Blessed Are The Poor in Spirit
                                                
...For Theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven
                                                                                                   

                                                
                                                                                                   
by Heidi Baker with Shara Pradhan
                                                
Selected Excerpts from “Compelled by Love” 
                                                
                                                
  
                                                
When   God first sent us to Mozambique, people were blowing up relief  vehicles  after decades of war. We came into an atmosphere of floods,  famines,  and pain untold. We thought it was the perfect place to offer  our lives,  the perfect place to see God’s kingdom established.
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
Rolland   and I came to Mozambique in 1995 to see the gospel proven, to see the   glory of God in the darkness. We came to heal the sick, raise the dead,   and drive out demons in the power of the Holy Spirit.  We   came to serve God and not money. We came for relief from worry about   our lives, what we will eat, drink and wear. We came to be Jesus’ hands   extended among the poor. We came to see righteousness, peace, and joy.   We came to some of the most grief-stricken, suffering people we could   find in the world, a population that had suffered decades of war,   disease, and oppression. And we came to learn – from them – about the   kingdom  of God.
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
If   God was not with us in this unfamiliar world and ministry, we did not   want to continue. If He could not be trusted and followed, if the  Sermon  on the Mount was simply impractical, if we could not do “even  greater  things” than Jesus did (John 14:12), then our mission work was –  and is  today – hopeless.  We have no back up plan. We have nothing but Him.
                                                
                                                
  
                                                
                                                
What Does it Mean to be Poor in Spirit?
                                                
                                                
                                                
  
                                                
Everywhere   we travel in the West, we tell people that Jesus does things upside   down. We have learned this from sitting with the poorest of the poor and   letting them teach us about the kingdom of God. Jesus loves to show   Himself strong to the weak first, the most unlikely, the forgotten, and   the most humble of all.
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
In   Africa we have seen Jesus do this. For the poor draw us into a life of   living even lower still, leading us on the low road – the only road   forward – until we become as desperate for God as the poor are for daily   bread. When we send our international visitors home from Mozambique,  we  always pray that they take home the riches of the poor because, as   Matthew 5:3 says, “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the   kingdom of heaven.”
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
Many   ask why Jesus reserves the kingdom  of God for the poor in spirit. Why   is it that the wealthiest people and cultures experience fewer  miracles  and less of the supernatural?
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
What   does is mean to be poor in spirit? There is something about the poor   that delights the heart of God. They are contrite. They know they are in   need. But what is it about them that draws the kingdom  of God to   Earth? The answer to this lies in their dependency, hunger, need, and   desperation. 
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
  
