Stepping Stones To ShalomSample

Stepping Stones To Shalom

DAY 2 OF 12

Master Peace of Mind

The Rabbi of Kelm (19th-century Russia) was known to say: “A person who has mastered peace of mind has gained everything.” 

In Genesis 37, we learn that Jacob had left the house of Laban and returned to the land of Canaan. According to Jewish tradition, Jacob’s one request when he returned to the Holy Land was to live with peace of mind. The chapter begins by telling us that Jacob settled in the land of his fathers. 

The rabbis teach that when Jacob physically settled in Canaan, he also asked God for the ability to be “settled” in a more spiritual manner after the decades of turbulence that he had endured until this moment. Jacob wanted to live in shalom, in peace and quiet.

Ironically, what follows is one of the most unsettling episodes in Jacob's life. We read about the jealousy between Jacob’s favorite son, Joseph, and his brothers, which culminated in Joseph being sold to nomads heading to Egypt and Jacob being told that his beloved son was dead. What could be more unsettling than that!

The Jewish sages explain that when Jacob asked God for tranquility, that’s exactly when the rift between Joseph and his brothers began. Because Jacob wanted tranquility, God sent him rivalry and division? How does this make any sense?

When God allowed more tumult in Jacob’s life, it wasn’t because He denied Jacob’s request; in fact, He was granting it. It was only through the experience of extreme turbulence that Jacob would be able to learn how to experience constant tranquility.

If you have ever watched an experienced surfer ride the waves of a roaring ocean, you’ll understand how this concept works. In the case of the surfer, it doesn’t matter how turbulent the waters are. The waves rise and fall, they splash and crash. Yet, the surfer remains calm, riding atop the tumult beneath with complete confidence.

Certainly, God could have granted Jacob’s request for peace with the absence of any turmoil. But that would be a conditional peace – one that could be broken at any moment. God wanted to give His beloved servant an even greater tranquility — one that was deeper and more stable, one that Jacob could ride through the turbulence of life. 

God wanted Jacob to learn that tranquility and peace comes from within, not from the conditions without. Once Jacob could go through the worst life had to offer, he could learn to get through anything. Jacob discovered a peace that would last for the rest of his life.

Maybe you know some people who seemingly have it easy in life, yet they are in constant tumult on the inside. Other people have their share of problems, and yet they remain calm and unmoved. The secret is in how connected we are to the ultimate source of peace — God.

Judaism has a longstanding tradition of connecting to God in peace and tranquility through quiet prayer and reflection. It should be the goal of every believer to maintain a place of faith and calm even in the most unsettling of situations, keeping our eyes fixed firmly on God.

Stepping Stone 2: Make peace a priority. Until we make shalom a goal that we are committed to achieving, we are far less likely to reach it. Give yourself the time and space to practice shalom by connecting to God, letting go of control, and trusting in God’s ways daily. 

Scripture

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About this Plan

Stepping Stones To Shalom

In Judaism, peace—shalom—is rooted in the Hebrew word shalem, which means “whole” or “complete.” True shalom implies that diverse parties purposely set aside their differences and agree to see the good in one another, not just living alongside but among one another for a higher calling or purpose. This devotional plan explores 12 different steps we can all take toward achieving shalom in our lives.

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