Galatians 5:16-26 · Life by the Spirit
How to Keep Your Head When Others Are Losing Theirs (Fruit of the Spirit: Peace)
Galatians 5:22
Sermon
by James Merritt
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What do men want most in their homes? A survey was taken a few years ago to determine what men care about most, and what they hope their wives will understand. The results were shocking. Men did not want expensive furniture, well-equipped garages, or a private study in which to work. What they wanted most was tranquility at home. In other words, they wanted peace.1

I am convinced that everyone is looking for peace. Recently I was in Jerusalem, and I took a taxi down to the Old City. The cab driver was a young Jewish man by the name of Asi. I wanted to witness to him, and so I began to ask him questions about his faith.

Then I asked him this question: "What do you believe about the Messiah?" He said: "I believe the most important thing that can ever happen to Israel is for Messiah to come." I said: "Why do you believe that?" He said: "Because he will bring peace." We want peace in our homes, we want peace in our hearts.

We see here in Gal. 5:22 that the fruit of the Spirit is peace. Now there are actually three types of peace that we find in the Bible. There is, first of all, eternal peace. This is peace with God. Rom. 5:1 says: "Therefore having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ."

Then there is external peace—peace with others. Paul said in Rom. 12:18, "If it is possible, as much as depends on you, live at peace with all men." But the fruit of the Spirit is internal peace. This is the peace of God. Paul said, "And let the peace of God rule in your hearts." (Col. 3:15)

Now I want you to understand what peace really is. Peace is an assurance of God's control, which results from obedience to God's command. The Lord said to the nation of Israel in Isa. 48:18, "Oh, that you had heeded My commandments! Then your peace would have been like a river…"

Now even if you are saved, you still need to have peace. Because even the upright can get uptight. You can have peace, perfect overflowing unbelievable peace, even in the stormiest seas of sorrow and suffering, if you follow what I call Paul's prescription of peace that is found in the fourth chapter of Philippians.

There are certain steps that Paul tells the Philippians they need to take every day in their life, and if they do, he says in v.7, "and the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus."

I. Peace If a Matter of Focus

"Rejoice in the Lord always. Again I will say, rejoice!" (Phil. 4:4) Now you cannot rejoice in the Lord, unless your focus is on the Lord. When your focus is on the Lord, you will rejoice in the Lord, and when you rejoice in the Lord, you will have the peace of the Lord. Isa. 26:3 says: "You will keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on You, because he trusts in You."

You remember when Jesus came walking on those stormy waves to the disciples in that boat. Peter wanted to come to Him, and Jesus invited him to step out of the boat into that water. You remember that as long as Peter kept his eyes on Jesus, he walked on the water. But when he took his eyes off of Jesus, he began to sink.

The great Christian, Corrie ten Boone, once said: "When I look at the world, I get distressed. When I look at myself, I get depressed. But when I look at Jesus, I am at rest."

I want to let you in on a little secret about peace. Peace is not the absence of problems. Peace is the presence of Jesus in the midst of your problems. You see, you cannot always rejoice in your losses, but you can always rejoice in the Lord.

Now notice the reason for this rejoicing. We are told to rejoice "in the Lord." Now remember that the person who wrote this was not just some preacher in a pulpit. This was a prophet in prison who was telling all of his brothers and sisters in Christ to rejoice in the Lord. Paul wrote these words from a Roman dungeon, chained to a Roman guard, facing a Roman death. Yet, the key was his focus.

Let me tell you three things you can always rejoice in no matter what's happening to you, or what you are going through. First of all, you can rejoice in the grace of God that saves you. Secondly, you can rejoice in the goodness of God that secures you. Thirdly, you can rejoice in the glory of God that surrounds you.

But notice also the season for rejoicing. Not only are we to rejoice in the Lord, but we are to rejoice in the Lord "always." That means winter, fall, spring, summer, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and all day Sunday; when it is wet, when it dry; when it is hot, when it is cold; when things are good, or things are bad, we are to rejoice in the Lord.

