Before you speak of peace, you must first have it in your heart.
—St. Francis of Assisi
Father Richard Rohr writes of the essential Christian call to nonviolence:
Generations of Christians seem to have forgotten Jesus’ teachings on nonviolence. We’ve relegated visions of a peaceful kingdom to a far distant heaven, hardly believing Jesus could have meant for us to turn the other cheek here and now. It took Mohandas Gandhi (1869–1948), a Hindu, to help us apply Jesus’ peacemaking in very practical ways. As Gandhi said, “It is a first-class human tragedy that peoples of the earth who claim to believe in the message of Jesus whom they describe as the Prince of Peace show little of that belief in actual practice.” [1] Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (1929–1968), drawing from Gandhi’s writings and example, brought nonviolence to the forefront of the civil rights movement in the 1960s.
Training in nonviolence has understandably emphasized largely external methods or ways of acting and resisting. These are important and necessary, but we must go even deeper. Unless these methods reflect our inner attitudes, they will not make a lasting difference. We all must admit that our secret inner attitudes are often cruel, attacking, judgmental, and harsh. The ego seems to find its energy precisely by having something to oppose, fix, or change. When the mind can judge something to be inferior, we feel superior. We must recognize our constant tendency toward negating reality, resisting it, opposing it, and attacking it on the level of our mind. This is the universal addiction. [2]
Nonviolence teacher Ken Butigan understands God’s love to be at the center of nonviolence.
Our true calling is to love one another as God has loved us. When we take this seriously, we are transformed into lovers who care for all beings. In practical terms this means resisting the tendency of the violence system to divide the world into various enemy camps. A fundamental script of this system is to separate “us” from “them”: … those who are worthy of our love and those who are not…. Often, we project our own unacknowledged violence onto [them].
Nonviolence takes another approach. Practitioners of nonviolence seek to become their truest selves by slowly learning to love all beings, confident that all are kin and that we are called to embody this kinship concretely, especially in the midst of our most difficult and challenging conflicts…. Nonviolence is committed to challenging and resisting every form of violence. Nevertheless, it does not conclude that the opponent is absolutely and irrevocably incapable of loving or of being loved. To love the perpetrator … is a creative and daring act that seeks to provoke all parties to make contact with their true self, the undefiled reality of God which dwells at the center of their being. In short, their sacredness.… The greatest work of nonviolence is to create situations which free the sacredness of ourselves and our opponent. [3]
Jesus Calls Us to Make Peace
Blessed are the peacemakers: They shall be recognized as children of God.
—Matthew 5:9
Father Richard considers what it means to be a peacemaker:
This verse in Matthew’s Gospel is the only time the word peacemakers is ever used in the whole Bible. Peacemakers literally are the “ones who reconcile quarrels.” We can clearly see Jesus is not on the side of the violent but on the side of the nonviolent. Jesus is saying there must be a connection, a clear consistency, a constant unity between means and ends. There is no way to peace other than peacemaking itself.
Today, many think we can achieve peace through violence. We’ve all witnessed actions coming from the logic “We’ll stop killing by killing.” It’s the way we think, even though it’s in opposition to all great religious teachings. Our need for immediate control leads us to disconnect the clear unity between means and ends. The U.S. even named a missile that was clearly meant for the destruction of humanity a “peacekeeper.” At least the word is more honest: peacekeeper, instead of Jesus’ peacemaker. But the peace we are keeping is a false peace. Jeremiah the prophet would say about our “peacekeeping” wars what he said to Israel’s leaders:
“Peace! Peace!” they say, whereas there is no peace.
They should be ashamed of their loathsome deeds.
Not they! They feel no shame, they do not even know how to blush.
—Jeremiah 8:11–12
War is a means of seeking control, not a means of seeking peace. Pax Romana is the world’s way of seeking control and calling it peace. The Romans thought they had peace, but violence will always create more violence, especially on the edges, in the colonies. At the center, among folks who are “insiders,” it has what it calls peace, yet the violence has merely been exported to those on the edges of society. That is no real peace. Our rich gated communities with security entrances are evidence of the same today. As Pope Paul VI said, “If you want peace, work for justice.” [1]
Do we have any idea of all the slavery and oppression, all the killing and torture, all the millions of people who have existed around the edges of every empire so those at the center of the empire could say they had peace? Every time we build a pyramid, certain people at the top will have their peace, yet there will be bloody bodies all around the bottom. Those at the top usually don’t recognize the price of their false peace.
