
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


June 9, 2026
Daily Devotional:
“Hunger that Satisfies”
Matthew 5:6
"Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled."
In the Beatitudes, Jesus completely flips our understanding of fulfillment on its head. He doesn't say, "Blessed are those who are completely perfect andhave it all together." Instead, He blesses the longing. He honors the empty stomach and the parched throat. The word Jesus uses for "righteousness" isn't about stiff, rule-following perfection. It’s about a deep alignment with God—a desperate desire to see His goodness,justice, and love saturate our own hearts and the world around us. It's looking at our lives and saying, "I want more of God, and less of everything else."
Here is the beautiful paradox of the Kingdom: Our emptiness is our greatest asset. Matthew 5:6 is a beautiful promise for anyone who feels spirituallyempty, tired of the status quo, or broken over the injustice in the world. Jesus is saying that your spiritual hunger isn't a sign of failure—it is the exact prerequisite for being filled by Him.
When we admit we are starving for something real, God meets us right there. If you hunger for praise, you will always be at the mercy of people's opinions. If youthirst for control, you will live in constant anxiety. But if you hunger and thirst for God's righteousness, Jesus gives a rock-solid guarantee: You will be filled. Not with a temporary fix, but with a deep, soul-satisfying peace that the world can neither give nor take away.
We live in a culture designed to keep us constantly craving. We hunger for success, thirst for validation, and scroll endlessly to feed a deep-seated desire to feel "full." The trouble is, these things act like spiritual junk food—they give us a temporary rush, but leave us emptier and more exhausted than before. In modern times, we say we are "starving" when we missed lunch and our stomach rumbles. But in ancient Judea, clean water was scarce and food security was a daily struggle. To "hunger and thirst" in this context meant a desperate, life-or-death craving. The paradox is that happiness is a byproduct, not the prize. When you stop chasingself-satisfaction and start chasing God's heart, fulfillment finds you.
Take a quick, honest inventory of your day so far. What have you been reaching for to satisfy your inner cravings? When you feel stressed or empty, do you turn to distraction, or do you turn to the One who promises to fill you? Instead of trying to hide your spiritual hunger or mask it with quick fixes, bring that emptiness to God today. Let your physical cravings throughout the day—whether it's reaching for a snack or a glass of water—be a gentle reminder to pray: "Lord, make me just as hungry for You."
By Y.E.S. Jesus Youth Encountering Savior JesusJune 9, 2026
Daily Devotional:
“Hunger that Satisfies”
Matthew 5:6
"Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled."
In the Beatitudes, Jesus completely flips our understanding of fulfillment on its head. He doesn't say, "Blessed are those who are completely perfect andhave it all together." Instead, He blesses the longing. He honors the empty stomach and the parched throat. The word Jesus uses for "righteousness" isn't about stiff, rule-following perfection. It’s about a deep alignment with God—a desperate desire to see His goodness,justice, and love saturate our own hearts and the world around us. It's looking at our lives and saying, "I want more of God, and less of everything else."
Here is the beautiful paradox of the Kingdom: Our emptiness is our greatest asset. Matthew 5:6 is a beautiful promise for anyone who feels spirituallyempty, tired of the status quo, or broken over the injustice in the world. Jesus is saying that your spiritual hunger isn't a sign of failure—it is the exact prerequisite for being filled by Him.
When we admit we are starving for something real, God meets us right there. If you hunger for praise, you will always be at the mercy of people's opinions. If youthirst for control, you will live in constant anxiety. But if you hunger and thirst for God's righteousness, Jesus gives a rock-solid guarantee: You will be filled. Not with a temporary fix, but with a deep, soul-satisfying peace that the world can neither give nor take away.
We live in a culture designed to keep us constantly craving. We hunger for success, thirst for validation, and scroll endlessly to feed a deep-seated desire to feel "full." The trouble is, these things act like spiritual junk food—they give us a temporary rush, but leave us emptier and more exhausted than before. In modern times, we say we are "starving" when we missed lunch and our stomach rumbles. But in ancient Judea, clean water was scarce and food security was a daily struggle. To "hunger and thirst" in this context meant a desperate, life-or-death craving. The paradox is that happiness is a byproduct, not the prize. When you stop chasingself-satisfaction and start chasing God's heart, fulfillment finds you.
Take a quick, honest inventory of your day so far. What have you been reaching for to satisfy your inner cravings? When you feel stressed or empty, do you turn to distraction, or do you turn to the One who promises to fill you? Instead of trying to hide your spiritual hunger or mask it with quick fixes, bring that emptiness to God today. Let your physical cravings throughout the day—whether it's reaching for a snack or a glass of water—be a gentle reminder to pray: "Lord, make me just as hungry for You."