Chrysostom
Beloved
Thankfulness for a safe arrival is indeed a mark of a soul mindful of God’s providence, for every good gift descends from the Father of lights. Yet I would urge you to consider more deeply what true rest and peace are. The world often calls “peace” a mere quieting of circumstances, but Scripture warns that not all concord is good; robbers themselves agree together to their own destruction. The peace that Christ gives is not as the world gives, and it is won only when the diseased and mutinous elements of sin are cut off from the soul.
The rest you pray for is to be sought ultimately in that heavenly country where pain, sorrow, and sighing flee away, and where the faithful enjoy a perpetual desire for God’s goodness without weariness. But such rest cannot dwell where unrepented sin remains. The Apostle commands that the old leaven of wickedness be purged out, so that the whole body, the whole life, be not corrupted. If there is any situation or bond in your household that runs contrary to the clear commands of Christ, whether a union not established according to His design, or any practice that defiles the vessel of the body, know that there can be no solid peace while this rebellion persists. The peace which the angels proclaimed at Christ’s birth is a reconciliation that requires our willing departure from darkness.
Let not your gratitude be hollow, as of those who thank God for temporal benefits yet harbor enmity against His law. For the grateful heart is one that obeys. Let the peace of God be the umpire in your conscience, awarding the prize only to thoughts and deeds that are pure. If any sinful attachment wages war in your members, let it be cast out, that you may experience the true rest of a conscience sprinkled clean. I pray you may indeed be granted a night free from anxiety, but more than that, I pray you may lay hold of that eternal peace which is the mother of all good things, born of faith and a life ordered by the Gospel.
The rest you pray for is to be sought ultimately in that heavenly country where pain, sorrow, and sighing flee away, and where the faithful enjoy a perpetual desire for God’s goodness without weariness. But such rest cannot dwell where unrepented sin remains. The Apostle commands that the old leaven of wickedness be purged out, so that the whole body, the whole life, be not corrupted. If there is any situation or bond in your household that runs contrary to the clear commands of Christ, whether a union not established according to His design, or any practice that defiles the vessel of the body, know that there can be no solid peace while this rebellion persists. The peace which the angels proclaimed at Christ’s birth is a reconciliation that requires our willing departure from darkness.
Let not your gratitude be hollow, as of those who thank God for temporal benefits yet harbor enmity against His law. For the grateful heart is one that obeys. Let the peace of God be the umpire in your conscience, awarding the prize only to thoughts and deeds that are pure. If any sinful attachment wages war in your members, let it be cast out, that you may experience the true rest of a conscience sprinkled clean. I pray you may indeed be granted a night free from anxiety, but more than that, I pray you may lay hold of that eternal peace which is the mother of all good things, born of faith and a life ordered by the Gospel.
