Be A Peacemaker
Matthew 5:9
sermon by
Paul George Retired Pastor
Church of the Nazarene
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This seventh Beatitude has to do more with conduct than with character. The
first four may be grouped together as the negative character of the heart of
the godly. They are not self-sufficient, but consciously poor in spirit;
they are not self-satisfied, but mourning because of their spiritual state;
they are not self-willed, but meek; they are not self-righteous, but
hungering and thirsting after righteousness. In the next three, the Lord
names their positive character, having tasted of the mercy of God, they are
merciful in their dealings with others; having received a spiritual nature,
they now hate impurity and love holiness; having entered into a peace with
God they now wish to live in harmony and peace with all mankind.
In a world where there is no strife there is no need for peacemakers. Where
the world is filled with malice and envy, hateful and hating one another"
(Titus 3:3): though attempts are often made to conceal this by the cloak of
hypocrisy yet it soon comes forth again in its hideous nakedness, as the
history of the nations attests, peacemakers are needed.
The desire of peacemakers is to live peaceably with all men and abstain from
deliberate injury of others, promote unity and heal broken relationships.
Peacemakers pour sooth oil on troubled waters, reconcile those who are
alienated, right wrongs, and strengthen the kindly ties of friendship. As
the sons of peace they bring into the hostile atmosphere of this world the
pure and calming air of heaven.
The disposition of the peacemakers is a vastly different disposition of the
easy-going indolence which is often nothing but selfishness, of the wicked
of this world. The peace they desire to establish is not a peace at any
price. It is a peace that is not to be sought at the expense of
righteousness. It is a peace God Himself approves of. In this life we are to
avoid all needless contention, to the point of sacrificing the truth.
It is the duty of every Christian to see to it that we conduct ourselves in
such a way no just complaint can be filed against us. It is also for our own
peace we do this because it is impossible to be happy when we are involved
in strife and enmities. When disturbance and turmoil is aroused, we should
diligently examine ourselves before the Lord as to whether the cause for it
lies in us and if it does confess the sin to Him and seek to reconcile those
offended. Peacemakers must constantly be on their guard against an invasion
by the spirit of bigotry, intemperate zeal, and a quarrelsome spirit and
keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace" (Ephesians 4:3).
In order to develop a peaceful disposition we must first cultivate the grace
of "lowliness," which is the opposite of pride, of meekness, which is the
opposite of self-assertiveness, and the grace of long sufferance, which is
the opposite of impatience. We are not only to do all we can to heal broken
relationships we are to reconcile men to God. This is a contrast in the task
given to Joshua and his officers under the Mosaic economy, of taking up the
sword to slay the enemies of the Lord! In this age the servants of Christ
are commissioned to seek the reconciliation of those who are at enmity with
God.
Peacemakers are the ambassadors of God, calling sinners to come to God,
throw down the weapons of their warfare and enter into peace with God. They
know there is no peace for the wicked, and therefore they exhort them to
make peace with God.
There is still another way in which it is the privilege of believers to be
peacemakers, and that is by their prayers. In the day when the Lord’s anger
is kindled against a sin-laden people and the dark clouds of providence
threaten an impending storm of judgment, it is both the duty and the
privilege of God’s peacemakers to stand in the breach and in earnest
supplication plead with God to withhold His judgment as Moses did (Exodus
32:10), Aaron did (Numbers 16:47, 48), and David did (2 Samuel 24:14). This
is indeed a blessed work of peace: to intercede as Abraham did for Sodom.
Only in the Day to come will we know what the wicked gained by the presence
of the righteous remnant in their midst.
The reward for being peacemakers is decisive proof that these Beatitudes are
not directed toward the moral virtues of the natural man, but rather the
spiritual graces of the regenerate. To be called a child of God is to be
renewed in His image and likeness and to be a peacemaker. The Lord Himself
is "the God of peace" (Hebrews 13:20), and where this peaceful disposition
is manifested by His people He owns them as His children. Furthermore,
peacemakers are recognized as children of God by their spiritual brothers.
Ultimately, God will make it manifest to the entire universe that we are His
children (Rom. 8:19).
The Christian life
is one that is full of strange
paradoxes which are not understood by human reason, but which are easily
understood by the spiritual mind. God’s children rejoice with joy
unspeakable, yet they mourn with a lamentation the children of wrath don’t
understand. They rejoice because they have been brought into contact with a
source of satisfaction which is capable of meeting every longing, yet they
pant with a yearning for righteousness like that of the thirsty deer. They
sing songs in their heart to the Lord, yet groan deeply and daily over the
lost condition of the ungodly. Their life is often filled with pain yet they
would not part with it for all the gold in the world. These puzzling
paradoxes are among the evidences which they possess that they are indeed
blessed of God. But who by mere reasoning would ever conclude that the
persecuted and reviled are "blessed"! They are not compatible with the
world’s idea of blessed but are actually a manifestation of the miseries of
life.
The reason why the children of God are persecuted, reviled, and have all
manner of evil said of them is the wicked of this world hate justice and
love those who defraud and wrong their neighbors. They hate righteousness.
If the children of God would cease walking humbly with God, they might go
through the world, not only in peace, but with applause. Because they refuse
to cease their walking humbly with God they suffer persecution because their
life reveals the ungodliness of men and this provokes their resentment. The
wicked in this world hate God and those who bear His image.
The blessed in this world are those the world detests. Although those the
world detests are persecution it is really a blessing in disguise. The
opposition the child of God encounters in this world enables them to be
aware of their own infirmities and needs. They are made aware of the fact
they cannot stand for a single hour unless Divine grace upholds them. By
persecution they are often kept from certain sins into which they would most
likely fall were the wicked at peace with them. Persecution affords the
believer an opportunity to glorify God by his constancy, courage, and
fidelity to the truth.
This persecution "for righteousness’ sake" calls upon us to honestly examine
ourselves before God when we are being opposed: "But let none of you suffer
as a murderer, or as a thief, or as an evildoer, or as a busybody in other
men’s matters" (1 Peter 4:15). The same qualification is made in the verse
which immediately follows the last quoted: "Yet if any man suffer as a
Christian, let him not be ashamed; but let him glorify God on this behalf":
this is a most necessary caution, that the believer see to it that he is
suffering for doing what is right and not on account of his own misconduct
or foolish behavior.
Jesus warns His servants what they may expect to encounter, and then defines
how they are to respond. The glory worldly leaders value and crave is
flattery and honor, but the glory the disciple of Jesus crave is conformity
to Jesus who was "despised and rejected of men." Instead of being downcast
over and murmuring at the hostility they meet with in this world, they are
to be thankful to God for the high honor He confers upon them in making them
partakers of the sufferings of His Son.
The Lord Jesus pronounced blessed or happiness on those who, through
devotion to Him, would be called upon to suffer. They are "blessed" because
such are given the unspeakable privilege of having fellowship with the
sufferings of the Savior. They are "blessed" because such tribulation works
patience, and patience experience, and experience hope, a hope that will not
make ashamed. They are "blessed" because they shall be fully recompensed in
the Day to come. The child of God must not be dismayed because the fiery
darts of the wicked are hurled against him. We must remember that "The
sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory
which shall be revealed in us" (Romans 8:18).
The afflictions which come upon the children of God for their faithfulness
are to be endured not only with patience and resignation, but thanksgiving
and gladness because they come upon them for Christ’s sake. He suffered so
they must and they should rejoice to suffer a little for Him. Because they
shall be richly recompensed, great is their reward in heaven. These are a
reason to rejoice, no matter how fierce the conflict may be.
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