After last week’s post on my role as a peacemaker, some who have known me a long time objected. My oldest daughter said I truly had brought peace to many difficult situations, and rather than a doormat, I was creative, loving, and inspiring. And she believes my grandchildren enjoy being with me because they feel safe and peaceful with me. As I pondered this, I realized that my bent toward peace really is a God-given desire, my heart’s passion, and part of my hard wiring. The problems arose when my hard-wiring was hijacked. The great masquerader is always on the prowl, working to swerve us off any course toward God, or the life we were created to live. Isn’t it far easier to steer a moving car than to stop one, or to simply shift our direction or focus, than to change our views entirely? Thus, the introvert experiences unsafe situations and becomes excessively shy, while an extrovert is snubbed or left out, and develops a tendency to overly boisterous, perhaps even obnoxious behavior. With the combination of my personality and life experiences, my responses to life situations often have not been God’s best for me. Fear has boxed me in and restricted my life. After I visited my dream college, I turned down a scholarship when realized I’d be moving into a building full of complete strangers. Instead, I stayed at home and went to the local university. (I was forced to handle college dorm life when my family moved away in the middle of my freshmen year and left me behind. I loved it.) Even though I had dedicated myself to be a missionary when I was ten, when I reached career decision time in college I was too afraid to go into a foreign country and speak to strange people. After all, the family joke for years had been that I couldn’t even ask where the bread was in the grocery store! And when I was offered a summer job in Paris through my French teacher, a slight objection from my mother was all it took for me to agree with my fear, and pass on that once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Even after I was married and had two children, I still wouldn’t ask for something in the grocery store. I only used the drive-in window at the bank. It would take me two weeks to gather the courage to take a pair of pants to the dry cleaners. Happily, that was “the old me.” I’m still an introvert, but fear is only an occasional wrestling match, rather than a constant companion. Since I don’t recall a time in my life when I wasn’t aware of God, what hijacked my life? Why did it take me so long to start living? I tossed all of this around until Saturday night, when I listened to a well-known parable, the one about the three employees whose boss was leaving for a trip and gave them various sums to manage in his absence. The one who had been given the most invested shrewdly, and doubled his boss’s money, and when at last his boss returned, received praise and even more responsibility. The second worker, who had received a little less had also invested and doubled his investment. The boss praised him as well. But the third man, who had only received a little, said he knew his boss didn’t work or earn anything, and since he was afraid of his boss, he had buried the money so it wouldn’t get lost or stolen. He produced the original sum, evidentially satisfied that he’d played it safe. But his boss was furious, took the money from him, and gave it to the one who had the most. I’ve always puzzled over this story. It never seemed fair. After all, Jesus was telling stories to explain God’s view of our human lives. How does this sync with: “Come to me all who are heavy laden and I will give you rest”? Doesn’t this sound more like the great watch maker, winding us up and setting us into play? Like the boss going off on a trip, God stands back, arms crossed, frowning, and watches us mess up? Like the child who wonders where God is while she is being abused? The woman who loses pregnancy after pregnancy, or who fails to conceive after a lifetime of only wanting to be a mother? The wife with young children watching her husband and soul mate die of an aggressive cancer? The businessman who follows God’s ways and takes huge financial loses, while unscrupulous men grow wealthy? Or thousands lose their loved ones when obsessed men fly jets into buildings? Doesn’t the third worker’s view make sense? This week, I connected the dots. I remember on September 11th, when I had thought for several hours that my daughter was on the second jet that I had watched on TV as plowed through the World Trade Towers. At the end of the day, I prayed through my tears. “God, where were you when all those people suffered and died?” I “saw” a picture in my mind that I believe came from him. It was Jesus, on the cross in front of the buildings, his body completely covering them. The jets ripped through his body first. He was saying, “I was there. I felt every pain.” That is the point of Immanuel, God in human form. God with us. He doesn’t leave us alone to struggle or grieve. He said not one little bird falls or wild flower dies that he doesn’t know about. He counts every hair on our heads. He knows. He cares. He hasn’t left us alone on this journey. So the issue with the three workers wasn’t about how much anyone started or ended up with. The third worker wouldn’t believe his employer would be there for him. Instead, he lived in fear of him. That was me! I had talked about God, worshipped Him, studied and memorized my Bible, even served as a missionary (finally), but until this decade of my life, was often paralyzed by fear. Wasn’t I like that third man, not trusting God to be there for me? Thinking I have to talk to that intimidating person, or make that phone call, or go to that place full of strangers on my own? The pieces slid into place. The story isn’t about what we receive. It’s about who or what we trust to keep us safe, or give our lives meaning. It has only been since I have been able to open up and deeply receive God’s love into the core of my being, since I have released my old waiting-for-the-hand-to-hurt-me view of God that carried over from my father, that I have been able to really trust God. And trusting is more important than doing. Since I know the Prince of Peace will never leave me alone, will always give me the help I need when I need it in order to carry out his will, I am at peace. I am smiling as I say that I truly am called to be a peacemaker. I can bring that as a gift to others – with a full heart – for the love I have received. Even if it is just a glimpse of peace. What is the passion of your heart?
