“One
day I would love to turn on the news and hear,
‘There’s
peace on earth’.”
It’s an anniversary year. Not all anniversaries are good and this one
isn’t. There are some anniversaries that most of us, particularly if you lived
through these terrible events, would love to forget.
This
year is the 25th anniversary of the Los Angeles riot that started on
April 29, 1992. The riots lasted six days: 63 people died, more than 2,000
suffered injuries. It’s the 40th anniversary of the Detroit riots.
Detroit residents rioted for six days beginning on July 23, 1967. At least 43
died with another 2,000 injured. More than 2,000 buildings were burned down. Famed
Detroit Tigers left fielder, Willie Horton, an African-American who’d grown up
in the riot area, stood on a car in his uniform amidst the rioters and pleaded
with them to go home. The rioters ignored him.
On
July 17, 1932, a riot in what is now Hamburg, Germany, involved 7,000 Nazis and
perhaps that many Communists. It became known as “Bloody Sunday” and left 18
Germans dead. It also killed freedom, the Weimar Republic and its free
elections. Three days later an emergency decree curtailed liberty in Prussia
which opened the door for the beginning of Hitler’s dictatorship the following
year.
Over the last five years there have been race-based riots in Maryland,
Minnesota, Missouri, and other states following the shootings of African-Americans
by white policemen. The more recent April 15th riot in Berkeley,
California, received less attention, but involved 500 to 1,000 demonstrators,
including alt-right and anti-fa (“anti-fascist”) brawlers. Six were
hospitalized and there was one stabbing. A greater tragedy is perhaps when
riots become so “normal,” they’re no longer newsworthy.
One
of the terrible aftershocks of the Fall is that human beings like to fight. Our
bent is toward conflict. We especially like to fight and win. It’s part of how
we deal with our consciences and guilt. If we can win, judge someone else
wrong, then we feel better about ourselves. Like Adam and Eve, our own
arrogance sets us up for continual conflicts.
Recently, Pastor John Burke (Gateway Church,
Austin, Texas), wrote very transparently about himself: “I watch the news and condemn those ‘idiotic people’ who do such
things. Most reality TV shows are full of people I can judge as sinful,
ignorant, stupid, arrogant, or childish. I get in my car and drive and find a
host of inept drivers who should have flunked their driving test—and I throw in
a little condemnation on our Department of Public Safety for good
measure! At the store, I complain to myself about the lack of organization
that makes it impossible to find what I’m looking for, all the while
being tortured with Muzak—who picks that music anyway? I stand in the
shortest line, which I judge is way too long because—‘LOOK PEOPLE—it says ‘10
items or less,’ and I count more than that in three of your baskets.
What’s wrong with you people?’ And why can’t that teenage
checker—what IS she wearing?—focus and work so we can get out of
here? Judging is our favorite pastime. Judging makes us feel good because
it puts us in a better light than others.”
Our judgmental spirits and pettiness make us
vulnerable for arguing and fighting. Too many of us live in a state of
perpetual conflict. What makes that particularly sad is that we all want
desperately to live in peace, to live a life free of conflict. Yet, we do many
things wrong that cause even more conflict. While most of us don’t go looking
for a fight, too many of us don’t put forth much effort to be a peacemaker or
even a peace-keeper.
Peace-making requires divine power. True
peace and lasting peace is impossible apart from God’s intervention. No one can
produce what they don’t already possess. You can’t spread peace if you’re at
war inside.
The
only way to have inner peace is to first have personal peace with God through
faith in Jesus Christ. Jesus is the Prince of Peace. God is the source of all
genuine peace. Scripture repeatedly tell us that God is a peace-loving,
peace-making God. One outcome of that means that believers should be the most
peace-loving and the greatest peacemakers. But are we? The 3rd fruit
of the Spirit is peace. Is that fruit evident in your life? Would your family
say that you’re a “peace lover?” How about your church family? What about your
co-workers? Or, sadly, are you known as a pot-stirrer?
You’ve no doubt heard of Alfred Nobel. Alfred
Nobel was one of the world’s wealthiest men of his day. He invented dynamite. Yet,
one morning in 1888, Alfred Nobel woke up to a terrible horror…he read his own obituary. A careless
reporter had mistaken the inventor for his brother, who’d actually died. The
shock for Alfred Nobel was overwhelming.
For the first time in his life, he saw
himself as the world saw him – the dynamite king, the distributor of death. It
was only for destruction that he would be remembered. And at that point, Alfred
Nobel changed the course of his life. He determined that he would not be
remembered in future generations as the merchant of death. So in his Last Will
and Testament, he left his vast fortune to be awarded to those seeking world
peace. We know it today as the Nobel Peace Prize.
Alfred Nobel wanted to be remembered as a
peacemaker – not a peace breaker. How do you want to be remembered? More
importantly, how will you be remembered? “Blessed
are the peacemakers, for they will be called sons of God.” Based on your
commitment to being a peacemaker, based on your character – would those around
you know that you are God’s child, that you have a personal relationship with
the Prince of Peace?
Can we help you spiritually? Can we help you know Jesus better? Please check out more resources on our church's web page, Gracechurchwi.org. Or, call us at 262.763.3021. If you'd like to know more about how Jesus can change your life, I'd love to mail you a copy of how Jesus changed my life in "My Story." E-mail me at Carson@gracechurchwi.org to request a free copy. Please include your mailing address. "
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