.
● Phil 4:5 . . Let your gentleness be evident to all.
The koiné Greek word for "gentleness" is epieikes (ep-ee-i-kace') which
essentially means: mild.
Webster's defines "mild" as gentle in nature or behavior, moderate in action
or effect; not sharp or bitter, i.e. just the opposite of fierce, harsh, rough,
scathing, mean, abrasive, stormy, intemperate, strict, and/or severe.
Though a mild person is affable, they aren't necessarily a wimp; no, they're
just not easy to provoke. The quite opposite would be a thin skinned,
reactive, defensive personality that goes to war at the drop of a hat.
Mild people don't threaten, nor come at you with bared teeth and narrowed
eyes. They're reasonable and rational, rather than emotional and reactive.
Assertive, confrontational people have no clue what it is to be mild; and
those are the very ones losing sleep with evil thoughts as they obsessively
re-wind and re-play a conflict with somebody in their heads over, and over,
and over again rehearsing things they should've said, and would've said, had
they thought of them.
● Matt 5:5 . . Blessed are the meek.
Moses was meek (Num 12:3) and Christ was meek (Matt 11:29, Matt 21:5).
Personally I wouldn't categorize either of those two men as meek. So then,
what really is meekness?
Primarily, to be meek, in the Biblical sense of the word, is to be temperate.
A temperate person isn't eo ipso a cowering milk toast. Anybody who's
studied the life of Moses and Jesus can easily testify that neither of those
men were timid; no, they walked softly but carried a big stick, so to speak.
Never mistake true meekness for a yellow streak.
Jacob and his dad Isaac were temperate men; but could be very strong
when the situation called for it. Temperate people pick their battles carefully,
and never waste anger and energy on trifles.
There are Christians in this world who're simply implacable. They just cannot
live and let live. Turning the other cheek is to them a worn-out cliché that no
one takes seriously anymore.
For them rivalry, conflict, revenge, competition, retaliation, recriminations,
and grudging are a way of life: every disagreement is an act of war-- they're
peevish, emotional, bitter, harsh, unloving, cruel, thoughtless, and reactive;
and they thrive on complaining, criticizing, chafing, carping, finding fault,
tattling, bickering, retort upon retort, rejoinder upon rejoinder, sarcasm,
endless debate, dredging up old unresolved conflicts, gainsaying, and getting
in people's faces and giving them a piece of their mind.
It seems like those people are always getting indignant about some petty
outrage or another. Well; those kinds of Christians are definitely not in the
"gentle" category. They're hellish, toxic demons who relish letting their
wrath be evident to all instead of gentleness because when they're upset;
they want everybody to know it.
_