Category: Peace
Peace

Virginia Beach, VA
When we started attending church, I picked up on the verses that encouraged my peace-keeping practices. “Blessed are the peacemakers.” Matt 5:9 ESV
“Strive for peace with everyone, and for the holiness without which no one will see the Lord. See to it that no one fails to obtain the grace of God; that no “root of bitterness” springs up and causes trouble, and by it many become defiled Hebrews 12:14-15 ESV
Turn away from evil and do good; seek peace and pursue it. Psalm 34:14 ESV
By the time I arrived at my teenage years, I was well versed in ducking my head, “fixing” things, reading the temperature of the people around me, and doing whatever it took to “keep the peace.”
Because I thought peace was my job, even memorizing great verses couldn’t help. “Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” Phil 4:6-7 ESV
Not being anxious was yet another job to add to my to-do list.
If someone had asked me what I wanted, just for me, I wouldn’t have known how to answer. My own feelings didn’t get enough time in my conscious mind to even register.
Being a peacemaker translated into being a people-pleaser.
Making new resolves.
And the harder I tried, the less peace I had.
I made many poor choices, though I didn’t realize I was making choices.
Even at my best, it was me, the Peacemaker, trying harder. Pulling it together.
That made me a doormat and a boring date.
In marriage, it made me a doormat and a boring mate.
Looking outside myself didn’t really help. In the news and magazines, instructions from gurus and shamans and politicians abounded, sources all over the world offered peace, where there was no peace.
They have healed the wound of my people lightly, saying, ‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace. Jeremiah 6:14 ESV
And you shall know that I am the Lord God. Precisely because they have misled my people, saying, ‘Peace,’ when there is no peace, and because, when the people build a wall, these prophets smear it with whitewash, say to those who smear it with whitewash that it shall fall! Ezekiel 13:9b-11 ESV
I didn’t know it was impossible for me to be the one to bring peace, or that peace isn’t something I can work for or contrive.
It took a lot of pain, blind alleys, false starts and long roads to get to the place where I couldn’t go on. In total defeat, I surrendered my Peacemaker badge.
Once I gave up trying to be god in my life, and in the lives of everyone around me (come on now, isn’t that what we’re doing when we try to make everything right?) I discovered the treasure of joblessness.
I found the most wonderful gift.
The presence of one who is peace.
Instead of projecting what might happen so I can fix it before it starts, and watching everyone to ward off an injury or bandage a hurt, instead of anxiously watching faces for affirmation, attention that is fleeting and shallow, I snuggle up to the God of Peace.
And in the presence of the God of green hope, I am getting to know me, the one I was created to be, distinct and special, just as you are.
Unique.
Wonderful.
So this year, as I raise my flag on Veterans’ Day, I know I’m not the one to bring peace, for me, my family or my world.
Tell me, where do you find your peace?

poem by J F Thompson
Now may the Lord of peace himself give you peace at all times in every way. The Lord be with you all. 2 Thess 3:16 ESV
Oh! May the God of green hope fill you up with joy, fill you up with peace, so that your believing lives, filled with the life-giving energy of the Holy Spirit, will brim over with hope! Romans 15:13 MSG
Breathe on me
Immediately following his agonizing crucifixion and supernatural resurrection, the first time Jesus appeared to the whole bunch, he breathed peace and the power of his Spirit over his disciples, and said, “If you forgive someone’s sins, they’re gone for good. If you don’t forgive sins, what are you going to do with them? John 20:22-23, The Message. That last line stopped me cold.
I would have expected words of comfort for the fear and dejection they had experienced in the last few days.
Or answers.
What happened to Jesus? Where was he during those dark hours? What did it feel like? How was his body changed? How’d he get in the room with the doors locked against the world? What would happen to Him now, to all of them?
Instead, Jesus tells them the point of his resurrection power is forgiveness.
Really? Forgiveness?
Then I recall the words he gasped from the cross. “Father, forgive them they know not what they do.”
All right. I know He took our sins to the cross. But giving us the power to forgive sins?
“If you don’t forgive sins, what are you going to do with them?”
Good question. What am I doing with sins against me?
God often speaks to me in mental pictures. As I ponder this, I see an image of me, navigating life with my hands full, cradling scars from childhood when someone hurt me deeply or wounded me by neglect, or from a painful relationship, or rage against the one who abused my children . . . (It goes on, and I’m sure you can write your own list.)
With my hands full, I have nothing to help me make my way through the tough places,
or to receive any gifts,
or to offer assistance to others.
I have to ask, who is being hindered the most now by my holding onto sin against me?
In the light of this, holding on seems preposterous.
So I journey on, forgiving some easily. With the others, deeper wounds from those who should have been the most loving, I have struggled.
Sometimes all I’ve managed is wanting to let go. And for a while, that was enough. The beginning of that road.
But as I felt the call to grow, no amount of sheer effort would make it happen.
I’ve come back around to the breathing part. Jesus breathes his spirit on us to give us the power to really live. The life we were created to live.
It’s pure gift. As I open my hands and heart, and welcome that breath, something in me is transformed.
Lord, breathe on me, giving me the peace the world cannot give, and the power to let go of sins, mine and those of others that have burdened me for way too long. Thank you for new life power.
Is there a struggle on your journey?
