Tag Archives: peace

The Only Hope for Unity and Peace

We live in a divided society.  We are reminded of that every night on the news.  Our newspapers and magazines are full of photos of protests, riots, shootings, and violence.  Race divides us.  Politics divides.  Economics divides us.  We are a fractured people.  We mourn the division, and we all probably wonder if there is any hope for unity.  Can we ever truly and peacefully come together? Continue reading

Peace at all costs?

I am a history buff.  Always have been.  I am also one of those people who is fascinated by dates and what happened on certain days.  For example, I am writing this on Friday, March 18, 2016.  On this date in history in the year A.D. 37 the Roman Senate proclaimed Caligula as Emperor.  (Something they would come to regret!)  In 978 King Edward of England was murdered, joining thousands of other Christian martyrs in the roll call of faith.  In 1852 the Wells Fargo Company was founded.  In 1922 Mohandas Gandhi was sentenced to six years in prison for civil disobedience.  In 1961 the Pillsbury Dough Boy made his debut.

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Take His Peace

{Advent Greetings. It has been so long, too long, since I have written anything. These past few months have been incredibly busy, which explains but does not excuse the long absence from this blog. I did want to return for the holidays, though. Here is a little something that is excerpted from a book I wrote for Advent. The book is called The Journey to Christmas. Hope you enjoy.}

The season of Advent is often such a hurried, busy time. I often think: What have we done to ourselves. We have not only robbed this time of its spiritual significance, but we have also robbed it of its joy and peacefulness. What should be a time of quiet reflection and meditation has become rushed and “care-full.”

Even as I write this, I feel little peace, and lots of anxiety. I am getting ready for an upcoming event here at the office—an event I am in charge of and must plan. I am scheduled to preach in a local church on Sunday—and it is Thursday morning and right now I don’t have the vaguest idea what I am going to speak on. I feel pressured by all the duties and responsibilities of my job… not to mention family, shopping, planning parties, and all the other “obligations” attached to this time of the year. I am not quiet in my mind, and I am not at peace.

Yet, I should be. Advent forces us to focus on the meaning of life, the purposes of God, the promises of the Savior. One of these promises (and prophecies) is that He will be the Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9:6). He rules in peace. He grants peace. His reign is (and will ever be) a rule of peace. His future millennial kingdom is often depicted in art as the “peaceable kingdom.” So, if He is the Prince of Peace, and I am His, His child, should not His peace rule in my heart. What’s the problem? The problem is not with Him—it’s with me. I allow things, events, people to rob me of His peace.

I remember that years ago Bill and Gloria Gaither recorded a dramatic reading set to music. It was called “Take His Peace.” I have often thought of those words, especially the verb in that phrase. For there is a great truth here. If I am to have the peace of God ruling in my heart, I must choose to take His peace. He is the Lord of Peace (Yahweh Shalom). He offers peace. His peace is available through His grace. But I must choose to take it.

And…

I must choose to take it even if what surrounds me does not lend itself to peacefulness. Indeed, it is in such times that I MUST even more emphatically choose to take His peace.

Consider this bit of ecclesiastical trivia: In the Eastern Orthodox Church today is the feast of the prophet Habakkuk. Habakkuk understood what it was like to live in troubled times. Indeed, his book is basically focused on dialoguing with God about things the prophet doesn’t understand. Yet, when we get to the conclusion of the matter, we heard some incredibly profound and powerfully moving words. Listen to the prophet:

Though the fig tree does not bud
and there are no grapes on the vines,
though the olive crop fails
and the fields produce no food,
though there are no sheep in the pen
and no cattle in the stalls,
yet I will rejoice in the LORD,
I will be joyful in God my Savior.
(Habakkuk 3:17-18 NIV)

Habakkuk discovered this great truth. Our focus must be on God, not circumstance. That is the way to peace—and to worship.

So in this Advent season, with all the external busyness, frustration, worry and anxiety… let us each strive internally to take and enjoy His peace. Remember, it is the free gift of the Prince of Peace Himself.

Divine Stabs of Joy

C. S. Lewis called them “stabs of joy.” They were those moments of ecstasy that come at the most unforeseen times and often from the smallest incidents. As a child Lewis felt these piercings of his heart when seeing a picture of the Norse gods… and he was enraptured by the power of the scene, and its otherworldly “Northerness.” Music also could evoke these flashes of bliss for him. The search for joy became a focused desire of his life. Indeed, his autobiography is entitled Surprised By Joy and it is there he describes how he found the deepest desires of his heart fulfilled only when he discovered true joy in Christ.

I had one of these stabs of joy on the way to work this morning. Continue reading