Ensign: And On Earth Peace
AN ENSIGN ON THE MOUNTAINS 28 November 2014
WORD COUNT: 46,802
[I really want next week's Ensign to be a blockbuster, not a trifle. Since I have that Nano novel to finish over the weekend -- and at the rate I'm going hope to finish it, at least the first draft of it, today -- I was rifling through the archives and found this devotional post of time from seven years ago. August 31, 2007 if you're counting.
Yes, the kids have grown significantly since then and THEY HAVEN'T STOPPED YET! Still, since we will be hearing some permutation of today's title over the next month usually in regard to a multitude of the heavenly host and shepherds in a field and this little town of Bethlehem ... still ... we ought to be asking ourselves (and I include me) how much over the rest of the year do we really mean it?
Now please step back with me seven years and three months ago.]
WORD COUNT: 46,802
[I really want next week's Ensign to be a blockbuster, not a trifle. Since I have that Nano novel to finish over the weekend -- and at the rate I'm going hope to finish it, at least the first draft of it, today -- I was rifling through the archives and found this devotional post of time from seven years ago. August 31, 2007 if you're counting.
Yes, the kids have grown significantly since then and THEY HAVEN'T STOPPED YET! Still, since we will be hearing some permutation of today's title over the next month usually in regard to a multitude of the heavenly host and shepherds in a field and this little town of Bethlehem ... still ... we ought to be asking ourselves (and I include me) how much over the rest of the year do we really mean it?
Now please step back with me seven years and three months ago.]
It's the last day of August ALREADY? Especially when I look at how my kids have grown (at eighteen months and two months, respectively), I constantly get floored by how much time passes. Since we have pictures of when they were newly born, still really chubby, still small -- comparatively speaking, it's amazing how Sarah and Jeffrey have grown in the brief time that my wife Martha and I have been privileged to have them. What I expect we ALL want for our children is to grow up in a better world, a more peaceful world. But are we making the conscious effort to build it with the right foundations?
Perhaps the most memorable mention of peace in the Bible is in the traditional Christmas story from the Gospel of Luke. It's just after a single angel announces the birth of Jesus the Savior to the shepherds and tells them how they'll recognize Him. "And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God, and saying, Glory to God in the highest, and on earth PEACE, good will toward men." (Luke 2:13-14)
Keep in mind that angels in the Bible are not the cute greeting card figures with halos and wings (both inventions of the Middle Ages); indeed, their appearance to anyone as recorded in Scripture is always so awesome and terrifying that they're almost always saying "Fear not" whenever they appear. In the midst of even one's own unconscious fear and trembling, it takes a while to process a message of peace.
But what is it? Shortly after the original twelve disciples are assembled by the adult Jesus, they're given their "marching orders" in Matthew 10. Among them is a statement that flies in the face of much we've been taught about Him (two thousand years' hindsight is not often 20/20): "Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword."
I just noticed as I'm typing verse thirty-four that Jesus says "send" and not "bring". The impression we and I expect the lion's share of people had in Jesus' time upon earth is that peace -- an end to war, which could just as easily be an end to ANY conflict between individuals and nations -- is going to get forced on us. Just as we are all created by God and freely choose to accept or reject Him, so He's not going to force peace on us. We have to make the active choice to pursue peace in our own lives. Psalm 34:14 calls for us to "Depart from evil, and do good; seek peace, and pursue it." How many of us seek peace (or at least say we do) but don't pursue it?
For God to force that upon us would be a complete denial of Who He is. Within the church, chapter four of James speaks of wars and fightings coming from our lusts and selfish desires. Verse two elaborates, "Ye lust, and have not: ye kill, and desire to have, and cannot obtain: ye fight and war, yet ye have not, because ye ask not." If this is true in the church which is supposed to stand out as a light upon a hill, how much more true is it of the world we live in, one where the foundation of Jesus Christ as God's Son and Our Savior is not known or actively pursued?
There's more truth to the campfire song "Let There Be Peace On Earth" than is obvious, at least to me. It's got to start with us. It's got to begin with me. The confession of sin -- deliberate rebellion against God, on the personal and the national level -- has got to begin with each one of us or it doesn't mean a thing. To fix a problem, we have to acknowledge there is one. Which makes peace ultimately more than the absence of war but rather the end of conflict with each other and contentment with ourselves and in every situation. That we can only learn through the grace of God.
Sincerely yours,
David
P.S. I write this weekly devotional to keep in touch, and I hope to encourage you too! If I'm not or you want me to get lost, please tell me -- thank you!
I praise and I thank You, Lord, that we can come to You in prayer and that You provide for all our needs, even when we don't always know what they are. We pray as You ask for the peace of Jerusalem on both sides on the fence and all around the world.
I praise and I thank You, Lord, for all who are in leadership and service both here and abroad. Thank You for the opportunities we have along with the promise of new life in You! AND I pray that we are all seeking and are preparing to have the most blessed and blessing week ever! Amen.
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