Matt 5:9
9 Blessed are the peacemakers,
for they will be called sons of God.
Well here it is mid-week already and time for the next be attitude. Peacemakers, they seem to be in short supply these days. However Christ Jesus told His disciples that they were to be peacemakers. We to as Christians are to be peacemakers.
1.
Our quest for peace. I
think it is safe to say that almost everyone if not everyone
wants peace and serenity.
We
seek peace in a world of strife.
In the past 4,000 years there have been fewer than 300
years of peace in our
world.
In
Quincy Wright’s A
Study of War,
we learn that, in the 461 years between 1480 and 1941, the following
countries were involved in the number of wars as listed: Great
Britain, 78; France, 71; Spain, 64; Russia, 61; Austria, 52; Germany,
23; China, 11; Japan, 9; the United States, 13. In recent years there
have been more than 80 wars occurring in the world within a year’s
time. Why
some do not find lasting peace?
They
misunderstand the meaning of peace.
Peace is no vague dream
or pleasant hope. It is the reality of which Isaiah spoke: “Thou
wilt
keep him in perfect
peace, whose mind is stayed on thee”
(Isa.
26:3).
Peace is not just the
removal of our problems nor just the absence of strife. When Christ
Jesus preached, there was
strife between the Jews and Romans. The Roman Empire had
forced the world to its
knees. And between His followers and the Jewish leaders.
Peace
overcomes our problems even in the midst of strife (Phil. 4:7). Peace
is from within, not from without. Paul said, “The
peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts
and minds through Christ Jesus”
(Phil.
4:7).
The Greek word for “keep
your hearts and minds”
is a military term that pictures the sentry who walks back and forth
guarding his camp during the night. While he is there, the camp is
safe. So, in the same manner, God guards our hearts and minds through
Christ Jesus, and therefore we are at peace.
2.
Our peace in Christ Jesus. The
only true and lasting peace to be found in this world is found in
Christ Jesus. Even
before Christ Jesus was born, it was prophesied that He would bring
peace (Isa.
9:6; Ps. 72:7).
At
Christ Jesus’ birth the heavenly host announced that he would bring
peace to earth (Luke
4:18).
Throughout
Christ Jesus’ ministry He brought peace to others. He
interpreted His preaching as a mission of peace (Luke
4:18).
He taught His disciples that they could know peace in a world of
tribulation (John
16:33).
He instructed His disciples to spread peace (Luke
10:5).
In times of despair, Christ Jesus brought peace to His disciples
(John
14:1 – 2).
Christ Jesus promised His disciples that the Holy Spirit would
continue to bring them peace even after his departure (John
14:1 – 2).
Only
those who are justified by faith in Christ Jesus possess everlasting
peace(Rom.
5:1; Isa. 48:22).
3.
The role of the peacemaker. It
is only logical that Christ Jesus would assign the role of
peacemaking to those who have found true and lasting peace in Him.
The
peacemaker is not merely a peaceable person, a peace lover, or a
peacekeeper. The
peace-at-any-price person
who just does not want to get involved is not the person of which
our Lord speaks in this
beatitude. Neither is he the peace lover, for even some warmongers
are peace lovers.
The
peacemaker is an active, positive force in the world. They
makes peace with themselves.
Every person is
challenged with the decision to do right or wrong. Some are never at
peace
because they are
double-minded; they have not given Christ Jesus control of their
lives, and
so they battle with their
wrong desires. When one can say, “I
live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in
me”
(Gal.
2:20),
they have made peace with themselves.
They makes peace with
others. In many areas the peacemaker is actively engaged in their
Christian task — in
the home, in the community, in the church, or maybe even in
international
affairs. The peacemaker
goes out of their way to find new ways of making peace with others.
By what they do not say
or do, by what they do say or do, and by how they say or do it, the
peacemaker makes peace.
They go the second mile, turns the other cheek, and loves their
enemies.
The
most important task of the peacemaker is the task of witnessing to
the unsaved. The
peacemaker
makes peace between rebellious humans and the God of peace. As
Christian shares we our faith in Christ Jesus with those who are
unsaved, we becomes the peacemaker in the best sense of the word,
fulfilling the promise of this beatitude, for the peacemakers are
“children of God.” We
are never more like God than when we are making peace.
Conclusion:
Billy
Graham often told the story of a man who had fallen from a high
scaffolding. A preacher was called to the scene to witness to the
man. He said, “My dear man, I am afraid you are dying. I exhort you
to make your peace with God!” The injured man replied, “Why that
was made nineteen hundred years ago when my glorious Savior paid all
my debt on the cruel tree. Christ is
my
peace and I do
know
God!”
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