The Canadian Lutheran September/October 2021

Page 5

TABLE TALK

Peace when there is no peace

“They have healed the wound of my people lightly, saying ‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace…”

Jeremiah 6:14, 8:11

by Mathew Block

T

hese words, uttered by God in the leadup to the destruction of Jerusalem and the beginning of the Babylonian Captivity, are spoken as a rebuke to false priests and prophets. God had declared, through Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and others, that disaster was coming as a result of the people’s sin. But instead of heeding this warning, instead of calling for repentance, the authorities rejected the message. “Be at peace,” they told the people. “All is well.” In reality, there was no peace to be had. The rulers of the land were leading their people dangerously astray (Ezekiel 13:10). The nation had a deep, festering wound which needed immediate medical attention; instead, the leaders slapped a bandage on it and called it good. Meanwhile, the gangrene was setting in—with fatal consequences. There is something deeply distasteful about proclaiming peace when there is no peace. And yet the world sometimes accuses the Church of doing the same thing, albeit in a different context. This life is full of suffering. Millions of children across the globe are underfed and malnourished. Totalitarian states brutally oppress their citizens. Illness strikes without rhyme or reason. Terrorist organizations slaughter the innocent. Natural disasters sweep away the little that poor people once had. In response to this suffering, the Church comes and offers Jesus, saying that in Him all people will find peace.

But hang on: isn’t this just what the priests were doing in Jeremiah’s day? Weren’t they papering over real problems, promising a peace that wasn’t there? To be fair, sometimes we as Christians can be guilty of this— offering words alone when action is needed (James 2:15). Faced with grief or sorrow, we rush to solve the problem with our words. “God moves in mysterious ways.” “He’s in a better place now.” “This too shall pass.” “God’s got it under control.” These answers are all true; and yet our delivery of them can become a little too pat. A little too trite. We fail to enter into the grief of others, acting as if a few words should make everything better. This isn’t the peace that Jesus offers. He doesn’t pretend that faith in Him will free us from suffering; instead, He promises to be with us in the midst of suffering. That’s the difference between a false peace—that condemned in the Book of Jeremiah—and the peace which Christ gives. He acknowledges the reality of suffering, and yet promises to be with us in it, granting us the peace of His presence—a peace which passes all human understanding (Philippians 4:7). “Peace I leave with you,” Jesus says to us. “My peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid” (John 14:27). We indeed face many sorrows in this world. But we need not be afraid. God is with us in the midst of these

sorrows. He sends His Holy Spirit to be with us, to comfort us. He bears us up in His arms. And it is this promise which gives us peace in a world where otherwise we should find none. In this issue we contemplate some of the challenges of life which threaten to rob us of peace. Rev. Dr. Richard Beinert explores the relationship between suffering and faith (page 6). Rev. Michael Keith helps us chart a path through the journey that grief entails (page 9). And our third feature invites us to remember the persecuted Church around the world in prayer (page 12)—a theme expanded upon also in President Timothy Teuscher’s column this issue (page 42). In the face of suffering like this, it can be easy to feel hopeless. But even in these things, our Lord has promised us His peace—a peace which does not deliver us from sorrows in this life but sustains us in the midst of them. For our Jesus also knows what it is to suffer. He knows what it is to grieve the death of a loved one. He knows what it is to be persecuted and put to death without cause. But just as God raised Him from the dead, He will raise us also. At length, He will gather us to Himself, and there we shall grieve and suffer no more. For there, in the presence of the Prince of Peace, we shall know true peace at last. “Now may the Lord of peace Himself give you peace at all times in every way. The Lord be with you all.” – 2 Thessalonians 3:16

THE CANADIAN LUTHERAN September/October 2021

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Articles inside

When Life’s Great Trials Cast You Down

1min
page 44

Supplement: LAMP Ministry

10min
pages 35-38

Help! The communion wafers are stale.

4min
page 28

Who catechizes you?

4min
page 24

Return to the Lord your God

4min
page 20

Rev. Zakel installed at Prince of Peace

2min
page 30

No time to sleep

2min
page 29

Wilderness Escape VBS at Bethel

1min
page 27

New pastor for Fisherville

1min
page 27

May flowers

1min
page 26

“Teach the catechism, especially to the young” - Martin Luther

1min
page 25

Another generation confessing

1min
page 25

Bethel Thunder Bay closes

2min
page 23

A block party brings the community together

1min
page 22

King of Kings hosts VBS

1min
page 21

VBS goes online again at Foothills Lutheran Church

1min
page 21

Confirmation news from Fort Mac

1min
page 19

Anything but still!

1min
page 19

First-ever virtual youth gathering a success

1min
page 19

LCC’s Free Stock Photo Catalogue is here!

1min
page 18

Confessional Chats: Introducing LCC’s New Video Series

1min
page 18

Reflections from LCC/LLL-C's Communications Internship

4min
page 17

New Bishop Consecrated for Finnish Lutherans

1min
page 16

Latvian Lutherans vote to seek membership in the ILC

2min
page 16

Australian, German leaders who led churches to partnership with LCC pass on to glory

1min
page 15

Eight dead after flash flood at Ethiopian seminary

1min
page 15

Mission congregation hosts installation of LCC’s newest Missionary-at-Large for the francophone community

5min
pages 31-32

Former CLS president called to glory

1min
page 34

LCC Seminaries Call for Nominations

2min
pages 33-34

LCC Seminaries: In the spotlight...

1min
pages 33-34

New academic year begins!

1min
pages 33-34

In Review: The Green Knight

8min
pages 39-40

The Journey Through Grief

7min
pages 9-11

Peace when there is no peace

4min
page 5

Love Your Enemies: The Persecuted Church Today

9min
pages 12-19

A Strange Blessing for the Saints

4min
pages 42-44

Faith and Suffering

8min
pages 6-8
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