Today my nature walk came complete with the usual squirrels and chipmunks, two rabbits, three golf balls, a swimming muskrat and, oh yes, a snake. A new variety this time, a tiny gray snake who was just lying on the gravel, playing possum I suppose. I prodded it with a stick to get it to move off into the grass where I imagined it would be safer. Maybe the real desire of my heart is to be a herpetologist. But I doubt it. Thankfully this one was so little and slow-moving that I didn't jump.
Last month I asked whether hardship is really the path to peace. I looked up some things the Bible says about peace and my short answer is "No." My search was by no means exhaustive, but I got a review of a few truths I seemed to have forgotten. Peace is fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22). Jesus gives us His peace (John 14:27). He will keep in perfect peace him whose mind is steadfast (Isaiah 26:3). I kept getting the message that peace is a gift and it comes from God.
I did find some evidence of hardship bringing peace: The punishment that brought us peace was upon Him (Isaiah 53:5), and He made peace through His blood (Colossians 1:20). So He took the hardship upon Himself and makes the peace available to us as a gift.
As usual, I think I was asking the wrong question. We will all walk the path of hardship to some extent. But it won't bring peace of itself. Hardship will happen; peace is available. The only source is Jesus.