Submieeion and Peace
Psalm 119:165
Great peace have they which love your law: and nothing shall offend them.


Loving the law of God, not only with delight in the vehicle of its expression, but with inward submission to its behests, we shall have —

I. THE PEACEFULNESS OF A RESTFUL HEART. Such a heart has found an adequate and worthy object for the outgoings of its affections. Base things loved always disturb. Noble things loved always tranquillize. For our hearts are like the creatures in some river, of which they tell us that they change their colour according to the hue of the bed of the stream in which they float and of the food of which they partake. The heart that lives on the will of God will be calm and steadfast, and ennobled into reposeful tranquillity like that which it grasps and grapples.

II. THE CALM OF A SUBMITTED WILL. If you were ever on board a sailing ship you know the difference between its motion when it is beating up against the wind and when it is running before it. In the one case all is agitation and uneasiness, in the other all is smooth, and frictionless, and delicious. So, when we go with the great stream, in not ignoble surrender, then we go quietly. It is God's great intention, in all that befalls us in this life, to bring our wills into conformity with His. Blessed is the ministry of sorrow, and of pain, and of loss, if it does that for us. And disastrous and accursed is the ministry of joy and success if it does not.

III. THE PEACE OF AN OBEDIENT LIFE. When once we have taken it (and faithfully adhere to the choice) as our supreme desire to do God's will, we are delivered from almost all the things that distract and disturb us. Away go all the storms of passion, and we are no more at the mercy of vagrant inclinations. And as thus we may be delivered from all the agitations and cross-currents of conflicting wishes, inclinations, aims, which otherwise would make a jumble and a chaos of our lives, so, on the other hand, if for us the supreme desire is to obey God, then we are delivered from the other great enemy to tranquillity — namely, anxious forecasting of possible consequences of our actions, which robs so many of us of so many quiet days. "I do the little I can do," said Faber, "and leave the rest with Thee." And that will bring peace.

IV. THE PEACE OF FREEDOM FROM TEMPTATIONS. "Nothing shall offend them." The higher love casts out the lower. Which is best, to overcome our temptations, or to live away up in the high regions to which the malaria of the swamps never climbs, and where no disease-germs can ever reach? That elevation is possible for us, if only we keep in close touch with God, and love the law because our hearts are knit to the Law-giver.

(A. Maclaren, D. D.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: Great peace have they which love thy law: and nothing shall offend them.

WEB: Those who love your law have great peace. Nothing causes them to stumble.




Peace Amid Troubles
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