"...that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith; that you, being rooted and grounded in love may be able to comprehend with all the saints what is the width and length and depth and height—to know the love of Christ which passes knowledge; that you may be filled with all the fullness of God. Ephesians 3:17-19
It’s January. Are
your Christmas decorations put away, yet? Our bank accounts are noticeably
lighter, the daylight hours are still pitifully few, and it seems like Spring
is still a long way away.
The birth of
Christ was the fulfillment of God’s promise that He would reconcile mankind to
Himself. The angels sang, “Glory to God in the
highest, and on earth peace, goodwill toward men."
In
the scriptures the Messiah is prophesied as a man of sorrows,
acquainted with grief, as the lamb of God brutally sacrificed for the sins of the people. He’s also prophesied as an king who
would deliver the nation of Israel from their oppressors and whose reign would never end.
Not
understanding how Jesus could be both, the people of Israel focused on the
Messiah coming as a great king who would free them from the bondage of the
Roman empire. They wanted Him so desperately. The problem was, they saw the
prophesies as a single range mountain peaks, grouped together in time. What they
couldn’t see from their perspective was the valley of time separating the
coming of Jesus as an infant and His death on the cross in 33 AD from his
coming as a reigning king. They couldn’t see the 2000+ years of the church age
between the time of His sacrifice and when He will come as a conquering
king who will reign forever.
So
where is the peace that He promised? The peace Jesus brought when He came the first time is
between Man and God. He redeemed us—bought us back and paid the price—from the
power of sin and death. Jesus reconciled us to God by paying the price for our
sin. When we yield ourselves—mind, will
and emotions—to Him, He changes our hearts and gives us peace. Not just peace
with God--that's reconcilation with God--but the peace of God.
Unfortunately,
as long as the hearts of men remain unsurrendered, there will be sin and death in the world, and, no lasting peace
on the earth, except in the hearts of His people.