Disciples Peace Fellowship
Ten ways to cultivate a lifestyle of peace
- Prayon a regular, intentional basisfor those
regarded as enemies by our nation. I'm glad, Dr. King once
said, that Jesus didn't tell us to like our enemies! There
will be people we don't much like; but we love them because
God loves them. Praying for so-called enemies is a powerful
sign and instrument of this human unity that is at the heart
of the gospel.
- Commit yourselves to dialogue with people you can't stand
right in your own congregations. It is important to pray for
enemies in other places; but, to paraphrase I John, how can
we speak of relationship to people we can't see if we can't
demonstrate relationship with people we see every week? Peacemaking
begins at home.
- Study the lives of persons for whom peacemaking has been
a way of life. The faces of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Dorothy
Day come quickly to mind, but also look for more immediate
models. It will embarrass them, but T. J. Liggett and Rhodes
Thompson (who are here today) have been such models for me.
Let the witness of such persons help shape who you are.
- Dare to imagine the world other than it now is. Part of
the reason the church fails in its mission of peacemaking
is that our imaginations are so impoverished, because we simply
accept what is as "the way things are." Study, for
example, the vision of Isaiah 65 ("No more shall there
be an infant who lives but a few days"). This isn't wishful
thinking. It's imagining the world as our gracious God would
have it. Let that set your agenda. This past week we had the
communications officer at the Israeli embassy speak at Eden
Seminary in order to understand better the situation in the
Middle East. We have no choice, he said, but to respond to
violence with greater violenceand all I could think
is "what a failure of the imagination!" What a failure
to put a face on Palestinian neighbors and to imagine the
world other than it now is.
- Take every opportunity to travel in other cultures (preferably
not in five star hotels!), and
- Sixth, if you can't travel to various countries, then read
works of fiction that come from those places. The study of
history and government are great, but serious literature puts
a face on people from parts of the world you may never see.
- Practice hospitality to strangerswhich is, after all,
one of the most persistent injunctions in all of scripture.
Welcoming strangers (migrant workers, people of other faiths
...) is based on a recognition of fundamental relatedness
prior to any specific knowledge of who they are.
- Remember that lifestyle (the amount of the earth's resources
we consume) is also an act of peacemaking.
- Be willing to look critically at the groups you are part
ofwhether that be your nation or your church or your
university. Always be suspicious of proposals that work to
your advantage but not to the advantage of your neighbors.
- Live ecumenically. Churches often act like competing corporations,
but you don't have to buy into it. Wherever you are located,
work for the common witness of the church in that place. It
will be a profound act of peacemaking.
Rev. Michael Kinnamon
Eden Theological Seminary
To see the full text of Kinnamon's speech, click
here.
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