“Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth; I have not come to bring peace, but a sword," said Jesus. Could he have known how much carnage would be wrought in his name because of these words attributed to the Prince of Peace. Would he have said them? Did he say them? By the time Matthew was writing his account of Jesus’ life, these words would have passed through quite a few reporters. Maybe they got skewed? How I wish they had never been written down.
Yesterday I mentioned an account of the historic and ongoing clashes between Muslims and Christians along the Tenth Parallel. There have been crusades and counter-crusades, attacks and massacres and reprisals and counter-reprisals, often going back centuries, between these two faiths, both of which uphold an imperative to win converts. Rivers of blood have flowed as corrupt politicians hungry for oil money and other resources have joined with zealots to cloak their murderous agendas in religious language. And both of these religions, which claim to preach peace, have enough violent rhetoric in their scriptures and traditions to fuel endless bloodshed. The issues and conflicts are perpetuated, as we see in the plight of kidnapped Nigerian school girls and countless other crises.
And Jesus isn’t even talking about conflict between enemies but in families. He goes on to say, “For I have come to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her mother and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law; and one’s foes will be members of one’s own household.”
I don’t think Jesus was saying he came to bring conflict, but that conflict would be an inevitable consequence of his mission, of following him. Jesus came to stand up to the evils of this world, injustice and oppressive, racist systems; corruption and complacency. That doesn’t make for a peaceful life. Those whose mission is peace often provoke conflict and die violently – Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King being two obvious examples. Oh, and Jesus…
Jesus was not promoting violence. He said "not peace but a sword." Look at some of the other ways the word “sword” is used in the New Testament: The sword of the Spirit is one of the defensive weapons we take up against the devil. In Hebrews we read that the Word of God is sharper than any two-edged sword, “…dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow…”That is surgically sharp!
Jesus is saying there is evil in the world, that his followers need to be able to distinguish the Kingdom of Light from the realm of darkness. The sword Jesus refers to can be a sword of distinction, which distinguishes good and evil, what will bless us and make us effective as disciples, from what will harm us and make us complacent and weak. Jesus does divide families sometimes. He demands our fidelity over all other claims. The priorities of this world – family, wealth, convenience, distraction – do not make us effective disciples. Jesus is just calling it. We can be fuzzy, or we can be clear. Jesus came not to bring peace but reality and radical freedom to move in God’s Spirit.
Have you ever had to choose to disassociate from people or practices that were destructive for you? Do you face such dilemmas in your life now?
Might we ask for the Spirit's help to marry “mission clarity” with our calling to be peacemakers?
Jesus paid the ultimate price for his mission, at least in worldly terms. In eternal terms, he was just getting started.
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