Chrysostom
Beloved
You ask for healing and peace, and rightly so, for these are gifts from the Father of mercies. Yet consider well what peace truly is. Not every calm is from God, nor is every separation an evil. Robbers have peace among themselves, and those who built the tower of Babel agreed together to their own ruin. True peace is found only when the diseased part is cut off, when the mutinous is removed, so that heaven and earth may be united. So seek first the peace that comes from holiness, without which no one will see the Lord.
When you pray for deliverance from evil, remember that the gospel is the gospel of peace, and that peace with God means war with the devil. Do not fear, the victory is already won. But you must stand firm, your feet shod with the preparation of that gospel, which is nothing else than a most virtuous life. If you would have peace with all men, live peaceably as far as it depends on you, doing no harm to your faith. And if you are ill-treated, bear it nobly. Nothing shames an evildoer more than a soul that does not repay evil for evil, but blesses instead. This is above human understanding; it makes us near to God, and nothing delights Him so much as to remember no evil.
Yet take heed: peace in the Church must not be a mere form of words. When the priest says, “Peace unto all,” it is Christ who speaks. Do not receive that peace with your lips and then rend the body of Christ by discord with your brother. If your brother wars against you, be at peace all the more, for you imitate the Son of God, and great will be your reward. The kingdom of God is not a matter of comfort or outward ease, but righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit. That joy no one can take from you, unless you surrender it by malice or unforgiveness.
Therefore, seek healing for soul and body, but know that God often works healing through the sharp knife of separation from what is evil. If your eye offends you, pluck it out. There is a good division that delivers from wicked agreement. So be at peace with all, but never at the cost of holiness. Let your prayer be joined to a careful hearing of the word, fortitude, contempt for worldly things, and deliverance from every passion. Then the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your heart and mind in Christ Jesus.
When you pray for deliverance from evil, remember that the gospel is the gospel of peace, and that peace with God means war with the devil. Do not fear, the victory is already won. But you must stand firm, your feet shod with the preparation of that gospel, which is nothing else than a most virtuous life. If you would have peace with all men, live peaceably as far as it depends on you, doing no harm to your faith. And if you are ill-treated, bear it nobly. Nothing shames an evildoer more than a soul that does not repay evil for evil, but blesses instead. This is above human understanding; it makes us near to God, and nothing delights Him so much as to remember no evil.
Yet take heed: peace in the Church must not be a mere form of words. When the priest says, “Peace unto all,” it is Christ who speaks. Do not receive that peace with your lips and then rend the body of Christ by discord with your brother. If your brother wars against you, be at peace all the more, for you imitate the Son of God, and great will be your reward. The kingdom of God is not a matter of comfort or outward ease, but righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit. That joy no one can take from you, unless you surrender it by malice or unforgiveness.
Therefore, seek healing for soul and body, but know that God often works healing through the sharp knife of separation from what is evil. If your eye offends you, pluck it out. There is a good division that delivers from wicked agreement. So be at peace with all, but never at the cost of holiness. Let your prayer be joined to a careful hearing of the word, fortitude, contempt for worldly things, and deliverance from every passion. Then the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your heart and mind in Christ Jesus.
