga o mua and Spirit have eternal life (Hone 3:5). It all begins at the cross, at the sacrifice of Jesus Christ; e tona toto.

Jesus is meek

Tangohia taku ioka ki runga ki a koe, me te ako i ahau; He meke hoki ahau, he iti hoki te ngākau: a ka kitea e koutou he okiokinga ki o koutou wairua (Mat 11:29)

Te Paipera Paipera Matiu 6-10 Kia tae mai tou rangatiratanga i runga i te whenua e rite ana ki te rangi

Ka mea a Ihu, that He is meek and lowly in heart. He walked on earth, te raveraa i te hinaaro o To’na Metua; Jesus was meek

Jesus didn’t walk after His flesh; His senses, karekau, tīweka, hiahia, a ka. But Jesus walked after the Spirit; te mahi i ta te Matua i pai ai. Aita Iesu i haafifi i te ao nei, KĀORE!

Jesus stayed in the will of His Father, by obeying and doing His words and keeping commandments. Therefore Jesus pleased the Father and was faithful to Him unto His death.

So many people despised Him, but Jesus stayed faithful to His Father. It had cost Him everything, engari i mahia e Ihu, because He loved His Father.

Although Jesus bore the fruit meekness, Jesus was not a wishy-washy. Jesus walked and spoke boldly with authority. Jesus was meek towards man, He was gentle and served them, but He wasn’t afraid to confront God’s people, with their sins and their evil walk.

The new creation is meek

We have the Holy Spirit living inside of us, and therefore Gods nature dwells in us. He dwells in usand if we live according to His will, me te whai i te Wairua, then we shall bear the fruit of the Spirit, which contains the fruit meekness.

He Korero a Roma 6-6-7- I te mohio hoki kua ripekatia to tatou koroheke ki a ia, kia kore ai tatou e mahi i te hara mo te tangata kua mate.

Just like God and Jesus are meek, we shall also become like them and become meek.

We can only bear the fruit meekness, if our flesh, and our ‘self’ has died, and if we walk after the Spirit and live according to His commandments and His will.

Dying to the flesh, to ‘selfis not fun; nobody wants to die, because it hurts. Jesus never said that it was easy, but He said it was necessary in order to have eternal life.

You may consider many things in your life as normal, and see no harm in doing those things. But when you begin to read and study the Word of God, ka mohio koe the true will of God.

Ina koe whakahou i to hinengaro me te Kupu a te Atua, you will find out that a lot of things that you consider normal aren’t normal at all and oppose the will of God.

The truth is revealed by God’s Word

When you find out the truth by God’s Word you have to decide to submit to the Word of God and obey His words and commandments and do His and remove those things from your life or will you reject the Word of God and keep those things in your life and keep doing what you want to do?

If you really love God and want to obey Him, you have to remove many old habits, in which you walked in when you were te hanga tawhito.

The dying process of the old creation is necessary, no te mea ke atu te hanga hou cannot appear.

When your ego, pride and arrogance have died, then the fruit meekness can come forth. We should put on meekness and take off pride, ego, āhua whakahīhī, self-assertiveness etc.

Christians put on meekness

No reira kakahuria, hei hunga whiriwhiri a te Atua, tapu me te aroha, nga puku o te aroha, atawhai, te haehaa o te hinengaro, ngawari, whakaroaroa (Kolosa 3:12)

Paipera karaipiture Romans 12-2 Kaua e rite ki tenei ao engari ka hurihia e te whakahoutanga o to hinengaro

Putting on is an actionThe secret is that when you renew your mind with the Word of God and walk in the Word, that you’re putting on Christ. You cloth yourself with Him; with bowels of mercies, atawhai, te haehaa o te hinengaro, ngawari, te manawanui.

When someone does you wrong and you become mad, and start to attack that personit means that your flesh has not died heoi ano.

It means that your mind is not I whakahoutia me te Kupu a te Atua, because you’ve acted out of your emotions and feelings(o koutou kikokiko), instead of acting out of the spirit and out of the Word of God.

When you become angry, you don’t bear the fruit meekness.

Another thing to remember is, that as he Karaitiana whanau hou, you don’t have your own opinion anymore, but you have Gods opinion. It doesn’t matter what you think, it matters what God thinks, and what His Word says.

Being meek pleases God

While the world says that you have to be spontaneous, nui (because they don’t like quiet people), self-assertive, stand up for yourself, take matters into your own hands etc. God says something else about these matters.

God has a delight in a meek and quiet spirit. A meek and quiet spirit are valuable to Him.

Peter wrote about the adorning of a woman:

Engari kia waiho ko te tangata huna o te ngakau, i roto i te mea e kore e pakaru, Ahakoa te whakapaipai o te wairua me te wairua marie, Kei te tirohanga a te Atua nui (1 Pita 3:4)

Only a meek and willing spirit will submit to God and receive and obey His words. Because a pride spirit, thinks he knows it better and shall always be resistant. A pride spirit will never submit to God and will never be open for correction.

But the meek shall inherit the earth; and shall delight themselves in the abundance of peace (Himene 37:11, Matiu 5:5)

What doesn’t the fruit meekness mean?

The fruit meekness doesn’t mean consorting and compromising with the world and allowing sin and iniquity. The fruit meekness doesn’t mean accepting and approving the evil things that oppose the Word of God and are an abomination to God.

Jesus is meek. Heoi ano, when Jesus walked on this earth, He never sinned nor walked in iniquity. Jesus didn’t compromise with the world and allow sin. Engari, Jesus confronted the people with their sins and commanded them to repent and kati te hara.

Jesus also didn’t consort with the Pharisees and Sadducees, in order to be accepted by them or to become famous. Jesus walked in obedience to His Father in righteousness and in holiness.

Righteousness can’t have communion with unrighteousness. Holiness can’t have communion with sin.

What does the fruit meekness mean?

The fruit meekness means being weak after the flesh (mate o te kikokiko), but being strong in the Spirit. Because only when you are weak, God will make you strong.

When you are strong in the Spirit, you shall walk after the Spirit according to the Word and be a witness and speak with authority. You shall do the will of God and represent and bring His Kingdom on earth .

So let us bear this fruit meekness; and walk in meekness towards God and towards others.

'Kia tote o te whenua'

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