Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life - Peace

Episode Date: November 10, 2025

There’s a difference between controlling or suppressing the natural self-centeredness and insecurity of the heart through willpower and seeing it permanently changed through the power of the Holy Sp...irit. In Galatians 5, there’s a list of the traits or characteristics of a supernaturally changed heart. They’re called the fruit of the Spirit. We’re in a series trying to understand how we can have more of that supernaturally changed heart in our own lives. Today we look at peace.  We’re going to learn three things from this classic passage in Philippians 4: 1) the character of peace, 2) the three disciplines of getting peace, and 3) the secret of peace. This sermon was preached by Dr. Timothy Keller at Redeemer Presbyterian Church on April 25, 2010. Series: The Real Signs of the Spirit. Scripture: Philippians 4:4-12. Today's podcast is brought to you by Gospel in Life, the site for all sermons, books, study guides and resources from Timothy Keller and Redeemer Presbyterian Church. If you've enjoyed listening to this podcast and would like to support the ongoing efforts of this ministry, you can do so by visiting https://gospelinlife.com/give and making a one-time or recurring donation.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Gospel in Life. The Bible tells us there's a difference between outward self-control and the deep lasting change only the Holy Spirit can bring. In Galatians Chapter 5, Paul calls these inner transformations the fruit of the spirit, love, joy, peace, patience, and more. Join us today as Tim Keller explores one of the fruit of the spirit. The scripture this morning is from Paul's letter to the Philippians, chapter 4, verses 4 through 12. Rejoice in the Lord always.
Starting point is 00:00:47 I will say it again. Rejoice. Let the gentleness of your be evident to all. The Lord is near. Do not be anxious about anything. But in everything, by prayer and petition with Thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is pure, whatever is pure.
Starting point is 00:01:30 Whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable, if anything is excellent or praiseworthy, think about such things. Whatever you have learned or received or heard from me or seen in me, put it into practice, and the God of peace will be with you. I rejoice greatly in the Lord that at last you have renewed your concern for me. Indeed, you have been concerned, but you had no opportunity to show it. I am not saying this because I am in need. For I have learned to be content, whatever the circumstances. I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well-fed or hungry,
Starting point is 00:02:28 whether living in plenty or in want. This is the word of the Lord. The premise of the Bible is that there's a difference between a morally restrained heart and a supernaturally changed heart. There's a difference between controlling, suppressing the natural self-centeredness and insecurity of the heart through willpower, and seeing it permanently change through the power of the Holy Spirit. And in the book of Galatians chapter 5, there is a list of the traits, characteristics of a
Starting point is 00:03:11 supernaturally changed heart. They're called the fruit of the spirit, love, joy, peace, patience. It's a classic list. And each week we're taking one of those traits and taking a passage, the scripture that describes it, and trying to come to understand how we can have more of that. it supernaturally changed hard in our own lives. Today, we look at peace. Peace. And we're going to learn three things from this classic passage. The character of peace, the disciplines, the three disciplines of getting peace, and the secret. Paul uses that word, the secret of peace. Okay? The character
Starting point is 00:03:52 of peace, the disciplines of peace, and the secret of peace. Now, The opposite of joy is sadness or despair, just grief. But the opposite of peace is anxiety, fear, and depilitating worry. So you see here in verse 6, it says, don't be anxious about anything, and the antidote is the peace of God. By the way, this word anxious is not the normal, it's not normal care and concern. If you love somebody, if you love something, if you love anything, you have the burden of love and concern that comes with that automatically. But this is a word that actually means to be torn up, to be torn into pieces by debilitating
Starting point is 00:04:40 worry and fear. So what is this peace of God? Two things, just to start. Two things that Paul tells us about it. First, it's an inner calm and equilibrium. Because here down at the bottom, verse 11, 12. He says, I've learned how to be content in whatever circumstance. I've learned the secret of being content in every situation, which is to say, I'm the same
Starting point is 00:05:05 in one situation as the other. That's poise, equilibrium, an inner calm. And for a second, let's think about his circumstances. See, you and I, here in New York, we spend money in order to get poise. You spend money on pills, spend money on things. therapy you spend money on and these things you know are things that maybe we need but we're trying to get up the poise the equipoise to face what you know our bills um competition the boss our date our lack of dates one of what you're doing is these are the things that we're that we're nervous
Starting point is 00:05:50 about and we're anxious about and we're and we're really working at it and paul is facing torture and death. He's in prison. And he's saying, I've learned the secret of being able to smile at that. And look carefully. Does Paul say, you know why I can smile on the face of torture and death? Because I'm just that kind of guy. I'm a tough cookie. No. See, that's talent. See, talent is something that you were born with. There you've got it. I'm just one of those guys. He doesn't say that. I've learned this, he said. I've learned it. What does that mean? It's not natural to me. In fact, it's not natural to you either. I've learned it.
