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most kids in most neighborhoods we had our little disagreements, our arguments,
and our skirmishes. Usually these lasted
no more than a few hours unless a siege was declared in which case we could
make it perhaps two days before a truce was called. War in a neighborhood is rough, especially
when you want to play outside and no one will join you because you’ve drawn
battle lines over who has the best tennis shoes.
Honestly,
I can’t believe the things we used to argue over. But it wasn’t long until we found some way to
bury the hatchet and get our friendships and our relationships back on
track. Usually, the peace treaty took
the form of a simple I’m sorry. But if
the stakes were really high, candy, potato chips, a ride on someone’s bike, or
some type of trade was involved. The
result was peace in the neighborhood until the next squabble came along.
Isn’t
it odd how behavior among neighborhood kids reflects the greater neighborhood
of the real world? Unfortunately,
though, neither a bike ride nor a candy bar can resolve these problems. Even a formal declaration of peace between
countries is no guarantee that the peace can be maintained. The world learned that lesson during the
Second World War. Neville Chamberlain , England ’s
Prime Minister, returned from the 1938 Munich Conference with a declaration of peace with Nazi Germany, confidently stating
that he had obtained “Peace in our time.”
Sadly, there was no peace and the treaty signed between these two powers
was worthless. The scuffles in Europe ’s
neighborhood continued until the entire world was at war.
Peace
is a very popular word in vogue today.
With all the conflicts around the world, it seems that every diplomat,
every government leader, every political party, and every social movement has a
solution for the world’s problems. The
cries for peace around the world sound like a verse from the children’s song,
Old MacDonald had a farm. It would sound
something like this, “Here a peace, there a peace, everywhere a peace,
peace!” History teaches us, however,
that permanent peace is seemingly beyond mankind’s reach as a whole.
Would
it surprise you to learn that the word
peace appears 292 times in the Scriptures?
From Genesis to Revelation, from the beginning to the end, we find
mankind looking for peace with his enemies but also peace for his soul. Fortunately, God’s word makes it crystal
clear that mankind can achieve peace. This
peace is not between countries or individuals.
It is not based on a document or on a trade of goods. It is based solely on God’s grace and His
gift of salvation for a lost and dying world.
Micah 5:5a
gives us this following statement on peace: “And he will be their peace.” In this portion of scripture, Micah looks
forward to the day when Messiah will come.
Notice that Micah does not say that Messiah will bring peace; he says
that Messiah is peace. What a
wonderful truth this! The words of
Jesus, spoken hundreds of years later, guarantee this peace for the human
soul. Jesus says in John’s gospel that
he gives us his peace. This is not the peace offered by the world
but the very peace of God. Paul also
writes in his letter to the Romans that believers in Christ have received peace with God through Jesus Christ.
Do
you have this peace today? In a world
that is rocked and torn by turmoil, hatred, war, and fighting do you have the
assurance of God’s peace? When your
personal situation becomes difficult, when your family life is tense, when your
future is uncertain, when it seems the burdens of life are more than you can
bear, and when it feels as if you are being attacked from every side, cut off
from all help, do you have God’s peace and assurance that passes all
understanding? If so, I pray that you
will continue to walk in this peace today.
If you do not know this peace, I want to invite you to bow where you are
now and accept Jesus Christ as your savior and lord. He truly offers
us “Peace in our time.” Have a great
day!
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