Taking a Risk to Find Lasting Peace

Taking a Risk to Find Lasting Peace

Hi Friends,

Do you long for peace? Join me today for the true story of a woman who so longed for healing and peace that she took a great risk to find it.

(Excerpted from From Recovery to Restoration: 60 Meditations for Finding Peace & Hope in Crisis [affiliate link]).

Go Into Peace

Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace. Luke 8:48

Maybe it’s been twelve long years, and healing hasn’t yet come. Or maybe your child has been pronounced “cancer-free,” but your heart has yet to feel anxiety-free. When you live daily in the ongoing effects of disaster as the bleeding woman in Luke 8 did, it may seem too risky to believe that Jesus can and will save you and bring you into his peace.

The day of the diagnosis has long since passed. The bleeding woman has now suffered with her illness for twelve tense years. She has spent all her money on doctors, but none could heal her . She has lost all community because she is considered unclean (Luke 8:43). She is out of options. She is, frankly, desperate. Maybe that’s why she reaches out to touch the healing Rabbi’s garment. Maybe desperation is what drives us all to commit our wildest acts of faith.

Jesus, jostled and pressed by the throngs of people who have come to see him, asks an odd, even preposterous question, “Who touched me?” but no one fesses up (Luke 8:45). Peter, ever ready to speak his mind, points out the absurdity of the question, but Jesus insists, “Someone has touched me, for I perceive that power has gone out from me” (Luke 8:45-46). 

The once-bleeding woman, now healed, realizes she must confess. Trembling, she falls before Jesus, and right there in front of all those people, tells him her story, describes her years of illness, her years of loneliness. “I was desperate,” she might have said. “And I was healed instantly” (Luke 8:47). As she finishes her confession and looks up, does she fear finding condemnation in the mighty Rabbi’s eyes? After all, she, a woman, an unclean woman, had touched him, a man and a Rabbi.

But Jesus has no words of condemnation for her, only words of healing and forgiveness, words of peace, words of hope. “Daughter,” he begins. He names her tenderly as his own. “Your faith has made you well.” Yes, he labels her wild act of desperation, her betting belief that Jesus could make her clean, “faith.” “Go in peace” he commands her. My pastor, Rev. Joel Treick, pointed out that the word translated “in” means literally “into”— “Go into peace.” Because Jesus has healed all of our sins, we can now live into his peace. Therein lies our deepest hope.

Dear friends, hear Jesus’ call to trust him, to seek him in your sickness and exhaustion and stress. He has saved all who believe in him, all who take hold of him, and he has given us his peace. We may or may not know the instantaneous healing and full recovery in the next few days or the next few years, but we will one day know them finally and forever. Until that day comes, let us in desperation reach for the hem of his garment and lean into the peace he gives.

Prayer

Dear Jesus,

We are desperate to be healed; we aren’t even strong enough to reach for you. Give us the faith we need. Help us to live into your peace, even when ongoing struggles threaten to unsettle us. In your healing name, Amen. 

Further Encouragement

Read Luke 8:42-48.

Listen to “In Christ Alone” by Stuart Townend and Keith Getty at https://youtu.be/oZuIyrwSqHY.

For Reflection

Imagine Jesus speaking directly to you, “Daughter (Son), your faith has made you well. Go into peace.” Write out or pray aloud your response to those words.

A Prayer about Being God’s Masterpieces

A Prayer about Being God’s Masterpieces

Creator God,

What a profound declaration!

We are your masterpieces?

Energize our work with a deeper understanding of our calling. 

Even as we get kids ready for school (or teach our kids at home), 

even as we show up on time for Monday morning meetings, 

even as we face the blank page and trust that you will give us something to write on it, 

may we see your workmanship in us. 

May we see you creating us anew in Christ Jesus 

so that everything we do this week 

is infused with your glory

and intended for your grand purpose. 

In Jesus’ recreating name. Amen. 

Read Ephesians 2:1-10.

Get free printable prayer worksheet and cards

A Prayer about Worshiping the God Who Delivers Us

A Prayer about Worshiping the God Who Delivers Us

Merciful God,

Today, as we gather, whether in-person or apart, 

we remember your steadfast love which endures forever (Psalm 107:1). 

We have been in distress, 

from our own foolish and “sinful ways” (Psalm 107:17), 

from prisons of our own making 

and prisons of others’ oppression (Psalm 107:10). 

Even as we have “drawn near to the gates of death,” (Psalm 107:18),

We have cried out to you in our trouble, 

and you have delivered us again and again from our distress (Psalm 107:19).

You have sent out your word and healed us; 

you have delivered us from destruction (Psalm 107:20).

We thank you with full hearts 

for your “steadfast love” 

and for your “wondrous works to the children of man!” (Psalm 107:21).

In Jesus’ saving name. Amen.

Read Psalm 107:1-43.

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A Prayer about Being Extraordinarily Ordinary

A Prayer about Being Extraordinarily Ordinary

Father,

What an amazing true story!

The leaders of the council were angry 

because Peter and John had healed a man. 

They told them to not “speak to anyone in Jesus’ name again” (Acts 4:17). 

But Peter and John boldly refused, 

“Do you think God wants us to obey you rather than him? 

We cannot stop telling about everything we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:19-20). 

In the end, the leaders let them go 

because they were afraid of starting a riot if they punished them (Acts 4:21-22).

May we become extraordinarily ordinary people: 

May we be bold as Peter and John,

May we be ordinary people 

who, though we have no special seminary training, 

are recognized as extraordinary 

for one reason only—because we have been with Jesus. 

In Jesus’ risen name. Amen. 

Read Acts 4:1-22.

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A Prayer about Peace When We’re Afraid

A Prayer about Peace When We’re Afraid

Risen Lord,

Thank you for the details you give us in Scripture.

Today, or this week, we’ve probably all been afraid of something—

letting someone down, getting a scary diagnosis, not getting a job soon…

[Ask the Lord to show you if there’s anything you’ve been afraid of this week….]

The disciples were gathered behind locked doors, 

afraid that the Jewish leaders 

might come after them next. 

And suddenly you appeared in their midst

 and spoke four simple but life-changing words:

“Peace be with you” (John 20:19). 

Locked doors can’t keep you away from us. 

Neither can our sin, guilt, or fear.

You love us. You died for us. 

You freed us—from sin, from guilt, from fear. 

You were raised to new life 

so that we might have peace with you. 

Help us to breathe deeply of your everlasting peace 

today and every day.

In your resurrected name. Amen. 

Read John 20:19-23.

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