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• “Great peace have they who love Your law; nothing shall offend them or make them stumble” (AMP).
• “You give peace of mind to all who love your Law. Nothing can make them fall” (CEV).
• “Abundant peace have those loving Thy law, And they have no stumbling-block” (YLT).
There’s so much to learn from this verse. In it God reveals a life-changing principle: Gaining and maintaining peace are directly related to loving God’s law. In this passage, according to Gesenius's Lexicon, the word translated love means to desire, to breathe after, to delight and to be inclined to. It implies longing—something that comes from deep within and persistently craves more.
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As we pass through the seasons and events of our lives, we often experience an ebb and flow in our hunger for the Word. For me, for right now, and perhaps for you, too, it feels like it’s time for the tide to turn, rise and fill the beach once again. Something keeps pressing into my spirit and I can’t shake the thought that if I’m lacking in peace, perhaps the root of the problem is a lack of love for His Word.
Of course, understanding the Word is critical, but more than simply gaining knowledge, Psalm 119:165 talks about loving the law in its entirety. The word law in this passage not only includes Mosaic law and prophetic teaching, but also custom and manner. In our New Testament relationships with God, we are not required to keep Old Testament rites or ceremonial laws, but we are mandated by Jesus Christ to keep the moral law—and then some.
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To have peace in our lives, we must love, long for and incline ourselves to instruction and to the customs and manner of living outlined in the Word beginning with all those “be” attitudes Jesus gave that follow after the heart and principles of godly living. When we do this we will reap two outstanding benefits.
First, we will have no means or occasion of stumbling. According to Strong’s Concordance that’s what “nothing shall offend thee” means. When we love the law, we will lack the methods, resources, time or opportunity to stumble. We won’t slip, hesitate or blunder as we walk through the days of our lives, and we will face no stumbling blocks, hurdles or barriers.
That inspires me to investigate further. It seems God must have one of His awesome spiritual principles buried in this passage, and the more I dig into it, the more excited I get. Let’s look at the second benefit. According to Strong’s, the Hebrew word translated peace also means completeness, soundness, and welfare. A further breakdown of the word includes things like safety, health, prosperity, quiet, tranquility, contentment, friendship, peace of human relationships, and peace with God in covenant relationship. OK. I’m signing up right now. I want all that like yesterday.
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It’s possible to obey without loving, but that is not the way of peace. We will live in peace when we love, when we breathe after, when we desire, delight and incline to God’s ways over our ways. We have access to the path of peace when we understand this key concept: Peace is God’s rich reward for those who hunger after His Word. I pray God’s peace be with you, my friend, or as I’ve heard my teenager say, “Peace out!”