Monday, November 5, 2018

Worship - waging war for peace

Image result for peace in chaosImage result for peace wonderful peaceWhat do you think about when you hear the word "peace"?  Do you think of sitting by a beautiful mountain stream?  Taking a walk and reveling in the beauty and wonder of creation?  A bubble bath after a long day? What about a quietness of soul in the midst of pain, chaos or catastrophe?  Isn't that when we need it most?  Don't get me wrong, there is something very therapeutic - healing and centering about stepping away from the chaos of life and soaking in the beauty, setting our focus on something bigger, outside of ourselves, and I strongly recommend being regularly purposeful in this.  However, there's also a way to experience peace right in the midst of all the swirling, busy and painful life experiences.  How do we break through what's right in front of us, pulling in a hundred different directions at once, walk in peace when we feel alone, life hasn't gone as we anticipated and it's left us with a deep ache we can't run away from?
Image result for worship as warfare  Think of David - Samuel came to town to anoint the next king and called David's family together to discover which one was IT, but his family didn't even consider him as a necessary part of the family.  However, when he did get anointed king and was filled with the Holy Spirit to destroy Goliath, he was very quickly not just rejected by his family but rejected by King Saul and hunted down.  In his jealousy and fury, Saul soon had all of Israel, the Israel that David was anointed king of, chasing after him to destroy him.  Sometime later, having stayed with the Philistines with the 400 low-life ruffians that had banded together with David, he was headed to battle with the Philistines against his own people, but then was rejected by them and told to leave.  Even his enemy didn't want him and when he returned to his village to find it burned down and all the women and children taken, the only people he had left - his 400 men- were ready to stone him.  So, having received a glorious promise from GOD and subsequently having one person or group of people after another reject and seek to destroy him, right in the midst of the worst of the worst, what did David do?  I Sam 30:6 - he strengthened himself in the Lord his God.  He worshiped.  After that?  God gave him victory after victory and gave him back all that had been taken from him.  All the captives plus extra plunder were recovered.  Saul and his sons died in battle and David began the process of becoming King of Israel and subsequently became one of the most famous kings of all time and one of the most recognized Bible heroes.  But did it always look rosy?  Did he every have doubts?  Feel squeezed, worn out, alone and broken - yes, right before the breakthrough was the worst!  And Scripture is filled with examples of a person being brought to the end of themselves - and what they chose in that moment was critical.  Over and over, those who chose to worship in that moment, not declaring what was- as far as circumstances right in front of them- but declaring what they could not see - who God is and what He has done and can do.  And time and again this choice to set eyes on Him was the pivot point that brought them into breakthrough.
Image result for peace in chaos   Worship- our glorious warfare against the onslaught of fear, pain, chaos, uncertainty and all that life has to throw at us.  In those times that seem to most call us to action, to do something, fix something, our tendency is to ponder, think, worry.  We "fall into a trap of thinking we can find a solution by looking at a problem from every angle and letting it consume our world. But what happens is that the affections of the heart get drawn away from the Lord, to the point that we care more about the problem than about giving Him what He deserves.  We let other voices speak louder than His, and that is always irresponsible! I am responsible to Him first..." Bill Johnson  "Most of us are about 15 minutes away from discouragement if we make a series of wrong decisions.  Our goal must be to remain fundamentally connected in our hearts to God's affections and His nature.  Worship, then, is the family business. This does not mean that we ignore problems, but that we operate from the conviction that as we stay faithful to adore Christ Jesus in the midst of our trials, He promises to bring solutions that we could not derive within ourselves." David Bradshaw 
Image result for peace wonderful peace  It is not in our brilliance of thought, purposeful composure and strength of mind that we arrive at peace, unshakable peace - it is only by setting our eyes on Him and declaring who He is and what He has done that we can walk unmoved, unfrazzled, hopeful and glorious in joy no matter what life throws at us.

Peace, Wonderful Peace
Far away in the depths of my spirit tonight
Rolls a melody sweeter than psalm;
In celestial-like strains it unceasingly falls
O’er my soul like an infinite calm.

Refrain:
Peace, peace, wonderful peace,
Coming down from the Father above!
Sweep over my spirit forever, I pray
In fathomless billows of love!

What a treasure I have in this wonderful peace,
Buried deep in the heart of my soul,
So secure that no power can mine it away,
While the years of eternity roll!

I am resting tonight in this wonderful peace,
Resting sweetly in Jesus’ control;
For I’m kept from all danger by night and by day,
And His glory is flooding my soul!

And I think when I rise to that city of peace,
Where the Author of peace I shall see,
That one strain of the song which the ransomed will sing
In that heavenly kingdom will be:

Ah soul, are you here without comfort and rest,
Marching down the rough pathway of time?
Make Jesus your friend ere the shadows grow dark;
Oh, accept this sweet peace so sublime!

Song
Story behind the hymn

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