I am going to tell you something that is going to sound very strange, but it is true. The reason why most people in life never find peace, is because they are looking for it. You will never find peace looking for peace. You will only find peace when you look for Jesus.

John Wesley said: "When I looked to Jesus, the dove of peace flew into my heart. But when I looked at the dove of peace, it flew away." You see, he understood peace as a matter of focus.

II. Peace Is a Matter of Faith

"Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God." (v.6) Now just as focus deals with praise, faith deals with prayer. I want you to see, first of all, the attitude of this prayer. "Be anxious for nothing." Now you well know that peace and worry are mutually exclusive. Worry pulls tomorrow's clouds over today's sunshine.

The word worry comes from an old German word wurgen which literally means "to struggle" or "to choke." Worry throttles our thinking, chokes out the truth, and prevents us from bearing the fruit of peace.

I want you to really consider what worry is and what worry does. Worry, first of all, is a distrust in the wisdom of God. You see, every time you worry, what you are really saying is: "God, I don't believe you can handle this. I don't believe you can be trusted in this matter. I guess I'm going to have to carry this burden all by myself."

Furthermore, worry is a denial of the word of God. When you worry, you are really saying that God does not keep His promises, such as Rom. 8:28, that He "works all things together for the good of those who love Him."

But worry is also a defiance of the will of God. Jesus said in Mt. 6, "Do not be anxious for tomorrow." Worry is totally out of the will of God. God is not the author of confusion, He is the author of peace.

I wish we could all take a cue from a man I heard about who was a tremendous worrier. He was not only a worrier, he was worrisome; he worried other people with his worry. He couldn't sleep at night because he worried so much, and all he would do is pace the floor. Well, one day he came out of his house a totally different person. He was whistling, happy, singing at the top of his lungs. His next door neighbor saw him and said: "What in the world has happened to you?"

"Oh," he said: "I don't have a worry in this world, and I am so happy."

The neighbor said: "Well, how did you get rid of your worries?"

He said: "Well, I have hired a professional worrier. He does all of my worrying for me."

His neighbor said: "Well, that's just wonderful. How much does this professional worrier cost?"

The man said: "He costs a thousand dollars a day."

The man said: "A thousand dollars a day? You don't have that kind of money. How are you going to pay him?"

The man said: "Oh, that's his worry."

Well, I'm not going to tell you that God is a professional worrier, because He doesn't worry. But He is the professional when it comes to handling our worries. I Pet. 5:7 says, "Cast all of your care upon Him, for He cares for you."

You know what we need to do with all of our cares? We need to turn them into prayers. Because if anything is worth worrying about, it is worth praying about, and if it's not worth praying about, it's not worth worrying about.

If a care is too small to be made into a prayer, it is too small to be made into a burden; and we are to be careful for nothing, but prayerful for everything.

Notice also the latitude of this prayer. "But in everything by prayer and supplication let your requests be made known to God." Now notice we are to pray about everything. Prayer should encompass everything and leave out nothing. Some Christians pray about nothing; other Christians pray about some things, but God says every Christian ought to pray about everything.

I heard about a woman in her early thirties who was not married, and then she got saved. So she decided that she was going to pray for a husband. Every night she would hang a pair of men's trousers on the bedroom door, go to her bed, kneel and pray this prayer:

Father in heaven, hear my prayer,
and grant it if you can
I've hung a pair of trousers here;
please fill them with a man.

One of the reasons why we are loaded down with burdens and cares and worries and have no peace, is because we do not take everything to God in prayer:

What peace we often forfeit,
What needless pain we bear,
All because we do not carry
Everything to God in prayer.

Notice the gratitude of this prayer. For Paul says we are to pray "with thanksgiving." The one ingredient that must never be lacking in the recipe of prayer, is thanksgiving. I Thess 5:18 reminds us, "in everything give thanks, for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you."

