God’s Deep Settled Wholeness
If we read the Gospels carefully, we begin to see what Jesus meant when he said, “I am leaving you with a gift—peace of mind and heart… not fragile like the peace the world gives” (John 14:27). This is no peace at any price. It is a deep, settled wholeness from God. Not simply the absence of conflict, but a fullness of life rooted in right relationship with God, ourselves, and one another. It is peace that can coexist with uncertainty, sorrow, and even struggle.
Illustration
Imagine a lake during a storm. The surface is churned by wind and rain, yet deep below, the water remains still. God’s peace is like that deeper water. The storm may rage above—illness, anxiety, division, grief—but the Spirit anchors us beneath the surface, holding us steady. This is why Jesus could sleep in the boat while the waves crashed around him. His peace was not denial of danger, but trust in the Father.
This peace is cultivated by the Holy Spirit. It grows as we surrender control, resist fear, and learn to trust God’s faithfulness. William Bates, the 17th-century minister, wisely observed: “Every rash hand is able to make a wound… but it is only the God of peace that is able to heal breaches, and to allay those storms.” God’s peace does not inflame; it heals. It does not divide; it reconciles.
Challenge
Where are you seeking peace in fragile places—busyness, certainty, avoidance, or control? This week, pause daily and ask: What would it mean to trust God here? Choose one situation where you will respond not with anxiety or defensiveness, but with prayerful calm and peacemaking love.
Is this a peace that passes understanding—and even misunderstanding?
Prayer
God of peace,
quiet our anxious hearts and draw us into your deep wholeness.
When storms rage around us, root us in your Spirit.
Heal our inner divisions, mend broken relationships,
and make us instruments of your peace in a fractured world.
We trust you, now and always.
Amen.






