--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|                                                                        |
|    Goanetters annual meet in Goa is scheduled for Dec 27, 2005 @ 4pm   |
|                                                                        |
|The Riviera Opposite Hotel Mandovi, Panjim (near Ferry Jetty/Riverfront)|
|         Attending.......drop a line to [EMAIL PROTECTED]            |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Peace on Earth" Means "No More War" by John Dear

John Dear is a Jesuit priest, peace activist, and the
author/editor of 20 books on peace and nonviolence,
including most recently "The Questions of Jesus" and
"Living Peace," both published by Doubleday. He is the
coordinator of Pax Christi New Mexico. For information,
see: www.fatherjohndear.org and
www.paxchristinewmexico.org

Published on Saturday, December 24, 2005 by
CommonDreams.org
http://www.commondreams.org/views05/1224-21.htm


The story goes that when the nonviolent Jesus was born
into abject poverty to homeless refugees on the
outskirts of a brutal empire, angels appeared in the
sky to impoverished shepherds singing, "Glory to God in
the highest and peace on earth!" That child grew up to
become, in Gandhi's words, "the greatest nonviolent
resister in the history of the world," and was
subsequently executed by the empire for his insistence
on justice.

This weekend, as tens of millions of Christians across
the country celebrate the birth of the Prince of Peace,
the U.S. wages war in Iraq, Afghanistan, Colombia and
elsewhere; crushes the hungry, homeless, elderly,
imprisoned and refugee; and maintains the world's
ultimate terrorist threat--its nuclear arsenal.

Like Herod, Pilate and their soldiers, we have rejected
the angels' call for "peace on earth." When Bush,
Cheney, Rumsfeld and their warmaking supporters
celebrate Christmas, they mock Christ and his steadfast
nonviolence, and carry on the massacre of the
innocents.

If the angels are correct, then Christmas requires us
to welcome God's gift of peace on earth. In such a
time, that means we have to work for an end to war.
Christmas calls us to become like Christ--people of
active, creative, steadfast nonviolence who give our
lives in resistance to empire and war.

In pursuit of this Christmas gift, a group of us met
this week with Bill Richardson, the Governor of New
Mexico, and asked him to dismantle our nuclear weapons
and disarm Los Alamos, the birthplace of the bomb. In
this day and age, it is surprising that any elected
official would meet and listen to anti-war activists.
Yet Richardson asked to begin a public dialogue with us
about nuclear disarmament. We take this as a sign of
hope, even as we continue our protests at Los Alamos.

When Gandhi was asked one Christmas day for his
thoughts about Christmas, he spoke about the connection
between the wood of the crib--Christ's poverty--and the
wood of the cross--Christ's nonviolent resistance to
evil. He said Christmas summons us to the same lifelong
nonviolence. It has social, economic, and political
implications. I think, like Gandhi, that we have to
make those connections and pursue those implications.
Here are a few of them.

First, Christmas celebrates the birth of a life of
perfect nonviolence and calls us to become people of
active nonviolence. Christmas invites us to practice
the vulnerable, disarming simplicity of children, to
live the disarmed life in solidarity with the children
of the world, and to spend our lives in resistance to
empire. It summons us to study, teach, practice and
experiment with creative nonviolence that we too might
live the life of nonviolence which Jesus exemplified so
that one day peace might reign one earth.

Second, Christmas demonstrates that God sides with the
poor, becomes one with the poor, and walks among the
poor. God does not side with the rulers, the rich or
the powerful, but with the homeless, the hungry and the
refugees. Christmas puts poverty front and center and
demands that we work to abolish poverty itself so that
every human being has food, clothing, housing,
healthcare, education, employment and a lifetime of
peace.

Third, since Christmas illustrates how God sides with
the poor in order to liberate the oppressed from
poverty and injustice, it calls us to reject greed,
give away our money and possessions to those in need,
and also live in solidarity with the disenfranchised.

Fourth, Christmas pushes us to stand on the margins of
society, where we will find God. Christmas announces
that every human being is a beloved son and daughter of
the God of love. Every human life is beautiful in the
eyes of God, since God has become one of us. From now
on, we reject exclusivity, racism, sexism, and
discrimination of any kind, and embrace everyone as
equal. We stand on the margins with the excluded, the
marginalized, the outsiders and outcasts. From there,
we envision a new reconciled humanity.

Fifth, as Gandhi pointed out, there is a straight line
from the crib to the cross. Christ practiced steadfast
nonviolent resistance to imperial injustice and was
brutally executed. That bloody outcome is crucial to
the story, and calls us to work for the abolition of
the death penalty so that Christ will never be
crucified again and the killing stops once and for all.

Sixth, since the birth of Christ means that every human
life is beloved by God, that all human beings are God's
children, we have to treat every human being on the
planet as our very own sister and brother which means
we must oppose war and work for the abolition of war
itself. In particular, we denounce Bush's war on Iraq,
demand that the troops return home, and call for
reparations and nonviolent solutions to the horrors we
have brought upon the people of the Middle East.

Seventh, if the angels celebrate the coming of "peace
on earth," that means they are environmentalists. We
too have to protect the earth, oppose its destruction,
defend God's creatures and the universe, and help make
the earth a place of peace for every life form.

Eighth, Christmas means working for the abolition of
nuclear weapons. These weapons are idolatrous and
blasphemous. Their very existence insults the God of
peace and mocks the nonviolent Jesus. We can't
celebrate Christmas and at the same time work at Los
Alamos, Livermore Labs, the Nevada Test Site, or the
Pentagon, or be silent while this work goes on We must
reject this love or death and destruction, and pursue
life, the God of life, and a new world without nuclear
weapons.

Ninth, Christmas calls us individually to prepare for
the gift of peace on earth. It invites us to welcome
peace in our hearts and our personal lives, and learn
to be at peace with ourselves, with God, with our
families, friends, neighbors, and local communities,
and with the whole world.

Finally, Christmas invites us to be human in an inhuman
time. The scandal of the story is that God wants to
become human and show us how to be human. We, on the
other hand, want to play God, to be powerful, in
charge, in control, to dominate the world. Perhaps the
best way to celebrate Christmas and welcome the
beautiful gift of peace on earth is simply to be human,
despite the callous inhumanity around us, and to trust
that our modest, vulnerable humanity--our nonviolence,
compassion and love--like the humanity of the child in
the crib, will one day bear good fruit and sow the
seeds of peace on earth.


-- 
Question everything -- Karl Marx


--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|                    Goa - 2005 Santosh Trophy Champions                 |
|                                                                        |
|      Support Soccer Activities at the grassroots in our villages       |
|  Vacationing in Goa this year-end - Carry and distribute Soccer Balls  |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Reply via email to