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus defines peace in a different way that we call Pax Christi, the peace of Christ. In the remaining Beatitudes, Jesus will connect his peace with justice and self-sacrifice (see Matthew 5:10). The Pax Romana creates a false peace by sacrificing others; the Pax Christi waits and works for true peace by sacrificing the false self of power, prestige, and possessions.
John Chaffee’s Friday Five |
Grace and Peace, Friends! This week, I was out with a friend who told me he was listening to a discussion online between a Christian and a Satanist. Yep, you read that correctly. He said that throughout the conversation, the Satanist was making excellent points about how the god of the Christian was vindictive, punitive, retributive, and kept account of wrongs. He said the Christian failed to respond well to that indictment and how the conversation left a mark on him. I couldn’t stay silent. During our walk, I burst out and said, “This is what infuriates me. The Christian God is barely taught about in a Christian way. Most people have no idea that God is infinite, out-pouring love, who does not keep account of wrongs and has already reconciled everyone and everything back to God (Col. 1:15-20). Most people’s understanding of God can’t even live up to 1 Corinthians 13. The problem is that we platform very passionate people into pulpits who are still quite immature, and they preach their immaturity but not Christianity. Then, they hear someone like me talking like this and I am experienced as polarizing for just quoting parts of the New Testament that people were never told about. Everything changes when you realize Christ came to salvage all of humanity (John 12:32). People walk away from Christianity because, often, they were not really taught Christianity anyways.” The moment was a little odd because I vented more than spoke calmly. We then continued our walk, which was quite a nice time, and moved on to other topics. But I thought about that moment for the rest of the day. One of the reasons I started this weekly newsletter was to try and offer some other voices and share quotes from people who helped me shift my understanding of the faith into something larger, more integrative, more mature, and more robust. I sincerely hope that if you have been reading these emails for the past few weeks or months or from the start, it has helped you expand your view of the world and God and challenged you to grow yourself. As always, thank you for reading. Onto this week’s five quotes! |
1.”If you are too busy to read, then you are too busy.”- Richard Foster, Founder of Renovare In the modern world, everything seems to be bidding for our attention. There is always another movie or show to watch, some clip that went viral, some social media account begging for our reactivity… And so this metric of “being too busy to read” feels appropriate. If we do not have the time to sit and read even a paragraph of something worthwhile, that likely means that our lives are too overrun with nonsensical things. As soon as I am done writing this week’s newsletter, I will absolutely sit down and read for a bit. 2.”Si comprehendus, non est Deus (If you can comprehend it, it is not God).”- Augustine of Hippo, Early Church Father God is beyond our comprehension but not beyond our apprehension. Besides, God is less of an idea or concept to grasp as much as a Loving Mystery to be held by. 3.”I am neither of the East nor of the West, no boundaries exist within my breast.”- Rumi, Sufi Poet Ken Wilber, the philosopher from Colorado, wrote a lovely book called No Boundary. It takes to task how, in both the East and the West, we draw boundaries and lines between things. While seemingly helpful at first, these boundaries and lines are simplistic and eventually cause their own problems. What I find enlightening is how Rumi refused the simplistic divide of East vs West, and wrote from a place of wholeness according to his own experience of faith and what it means to be human. It would probably be better for all of us to stop drawing lines in the sand and embrace wisdom no matter where it came from. 4.”All you have to do is write one true sentence. Write the truest sentence that you know.”- Ernest Hemingway, American Author I am still developing and growing as a writer and often think of Hemingway. This idea of “writing a true sentence” is not easy. I can see how we fluff up our words and fill our sentences with pomp and circumstance. The world needs more of what must be said but has not yet been expressed. 5.”God weeps with us so that we may one day laugh with him.”- Jurgen Moltmann, German Lutheran Theologian Moltmann is an impressive figure. He passed away earlier this year at the age of 98. As a systematic theologian, he was top-notch. However, beyond that, I have heard stories that he was enormously and tenderly pastoral. He was well acquainted with grief and loss after having lived through WWII and being a POW at the end of it. His book, The Crucified God, was a titanic shift for me. The idea that God was passible (able to suffer) was a stark refusal of the static and impersonal god of the Aristotelian philosophers. I do not know about you, but it comforts me that God knows suffering, pain, grief, and loss. God understands and has experienced disappointment, rejection, despair, hardship, etc. This only heightens the understanding that the Good News of Jesus is actually about the reconciliation, restoration, and renewal of all things in Christ. A day is coming when evil will pass away, and all will know the Light that even welcomes our darkness. |