Starting point is 00:06:29 This calm, so that I've got this equilibrium in any situation. But that's not the only thing. The second thing Paul tells us about the character of this piece, it's not just an absence of fear. It's the presence of something. In particular, it's a sense of being protected. Because that doesn't come out as well in English as it should. It says in verse 7,
Starting point is 00:06:51 the peace of God will guard your hearts and your minds. The word guard is a military word. It's a very vivid word. It means to take a bunch of soldiers, to take an army and surround a city with the army to protect it from invasion. So if you have an army out there, you sleep really well. There's a whole army out there. I don't have to worry about marauders or anybody.
Starting point is 00:07:17 You know, I go to sleep at night. And this is getting at something very important. and we'll see this in a minute, both in the ancient times and in modern times, when people try to give advice on how to be calm, they almost always talk about removing certain thoughts. Don't think about that. Don't think that. Don't think those negative thoughts. Stop thinking about that. Stop thinking about that. Control your thoughts. You know, expel the negative thoughts. That's how you get calm. But here, we see the peace of God is. not the absence of some thoughts. It's the presence of God himself. The God of peace will be
Starting point is 00:07:59 with you. Christian peace is not expelling negative thoughts. The problem with expelling negative thoughts is what you're really doing there is you're just refusing to face how bad things are. You're not being realistic. Okay, I'm going to get calm by not by not facing the facts. essentially Christian peace is not that you stop facing the facts but you get something in your life a living power that comes into your life that enables you to triumph over those facts lifts you up over and through them and it's a sense of being protected and you know I you lots of us have experienced I think lots of believers have experienced this peace of God but in the situations that I have been present as a pastor usually where I've seen people experience this peace of God that passes, that transcends understanding, that goes beyond anything we can really account for. I've seen some people in horrible situations, tragic situations, in some cases,
Starting point is 00:09:09 having faced some violent death of a loved one, unlooked for. That's just the worst kind of situation to be in. And ordinarily, when you're cruising along in life and suddenly, somebody who you love dear is just ripped out of your life violent at that time you feel unprotected you feel vulnerable you feel like exposed you feel like you feel uh you know ravaged and yet sometimes i've seen christians experienced exactly the opposite they feel during times like that protected like everything somehow they have a sense that god is with them and everything is going to be okay they feel protected they know exactly how bad things are but they've got something
Starting point is 00:09:50 enables them to triumph over it. If you've ever been on a coast and seen in a storm and seen the waves come in and hit the rocks, sometimes the waves are so huge that it covers some rock you might be watching and you say that's the end of that rock. No way that rock's going to be there. And when the waves recede, there it is. Hasn't budged an inch. And Paul is like that.
Starting point is 00:10:14 If you read his life, wave after wave, you know, he's beaten, he's stone. He's flogged. He's shipwrecked. They're after him. They're trying to kill him. He's betrayed. Wave after wave after wave. And it's a plain historical fact. He's right. When he said, I have found a way to be completely poised under any circumstances. He's the rock. All the waves of life could not break him. And he says, this isn't a natural talent. You can learn this. So that's the character of Christian peace. It's an inner calm and an equilibrium that comes from that, but also a sense of God's. presence and almost a reason transcending sense of his protection. Number one. Number two, what then are the disciplines by which you can develop this piece? Because actually Paul's giving lots of advice in here, lots of advice, on how you can develop this piece and have this piece of God too. And there's three disciplines, and I'll name them, thinking, thanking, and loving. I know. The third one should be a TH, but I couldn't figure it out. Thinking, thanking, and loving. Thinking. Notice, verse 8. He says, brethren, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, think on these things, and the God of peace will be with you.
