Monday, October 23, 2023

Peace

One of my favorite parts of the series, "The Chosen" is how Jesus says to those he encounters, "Shalom,_________." While I knew that one of its translations connects to peace, seeing a portrayal of Christ saying this to another person - the Word of God speaking this "shalom" into existence - inspired me to dig deeper. 

We often think of peace as the absence of conflict, which definitely forms part of its definition. 

The peace that Christ came to provide, though, goes beyond a ceasefire to include wholeness, completeness, harmony and total well-being. The peace that Christ came to give us is restorative. It is healing. It integrates us and allows us to flourish, becoming the people that God created and needs us to be. It brings us back into communion with God and others. Christ's peace incorporates solidarity, flourishing, wholeness, and integration in a way that only He can fulfill and that He hopes to continue to provide to the world through His disciples. 

Shalom

St. Paul VI popularized the phrase, "If you want peace, work for justice" (St. Paul VI, 1972) to demonstrate the active role that we must play in partnering with Christ in this important work. Being an agent of justice requires that we strive to ensure that each person gets his/her due. From education to health care to social services to opportunities to work and contribute to the common good, our ministries bring peace to the extent that we advocate for justice and ensure that each member of our communities receives these fundamental aspects of life. 

Justice entails solidarity and works to pave the pathways for all to flourish. 

Working for justice in pursuit of peace often brings us into situations of conflict, injuries, and chaos. The road to peace - solidarity, flourishing, wholeness, integration - requires that we travel in a polarized, broken, and dysfunctional world. Healing, forgiving, rebuilding, and restoring demand immense effort, long amounts of time, and a willingness to toil in the midst of tension. As Pope Francis has often said, our Church must resemble a field hospital; as such, we must work as combat medics.

Finally, I heard recently that the current generation (those from about 2010 on) are called the "Polars" because of both the melting of the polar ice caps and the highly polarized world in which we currently live. May the work we do in our Catholic schools bring about peace and imitate the work done by Christ and His Church for the past 2,000 years. 

Let us continue to erase the margins that keep people outside of community creating new systems for all to flourish while also removing the barriers that keep some from that which all are due. 

Let us continue to invite all to the wedding banquet of the Lamb living in solidarity with all of our brothers and sisters, prioritizing dialogue rooted in listening.

Let us continue to bring people into a relationship with Jesus Christ, whose transforming love "bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things" and "never fails" (1 Corinthians 13:7-8).

Let us, through our words and actions, convey to all we encounter, "Shalom."

Solidarity.

Flourishing.

Wholeness.

Integration.

Peace.