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What If Your Need To Be Right Is Killing Peace

What If Your Need To Be Right Is Killing Peace

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We don’t actually want peace, we want to win. That single confession exposes so much of what’s broken in our relationships, our churches, and our online lives. We sing about the Prince of Peace and then walk right back into division, calling conquest “conviction” and retaliation “defending truth.” This conversation is a direct, uncomfortable invitation to face what we’re really chasing when we argue, post, subtweet, withdraw, or escalate.

We dig into biblical peace, shalom, not as surface-level calm but as wholeness, restoration, and relationships made right under God. Shalom isn’t silence and it isn’t weakness. It’s courageous, costly peacemaking that steps into the mess to repair what sin shattered. We look at Jesus as the model: not neutral, willing to confront sin, yet never driven by hatred, domination, or vengeance. The cross becomes the clearest picture of peace as power under control, where “Father, forgive them” exposes our addiction to payback.

We also bring it home with Romans 12 and the hard reality that we can’t control someone else’s response, but we are responsible for our posture. That includes the hidden war inside, bitterness, resentment, unforgiveness, and the mental rehearsals where we “win” arguments in our head. If you’ve been skipping peace and jumping straight to defense, this will challenge you and give you language for a better way. Subscribe, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review with your answer: who came to mind while you were listening?

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