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Peace By Trust Training
Last Tuesday night a tragic duet was heard around the world.
I listened as CNN and other news agencies carried live audio feeds of automatic
weapon fire sounding against the background of church bells tolling in
Manger Square in the town of Bethlehem. For over a month now, 200
Palestinians have been barricaded inside the Church of the Nativity, traditionally
taken to be the birthplace of Jesus. That night the “Battle of Bethlehem”
intensified. Fires broke out, damaging the structure and killing
at least one of those in the church. The standoff has become a flash
point in the latest round of vicious hostilities between Jews and Palestinians.
Yasser Arafat is said to be personally “controlling” the Palestinians in
the church, 40 of whom are said to be “senior terrorists” wanted by the
Israeli government. He claims Israelis are using the standoff as
a way to make Palestinians appear disrespectful of Christian traditions,
thereby adding to the suspicion and hostility Christians have already toward
Muslim believers since 9/11. But Israelis claim the fires and explosions
were set by Palestinians to make the Israelis seem the aggressors and seem
disrespectful of Christianity, even showing video with glass exploding
outward as evidence the source was internal to the church. Both sides
posturing for the North American audience. Watching the orange flames
shoot from the church, and listening to the outrageously dissonant sounds,
I grew cynical reflecting on the hatred that has fueled this conflict for
thousands of years! This will never end. After agreements and summits
and promises for as long as I can remember, nothing changes. There’s
nothing to be done. Leave them to their hatred and killing.
It’s impossible. And the sounds I heard echoed ironically against
the harmonious memory of the Christmas carol: “O little town of Bethlehem,
how still we see thee lie!” and “Silent Night, Holy Night, All is calm,
All is bright…..Sleep in perfect peace, Sleep in perfect peace.”
Peace I thought to myself, can never come.
That evening, somehow it seemed I wanted/needed to say something to
you today about peace. Though it wasn’t clear at the time, seemed remarkably
less clear last night at midnight, and is only somewhat clearer today,
it seemed to me that there may be a few among you who at this time of the
semester or at this season of your life, don’t have much peace. My
mind went especially to you seniors. It is a difficult time of your
life. All week I’ve thought about you. One of you even prayed
in morning worship yesterday, “Lord give seniors a sense of peace in this
difficult time, facing their future.” You may be preoccupied with
so many things that they disrupt your relationships, distracting you and
burdening you. But finally, I have a confession to make. As
I struggled to prepare speak to you about peace, I realized I didn’t have
much peace myself. I have been concerned about the college, concerned
about my children, concerned about my wife, finding it difficult to enjoy
the peace I know God promises to us all. Sometimes I think God calls
me to speak and especially to preach mostly because He has something he
needs to teach me. And He knows I won’t sit still long enough to
listen unless I have to prepare. It seems I myself may be among those
most in need of hearing this message. So I want to talk to you today
about peace. And as you might expect, it has a lot to do with character.
Will you bow your heads and pray with me?
May the words of my mouth and the meditation of our hearts be acceptable
in your sight O Lord, our strength and our redeemer.
CHARACTER & VIRTUE
We talk about character a lot at Greenville. We expect you to
become people of character. With God’s help, that’s our mission.
But after all, what is character anyway? Every time I point out to
my daughter that the stretching challenges she is facing at the moment
are “good for her character,” she’s quick to reply, “Thank you very much
Dad, but I think I have quite enough character already!” Until it
got too corny, I used to reply, “Well there’s no doubt you’re quite a character.”
But most of us recognize that ‘character’ refers to the deepest fiber of
our identity. In one sense the word could be used to describe just
the set of personality traits that distinguish us from one another; the
characteristics of our personality. More importantly however, I think
it means the “backbone”—or lack thereof—that holds all our personal characteristics
and quirks together. And like a backbone, it has a number of elements
or components. Some of these we call virtues, and some we call vices.
Either way, they are the principles at the root of who we are that provide
the skeletal structure for our identity. Though they are qualities
of who we ARE, in turn they serve as the most important forces that shape
our behavior; i.e. what we DO. In other words, while we may have
virtues or vices without acting on them at all, they are most easily known
by what they produce. They are “the tendencies in us to behave either
for good or for bad.”
This close connection between virtues and behaviors, explains why at
least since Aristotle, people have believed that the best way to build
character, to cultivate virtues, is by practice. Aristotle says that
by repeated action, we form habits, the very tendencies to behave, the
virtues, that comprise our character. So behavior shapes character.
For example, as C.S. Lewis put it, if you love others often enough, you
will become a loving person. But since the virtues are themselves
tendencies to behave, clearly having a certain character also shapes behavior.
