December
16, 2018 (adapted)
Advent
2012: “It’s a Wonderful Peace” NOTES NOT EDITED
Luke
2:14; Isa. 9:7; 26:3
SIS:
Peace throughout the course of your life is a matter of experiencing the
Presence of Almighty God.
The
Biblical doctrine of “peace” is one of the most misunderstood doctrines in the
Bible—especially the idea that lost people could ever possess it. For the most part, peace as it is commonly
thought of, does not exist.
I
always struggle a little bit with the Third Week of Advent. My custom has
always been to preach on peace on this week. Liturgically, this is usually the
week the theme of joy is expounded. I save joy for last because I see it as the
culmination of God’s hope, God’s love, and God’s peace.
I
first began preaching on Advent over 40 years ago. Ironically, the second
Advent of my Christian life I was at sea, underwater, on one of the deadliest
war vessels man has ever developed, the nuclear powered, ballistic missile
submarine. I was part of what became known as the “41 For Freedom,” 41 such
submarines that were the front lines of the Cold War. Each of these 41 nuclear
submarines carried more fire-power than all the bombs dropped during WW2.
That
was 1975. Viet Nam had just ended. The Cold War was heating up. We had been at
war in Viet Nam for ten years. Actually, Viet Nam is classified as a “Cold War
Era” conflict. The Cold War began in 1945 with the end of WW2, continuing until
1991. This period included the Korean War, Lebanon Crisis (1958), Dominican
Intervention, Viet Nam, Grenada, Beirut, Libya, and Panama. The Cold War ended
in 1991, but the conflict did not. The Post-Cold War Era began in 1990 with the
Persian Gulf War, followed by Somalia, Haiti, and Yugoslavian conflict. The
Post-Cold War Era ended in 2001. We all know what happened then. The War on
Terror began with the bombing of the Twin Towers in September 11, 2001.
So,
in essence and reality, WW2 never really ended. America has been in constant
conflicts since 1941—77 years of war! Peace is pretty much an illusion, and
illusion we Americans at home blissfully enjoy because men and women are
fighting overseas. It reminds me of the lyrics of the Christmas song, “I Heard
the Bells On Christmas Day,” written by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow during the
scourge of the Civil War. References to this war are found in many verses not
commonly sung. One such verse laments:
And in despair I bowed my head;
"There is no peace on earth," I said; "For hate is strong,
"There is no peace on earth," I said; "For hate is strong,
And mocks the song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!"
Longfellow
makes reference in this poem to the announcement of the angels tolling the
birth of Jesus Christ: “Glory to God in the
highest, And on earth peace, Good will toward men” (Lk. 2:14).
I
have the same struggles as Longfellow, but lack the glowing poetic prowess he
possessed. I am confronted this third week of Advent, that peace on earth, at
least geographically and politically, are an illusion and always have been. Most people do not have peace. Non-believers CANNOT have peace. Even many believers struggle with a lack of
peace because they do not understand “God’s favor.”
Yet,
the angels announcement still applies. Peace is available to those upon whom
God’s favor rests (the modern translation of the verse).
Conflict
abounds in our world—both internal and external. Circumstances are rarely perfect—at least for
any significant period. But, as bad as
circumstances might be around the world or even in your own life, you can still
have peace. Christmas is about, “A
Wonderful Peace.”
The
Wonderful Peace of Christmas does not require perfect circumstances to have
perfect peace. We can have perfect peace
even when our figurative house is falling down around us. The key to peace isn’t our circumstances. If
we allow our circumstances to get the best of us peace will evaporate like a
snowflake on a hot griddle (Don’t ask me why one is cooking outside in the
snow, but you get the point). As we continue to follow the story of George
Bailey in “It’s a Wonderful Life,” we come to the crisis in which Uncle Billy
loses the entire bank deposit for the Bailey Savings and Loan, just at a time
when bank auditors are going to examine the books. The books show the deposit, but Uncle Billy
lost the money. Along with losing the
deposit, George Bailey loses his peace, and his temper.
Here’s
the clip. (1:23:17 to 1:27:47)
One
of Israel’s prophets gives us a visionary description of the Messiah centuries
before Jesus was born: Isaiah 9:6-7
6 For to us a child is born, to us a son is given, and the
government will be on his shoulders. And he will be called Wonderful Counselor,
Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. 7 Of the increase of his
government and peace there will be no end.
Isaiah
will go on to talk about “peace” 28 more times as He
outlines
the ministry of the Messiah. One of
those 28 times is
Isa 26:3:
You will keep in perfect peace him whose mind is
steadfast, because he trusts in you.
