Peace
In keeping with our consistent ethic of life, the Church sees war as a grave violation of the dignity of the human person. Peace, wrote Blessed John XXIII, is a gift from God, to be sought, treasured, and safeguarded. While the Church does acknowledge that there are times when a use of force may be justified to correct a manifest injustice, these “just-war conditions” are quite limited.
“The best way to avoid war is to safeguard peace by letting go of the anger and hatred that breed war and by eliminating the poverty, injustice, and deprivation of human rights that lead to war”
(The United States Catholic Catechism for Adults, p. 395).
What does the Church say about peace?
Wherever the strong exploit the weak; wherever the rich take advantage of the poor; wherever great powers seek to dominate and to impose ideologies, there the work of making peace is undone; there the cathedral of peace is again destroyed. Today, the scale and the horror of modern warfare—whether nuclear or not—makes it totally unacceptable as a means of settling differences between nations. War should belong to the tragic past, to history; it should find no place on humanity’s agenda for the future.
Peace is a life issue
A Prayer for Peace
God, our Creator,
you call blessed
those who work for peace.
Help us to work without ceasing
for that justice
which brings true and lasting peace.
Banish war and violence
from the world
and keep us safe
from weapons of hate,
so that all people
might rejoice in your love
and live in your peace.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.
Click here to read excerpts from the Church’s teaching on way and peace.
Click here to read The Challenge of Peace. God’s Promise and Our Response by the US Catholic Bishops.
Click here to learn more about Pax Christi, a national Catholic peace movement.