The 
		simplest description of a Christian is one who is an imitator of God. 
		This transformation of the spirit of a Christian into “the image of His 
		Son” is God’s eternal plan for every man that comes to Him 
		
		(Rom 8:29-30). 
		When we honestly look at the nature of man and then that of God, we must 
		marvel at the great power that God has used to bring about that 
		transformation.  
		
		Just as a 
		blacksmith hammers out the lump of metal into a useful instrument, our 
		God uses the fires of conflict, guided by His written word and 
		providential care to mold us into His image 
		
		(James 1:2-4; Rom 5:3-5). 
		Without this process there can be no change.
		
		
		God Demands that We Know His Character
		
		Jesus 
		plainly showed His followers that all motives and actions on our part 
		must be based on our understanding of how God Himself thinks and acts. 
		How do we deal with an enemy, an angry, bitter man who has hurt us? “But 
		I say to you, love your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to 
		those who hate you, and pray for those who spitefully use you and 
		persecute you, that you may be sons of your Father in heaven; for He 
		makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the 
		just and on the unjust” 
		
		(Mt 5:43-45).
		
		
		God Proclaims That He is a God of Peace
		
		We should 
		listen carefully when God describes Himself. Paul twice used peace to 
		describe the Father’s basic character to the Romans.  “Now the God of 
		peace 
		
		be 
		with you all” 
		
		(Romans 15:33). 
		“And 
		the God of peace will crush Satan under your feet shortly” 
		
		(Romans 16:20). 
		Paul wrote
		
		other churches describing the blessing of having “the God 
		of peace” be “with you” 
		
		(1 Cor 13:11; Phil 4:9). 
		Later in the New Testament the power of “the God of peace” is displayed 
		by showing His ability to “sanctify you completely; and may your whole 
		spirit, soul, and body be preserved blameless at the coming of our Lord 
		Jesus Christ” 
		
		(1 Thess 5:23).
		
		
		
		What is Peace?
		
		Bible 
		lexicons define the Greek word translated as “peace” as meaning: 1) a 
		state of national tranquility 1a) exemption from the rage and havoc of 
		war 2) peace between individuals, i.e. harmony, concord 3) security, 
		safety, prosperity, felicity, (because peace and harmony make and keep 
		things safe and prosperous) - 
		
		Thayer’s Lexicon. 
		Peace is an absence of conflict, whether it is between warring parties 
		or between the warring thoughts and purposes in our hearts. God has the 
		power to bring real peace!
		
		
		What kind of Peace is at the Foundation of God’s 
		Character?
		
		When Jesus 
		was born into the world, the angels declared His mission to bring “Glory 
		to God in the highest, And on earth peace, goodwill toward men! 
		
		(Lk 2:14)” 
		How could Jesus bring peace between sinful men and a holy God? This 
		peace would only come as a result of a bitter war that resulted in the 
		shedding of Jesus’ blood on the cross and the resulting crushing of 
		Satan 
		
		(Heb 2:14-15; Rom 16:20). 
		Sinful men needed a savior, one that could provide a perfect sacrifice 
		for sin and provide the great power to mold men into a life of 
		repentance and change 
		
		(Heb 4:12-13, Phil 4:9).
		
		
		Please 
		understand that peace with God must be placed above any other kind of 
		peace. I must not let the threats of men or even the desire for peace 
		with men cause me to lose peace with God. Satan has always used social 
		relationships to entice the Christian to find “peace” with the world. 
		“If the world hates you, you know that it hated Me before 
		
		it hated 
		you. If you were of the world, the world would love its own. Yet because 
		you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, therefore 
		the world hates you” 
		
		(John 15:18-19).
		
		
		God Expects Us to Find Peace between Christians
		
		Jesus came 
		to set us with war with some and with peace with some. “Do not think 
		that I came to bring peace on earth. I did not come to bring peace but a 
		sword. For I have come to ‘set a man against his father, a daughter 
		against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law’; 
		and ‘a man’s enemies will be those of his own household” 
		
		(Mt 10:34-36). 
		When it comes to a relationship with Christians, those who have found 
		peace with God, God demands that we remove all obstacles that would 
		create conflict among His people 
		
		(2 Cor 13:11, James 4:13-18).
		
		
		Our War for Peace
		
		The battle 
		for peace begins in the heart. We must have a heart that has been 
		crushed and then healed by God in our conversion. Only then can we 
		become “peacemakers” 
		
		(Mt 5:3-9). 
		Those Christians who are not of this tender, penitent heart cannot be a 
		part of God’s peace. On the contrary, they will attack God’s way of 
		peace and be responsible for an ongoing turmoil against those who seek 
		to serve the Lord 
		
		(James 4:1-6). 
		Even among the churches of God, there must come a separation between 
		those who repent and seek God and those who Paul described as making 
		their “god 
		
		 ... their 
		belly, and 
		
		whose 
		glory 
		
		is 
		in their shame — who set their mind on earthly things 
		
		(Phil 3:18-19, 1 Cor 11:19). 
		Are you teachable? If not, then you need to go to war with your own 
		heart to find the repentance that will allow Jesus to be in control.
		
		
		(Rev 3:20).
		
		
		
		Peace in Local Churches
		
		As God’s 
		peacemaker, I must go to war to maintain the right relationships in a 
		local flock. Because we are people, we will constantly be tempted to 
		fight, look down on and discard our brethren. When I become like God, 
		then I will put the needs of others above my own 
		
		(Phil 2:3-4). 
		I will also have a genuine love for every soul “for whom Christ died”
		
		
		(Rom 14:15). 
		I will know that the only path to peace will come from that which is 
		pure, that is, God’s word received into a pure heart 
		
		(2 Tim 2:22, Jas 1:21). 
		The teaching of God’s word must be the means by which we find peace. 
		Please do not depend upon the schemes of men.
		
		Local 
		churches must have brave leaders that will confront and defeat those 
		problems that disrupt peace. When anger and bitterness exist between 
		Christians, then it is urgent that brave men confront this with God’s 
		solution 
		
		(Mt 5:23-24; 18:15-18, 35). 
		When false 
		teaching arises, men must be quick to confront it and challenge it
		
		
		(Titus 1:10-11). 
		If these and other problems are ignored, then rest assured they will not 
		“go away.” How many churches have been turned into a sea of turmoil 
		because of bitterness between two people was allowed to linger and 
		spread? “Pursue peace with all 
		
		people, 
		and holiness, without which no one will see the Lord: looking carefully 
		lest anyone fall short of the grace of God; lest any root of bitterness 
		springing up cause trouble, and by this many become defiled” 
		
		(Hebrews 12:14-15)
		
		We have a 
		great need today for brave men who will go to war for peace! Rather than 
		seeking a compromise of God’s plan of salvation for peace with the 
		denominations, we must fight for God’s peace. Rather than sitting on our 
		hands while watching a local church descend into worldliness, bitterness 
		and pride, we must fight for God’s peace. If you have found that blessed 
		peace that brings brethren together with God and with one another, then 
		you must fight to keep it!
		
		“May the 
		God of peace be with you.”
		 
		 
		  
		
		  Other Articles 
		by Larry Rouse 
		
		
		
		
		
		Why Should I Trust the Bible?
		
		
		Why 
		I Left the Baptist church
		
		
		
		The Lord's Supper or a Marathon?
		
		You Must Go to War to Find Peace