Starting point is 00:11:36 So the first thing is thinking, and this is really important, really important. Let's take a look at the first three of this long list. Think about whatever is true, noble right now that sounds pretty general generic doesn't it whatever is true noble right but when paul this is paul and when paul uses these words these particular greek words in the pauline corpus in his writings he's talking about doctrine he's talking about the teaching of the bible about god and about sin and about christ and about salvation about the world and human nature and god's plans for the world and the plan of salvation. That's what he's talking about. And this is amazing. He's saying, if you want peace, think about doctrine. Think about what you know about life and about God and about and this is so completely different than what you're going to find if you walk into a Barnes & Ombler
Starting point is 00:12:35 Borders bookstore and you go to the place on anxiety, worry, stress, dealing with stress, how to relax. And you get out a book and here's what they'll never do, never. Never. none of these books will ever say so you're stressed, you're anxious, let's start by asking the big questions what is the meaning of life what are you really here for what's your life all about
Starting point is 00:12:58 where have you come from and where are you going what should human beings spend their time doing never you think that's going to relieve stress to a modern New Yorker of course not why here's why they go right to technique They never ask you to think.
Starting point is 00:13:15 They never say, let's think about the big questions. You know, what's life all about? Let's put things in perspective. Never, they go to techniques. They go to relaxation techniques. They go to work, rest, balance. For example, they'll say, look, a couple times, you know, every quarter, go somewhere, sit on a beach, look at the surf and just brack it out and stop worrying about thinking
Starting point is 00:13:35 about everything else. Or they'll give you thought control techniques about dealing with negative thoughts, negative emotions, guilt thoughts, and so forth. They will never tell you to think. They'll tell you to actually, to go right to technique. Here's why. Let me read you two. You don't wonder where I'm going for a second, but let me read you two interesting quotes.
Starting point is 00:13:55 Here's Charles Darwin. And Charles Darwin said, quote, a person who has no assured belief in the existence of a personal God, and no belief in a future existence with retribution or reward, such a person can have for his rule of life as far as I see only to follow whatever impulses and instincts are the strongest or whatever seems to him to be the best ones Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., you know, great Supreme Court justice,
Starting point is 00:14:31 quite a formidable intellectual in the early 20th century and one of, in his personal correspondence he once wrote this to a friend he says there is no reason for attributing to a man a significance different in kind from that which belongs to a baboon or a grain of sand the world has produced me and the rattlesnake but i will kill it if i get the chance and the only reason is because it is incongruous to the world i want the world everyone is trying to make according to one's own power now by the way Oliver one of the home's got a lot of heat for this he's a Supreme Court justice you know
Starting point is 00:15:11 and he says you know there is no rational reason to say that a human being and a human being is really more valuable more significant than an animal or a rock oh my gosh people have gone but you know what his his biographers have said you know he's just working out the implications if you don't believe in God
Starting point is 00:15:29 and this is what Darwin is saying is that you don't believe in God and you believe you're here by accident and when you die you're rot that's it and when the sun dies everything goes away i mean and therefore nothing that human beings have ever tried to accomplish won't amount to anything okay what are the implications of that one of them is there is no right and wrong you may feel there's right and wrong darwin says you may have a feeling but your feeling shouldn't trump anybody else's you can feel it but there is no right and wrong there's really no way to tell people how they got to live.
Starting point is 00:16:04 Holmes is right. Ultimately, what a human being is, is just we're the product of these forces and we're going to go away someday. And what's to say that, you know, may feel more significant than an animal or a rock, but you're not. And what the biographer said was Holmes was simply thinking out the implications of not believing there's a God or there's a purpose in life. Well, I know plenty of New Yorkers that have the same beliefs.
Starting point is 00:16:29 Lots of the same people have the same beliefs. They have the same beliefs. They don't think there's a God. They think things are here by accident. But they would say to think about it like that, to work out the implications is morbid. Okay. Look, fine.