III. Peace Is a Matter of Fact

When your heart is filled with praise, and your mind is filled with prayer, then your soul will be filled with peace. What happens when you rejoice in the Lord? What happens when you take all of your concerns to God in prayer? Paul says in v.7, "then the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus."

I read something the other day that fascinated me. Oceanographers tell us that the worst ocean storm never goes more than twenty-five feet deep. In other words, gales can rip across the Atlanta or the Pacific. They can cause tidal waves a hundred feet high. But just twenty-five feet below the surface the water is as calm as a pond on a sunny day in June.

Do you know the only place you will really ever find peace in the midst of the storm—down deep in a walk with God and a relationship with Jesus Christ.

The Korean Christians have a saying, and they came up with this saying back when they were being persecuted because of their faith in Christ. They said: "We are just like nails. The harder you hit us, the deeper you drive us, and the deeper you drive us, the more peaceful it becomes."

Notice carefully that this is the peace of God. The Lord Jesus said in Jn. 14:27, "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." The peace of God is peace from God.

You will never have peace from God until you have peace with God, and that peace is only found in the Lord Jesus Christ. If you want the peace of God upon you, you must have the God of peace within you.

In the middle of a great battle, a general was mortally wounded and he lay dying on the battlefield surrounded by his aides. He began to cry out: "Give it to me, give it to me."

One of his aides said: "General, we will give you anything you ask for. What is it?" He pointed to a soldier that was dying underneath a tree not far from him. He said: "I would give ten thousand worlds to have what that soldier told me he had last night."

They rushed over to that soldier and discovered just a lowly Buck Private peacefully dying underneath that tree. They said: "You told the General you had something last night and he wants it. What is it?"

With his last breath, the soldier said: "A peace that passes all understanding."

Well, you can have that peace in Christ. But I want you to notice that God's peace is also God's protection. Because this peace "guards our hearts and minds." That word "guard" refers to a garrison of soldiers that were charged with the responsibility of defending a city. In other words, the fruit of the Spirit, which is peace, is a peace that God gives that stands like a soldier at the door of your heart, and guards you from the troubles of this world.

Everybody, I repeat, is looking for peace, and most people are looking in every place but the right place. Some people are trying to find peace in pills. Others are trying to find peace in pleasure. Many are trying to find peace in possessions. But, my friend, real peace is only found in a person, and his name is Jesus.

Someone once said: "God takes life's broken pieces and gives us unbroken peace." Horatio Spafford found that out in his own experience.

Spafford was born in 1828. He was a real estate baron and an extremely wealthy man. He was a tremendous Christian and a close friend of Dwight L. Moody. He lived in Chicago, and during the Chicago fire he lost his business. In that fire his only son was killed. It seemed like his life was covered by a canopy of dark clouds.

His wife was under tremendous stress, and so he sent her and their four daughters to England, which was her home country, for a vacation. He told them he would join them two weeks later. He put his wife and four daughters on a ship to send them across the ocean.

As they were in sight of land on the other side, a terrible storm hit, and all four of Spafford's daughters drowned. Only his wife survived. She sent a telegram to him with these two words: "Saved alone."

With the heaviest of hearts, Horatio Spafford got on that ship, made his way across England, got his wife; got on board the same ship to come back. On the way back he asked the captain to show him the spot where that ship went under and his daughters drowned. When the captain got to that spot and showed it to him, he went out on deck and wrote these words:

When peace like a river attendeth my way,
When sorrows like sea billows roll;
Whatever my lot, Thou has taught me to say,
It is well, it is well with my soul.

Now there is only one way Spafford could have written that song, and it is because he knew the Prince of Peace, the Lord Jesus Christ.

Oh, the peace I find in Jesus
Peace, no power on earth can shake;
Peace that makes the Lord so precious
Peace that none from me can take.

If you want peace, real peace, eternal peace, everlasting peace, so you can keep your head when others are losing theirs, come to the Prince of Peace, the Lord Jesus Christ.


1. James Dobson, Love for a Lifetime, p. 45.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James Merritt