Embracing the Gift of Peace Through Christ

Devotional

Sermon Summary

Bible Study Guide

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"Peace is the culmination of the names of the Messiah, the culmination of what God is up to in Jesus. And we all say that we want peace right we want peace for ourselves we want peace for our families we want peace for our relationships with our neighbors and our co-workers with our extended families and even with strangers we want peace as a nation and between nations there's almost no one who doesn't want peace." [00:08:12] (31 seconds)


"There is a paradox to peace there really is and for all of our efforts to find it to achieve it to get it we have shown ourselves as human beings to be really bad at peacemaking what is peace now if you're ambushed into ask answering that question if we have to give an answer off the top of our heads most of us are going to say something like no war or if we're feeling particularly quick when somebody unfairly asks us that question when we haven't thought about it we might say something like free from stress or worry and neither are bad answers." [00:10:03] (49 seconds)


"The paradox is deeper than our inability to achieve peace on our own no matter how much we strive Isaiah shows us the truth and what do we do when we can't find peace instinctively we look for someone who can because we know we can't we look for a leader an inventor a wise man a builder we may be skeptical of those people we may go all-inclusive but deep down we know they can't deliver in the long haul." [00:16:47] (33 seconds)


"This is about the birth of a child, not of the astonishing work of a strong man, not the bold discovery of a wise man, not the pious work of a saint. It really is beyond all understanding. The birth of a child shall bring about the great change, shall bring to all mankind salvation and deliverance. What kings and statesmen, philosophers and artists, religious leaders and moral teachers of labor, for in vain, is now brought about by a newborn child." [00:19:26] (30 seconds)


"The Prince of Peace comes not as a powerful political leader, not as the sage or the inventor. He does not keep conflict at bay. He endures it and he challenges it because he is complete and offers us completeness. Isaiah says in verse 5 of our passage that he destroys the very trappings of war. He is the bringer of light and joy. He is the bringer of peace, the ruler of peace and the sustainer of peace." [00:21:55] (31 seconds)


"Jesus, that baby in the manger, the one who is venerated by angels and shepherds and foreign wise men soon to be hunted by his own king is God's answer to our need for peace. And Jesus says in the hours before he was portrayed, peace I leave with you, my peace I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid. John 14." [00:22:49] (28 seconds)


"Our problem is we try to do it on our own, in our own power, in our own strength. We try to take on the role of the Prince of Peace, and guess what? We are not up for the task. That was the pride of Satan in the lie in the garden. That's our own twisted sense of self at work. And the older I get and the more I look at the things we strive for in life, the pursuits of the world are really about the pursuit of shalom, of peace, of completeness." [00:24:37] (35 seconds)


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