Starting point is 00:16:43 That's fine to say, let's not think out the implications. It's morbid. But I want you to see what you're doing. You're getting your peace by not thinking out the implications of your beliefs. Whereas Paul is saying Christian peace is exactly the opposite. Christian peace comes from thinking out the implications. thinking. See, what are the true and the right? What's the Christian doctrine? God, there's a God
Starting point is 00:17:10 and he made us for fellowship with him. And he created a perfect world, you know, a perfect world in which is no sorrow or disease or death originally. And he wanted to live with us in it. And of course, it's gone all wrong and we've turned from him and the world is broken, but he's sent his son into the world to rescue us and he's preparing a new heavens and new earth. We're going to live with him forever. Look at your value. Look at the fact that the future is secure. Now, what does that mean? If you're a Christian today and you believe all that doctrine and you're not at peace, you're not thinking. Isn't that something? You're not thinking. See, there's a stupid piece and then there's a smart piece. Let me tell you this stupid piece. Stupid piece is,
Starting point is 00:17:56 ho, ho, ho, to the bottle I go. To heal my heart and drown my woe. Now, what's that? A couple, I'm going to pop a cork. I'm going to sit under a tree. I'm going to look at the surf, and I'm not going to think. I'm going to brack it out. See, if I think about all the things that are going wrong in life and in the world, I'm just going to bracket it out. I'm not going to think as much.
Starting point is 00:18:13 But Paul is saying, if you're a Christian, you don't brack it out. You bracket it in. You think big, big picture. Everything's going to be okay. You know, if you really believe just the basic Christian truth, and you think it and think it and think about it, you're going to get peace. And if you don't have peace, you're not thinking.
Starting point is 00:18:35 There's stupid peace and there's smart peace. And Christian's peace is not by making yourself stupid. It's by making yourself as aware of your beliefs as thoughtful as possible. That's only number one. Because if you first learn the discipline of thinking, then secondly, there's the discipline of thinking. To see how very important that is, in verse six, Paul says, don't be anxious.
Starting point is 00:18:58 Okay, don't be anxious. Fine. Well, then what should we be doing? but make requests to God with Thanksgiving. So Thanksgiving is put against anxiety, but look carefully here. It's a little counterintuitive, isn't it? See, what we would say is you make your request to God, and then you get your requests, and if you get your requests, you thank.
Starting point is 00:19:22 That's not what it says. It says you thank him as you make the request. Well, why should I thank him as I'm making the request? Don't I want to wait until I see what he's going to do? No. Paul says you're never going to be content unless you make your request. That means you acknowledge that life is in his hands and you thank him for whatever he's going to do. The Psalms can profoundly shape the way you approach God.
Starting point is 00:19:49 Even Jesus relied on the Psalms to face every situation, including death. In Tim and Kathy Keller's 365-day devotional, the Songs of Jesus, you'll find daily readings through the psalms with fresh biblical insight. If you don't have a regular devotional practice, this book is a wonderful way to start. And if you already spend time in study and prayer, then reading and praying through the Psalms can help you bring your deepest emotions and questions before God and discover a new level of intimacy with him. We'll send you Tim and Kathy Keller's devotional as our thanks for your gift to help Gospel in Life share the love of Jesus with more people. Request your copy today at gospelonlife.com slash give.
Starting point is 00:20:29 That's gospelonlife.com slash give. Now, here's Dr. Keller with the rest of today's teaching. You're never going to get contentment unless you see this. Now, this is a heading, you might say a subheading underthinking. That's why I put it thinking, then thinking. But now listen, we already talked about this. God has not, did not make the world to be a world filled with sorrow and death and violence and suffering.
Starting point is 00:20:57 but he's got a plan he's got a plan to renew it he's got a plan to get it back and the plan is put in the abstract in Romans 8 28 where it says if you love God God is working everything together for good in your life absolutely everything even the bad things even the things that he hates
Starting point is 00:21:17 the things that he didn't put into this world he is going to weave into a plan a tapestry he's going to put everything together and he's going to weave it all together for your good in his glory. That's an abstraction. Here's the concrete. On the day that Jesus Christ was crucified, all of his friends would have looked up at him and said, I can't believe this. The good he was doing, the people he was healing, the people's lives he was changing. I can't believe this happened. I can't believe that these charges were trumped up. I can't believe they're
Starting point is 00:21:51 doing this. And you would have said, I can't believe that God could bring anything good out of this. You would have gone home and said there's absolutely no way God could bring anything good out of this. And you were looking straight at the greatest thing God has ever done toward the redemption of the world. But you couldn't get it into your little brain at the moment as to how that could possibly be. And God is saying that is just the prime example of what I'm doing in everybody's life. Even the terrible things that are happening to you, I'm working out for good. you know now the you know i'm only saying this because i'm like a little dog a little rat and when i
Starting point is 00:22:31 pushed down a bar and i get food i push it again so i'll tell you this story again because you always like it you know the most vivid example of this for me was when uh you know in my early 20s i prayed for a year oh there's a girl that i wanted to date and she was breaking up with me i was a girl i was thinking of marrying and she wanted to break up with me i was all week all year i said lord don't let her break up with me of course it was the wrong girl It wasn't the one sitting out here looking at me with a grin on her face right now. But I actually helped God. I mean, I actually put, I did what I could to help God with the prayer.
