Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you.
Not as the world gives do I give it to you.
The world gives us a peace that is the result of a temporary lack of negative feelings and circumstances. It is merely a lull between crises. It comes about when we manage to momentarily elude our anxieties. We are occasionally able to distract ourselves from the things we fear. We don't always have to directly engage those things in life with which we struggle. But the trouble with peace of this sort is that it always comes up short. It circumstantial by definition. Even if we happen to have immense resources and spend them all, along with all of our effort, to protect it, we cannot achieve uninterrupted peace of this kind. And the harder we try the more it tends to hurt when something breaks through the barriers we have built and we are confronted by the intrusion of an apparently indifferent world.
'I am going away and I will come back to you.'
If you loved me,
you would rejoice that I am going to the Father;
The peace that Jesus gives is different from that of the world. It does not require that we only always experience positive feelings and circumstances. It is durable enough to provide us with stability even in the midst of suffering. Paul and Barnabas told the disciples that, "It is necessary for us to undergo many hardships to enter the Kingdom of God", and they did not sense this to be in contradiction to the good news they proclaimed.
We probably wonder if this sort of peace, that is present in the midst of pain, is really anything other than pretense and propaganda. But it is vastly different to experience trials, hardships, and suffering, when we abide in the peace of Jesus, than to do so without it. We don't need to experience the desperation that is so common to the rest of the world in the face of suffering. We don't need to feel as though something went wrong, or is irreparably broken. We can move through the highs and the lows of life with a profound and unshakable trust that God is in control. Then, no matter what life throws at us, we won't overreact and make matters worse. We may not always see or understand what God is doing in the world. In fact, we do not often understand the ways in which God brings greater good from the many evils we see around us. But we know that even when he seems absent he is still working. He is always arranging everything for our good, not in an obvious way, like Santa Claus, but as rather as one whom we can trust because he knows us better than we know ourselves.
I will no longer speak much with you,
for the ruler of the world is coming.
He has no power over me,
but the world must know that I love the Father
and that I do just as the Father has commanded me.
Even the ruler of this world, the devil, need not cause us to lose our peace since he has no power over Jesus in whose hands are all of our lives. It should, perhaps, give us pause that we ourselves are all to able to extricate ourselves from his protection. But even when we think about that possibility we should not overestimate ourselves and underestimate God's mercy and his desire to save us. In any event, we don't need to worry as though the devil has ultimate power over us since the one who is living within us is greater than the one living in the world (see First John 4:4). We never need to succumb to his wiles or let ourselves be deceived by him again. We have recourse if it happens. But better to remain seated in the power of the peace of Christ.


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