There
is no doubt: If we keep our minds fixed upon the Prince of Peace we will have
peace in our lives all the time.
The
PROBLEM we have with understanding the Wonderful Peace of
God is we misunderstand what “peace” really is.
Someone has wisely summed up the Biblical perspective on peace:
Peace
that Jesus gives is not the absence of trouble, but is rather the confidence
that He is there with you always. Biblical
peace is not the absence of trouble but the Presence of God.
The
Hebrew name of Jesus spoken prophetically by Isaiah is: Sar Shalom, which can mean, “Captain
of Safety.” It is a term sometimes
associated with the confidence of victory in battle. Jews are a people well-acquainted with
struggle, slavery and hardship, and at the same time, an abiding sense of God’s
deliverance. This is peace. Not the absence of trouble but the sense of
God’s presence.
This
is also the theme of the angel’s song at the birth of Jesus:“ Glory to God in
the Highest and on earth, peace to men UPON
WHOM GOD’S FAVOR RESTS.” There is no
peace until one has peace with God. Perfect
peace is not about perfect
circumstances but a relationship the
Perfect Prince.
To
most people, peace is the absence of conflict. This was the original meaning of
the word translated in our passage shortly in the time before the birth of
Jesus. One of the Greek goddesses was a
goddess called, “Eirene.” Greeks believed that her favor bestowed
upon a person the gifts of wealth and well-being. The ancient Greeks considered peace to be the
foundation of national wealth and prosperity.
That is why Pontius Pilot, the Roman ruler, crucified Jesus to appease
the angry Jewish mob. He knew that Caesar
would not be happy if there was not peace—geo-political calm—in Pilot’s province. Only later did the word, “peace,” come to
mean “tranquility, peace of mind.”
The Wonderful
Peace we experience at Christmas time is to recognize that, regardless of
station or circumstance, we can have peace throughout the times of our lives. Let us survey the Word of God together to discover
the transforming power of God’s Wonderful Peace.
1. If God is with you and
His favor rests upon you, you will be at peace IN THE WORKING TIMES of your
life (Haggai 1:1-6)
(Hag 1:1-6) In the second
year of King Darius, on the first day of the sixth month, the word of the LORD
came through the prophet Haggai to Zerubbabel son of Shealtiel, governor of
Judah, and to Joshua son of Jehozadak, the high priest: {2} This is what the
LORD Almighty says: "These people say, 'The time has not yet come for the
Lord's house to be built.'" {3} Then the word of the LORD came through the
prophet Haggai: {4} "Is it a time for you yourselves to be living in your
paneled houses, while this house remains a ruin?" {5} Now this is what the
LORD Almighty says: "Give careful thought to your ways. {6} You have
planted much, but have harvested little. You eat, but never have enough. You
drink, but never have your fill. You put on clothes, but are not warm. You earn
wages, only to put them in a purse with
holes in it."
So
many people are filled with stress and dissatisfaction in regard to their
work. They slave and strive, but never
get ahead. They have no “piece” of the pie and they have no peace in their
live.
• Someone told me many years
ago, “wealth is not so much how much you can make, but how much you can keep.”
• Peace in the working times
of our lives comes from knowing that God is blessing us, even if our efforts
seem to be less than blessed at the moment.
• Nothing is more
frustrating to our peace of mind than to strive and work hard but seem to make
no progress.
A first– grader by the name of Angie came home from
school one
day proudly wearing a blue ribbon pinned to her shirt. She had won “first place” in her class’s
natural history contest. She drew a
giraffe with “3 legs.” Her Mom (having
not been trained by HeadStart) questioned the little girl’s picture: “But,
honey, your giraffe only has three legs.
A giraffe has four legs.” Not
deterred, the little girl spoke brightly, “Yeh, I know. But I was the closest one in the class.”
That
is a sweet story but at its core is the rotten
philosophy of modern success: the
modern mindset tells mankind that success is not achieving the goal of
excellence, but merely staying ahead of the next guy—that is, being “top rat”
in the rat race of life. Many people
in the world manage to be “top rat in the rat race” but never experience a
sense of well-being because they eliminate the pursuit of God from the equation
of a successful life. When we do this, eventually
we end up dissatisfied with a “blue ribbon for a three-legged giraffe.”
If
you want to experience “peace” in the working times of your life, you must keep
God in the equation of what it means to be “truly successful.”
