Tag Archives: peace-of-god

Do You Know Him? – YAHWEH-Shalom

So Gideon built an altar there to the LORD, and called it The-LORD-Is-Peace.

Judges 6:24, NKJV

Are you ever uneasy? Do you suffer from bouts of anxiety? Does life cause you to be in a constant state of worry? Are there personal issues, family issues, financial issues, job concerns, national and international frictions and factions, etc. that constantly have you worrying about what’s going to happen next?

Well, if you answered yes to any of those questions rest assured: you are not alone. You bear a similarity to and are in company with multitudes of others who live day-by-day under a cloud of despair and confusion. We sometimes think that since we are followers of Jesus Christ that life should be a consistent state of peaceful bliss. After all, Jesus is the Prince of Peace. God is YAWHEH-Shalom – The-LORD-Is-Peace! Should not our relationship with Him guarantee that we will always be at peace?

The answer to that may be a bit misunderstood. If we think that it is an absence of all things that would cause worry and stress, then we are woefully mistaken. If we think it should mean that a relationship with God through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ is the pathway to a peaceful existence in this life, then we are opening ourselves up to a life of disappointment and discouragement.

Consider, for example, the verse quoted above. In Judges 6:24, we are informed that Gideon built an altar to the Lord and called it The-LORD-Is-Peace. But the context of this event is in a time of national crisis, conflict and warfare. Gideon is called by God to lead in battle with the Midianites and Amalekites. It was anything but a time of peace.

Then, as we move to the New Testament for more clarification and give our attention to the teachings of Jesus, we may be even more confused about this matter. Read carefully the following passages in which Jesus spoke to this issue.

Peace I leave with you. My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you.

Do not think that I came to bring peace on earth. I did not come to bring peace but a sword. For I have come to set a man against his father, a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law; and a man’s enemies will be those of his own household.

John 14:27; 10:34-36, NKJV – Jesus speaking

Both of these statements were spoken by Jesus Christ. In one He says that He brings peace, and in the other He says that He did not come to bring peace. So which is it? Both statements can’t be true, can they?

Actually, they both MUST be true, or Jesus made a mistake, or, even worse, told a flat-out lie! So, if both statements must be true, then what did Jesus mean by these seemingly contradictory assertions?

The Bible teaches that we were at one time enemies of God. Our sin nature had set us in opposition to God, and there was no peace between sinful man and holy God. Jesus came into the world to be the means for man, steeped in sin and spiritually dead in those trespasses and sins, to be reconciled to God. It was through the death, burial, and resurrection of our Lord that He provided the means through which those who were at one time enemies of God and dead in sin, to be brought to life and become friends of God. Those who have accepted this gift of salvation are now enjoying being at peace with God. This is the peace Jesus came to bring.

However, for those who have never received His amazing gift of salvation, they are still living at enmity with God, and thus cannot enjoy the peace that Jesus offers. So, we need to understand that Jesus did come to bring peace for those who would accept His gracious offer, but for all others there is still a spiritual chasm between them and God. This is the root cause of such bitterness and enmity between believers and non-believers. This is the reason that there is such divisiveness between the ways of the world and the ways of God.

Also, an important note to remember, is that Jesus did not come to bring peace to nations. He spoke openly about the fact that there would be wars and rumors of wars as nation fights against nation and kingdom against kingdom. The things happening in the world today should not cause us to be overly distraught but should rather cause us to look to the eastern sky because they point to the fact that history as we know it is winding down.

Are you at peace with God? Have you accepted His gracious offer of salvation which has been provided by His Son? Do you know Him in this intimate way? This is the one and only means of experiencing real peace that will settle and establish you in the midst of a world filled with uncertainty. If you have not already accepted this amazing gift, then why not do so now!

Then, once you have accepted the gift of salvation which provides you with peace with God, you can then be the recipient of the gift of the peace of God. This is a gift which keeps us calm in the midst of the storms of life. Believers who are walking in intimate fellowship with the Lord are settled in their state of peace. The eventualities of life cannot rob us of this peace. It is, as Paul says, a peace that passes all understanding. You cannot understand, you cannot explain it, but thanks be to God that you can experience it! Hallelujah – what a Savior!

Until next time:

Blessings!