Feed the Spiritual Hunger – The Calendar of Scripture

The Worthy Brief

 

June 29, 2026

From The Worthy Brief

 

The following is from a daily enewsletter I receive…

 

 

Dear __________, God will fill the hunger that He has awakened!

Matthew 5:6 Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.

There is a kind of hunger that cannot be mistaken for preference. It is not the casual appetite of someone choosing from many options. It is the deep ache of need, the kind of hunger that seizes the heart, focuses the mind, and refuses to be satisfied with anything less than what it was created to receive.

Yeshua (Jesus) now declares ashrei over that hunger.

Through the Hebraic understanding of ashrei, we could hear His words this way: Oh, what a great blessing belongs to those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled. To the natural mind, hunger sounds like lack and thirst sounds like weakness. But in the Kingdom, holy hunger is not emptiness without hope. It is evidence that the soul has awakened to what only God can satisfy.

The Greek words in Matthew carry the force of real bodily need. This is not polite spiritual interest. It is famine-level desire. Yeshua is not describing people who admire righteousness from a distance. He is describing those who ache for it like a starving man aches for bread and a thirsty woman longs for water. They are not content with religious appearance or surface-level obedience. They long for life to be made right under the reign of God.

Behind this language stands the Hebrew world of hunger and thirst — ra’ev and tzamé — words that echo through the Scriptures as images of deep need and divine provision. Isaiah speaks of the redeemed who “shall neither hunger nor thirst” [Isaiah 49:10], because the God who restores His people also satisfies them. Yeshua is revealing the Kingdom fulfillment of that prophetic longing.

But what are they hungering for?

Yeshua says they hunger and thirst for righteousness. The Greek word is dikaiosyne, but through Hebrew ears we hear the deeper covenant idea of tzedakah. This is more than private morality. It is the right ordering of life under God. It is covenant faithfulness, justice, mercy, holiness, and restoration. It is relationships made right, the oppressed remembered, the poor not forgotten, and creation brought back under the rule of its rightful King.

In other words, to hunger and thirst for righteousness is to hunger and thirst for the Kingdom.

This is not religious self-improvement. It is prophetic longing. It is David crying, “As the deer pants for the water brooks, so pants my soul for You, O God” [Psalm 42:1]. It is Amos declaring, “Let justice run down like water, and righteousness like a mighty stream” [Amos 5:24]. It is the ache of every heart that has stood between what is and what God has promised, and refused to become comfortable with the gap.

This Beatitude follows beautifully in the order Yeshua gives. The poor in spirit have surrendered self-sufficiency. Those who mourn have seen what is broken. The meek have yielded their strength to the King. Now comes holy hunger — the longing for everything within us and around us to be brought into alignment with God.

The Kingdom does not form people who are easily satisfied by lesser things. It forms people with a holy appetite. They cannot be fully comforted by success, entertained into numbness, or distracted away from the purposes of God. Something within them cries out, “Let Your Kingdom come. Let Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”

And Yeshua calls them blessed.

Why? Because this hunger will not be ignored. He promises, “they shall be filled.” The Greek word carries the picture of complete satisfaction — not a small taste, not barely enough, but fullness. It is the word used when the multitudes ate the bread Yeshua multiplied and were satisfied — and there was an abundance of leftovers. The King does not bless a hunger He has no intention of meeting.

Yet this filling is not something we manufacture by striving. Yeshua says, “they shall be filled.” The filling comes from God. We cannot work our way into fullness, but we can remain hungry enough to receive it. We can refuse the false bread of this age. We can reject shallow waters that never satisfy. We can bring our longing to the One who opens His hand and satisfies the desire of every living thing.

This is ashrei — not shallow happiness, but the deep flourishing of a soul whose hunger has been aimed at the Kingdom. Oh, what a great blessing belongs to those who are no longer content with appearances, compromises, or half-measures, because they are hungry for what God Himself has promised to fill.

So do not despise the ache. Do not silence the longing. Do not settle for lesser fillings. If you hunger for righteousness, it is because heaven has placed that hunger within you. And the One who placed it there is faithful to satisfy it.

The hunger in you is not a problem to be managed; it is a promise in motion. You were made for more than comfort, distraction, or shallow satisfaction. Let your soul hunger for righteousness, for the reign of Yeshua, and for the world made right under the King. Bring your thirst to the One who gives living water, and your hunger to the One who prepares the table of the Kingdom. Oh, what a great blessing belongs to those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, because the King never awakens a hunger He does not intend to fill.

Your family in the Lord with much agape love,

George & Baht Rivka (Maryland)