“Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give it to you. Do not let your hearts be troubled or afraid. (John 14:27) Jesus understood the worry and fear of his disciples, for he told them He will be crucified in Jerusalem. Jesus repeated his assurance to his disciples that the sufferings he was going to face were totally under the will of God. He meant to express to his disciples that He would be thoroughly at peace, for He was carrying out the will of God. To the world, the understanding of peace implied the absence of pain or disasters. People could hardly stand the agonies of misfortunes. When Jesus was praying at Gethsemane, He cried to the Father: “Take this cup away from me”. Undergoing sufferings was truly fearful. But Jesus added: “but not what I will but what you will". Jesus’ sufferings were for the repentance of the sins of mankind. Similarly, the cross we are bearing now, together with Jesus’ sufferings, we are asking God to grand us the gift of forgiveness to sins. Thus, suffering is no more convey as desperation or punishment, instead, it is abound with offerings, and viewed as the essence of journeying together with Christ.