The world is noisy with hate right now. Harsh words, nasty comments, pointing fingers — anger seems to be the default setting. But there’s another way. A higher way.
Reconciliation over retaliation.
Jesus didn’t say, “Get even.” He said, “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you” (Matthew 5:44). That’s not easy — but it is the Jesus way. Retaliation only multiplies hurt. Reconciliation begins the healing.
History reminds us that hatred is nothing new. The early Christians hid in catacombs, martyrs laid down their lives, and countless faithful believers chose forgiveness over revenge.
Even now, in our generation, we grieve the loss of Charlie Kirk — a man who stood for faith and conviction. His family, friends, and followers ache with sorrow. But his life, like so many before him, points us back to the question: What would Jesus do?
Jesus chose the cross instead of retaliation. He laid down His life so we could live. That kind of love changes everything.
If we want peace on earth, it must start inside us. Not in the halls of government, not in the headlines, but in hearts willing to trade bitterness for forgiveness. Retaliation keeps the wound open. Reconciliation invites the healing touch of God.
It doesn’t mean we ignore injustice or pretend evil doesn’t exist. It means we choose love as our response. It means we ask, “Lord, let peace begin in me.”
The Apostle John wrote it best: “God is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in them” (1 John 4:16).
Charlie is not the first to pay the ultimate price for faith. He will not be the last. But his life reminds us that hate never wins. Only love does. Only God heals.
So when the noise rises, when the haters shout loudest, let’s quiet our hearts and ask: What would Jesus do? Then let’s do that.
Retaliation multiplies hurt. Reconciliation begins healing. Let peace start with us. “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you” (Matthew 5:44).
#Reconciliation #ChooseLove #LetPeaceBeginInMe
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Let Peace Begin in Me
The world is noisy with hate right now. Harsh words, nasty comments, pointing fingers — anger seems to be the default setting. But there’s another way. A higher way.
Reconciliation over retaliation.
Jesus didn’t say, “Get even.” He said, “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you” (Matthew 5:44). That’s not easy — but it is the Jesus way. Retaliation only multiplies hurt. Reconciliation begins the healing.
History reminds us that hatred is nothing new. The early Christians hid in catacombs, martyrs laid down their lives, and countless faithful believers chose forgiveness over revenge.
Even now, in our generation, we grieve the loss of Charlie Kirk — a man who stood for faith and conviction. His family, friends, and followers ache with sorrow. But his life, like so many before him, points us back to the question: What would Jesus do?
Jesus chose the cross instead of retaliation. He laid down His life so we could live. That kind of love changes everything.
If we want peace on earth, it must start inside us. Not in the halls of government, not in the headlines, but in hearts willing to trade bitterness for forgiveness. Retaliation keeps the wound open. Reconciliation invites the healing touch of God.
It doesn’t mean we ignore injustice or pretend evil doesn’t exist. It means we choose love as our response. It means we ask, “Lord, let peace begin in me.”
The Apostle John wrote it best: “God is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in them” (1 John 4:16).
Charlie is not the first to pay the ultimate price for faith. He will not be the last. But his life reminds us that hate never wins. Only love does. Only God heals.
So when the noise rises, when the haters shout loudest, let’s quiet our hearts and ask: What would Jesus do? Then let’s do that.
Retaliation multiplies hurt. Reconciliation begins healing. Let peace start with us. “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you” (Matthew 5:44).
#Reconciliation #ChooseLove #LetPeaceBeginInMe
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