2. If God is with you and
His favor is upon you, you will have peace IN THE WAITING TIMES of your life
(Psalm 27: 1-3, 14)
(Psa 27:1-3) The LORD is my
light and my salvation-- whom shall I fear? The LORD is the stronghold of my
life-- of whom shall I be afraid? {2} When evil men advance against me to
devour my flesh, when my enemies and my foes attack me, they will stumble and
fall. {3} Though an army besiege me, my heart will not fear; though war break
out against me, even then will I be confident.
Note that the
circumstances in this Psalmist’s life were
far from ideal—they were in fact life threatening. In such a time as this, what does one do? Notice verse 14:
far from ideal—they were in fact life threatening. In such a time as this, what does one do? Notice verse 14:
(14) Wait for the LORD; be
strong and take heart and
wait for the LORD.
wait for the LORD.
The
word translated “wait” in this passage means “to
bind together, or gather.” There
should never be a wasted or useless moment in the life of a believer. It is very frustrating and disturbing to
think that any of the precious few moments of our lives are being “wasted by
useless waiting.” Wasted waiting destroys one’s peace of mind. We should use difficult times as times of “gathering
our spiritual resources” through prayer and Bible study, and fellowship with
God’s people.
I’ve
read where we spend literally years of our lives, “Waiting. . .”
at
the bank; at the grocery store; at the doctor’s office; for our kids to come
home; for our “babies to be born.” . . . ;
or, for a prayer to be answered.
Hurry up and wait. I learned the meaning of
this phrase in “Boot Camp.” We would
“double-time” (run) to get to the chow hall and then wait a half hour to
eat. We’d run every where . . . and then
wait. Our leaders made us wait to teach
us to rely on those in charge of our lives, and not upon our own cunning and
ingenuity. It was about trust.
When
we wait on the Lord as the Psalmist instructs us, we are not “wasting our
time,” we are gathering our strength and collecting our spiritual resources.
Waiting, when God is in it, is not a wasting time but making the
best use of time. The greatest waste of
time is not “waiting on God,” but going on ahead without him.
Men
will drive around lost for hours rather than stop and ask for directions . . . This
is foolish. We not only run out of gas, but
we run out of patience.
We
inflict needless pain and anxiety upon ourselves when we “get ahead” of God and
fail to wait upon His blessing. A man, thinking himself clever, once
asked God, “How long is a million years?” God replied, “It’s just like a second of your time, my child.” The man asked a second question, “How much is a million dollars.” The Lord replied, “It is just like a single penny to Me.” Thinking he had ceased upon success without
struggle the man quipped, “Well, then, could I have a penny?” God replied, “Certainly, my child, in a second!”
God
does indeed have great blessing in store for us – but we must wait. But, when
we have the assurance and hope of better things to come, we can have “wonderful
peace in the waiting times of life.”
Hard circumstances can build anxiety and anxiety can trigger our “flight”
response to our circumstance. The Bible
says, “wait!”
The surest way I know to get behind in life is to get ahead of God!
The surest way I know to get behind in life is to get ahead of God!
Do
not move a muscle or move ahead one inch in your life until you are certain
that God is with you and His favor is upon you. If you do not wait on God, you
will not have peace in your life.
3. If God is with you and
His favor rests upon you, you will have peace IN THE WORRYING TIMES of your
life (Phil. 4:6)
Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition,
with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.
Everyone
worries. Some people even worry when
they have nothing in their life to worry about.
It is human nature.
Joseph had plenty to worry about. Mary
had more than enough to worry about to be sure--young, pregnant, carrying the Child of God! Everyone
in Bethlehem was on their way to a TAX AUDIT
– they all had something to worry about!
We
cannot escape frustrating moments in life, but we can escape anxiety and the
tendency to worry.
I remember one gift a teen-age daughter gave her mother
for Christmas. As you know, teens can be
very frustrating for parents. They know
everything and think they need you for nothing, but they ask you for things all
the time – it is frustrating. Anyway,
this teen-age girl got her mother some very expensive “wrinkle-removing
creme.” Just the gift a mother in
mid-life hopes to receive. The mother
was talking about this gift with another mother. The other mother asked, “Well, what did you
daughter give you last year.” The mother of the teen replied, “The
wrinkles!”
Life
will give you “wrinkles,” even without worrying about the health and welfare of
your children. There will always be times of “worry in our lives.” We need to follow the advice of the pop
singer who sang: “Don’t Worry, Be Happy!” I’d sing it, “Don’t worry, wait on God.”
When
you are concerned, turn to God. Cast your cares upon Him because He cares for
you. We can be at peace in times of worry when we know that God is with us and
His favor rests upon us.
