The LORD is My Peace

“He makes me lie down in green pastures; He leads me beside quiet waters.” Psalm 23:2

We’re in the middle-isa of a series in which I am walking us through Psalm 23 from the view of God’s covenant names. If you missed our first post, you can read about it here. In addition to starting the series, I share there about what it means to make a covenant. I would be remiss if I didn’t share what it means to be in a covenant, however. In a covenant agreement typically it is an agreement, usually formal, between two or more persons to do or perhaps not do something that is specified in the agreement. In the case of marriage, let’s say, the couple covenants to honor, love and be faithful to one another until death separates them. On a different vein, a covenant can also be a business deal- one promises to pay a certain amount by a certain or the other party has the legal and binding right to take a specific agreed upon action to get their money back.

With the Lord, and within the gospel, a covenant means a sacred agreement or mutual promise between God and a person or a group of people- those who believe on His Son, Jesus, in the case of the new covenant. When God made the covenant, He set the terms, He made the promises and we simply agreed with Him. If we are in covenant with Him, we get the blessings He has promised us. If He doesn’t give those blessings then He breaks His covenant promise with us, which God could never do. If we are not seeing the promises in our lives, the problem lies with us, not God on account of He made a promise to us that if we obey Him and His word, we will experience those promises.

In our walks with the LORD it is important to understand what is covenant and what it means to be in covenant because really, most do not experience the blessings and goodies in Jesus because they do not realize who they are what they have in Jesus. It is not realized simply because most cannot get out of their own emotions (the soul) to see and receive them.

Psalm 23:2 describe yet another one of God’s covenant names, YHWH Shalom, the LORD is Peace.

Peace is one of the goodies promised in Jesus as our right and privilege of being in covenant with God. He made us a promise that if we follow His ways we would be led to green pastures and quiet still waters. When storms spring up in life, can I tell you, it is not our God. Goodness, we are called sheep in the Word of God and have you ever seen a sheep stay anywhere near a place that is as tumultuous as rushing and stormy water? The LORD our Peace offers a resting place for us to experience His luxurious love. A good shepherd knows where ti pasture his flock, a perfect Shepherd knows even better. The green pastures spoken of here in the Psalm would be a stunning resting place, free from all fear. The Hebrew word for quiet waters is מְנוּחָה (menuha), or literally, the waters of a resting place.

This idea of the waters of a resting place reminds me of the woods in Massachusetts in the Winter. Many hiking areas on the East Coast also have lakes and little rushing rivers flowing in and around them. During the Winter however they are either dried up or completely frozen over. The stillness of the waters underneath the ice is incredible. A once rushing river of waters has been forced to quiet down for a season.

Praying For Peace

Peace. Often elusive at the time we need it most, when we are struggling with the worst. It’s enemies are sickness, death, financial loss, overdue bills, busyness, strife, a difficult boss, a strife-filled home — so many things. They drown out our sense of tranquility and rest with relentless force, leaving us stress, distressed, and anxious. Yet Jesus said, “Peace I leave with you, My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.” (John 14:27 – NKJV) So why the disconnect? Why the struggle to find peace in the midst of turmoil?

The answer is found in Philippians 4:6-7 — “Do not be anxious or worried about anything, but in everything [every circumstance and situation] by prayer and petition with thanksgiving, continue to make your [specific] requests known to God.  And the peace of God [that peace which reassures the heart] which transcends all understanding, [that peace which] stands guard over your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus [is yours]. (AMP) You know this verse, don’t you? Probably have quoted it, claimed it, declared and decreed it — and yet…have failed to find the peace it speaks of. There is a key though. A secret, if you will. Its the word “transcends” (some versions say “surpasses” — same meaning.) the word means “to rise above or go beyond the limits of something.” Hmmm…. This peace rises above and goes beyond the limits of what? Our understanding. See, most of the time we want to know the outcome. Or the end game. Or the answer. Our understanding depends on it. We tie our peace to it. And yet the Word says that His peace transcends our need to know these things.

So, question: Do you want His peace, or do you cling to your need to understand? What if you have to choose one or the other? What if having His peace is simply a matter of choosing it in prayer, and letting go of our demand to know the WHAT or the WHY? I propose that when we give Him our anxious and worried thoughts (which are actually negative faith, by the way), and thankfully ask for His peace in the midst of our circumstances, that peace becomes ours and stands guard at the door of our heart to do battle with those things that are at enmity with His promises.

“Now may the Lord of peace Himself give you peace always in every way….” (2 Thess. 3:16 – NKJV)