Good Morning All,
Matthew 5:9; “Blessed
are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.”
Peace is a unique experience. It has been the longing of man since Cain
killed Abel. Much of our popular
entertainment, whether books, music, movies or whatever, will have “peace” as a
theme somewhere in the story line.
Sometimes it is easy to see such as the Beatles and “Give Peace a
Chance” or Peter, Paul, and Mary with “Blowin’ in the Wind.” Sometimes it is forceful like in Charlie
Chaplin’s “The Great Dictator” (an attack on Nazism). Sometimes it is a little more subtle. One of the most powerful anti-war movie/TV shows
during the Vietnam War was a movie about the Korean War called MASH. We all claim to want peace just like we all
claim to be tolerant; it has to be on our terms.
That is the trouble with man’s definition
of peace. You and I can be at peace as
long as you do what I want. Since I
don’t really trust you anyway; I am always making sure that I am stronger than
you and ready to “enforce peace” (can anyone say oxymoron?). Too often, peace is just the absence of
fighting, a lull in a battle that will always rage in the hearts of sinful man.
Jesus calls us to a different reality. He calls us to be peacemakers, true
peacemakers reconciling man to man and being God’s hands in reconciling the
world unto himself. This is no easy
task; we will not do it by our own will or volition but only through God’s
grace will this occur.
Yesterday
was the election. The rhetoric and the poison reached incredible levels fed by
incredible sums of money and people who make fortunes by stirring up the
pot. They use just enough truth to be
legal but more than enough subterfuge to confuse people. In the middle of all this, God calls us to be
peacemakers. Peacemaking is not a
passive act. It requires us to get our
hands dirty. It requires interrupting
injustice without resorting to injustice, the act of disarming evil without
destroying the evildoer. It involves
neither fight nor flight but the careful, Spirit-led, arduous pursuit of
reconciliation and justice. It forces us
to see the face of the oppressed in our own faces, and the hands of the
oppressors in our own hands. Remember this
when confronted by those who advocate policies and lifestyles which oppose
God’s Will but also remember it when they ask what our motive is. We see this when we stand against evil, but
do we see it when God’s calls upon his people to be compassionate to the poor,
the orphans, the widows, and the aliens in our lands? God wants all to be saved and calls us to
show compassion and love to all that we meet even those who are “wrong.”
We are called to be faithful to Christ and
his teachings. When in the Garden, when
Peter drew his sword to defend Jesus; Jesus rebuked him and healed the man whom
Peter struck. Even on the cross, Jesus
prayed for his enemies as well as his family and friends. Do we pray for our enemies or those whose
views are different than ours? Do we ask
God to forgive them? Do we forgive
them? “Blessed are the peacemakers for
they shall be called sons of God”
Gracious Father, too
often we are slow to be peacemakers. We
seek retribution instead of reconciliation.
We seek to make gains and not give grace. Forgive us for our failures. Use us and give us the courage to be your
voice for those who have no voice, your hands for those who need your
comfort. Send your mighty Spirit to move
us, as your kingdom of priests, to ever praise your name. In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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