Starting point is 00:23:06 Because she was that one summer near the very end of the relationship, she was working at a, you know, a resort for the summer in a Poconos, and I got a job as a short-order cook at the same resort. I was saying, Lord, I'm making this as easy as possible for you. You know, I've asked for this prayer, and I'm just. you know, I'm taking the distance down everything. But I look back at it, God was saying, my son, when a child of mine makes a request, I always give that person what he or she would have asked for if they knew everything I know. Do you believe that? To the degree you believe that, you're going to have peace.
Starting point is 00:23:50 And if you don't believe it, you don't have peace. and whose fault is that? Is it gods? See? Make your request known with thanksgiving. So there's thinking. That's the first discipline. And if you do that,
Starting point is 00:24:08 then thanking is a second discipline, but loving. Loving's the last one. And where do we get that? Well, notice, Paul doesn't just say, think on what is true, what is noble, what is right. And by the way, you know where it says think about? such things that that is the greek word there means to drill down it means to ponder it means to gnaw over chew over meditate it doesn't just mean think about it just it means it just means
Starting point is 00:24:36 you know just continually pound these things into your head but see the first three have more to do with a mind whatever's true whatever is noble whatever is right but then look whatever is lovely whatever is admirable, whatever is excellent. This is attraction. This is love. He says, it's not enough just to think on the right things. It's also important to love the right thing. And here we have to go to St. Augustine.
Starting point is 00:25:06 St. Augustine, great Christian thinker, lived in the third and fourth century, he was completely aware, profoundly aware, of the problem in Greek philosophy. and it had been for years. In fact, Paul's referring to it. The great problem is, how can you live a life of contentment? And the Greek word for that was Adiracchia. And that's the very word Paul uses twice in 11 and 12. He says, I've learned, I've got the Adiracia.
Starting point is 00:25:38 It means to be independent of circumstances. It means to have this poise. It means to have this power. And not to be upset, devastated, you know, melted down. freaking out over anything. Always poised. And of course, as you might guess, the philosophers that really worked that out were the Stoics. And what the Stoics taught was the reason why most people are not able to live contented, you know, lies of equilibrium, is that they love the wrong things. You should never love success. If you set your heart on success, even if you get successful,
Starting point is 00:26:17 Well, you'll always be anxious. You'll never have peace because you'll be afraid of losing it. And, of course, if you don't get it, you'll even be worse. And you shouldn't set your heart primarily on family. Because even if you get a good family, you'll always be worried about it. You always be anxious, you see, for something to go wrong with the family. And if something does go wrong with the family, you'll be devastated. So the philosophers were saying, here's the problem.
Starting point is 00:26:37 You're loving things that you're not in control of. And therefore, they said, don't you dare give your heart to anything but your own virtue? That's what the philosopher said. That's certainly what the Stoics said, most of them. Because the virtue is something you can control. You can't control success. It has so much to do with circumstances. You can't control your family.
Starting point is 00:26:59 Things can go wrong with your family. You can't control this. You can't control that. So don't set your heart on anything you can't control. That's what they said. And then you will know tranquility. Set your heart only on your own virtue. You can be courageous.