If you are a loving person, you will tend to act in loving ways towards
others. Of course the same is true for the opposing vice of hatred
too, as it is for the other virtues and vices of integrity, wisdom, self-discipline,
anger, selfishness, and so on. Act selfishly and you become selfish.
Become selfish and you will act selfishly. It is a crucial cycle
of reinforcement that is at once both obvious and profound. In other
words, we are what we do, and we do what we are.
Usually when we are young we are not particularly aware of which virtues
and which vices we have. That’s partly because they are not yet well
developed and partly because we are not particularly self-aware.
But as time goes on we begin to see ourselves more clearly. Our actions
make our virtues plain…both to others and to us ourselves. Keep watching
yourself, as objectively as you can, and you learn a lot about your character.
Until the last fifty years or so there has actually been pretty good
consensus on what those virtues should be. Plato argued that there
were four cardinal virtues: Wisdom, Courage, Self-discipline, and Justice.
By the middle ages, the church had added what they called the three Theological
virtues: Faith, Hope, and Love. Today, in our post-modern world,
it seems that the very notion of character virtues has disappeared.
That’s because the very idea of ‘good’ has disappeared except as a generalization
about what people in general or some group in particular happens to choose
to believe. Virtue then is made relative to the individual or the
group they choose.
PEACE
So what does any of this talk about virtues have to do with peace?
Well bear with me and consider first what peace means and how it comes
about. It’s tempting to suppose that “peace” is a state of
external affairs; a state of affairs characterized by the lack of conflict
in outward actions and events. There is no peace in the Middle East
because there is open conflict, there is shooting, there are suicide bombers
destroying innocent lives, there are tanks rolling in the streets of Bethlehem.
There is no peace in Afghanistan and Pakistan because American troops are
still pursuing Al Qaeda and Taliban. But if peace is merely the lack
of outward conflict, then for the most part all of us should be at peace
because most of us are not involved today in open conflict. Yet the
tensions and anxieties, the fears and hostilities we feel suggest we are
not at peace. So peace must be something more.
Seventeen hundred years ago, St. Augustine, attempted to clarify this
notion of peace from a Christian point of view. Peace, he said, is
not just the lack of external conflict, it is the presence of right relationships.
Augustine made it clear that it is the well-ordered relationships of each
part of our self that makes for peace. Peace of the body, peace of
the rational and irrational soul, peace of body with soul, as well as peace
between man and man…. “The peace of all things is the tranquility
of order. [And] order is the distribution which allots things…each
to its own place.” But Augustine concludes ultimately, that because
we are fallen, peace comes only as we subordinate all other relations to
that of right relationship between mortal man and immortal God.
TRUST
How do these right relationships of peace come about? Plato had
argued that when each part of our self was in right relation to each other
part, when each class of society was in right relationship with each other
class, the result (he called it Justice not peace) arose from intensive
knowledge training. But Augustine’s key to peace, through right relationship
between God and man, came from quite a different source. According
to Augustine, right relationships could come only from trust. When
the central right relationship is between two persons, it must be a matter
of trust, not knowledge. So Christians have long concluded that true
peace begins not with knowledge training but with trust training.
But here finally is where the connection of peace to character emerges.
Peace depends on trust, but trust is a virtue of character. So ultimately,
Augustine is telling us that real peace, right relationships in family,
friendships, society, depend on our cultivation of trust in God.
And like all virtues, it comes from practice.
If right relations in the Middle East depend on trust, then there’s
little wonder there is no peace there. Ariel Sharon and Yasser Arafat
have distrusted each other from at least as far back as the 1967 war when
they fought each other. Trust is missing. At one time I hoped
such trust might exist. I remember the National Prayer Breakfast
just a few years ago where I watched Arafat embrace Leah Rabin, widow of
the assassinated Prime Minister of Israel with whom Arafat had won the
Nobel prize for peace in 1994. It seemed there was trust in that
embrace. Arafat also shared that peace prize with Shimon Peres the
man who served then, and ironically also serves now, as Foreign Minister.
Was there trust then but not now? Or had there never been real trust
there at all?
There are people on this campus who do not trust one another; people
you do not trust, people I do not trust; people who do not trust you and
do not trust me. More importantly, we often do not really trust God.
No wonder we often lack peace.
Trust training comes hard. Over 20 years ago my son Jim and I
walked across the street to the playground in our beach town of southern
California. He was 5 or 6 years old. We’d been there many times
before, and most times I had coaxed him onto the swings and climbing platform,
but had never succeeded in persuading him to slide down the ten-foot fireman’s
pole. Many times I had tried, and each time before, I could see the
fear in his eyes and could sense his distrust that he would really be okay.
