Peace Keeping vs Peace Making
A teenager was sharing with her mother about an issue that some others were having in their relationship. The teen was close enough to those involved that she was emotionally aware of the stress but not actively engaged in the conflict. In trying to help her daughter to navigate such tricky relationships, the mother gave the following advice, “Just keep your mouth shut.”
Of course, this mom was attempting to be helpful and to keep her child out of arguments, drama, and chaos, but what she actually was doing was advising her daughter to walk away from being a potential source of help and support to those about whom she cares. Perhaps, by taking part in the conflict right outside her proverbial front door, she could actually help her friends in their resolution.
While what her mom advised may sound like a piece of solid wisdom, it is actually, fundamentally flawed. There are times that it may be wise or even beneficial to remain silent, but there are many other times where seeking to be a peace keeper rather than a peace maker is doing more harm than good. In these times, peace keeping can be harmful, and peace making can be beneficial.
What is the Difference Between Peace Keeping and Peace Making?
The following are some Key Reasons Peace Keeping Can Be Harmful:
Peace Keeping can be an avoidance technique that allows sin to continue unchallenged.
Peace Keeping is an attempt to manage what things seem to be on a surface level and fails to address the deeper and more meaningful roots of issues where true growth can happen when these places are directly addressed.
Peace Keeping can keep important information silent when what really would be helpful is for it to be known.
Peace Keeping can unintentionally serve as a silent endorsement of something that is clearly wrong by omitting the opportunity to disagree and take an appropriate stand for something that is not okay.
Peace Keeping can leave others alone as the peace keeper neglects standing up for people who deserve it and neglects confronting what needs to be confronted.
Peace Keeping focuses more upon covering up conflict rather than truly building up those involved.
In truth, avoiding taking a stand or speaking up isn’t always helpful, but it may provide the allusion of being a good thing.
Key Reasons Peace Making Can Be Helpful:
When truth is spoken, it challenges the lies and changes hearts
Peace making is internally edifying in the peace maker and in those people and situations that the peace maker speaks truth into
It encourages others to become the best versions of themselves
A peace maker can help to break down the obstacles that get in the way of true connection with others, and this can open the way to health in the situation or relationship.
So, if you find that you are acting more as a peace keeper than a peace maker, I encourage you to consider the cost of that surface level peace. It may just be more costly than you imagined, especially if confronting people and issues in an appropriate way now may save years of further conflict down the road for all involved.