Sowing Seeds of Peace
James 3: 17-18
17 But the wisdom that comes from heaven is
first of all pure; then peace-loving, considerate, submissive, full of
mercy and good fruit, impartial and sincere. 18 Peacemakers who sow in peace reap a
harvest of righteousness.
Every
Tuesday at lunch, I have the opportunity to lead a Bible study for the ladies
in our AR CARES program. While I obviously love getting to work with all of our
clients, this has come to be one of my favorite times of the week, just because
most of these women are so honest in their questions and their comments. Some
of them have great Biblical insight, while some aren’t exactly sure how to look-up
a verse. However, they all contribute to the conversation, and every week I
leave feeling like we’ve had an enjoyable time talking with God and one
another.
For
the past several weeks, we’ve been going through the book of James. We take
several verses each week, and kind of break them down and talk through them.
Our verses yesterday were from chapter 3, and included the verses above,
focused on our becoming peacemakers. There were a couple of the women who
really struggled through the idea of being submissive (and I admitted that was
sometimes a hard word for me to swallow, as well.) As we talked through what
that really means Biblically, we landed on the idea that submission, and
peacemaking in general, has to do with once again yielding to Christ, and being
willing to set aside your own wants in order to let the wants of someone else
be more important. We talked a lot about choosing your battles, and the wisdom
that is in knowing when a fight is important, and when is an appropriate time
to let someone else win.
As
we look at our world today, and the chaos that seems to constantly surround us,
all the way from the global down to the things happening in our individual households
and families, I think it is more imperative now than ever that we be people of
God’s peace. Being people of peace doesn’t mean that we never fight for justice,
but rather that we save our fights, so that we will be ready to fight when it is
really needed. Just as the boy who cried wolf learned that he needed to save
his voice for when it was really needed, we too need to make sure that we have
our voices saved up for the important fights. According to Scripture, we can
run our thoughts through the following lense: Is this thought I have “Pure? Peace-loving? Considerate? Submissive? Full of mercy and good fruit? Impartial? Sincere?”
If you can answer yes to all of these, then this is wisdom from Heaven, and you
should move ahead with your plan. If not, then maybe take a second to think
about it again before you pick the fight.
We
all want peace, yet we are rarely the ones who want to give-in. I am the exact
same way. Yet, there is an undeniable incongruence here—if none of us choose to
be the ones who give in, and no one ever gives in, then peace seems like a
difficult goal to achieve. Be the one in your family that works for peace. Be
the one in your workplace, in your congregation, in your community, in your
world that works for peace. Be the one who is willing to fight when it is
necessary, to give in when it is not, and who encourages others to have those
pure, merciful, impartial, considerate thoughts. When you have a day when all
you need is a little peace, pray to God and ask Him for it, and then be the
agent that He uses to bring His peaceful kingdom to Earth!
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