When Jesus sat on the mountainside and taught the crowds, He spoke words that still cut through the noise of our world today. Among His famous Beatitudes, He declared:
“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.”
(Matthew 5:9)
These are more than poetic lines. They are a call to action, a vision for how followers of Jesus are to rise up and live.
If we go by the dictionary, peace is defined as “freedom from disturbance,” “tranquillity,” or “a state where war has ended.” While these ideas point us in the right direction, the biblical understanding of peace goes far deeper.
Christian thinkers like Billy Graham and A.W. Tozer capture this beautifully: peace is not the absence of trouble, fear, or conflict—it is the presence of Christ.
This shifts everything. We don’t just look for peaceful circumstances; we look for the God who brings wholeness and rest even in the middle of chaos.
It’s one thing to keep peace—it’s another to make peace. A peacekeeper avoids conflict, tries not to stir the waters, and maintains calm. A peacemaker, however, is active. They step into tension with the intention of bringing reconciliation, healing, and God’s presence.
Jesus doesn’t call us to be passive peacekeepers. He calls us to be peacemakers—people who actively work to bring wholeness and restoration in a broken world.
The Easy-to-Read Version translates Matthew 5:9 this way:
“Great blessings belong to those who work to bring peace. God will call them his sons and daughters.”
Notice the word “work.” Peace-making is not an afterthought; it is a calling, a job, a mission.
If peacemaking is our role, what does it look like in practice? Here are some qualities to pursue:
Being a peacemaker means acting promptly. Don’t wait until conflict festers or wounds deepen. Step into situations quickly, ready to bring God’s peace. Just as lateness in a job limits your effectiveness, delay in peacemaking limits what God can do through you.
Our peace must flow from a genuine relationship with Jesus. When we’re rooted in prayer, scripture, and intimacy with God, we carry His peace naturally into conversations and situations. Sometimes we’ll see the impact immediately; other times we may never know how God used us. But if we’re authentic, His peace will overflow through us.
The best workers aren’t satisfied with the bare minimum—they give their best. In the same way, peacemakers go beyond what is convenient. They take risks, stretch themselves, and refuse to settle for half-hearted efforts.
Our attitude matters. When we carry cynicism, bitterness, or apathy, people notice. But when we bring joy, love, and Christ-centered hope, people notice that too. As Paul wrote:
“In all the work you are given, do the best you can. Work as though you are working for the Lord, not any earthly master.”
(Colossians 3:23)
Peacemakers are marked by wholehearted service. We don’t serve God reluctantly—we serve Him with honour, knowing we carry His peace into a restless world.
True peace often comes with sacrifice. Consider the Good Samaritan. He gave his time, resources, and compassion to care for a wounded man who should have been his enemy. Or the friends of the paralysed man who carried him to Jesus, breaking through the roof so their friend could find healing.
In both cases, peace came because someone sacrificed. As peacemakers, we too must be willing to give—our comfort, time, energy, and resources—so that others can encounter God’s peace.
Jesus doesn’t shy away from the difficulty of this calling. Immediately after blessing the peacemakers, He says:
“Great blessings belong to those who suffer persecution for doing what is right. God’s kingdom belongs to them.”
(Matthew 5:10)
Peacemaking will not always win applause. Sometimes it will bring resistance, misunderstanding, or even hostility. But we are not called to conform to the world’s chaos—we are called to rise up differently, the Jesus way.
The blessing is clear: peacemakers are called children of God. This isn’t a symbolic title; it’s a declaration of identity and inheritance. The King of creation calls us His sons and daughters. His kingdom is our home. There is no greater reward.
Here’s a simple truth: we cannot give what we do not have. If we are not living in God’s peace, it will be difficult to bring it to others. That’s why we must continually return to Him—through prayer, worship, Scripture, and the support of fellow believers.
Yes, it’s good to rest, relax, and enjoy life’s simple pleasures. But true peace is only found in Christ. He is our shelter, our refuge, and our wholeness. And when we find our peace in Him, we are empowered to share it with others.
We live in a world filled with conflict, anxiety, and division. But Jesus calls His followers to rise up—not with anger, fear, or force, but with peace. Not simply to keep things calm, but to actively make things whole.
To be a peacemaker is to live the Jesus way. It is to step into brokenness with healing, into conflict with reconciliation, and into despair with hope.
And when we do, we carry the greatest blessing: the identity of children of God, heirs of His eternal kingdom.
✦ “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.”