John_Dear_HomeJohn_Dear_APersistentPeaceJohnDear_BiographyJohnDear_ShareYourStoryJohnDear_BookTourJohnDear_TheFactsJohn_Dear_ResourcesJohn_Dear_Reviews
John_Dear_pictures

Resources


“Be the difference you want to see in the world.”
             —Gandhi

Each one of us is called to live peace in our own lives and in our community. There are many ways to be an activist for peace and nonviolence. Read the following list of ways to be involved in bringing peace to your part of the world, discern what way you are being called to be an ambassador for peace, learn more about organizations in your area that support that cause and get involved!


World Day of Peace is September 21, 2008

Making Peace a Reality on World Peace Day
By Rev. John Dear, S.J.

When Jesus rose from the dead, his first words to his community were “Peace be with you.” As Catholics, we welcome that first gift of resurrection. Because we follow Jesus, we try to live in peace with everyone, with all of creation, with the God of peace. For Christians, every day then is World Day of Peace.

This year, on September 21, World Peace Day, we join with people around the globe who long for a new world of peace. We remember our special calling to be instruments of Christ’s peace, ambassadors of reconciliation, blessed peacemakers in a world of war. Never was it so important to take this calling seriously.

That means, we try to make peace with ourselves. To make peace with our spouses, children and relatives. To make peace with our neighbors. To make peace with everyone in the church. To make peace with all creatures and all of creation. To make peace with our enemies, even to love them, as Jesus commanded in the Sermon on the Mount.

Some say it’s just too hard to be peaceful, to make peace, but I think this is the beginning of the spiritual life. That’s how the journey starts. Peacemaking is hard. That’s why we have our wonderful sacraments, our Gospel, our saints, our community, one another--to help each other become more and more prayerful, more and more nonviolent, more and more the disarming presence of the peacemaking Christ in our world.

It’s because we so quickly give up the work of peace that today we have some thirty five wars, tens of thousands of nuclear weapons, billions suffering in poverty, and global warming threatening us all.

Jesus wants us to live in peace with one another, and with the God of peace. He calls us to bear witness to his gift of peace in our lifetimes. World Peace Day reminds us to put that peace at the center of our prayer, our hearts, our relationships, our work, our lives. It reminds us to do something new for peace--no matter how small or insignificant it may seem in the grand scheme of things.

The saints show us that every one of us can make a difference. We can harbor the peace of Christ in our hearts. We can be a healing presence to our families and neighbors. We can support the grassroots movements for peace and justice, such as Pax Christi USA and the Catholic Worker. We can point the way forward from conflict, division, violence and war to God’s reign of peace and nonviolence.

“Peace I leave you, my peace I give you,” Jesus told his friends the night before he was killed. This World Peace Day, as we join the global call for a new world of peace, we witness to our acceptance of Jesus’ gift of peace and participate in God’s nonviolent transformation of the world. As we do, we are greatly blessed.

**********

Rev. John Dear, S.J. has just published his autobiography, A Persistent Peace, (with a foreword by Martin Sheen, Loyola Press), and was recently nominated by Archbishop Desmond Tutu for the Nobel Peace Prize.

ReadTheFreeEbook


Other articles by John Dear, SJ

5 Ways to Live A Peaceful Life

Prayers by John Dear, SJ

Prayer of Nonviolence

Vow of Nonviolence

Reflective Prayer of St. Francis


Learn more about organizations in your area

Pax Christi USA, the national Catholic peace movement
www.paxchristiusa.org
 
The Fellowship of Reconciliation, international interfaith peace group
www.forusa.org
 
Nonviolence website
www.nonviolence.org
 
Jonah House, a community of peace, nonviolence and resistance, founded by Phil Berrigan
www.jonahhouse.org
 
The War Resisters League, based in New York City
www.warresisters.org
 
The Sojourners community, evangelicals for peace and justice, in Washington, D.C.
www.sojourners.com
 
The School of the Americas Watch, a campaign to close the SOA torture training center in Fort Benning, Georgia
www.soaw.org
 
The National Coalition for Peace and Justice, in New York City.
www.ncpj.net
 
Pace e Bene, a Franciscan campaign to promote Gospel Nonviolence, based in San Francisco
www.paceebene.org
 
The One Campaign, Bono’s campaign to abolish poverty in Africa
www.data.org

 


HomeA Persistent PeaceBiographyShare Your StoryBook TourThe FactsResourcesReviews

Loyola Press

  3441 North Ashland Avenue • Chicago, IL 60657 • 800-621-1008
© 2008 Loyola Press. All rights reserved