Wisdom is a thing of more worth than
gold. Like few things that are valued in this life, it is hard won and not
easily lost — so long as we continue to revere the source of it: that’s God.
There are three vitally
interconnected components in the biblical wisdom of the Apostle Paul:
“If it is possible,
as far as it depends on you,
live at peace with everyone.”
Romans 12:18 (NIV)
as far as it depends on you,
live at peace with everyone.”
Romans 12:18 (NIV)
If it is
possible — sometimes it
isn’t possible. Sometimes we’ve exhausted all our avenues of love and understanding
and patience. Sometimes we can’t do any
more. Sometimes we have to leave situations to our prayers. Yet there is still
kindness. There is still grace. And as we give our kindness and grace, God
grows us in kindness and grace.
Have you ever noticed that? We grow
only in accordance with the sacrifices we make that are uncomfortable for us;
those that demand a choice to love. Those where others get right of way.
We may have decided that a person
or a situation no longer is extended our trust. The power in that decision is
they no longer have power over how we choose to treat them.
… as far as it depends on you… this stresses the importance of exhausting
every opportunity, because, let’s face it, we’re quicker to cut ties with
someone who hurts us than we want others to when
we hurt them. And we all engage in ways that hurt others. All of us. There is
always a ‘when’.
Have we gone to the fullest extent
we can to reach out toward them? Here’s where the wisdom comes in. There are
times when we think we have, and we haven’t. There are times when we think we
haven’t, and we have. Wisdom discerns correctly. Wisdom both endures and does not prolong pain.
… live at peace with everyone… if only everyone did or could. But not
everyone does. And none of us really do it with any consistency without God’s
Spirit reminding us. We all need to be reminded to come back to a way of living
that requires us to sacrifice for the good of others, where there’s no direct
benefit to ourselves.
When we live at peace with everyone,
God does a work of peace in us.
God does a work of peace in us.
Or, is it the other way around?
Like the chicken and the egg, it’s an interdependent relationship. Want ‘inner
peace’? It’s as easy as having interpersonal peace, because everyone’s hope and
joy relies at least to some extent on how they’re treated.
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