4. If God is with us and His
favor rests upon us, we can be at peace IN THE WANING TIMES of our lives (Lk 2:25-30; 36-38)
(Luke 2:25-30) Now there was
a man in Jerusalem called Simeon, who was righteous and devout. He was waiting
for the consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit was upon him. {26} It had
been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not die before he had
seen the Lord's Christ. {27} Moved by the Spirit, he went into the temple
courts. When the parents brought in the child Jesus to do for him what the
custom of the Law required, {28} Simeon took him in his arms and praised God,
saying: {29} "Sovereign Lord, as you have promised, you now dismiss your
servant in peace. {30} For my eyes have seen your salvation,
..................................................................
(36-38) There was also a prophetess, Anna, the daughter of Phanuel, of the
tribe of Asher. She was very old; she had lived with her husband seven years
after her marriage, {37} and then was a widow until she was eighty-four. She
never left the temple but worshiped night and day, fasting and praying. {38}
Coming up to them at that very moment, she gave thanks to God and spoke about
the child to all who were looking forward to the redemption of Jerusalem.
If
you live long enough, you will get old. And, if you get old, your strength,
your health, and you wealth will wane – which means “lose strength or power.”
Mechanics call it “low compression.” Your pistons just don’t have the punch
they used to have. You don’t have enough
“carbs” in your carburetor.
What do you get a ninety-year old woman for Christmas? There was a
very kindly old lady in the community.
Everyone loved her. She lived in
a small, well-kept, wood frame house at the end of a cul-de-sac. For years her neighbors had been buying her
little knick-knacks for Christmas. As
she approached the golden age of ninety, a friend asked her what she wanted for
Christmas. The woman who was winding
down in life smiled and said, “A kiss .
. . . . . so I won’t have to dust it!”
A
man was constantly being nagged by his wife to go get an eye exam. As we get
older, our sight isn’t what it used to be, but many people don’t want to admit
it. The
man resisted. Finally, the
frustrated wife made an appointment to see the eye doctor. The day
before the man was to go to the eye doctor he came into the kitchen where
his bride of 30 years was sweating over a
hot stove with her hair in curlers.
The man was suddenly overcome by his
love for his bride. He reached over
and pecked her on the cheek and said, “Honey,
you really look good to me.” The
surprised wife quickly replied, “That’s it!
I’m cancelling your eye
appointment!”
We
all face the time when our strength and power will wane. We need to remember Simeon and Anna in the
Christmas story. I’ve watched people
grow old. I’ve watched people die simply
because their bodies wore out. People
who die in the presence of the Lord, die in peace—even when they have been
abandoned by their bodies.
Peace
can be our gift from the cradle to the grave . . . . in our Working Times; in
our Waiting Times; in our Worrying Times and in our Waning Times if God is with
us and His favor is upon us – we can have peace within
us, if God’s favor is upon us.
Isaiah 9:6-7 6 For to us a child is born, to us a son is
given, and the government will be on his shoulders. And he will be called WonderfulCounselor,
Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. 7 Of the increase of his
government and peace there will be no end.
(Luke 2:14) "Glory to
God in the highest, and on earth peace to men on whom his favor rests."
Isaiah 26:3 3 You will keep
in perfect peace him whose mind is
steadfast, because he trusts in you.
You can have peace throughout the different seasons of life if you
are experiencing the favor of Almighty God – the Prince of Peace.
Early I mentioned how Longfellow, the great American poet bemoaned
the singing of “peace on earth” while all about him was turmoil, including a
son who had returned home severely wounded in the Civil War. Longfellow wore a beard to hide the scars on
his face that occurred as he tried unsuccessfully to put out the fire of his
wife’s nightgown. Longfellow wrote his
great carol, “I Heard The Bells On Christmas Day,” when peace had been pummeled
by personal and national tragedy. Recall
his words,
And in despair I bowed my head;
"There is no peace on earth," I said; "For hate is strong,
And in despair I bowed my head;
"There is no peace on earth," I said; "For hate is strong,
And mocks the song // Of peace on earth, good-will to men
But the great
bard would not end his carol on a note of gloom and war but would conclude by
saying,
Then
pealed the bells more loud and deep:
“God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;
“God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;
The Wrong shall fail, / / The Right prevail,
With peace on earth, good-will to men.”
One
day the Prince of Peace Isaiah described will return and bring to our political
experience the same peace that can reign in our spirits, even now. True peace is available, NOW, to any man,
woman or child upon whom God’s favor rests as a result of that person’s
complete surrender to Him.
May the God of peace, and the peace of God reign in our hearts.
May the God of peace, and the peace of God reign in our hearts.
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