This blog has articles pertinent to Christian living, disability, ethics, Life Issues, and faith in Jesus Christ.
“Our once great western Christian civilization is dying. If this matters to followers of Jesus Christ, then we must set aside our denominational differences and work together to strengthen the things that remain and reclaim what has been lost. Evangelicals and Catholics must stand together to re-establish that former Christian culture and moral consensus. We have the numbers and the organization but the question is this: Do we have the will to win this present spiritual battle for Jesus Christ against secularism? Will we prayerfully and cooperatively work toward a new Christian spiritual revival ― or will we choose to hunker down in our churches and denominationalisms and watch everything sink into the spiritual and moral abyss of a New Dark Age?” - Mark Davis Pickup
Thursday, September 15, 2016
LONGING FOR INTERNAL PEACE
In
the 11 th Chapter of Isaiah we read
“The wolf will live with
the lamb,
The leopard shall lie down
with the kid,
He calf and the lion and
fatling together,
And a little child shall
lead them.”
The imagery is of a future
time of universal peace.
There is an innate longing
deep within the human heart for peace and harmony. Until Christ comes again to
establish the Kingdom of God on earth, it will not be. But until then, He offers
his followers internal peace that passes human understanding (see Philippians
4. 6-7). That peace has a transformative quality that can change even devilish people
into saints. History is replete with
examples.
Prior to his ascension
into heaven, Jesus told his disciples, “I am leaving you with a gift ― peace of
mind and heart! And the peace I give you isn’t fragile like the peace the world
gives. So don’t be troubled or afraid. Remember what I told you ― I am going
away, but I will come back to you again.” (John 14.27-28.) The same peace is
available to you and me.
Christ’s peace is not a peace given by the world. As
Pope Benedict so concisely stated in his book The Infancy Narratives: Jesus of Nazareth (2012): “The peace of
Jesus is a peace that the world cannot give. Ultimately the question here is
what redemption, liberation and salvation actually mean.” The world cannot give this peace because it
does not understand it; it is a spiritual currency that the broken-hearted and
contrite understand.
Without Christ, the
longing for internal peace is either illusive or counterfeit. Jesus is the author of all we know and all
that is unknown (see John 1.1-5 & 12-18). Do not discount this important
truth. It is important because even when our world seems to be falling apart we
can still have peace in Christ and salvation.
His peace is rooted in forgiveness and deliverance from our sins through
his sacrificial offering on the cross (see Colossians 1.12-20).
The absence of Christ’s
peace can (and does) turn gentle souls into cynical, stone hearted people. The
world’s cruelty can sear individual and even collective human consciences. We see this in such things as abortion, child
and elder abuse, euthanasia, assisted suicide and pornography that is
increasingly common as society turns away from Christ and his teachings.
Despite this, and in the
midst of human violence and spiritual corruption, Christ still offers his peace
to all who come to know Him. This peace that passes human understanding was
made evident to me, even in the storms of life and the terrors of degenerative
disability ― especially during the terrors of degeneration! I have found peace
of mind and heart, just as Jesus promised. The darker my physical reality becomes the
more evident and certain the light of Christ becomes.
There have been times when
my disease threatened to engulf me; my prayerful cries were met with a deep
peace that overtook the fear. I cannot explain it logically. An inaudible but
real message of assurance “Be not afraid, I am with you” descended upon me to over-take
the raging flames of terror. I have
written about this before.
Jesus referred to the Holy
Spirit as the Counselor. The Holy
Spirit’s counsel is continually pointing us to the truth of Christ as the way
of eternal life. Saint Paul called the Holy Spirit the “Spirit of Christ”
(Romans 8.9, Galatians 4.6, Philippians 1.19).It is the spirit of Christ that gives us peace.
Christ ha been the source of
peace not only in the here and now but year after year, decade after decade, century after century, throughout the ages.
The heavenly host that announced the Messiah’s birth
said, “Glory be to God in the highest and on earth peace to those whom his
favour rests.” Again, Pope Benedict commented on this passage found in the
second Chapter of Luke: “”God’s glory” is not something brought about by men
(Glory be to God). The “glory” of God
is real, God is glorious, and this is truly a reason for joy: there is truth, there is goodness, there is
beauty. It is there―in God― indestructibly.” (The Infancy Narratives, p.74.)The glory of God that angels sung about at Christ’s birth is still
available to us.
Christ’s peace is glorious
and good and true. It brings joy and hope.My disease and deteriorating health cannot alter any of this. There is
nothing that happens to me in this world that can rob me of the eternal hope
that is within me.
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