Starting point is 00:27:12 You can be have integrity. You can be honest. set your heart only on the only thing that should really truly make you content is to know that you are being the person you want to be that that's under your control nothing else is and St. Augustine said you guys have completely missed the boat
Starting point is 00:27:27 if you think that your virtue is under your control it is not listen if you if you say I the thing I'm going to live for is success and you've set off yeah it's not certain you're going to have success but if you say the thing
Starting point is 00:27:45 that matters to me is that I be the person I want to be, to live according to my principles, you know, living according to my virtues. He says, that's every bit is uncertain. You don't have control over that. You're human being. You're frail. And if you fail, then you've got nothing. Augustine says, you got it all wrong. You shouldn't be loving things out there and you shouldn't be loving anything in here. And then he said, only love of the immutable can bring tranquility. only love of the immutable what's the immutable that which cannot change your virtue can change
Starting point is 00:28:21 don't give me this stuff about control he says your problem is that our problem the reason we don't have pieces we're loving mutable things things that circumstances including our virtue can take away from us but there's one thing that's immutable that not only can circumstances not take it away from you but even the worst circumstances in this life only give you more of it
Starting point is 00:28:40 have you thought about that what's the worst circumstances violent death and there's one thing that if you love it supremely even violent death gives you more of it what is it the presence of god the beauty of god the face of god and that's the reason why augustin could say this and it was just amazing in his confessions he lays it out first of all he says this in confessions this is book book four he says
Starting point is 00:29:08 god alone is the place of peace that cannot be disturbed and God will not withhold himself from your love unless you withhold your love from him. See, there it is. If you love the immutable, you'll have tranquility. So how can you not love the immutable only if you withhold your love from him? But if you don't withhold your love from him, he will not withhold his love from you. And you might say, and at some point I think Augustine, being a great writer, was hearing an objection. And the objection goes like this.
Starting point is 00:29:41 the objection says well no wait a minute you're saying i have to love god but i you know i love a lot of things i love i love material comforts i love people i love romance i love you know there's lots of things i have to love god not these things then he says no no no no but you have to see that if you love god supremely you not only get god the immutable but you will find that in that all that what you have been loving in these things was actually in god puts it like this. He's praying. Augustine writes, quote, What do I love when I love thee? Not the beauty of bodies, nor the fair harmony of time, nor the brightness of the light so gladsome to our eyes, nor sweet melodies of varied songs,
Starting point is 00:30:27 nor the fragrant smell of flowers, not limbs acceptable to the embracements of the flesh. None of these things I love when I love my God. But, and yet, I love a kind of light melody fragrance meat and embracement when I love my God. But they are those which space cannot contain, which time cannot bear away. They are smells that breathing cannot disperse. They are tastes that eating cannot diminish. This is what I love when I love my God. And that's the final way to get the calm, to get the tranquility, get to peace.
Starting point is 00:31:08 is to love him supremely. Now, finally, I told you, character of peace, the three disciplines of peace, but the secret. Paul talks about the secret, and this is why we're not done yet, and here's why we're not done yet. Try to go home and love the immutable. Just go ahead, and then write a paper and tell me how it went. I mean, go home, sit down, find a nice, quiet place, sit down, and then try, go. you just try to love the immutable and then it's like i'm not feeling anything yet see god is just a term god is just he's an abstraction frankly the word god is just an abstraction but notice what it
Starting point is 00:31:54 says the secret of the peace of heart of god or maybe i should say the peace of god keeps your hearts and your minds not just in god but in christ jesus and by the way hearts and minds and by the way hearts and minds are separated there grammatically because Paul is trying to say it's one thing to keep your thoughts in Christ Jesus we already talked about this is another thing to put your heart in him to have your heart in Christ Jesus how does it work to find him attractive to find him lovely to find him unbelievably lovely see it's not enough that's it says Paul says I want you to find Jesus Christ lovely That's the only way you're ever going to love the immutable and find that tranquility.
Starting point is 00:32:39 Well, how do you do that? Think like this. There's a place, actually we read this, it was in a passage we looked at earlier this year, but we didn't look at the verse. It's in Isaiah 57. Remember when we were going through Isaiah? Isaiah 57, at the end of the chapter, says this, The wicked are like the tossing sea, which cannot rest,
Starting point is 00:33:03 whose waves cast up mire and mud there is no peace says my god for the wicked the wicked are like the tossing sea which cannot rest whose waves cast up mire and mud there is no peace says my god for the wicked now at first sight this just looks like another one of these Old Testament statements God will smite the evil doers but no look
Starting point is 00:33:23 this is talking about natural consequences and the stomachs had it right and Augustine had it right If you love anything more than God, I don't just mean it's important to believe in God, of course you have to believe in God, but if you love anything more than God, if you live for anything more than God, your life is going to be like a tossing sea, restless, constantly, what, casting up mire and mud, because your life is like a house built on sand instead of on the rock, and you're always going to be having cave-ins. We've been through it. If you love anything, you're going to always be an anxiety about it, anything more than God. And so God is saying the natural consequence of turning away from me, the natural consequence of not building your whole life, centering your whole life on me, is restlessness, deep restlessness. Who took those consequences?