Was my son really such a wimp? I remember the struggle in my mind vacillating
between my impatience with his apparent fear and my recognition that pressing
him too hard would only make matters worse. Could I really be patient?
Each time before, he had backed down and we had left with tension, not
the peace of right relationship between us. You see I
couldn’t reach all the way to where he had to swing out of the platform
and grab the pole. For a moment he would be on his own. You
could see that he knew that, so the real issue was whether he believed
I could or would catch him if things went wrong. It seemed like hours,
though I suspect it was only minutes. He’d lean out, then back off,
lean out then back off again. I knew that once he had stepped out
once, it would be easier to trust me and to trust himself the next time
and the next time and the next time. But pressure and impatience
would backfire and make trusting again later all that much harder.
It became clear, that trust is a very difficult virtue to build and a very
very easy thing to destroy. It depended as much on my trustworthiness as
it did on his decision to step out. Trust comes hard. I remember
the moment that day when he finally reached out, stepped off the platform
letting go of his security and slid down into my arms. His trust,
produced such joy, such relationship, such peace between us.
Don Richardson, in his book Peace Child, tells how as a missionary,
he had sought to coax the Sawi headhunters of New Guinea to trust Jesus.
Their culture was based on distrust. It was expected that people
would deliberately build friendship relationships based on deceit in order
eventually to betray one another in war. And the regular wars between villages
brought tragedy and disaster to these simple people. There was no
peace, either in external events or in internal relationships among the
people. Richardson sought to tell them the gospel of Jesus Christ.
But in such a climate of distrust, the Sawi couldn’t understand.
Hearing the story of Jesus’ death, they saw Judas Iscariot as the hero.
He had cultivated a relationship with Jesus in order to betray him for
personal profit. By their standards, he was brilliant, and Jesus
was the chump. How would it be possible to teach these people about
trust. And without trust, how could they ever know peace. The
breakthrough came after many years when Richardson learned of an unusual
custom. At rare times, the chief of the village really wishing to
make peace, would offer his own son, a tiny baby, who would from that time
forward be raised by their enemies. It was the ultimate sacrifice
of a people who sought real peace. The child would be raised in the
other village, and right relationships could exist because the enemies
could trust a chief who had shown himself trustworthy by such an expression
of sacrifice. Trust comes hard. When Richardson described the
initiative of God the Father in offering his son as a tiny peace child,
the Sawi understood that this God could be trusted, and peace came to their
lives not only by cessation of conflict between them, and by right relationships
among them, but most importantly by right relationship between them and
their Father in heaven.
Trust training, the cultivation of the virtue of trust, requires then
an act of our minds in response to the evidence of a trustworthy object
of our trust. Whether it is a trustworthy earthly father waiting
patiently for his son to choose to trust him, or a Sawi chief waiting for
an enemy village to respond in trust to his trustworthy sacrifice, or an
Israeli or Palestinian negotiator acting to trust or waiting to be trusted,
or our trustworthy Heavenly father, waiting patiently for us His children
to choose to respond to him with trust…the message is the same. Peace
comes only by trust, and trust comes only by the mental act of the one
who wishes to trust, in response to the one who is Trustworthy.
In John 14:27, Christ promised to give us peace, 27Peace I leave with
you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not
let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid. But His peace comes
only by the act of trusting in Him.
Is there conflict in your mind today? Does that conflict constitute
a profound lack of peace? Are you worried about tomorrow? About
examinations? About a job for the summer or as a senior, about what’s
next for the fall? Do you want peace? Peace is right relationship,
and that ultimately comes down to right relationship with God. But
peace depends on that character virtue of trust.
Listen to the wonderful assurance of this linkage found in Isaiah 26,
3 God will keep in perfect peace [those] whose mind is steadfast, because
[they] trust in [Him]. Are you at peace? Right relationship
with your friends, your family, your Maker? If not, is your
mind steadfast in trusting? Or are you vacillating in the emotions
of fear and distrust, hesitant to step out until it feels right?
As Oswald Chambers asks (2/11), Is your mind stayed on God or is it starved?
Starvation of the mind, caused by neglect, is one of the chief sources
of exhaustion and weakness in a servant’s life. If you have never used
your mind to place yourself before God, begin to do it now. There is no
reason to wait for God to come to you. You must turn your thoughts and
your eyes away from the face of idols and look to Him and be saved. Your
mind is the greatest gift God has given you and it ought to be devoted
entirely to Him.
Friends, and I speak to myself now too, whether it is for peace with
friends, with family, or with God, it will take deliberate acts of trust
training. Choose to step out and trust. The reward is a peace
that passes understanding!
Philippians 4:6-7 6Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything,
by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.
7And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your
hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.
Sing: When Peace Like a River
Dr. Jim Mannoia
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