How Is Peace Possible in This World?
This is a question everyone must ask. Certainly peace seems to
be impossible here. Yet the Word of God promises other things that
seem impossible, as well as this. His Word has promised peace. It
has also promised that there is no death, that resurrection must
occur, and that rebirth is man's inheritance. The world you see
cannot be the world God loves, and yet His Word assures us that
He loves the world. God's Word has promised that peace is possible
here, and what He promises can hardly be impossible. But it is true
that the world must be looked at differently, if His promises are
to be accepted. What the world is, is but a fact. You cannot choose
what this should be. But you can choose how you would see it. Indeed,
you must choose this.
Again we come to the question of judgment. This time ask yourself
whether your judgment or the Word of God is more likely to be true.
For they say different things about the world, and things so opposite
that it is pointless to try to reconcile them. God offers the world
salvation; your judgment would condemn it. God says there is no
death; your judgment sees but death as the inevitable end of life.
God's Word assures you that He loves the world; your judgment says
it is unlovable. Who is right? For one of you is wrong. It must
be so.
The text explains that the Holy Spirit is the Answer to all problems
you have made. These problems are not real, but that is meaningless
to those who believe in them. And everyone believes in what he made,
for it was made by his believing it. Into this strange and paradoxical
situation,--one without meaning and devoid of sense, yet out of
which no way seems possible,--God has sent His Judgment to answer
yours. Gently His Judgment substitutes for yours. And through this
substitution is the un-understandable made understandable. How is
peace possible in this world? In your judgment it is not possible,
and can never be possible. But in the Judgment of God what is reflected
here is only peace.
Peace is impossible to those who look on war. Peace is inevitable
to those who offer peace. How easily, then, is your judgment of
the world escaped! It is not the world that makes peace seem impossible.
It is the world you see that is impossible. Yet has God's Judgment
on this distorted world redeemed it and made it fit to welcome peace.
And peace descends on it in joyous answer. Peace now belongs here,
because a Thought of God has entered. What else but a Thought of
God turns hell to Heaven merely by being what it is? The earth bows
down before its gracious Presence, and it leans down in answer,
to raise it up again. Now is the question different. It is no longer,
"Can peace be possible in this world?" but instead, "Is
it not impossible that peace be absent here?"
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