Starting point is 00:34:23 You know, in 2 Corinthians 521, that I always quote, God made Jesus sin, who knew no sin, that we might become the righteousness of God and Him, and how I always try to point out, that doesn't mean that God made Jesus sinful. It means on the cross he treated him as the sinners deserve. And what does this mean? On the cross, he got all the consequences of what we have done. And this is one of them. And can't you see it?
Starting point is 00:34:51 Do you see Jesus Christ just walking through the crucifixion saying, I'm just keeping my mind centered on God, I'm okay, I'm content in whatever circumstance I'm in. Jesus didn't say that, no, because he wasn't. Why? Because he lost all of his peace. He cries, my God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? In fact, we're told that he died with a cry. He died screaming. Bill Lane, the commentator on the book of Mark, says, he says, the cry of dereliction, that scream, he says, crucified criminals ordinarily suffered complete exhaustion and for long periods were unconscious before they died. The stark realism of Mark's account describes a sudden, violent death.
Starting point is 00:35:39 The cry of dereliction expresses unfathomable pain. Jesus lost all of his peace, all of his peace so you could have eternal peace. And looking at that is what we'll get you through. That's what will make him lovely. And let me prove it to you. We've got a case right in front of you. Horatio Spafford was an American lawyer who lost everything he had in the Chicago fire of 1871. Only two years later, he sent his wife, Anna, and their four daughters on a ship across the Atlantic Ocean. to England for a trip. The ship hit another ship on the way and began to sink.
Starting point is 00:36:27 As was sinking, Anna got the four little girls together and they prayed. And then the ship went under the water and they all were scattered into the waves. And all four little girls drowned. Anna was found unconscious by a rescue ship floating.
Starting point is 00:36:43 They rescued her, they took her to England and she cabled, Horatio Spafford, just two words. saved alone and when Horatius Bafford was on the ship over to England to bring his wife home he began to write a hymn
Starting point is 00:37:01 that we're going to sing at the end it is well with my soul peace like a river he wrote that and here's what I want you to think why would a man dealing with his grief seeking the peace of God the peace like a river spent the entire thing on Jesus My sin, oh the bliss of this glorious thought, my sin, not in part but the whole, is nailed to the cross, and I bear it no more.
Starting point is 00:37:28 Praise the Lord, praise the Lord, on my soul. What has that got to do with his four little girls that are dead? Everything. You know why? Look, when things go wrong, one of the ways you lose your pieces, you say, maybe I'm being punished. But no, look at the cross. All the punishment fell on him. Another thing you say is, well, maybe God doesn't care.
Starting point is 00:37:46 Maybe doesn't care. No, look what he did for us. what he bore for us. The Bible gives you a God that says, I've lost a child too, but not involuntarily, voluntarily for your sake. You sing that hymn and you watch a man thinking, thanking, and loving himself into the peace of God. It worked for him under those circumstances. It worked for Paul under his circumstances. It will work for you. Let's pray. Thank you, Father, for giving us this offer. Peace, like a river. Peace, infallible. We see, Lord, that peace is not something that really does just come. It's not a talent.
Starting point is 00:38:32 And it's really not even just a simple gift. It's a discipline. We have a number of beliefs that we're not thinking into. We have a wonderful God that we're not loving. And therefore, we don't have the peace we ought to have. Give us this peace. because we know the secret how we can be thankful for even the bad things in our lives it's the cross how we can know that god is with us no matter what it's the cross and we pray lord that you would help us knowing the gospel of jesus christ think and thank and love you into the peace of god it's in jesus name we pray amen Thanks for listening to today's teaching. It's our prayer that you were encouraged by it and that it helps you apply the gospel to your life and to share it with others.
Starting point is 00:39:28 For more helpful resources from Tim Keller, visit gospelandlife.com. There, you can subscribe to the Life in the Gospel Quarterly Journal. When you do, you will also receive free articles, sermons, devotionals, and other great gospel-centered resources. Again, it's all at gospelandlife.com. You can also stay connected with us on Facebook, Instagram. Instagram, YouTube, and X. Today's sermon was recorded in 2010. The sermons and talks you hear on the Gospel and Life podcast were recorded between 1989 and 2017,
Starting point is 00:39:59 while Dr. Keller was senior pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.

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