                                                
True Dependence on God
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
Since   moving to Mozambique, we have learned to depend on God for everything.   If God does not show up there, we are dead. In the Western church we   decorate the altar, sing another amazing song, wave another flag, turn   on the colored lights, and smoke machines, and sit in a very comfortable   chair. Some of these things can be wonderful expressions of creativity   and ingenuity. They can, however, become backup plans. What we need  more  is to be totally dependent on God showing up. We need His pure   presence. 
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
 In   our poor Mozambique mud-hut churches, we have to have God show up –  and  we have to have fresh food – or no one will come. People wouldn’t  want  to come to church for the carpets because, even if we had them,  they  would be full of dirt and bugs! People come to church to dance, to   rejoice, to sing, to meet with God, and to be healed and delivered.
In   our poor Mozambique mud-hut churches, we have to have God show up –  and  we have to have fresh food – or no one will come. People wouldn’t  want  to come to church for the carpets because, even if we had them,  they  would be full of dirt and bugs! People come to church to dance, to   rejoice, to sing, to meet with God, and to be healed and delivered. 
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
I   am finally beginning to understand God’s kingdom from the children and   the poor. They teach us about dependence, humility, and being emptied  of  all else so that God can fill us. They simply have nothing else.
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
Interdependence: We Need Each Other
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
Why   does God break forth in Mozambique in such power among the poor here  in  Mozambique? It’s because the poor rely on each other. They need each   other. They live in a community of interdependence. They have to share   with each other just to survive. Those who have much are often quick  to  accumulate and slow to give away. Yet those who have little are  quick to  share. They often give without remembering; they receive  without  forgetting. The poor are truly rich for the simplicity of their   devotion. 
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
I   did not move to Mozambique with an action plan to save the country. My   goal was not to start a revival. My vision was not to oversee  thousands  of churches. I came to learn to love, and I am still just at  the  beginning of that journey today. I am just starting to learn how to  love  more. I believe this is my lifetime goal. I want to love God with   everything within me. I want to love my neighbor as myself.
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
When   God sent me to the poor, it was not for what I could give, but for  what  I could learn and for what I could receive. God did not start by   telling me to minister to the poor but to be ministered to by them. Mother Teresa said:
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
 “Today it is very fashionable to talk about the poor. Unfortunately, it is not fashionable to talk with them.”
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
We   need to start talking with them. The poor are my friends and my  family.  Village life is quite simple compared to Western culture. I  love to  camp in the mud-hut villages and enjoy the simplicity of the  poor. We  sing and dance into the night, worshiping our beautiful Jesus.  There are  no computers, videos, CD players, or electricity to distract  us. It is a  simplicity of devotion.
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
The poor have taught me that we must receive just to live. 
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
Rich vs. Poor
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
Does   poor in spirit mean financially poor? I believe Jesus meant that poor   in spirit is a posturing of the heart where one is wholly given, fully   yielded, completely desperate, and totally dependent on God alone. The   Lord wants to cause even the rich and the middle class to be poor in   spirit and know that they are in total need of Him.
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
God   often brings me from the poorest of the poor to those who have   financial means. I feel, in some simple way, that I then bring the   treasures of the poor to the wealthy church, which is so in need of   simplicity. 
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
Recently   God spoke to me about His desire for multiplication and how He wanted   to raise up an entire army of laid-down lovers – people who are willing   to lay down everything for the love and service of God – who will  carry  His glory to the ends of the earth. Jesus spoke to me about a  mass,  student-volunteer, missions movement to bring the gospel – true  love  poured out – to every tribe and tongue. 
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
A Call to All: Everyone is Invited
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
I   believe being poor in spirit is a choice – a decision we all have to   make to go lower still, fully dependent on the One who is always   dependable.
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
God   answers all of us according to our faith and hunger, and in  fulfillment  of His plans for you that were laid before the foundation  of the world.  God desires all His children to come alive with  compassion and not  shrink back in unbelief. Rich or poor, if you are  tired of hiding from  the world’s problems and want to partake of God’s  nature to bring life  to the dead, Jesus is more than enough. We need  God, and we need each  other.
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
 God   has sovereignly given us an outpouring of love, joy, and refreshment  to  the poor and suffering in Africa. But today, God calls all of us –  rich  and poor – to rest in Him and to love Him with all our heart,  mind,  soul, and strength, loving our neighbors as ourselves. For this  Jesus  died. We are also all called to share and to remember the needs  of the  poor.
God   has sovereignly given us an outpouring of love, joy, and refreshment  to  the poor and suffering in Africa. But today, God calls all of us –  rich  and poor – to rest in Him and to love Him with all our heart,  mind,  soul, and strength, loving our neighbors as ourselves. For this  Jesus  died. We are also all called to share and to remember the needs  of the  poor.
                                                
  
                                                
 
                                                
  
                                                
We   all want to see the glory of the Lord cover the earth as the waters   cover the sea (Hab. 2:14). I pray that Jesus will draw you deeper still,   I pray that you can lie down, giving and trusting everything to Him so   that He can trust you with everyone. And when you get up, there will  be  revival – whole nations will come to Him, falling on their faces. He   changes us with one glance of His eyes so that we are not afraid to be   completely abandoned in His arms.
                                                
                                                                                                             Excerpts from Heidi Baker, Compelled by Love (Lake Mary, FL: Charisma House, 2008), Used by permission.

Heidi Baker founded    Iris Ministries with her husband Rolland. Together they served as    missionaries in Indonesia, Hong Kong and the streets of London before    following God’s calling in 1995 to Mozambique. Having faced overwhelming    need, the Bakers now watch God provide miraculously for more than 7,000 children. Learn more about the Bakers and order “Compelled by Love” at www.IrisMin.org
 
  
  
 
Heidi Baker with Shara Pradhan, 3/26/2012