Gerald W. Schlabach

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Author: Gerald Schlabach

What if we win?
Nonviolence and the challenge of governance

Posted on April 15, 2016November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

Advance paper for Pax Christi International / Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace conference, Rome, April 2016: “Nonviolence and Just Peace: Contributing to the Catholic Understanding of and Commitment to Nonviolence” Gerald W. Schlabach And what if you win? As I have observed or participated in various social movements over four decades – reformist and revolutionary,…

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Praying the Our Father –
a Lenten self-examination

Posted on February 16, 2016November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

Lenten reflection 16 February 2016 Isaiah 55:10-11; Matthew 6:7-15 A fine book on ethical teaching in the New Testament bears the title of The Great Reversal. While God’s saving work always fulfills the deepest longings that our Creator has written on our hearts, that work must often reverse our superficial, misguided, and short-sighted longings. With…

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Though this page too will crumble
(Valentine card no. 35)

Posted on February 14, 2016November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

Someday we will have made love for the last time. Will we know this at the time as one inept and final fling?Or will cooling embers simply have turned to wisp-whipped ash?Must I name a heart suddenly failing?Or illness imposing impolitelyloss upon loss? Perhaps not. Perhaps nothing of the kind.For love once truly made –…

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The glamour of evil:
look beyond surface to find authentic joy

Posted on February 8, 2016November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

America magazine 8 February 2016 In the Roman Catholic rite for the baptism of adults, as well as in the ritual for the renewal of baptismal promises, a striking question confronts us: “Do you reject the glamour of evil?” The question, in a parallel with the rejection of Satan, has ancient roots in early baptismal…

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Feast of the Holy Family
(Advent/Christmas relection)

Posted on December 27, 2015November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

Lectionary readings: Sirach 3:2-6, 12-14, Colossians 3:12-21, Luke 2:41-52 Set against the background of our preliminary readings from Sirach and Colossians, today’s gospel reading is almost playful. Pious interpretation may hesitate to suggest that the twelve-year-old Jesus, who had lingered in the temple to begin practicing the craft of rabbinical debate, was teasing his anxious…

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Sed contra (a poem)

Posted on November 1, 2015November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

I suppose I will always be suspect to you,heir as I am to martyred dissent,beholden to untidy reality no catechism can tame,gripped by loyalty to bishops and creedthrough a second simplicity not simple at all,a good enough Catholic at best,in a time when the “best” of so many is enemy of the good. Still, can…

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Remembering my friend, Ivan J. Kauffman (1938-2015)

Posted on July 19, 2015November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

“Nothing that is worth doing can be achieved in our lifetime; therefore we must be saved by hope.” – Reinhold Niebuhr Some men and women measure their hope by business plans, grant proposals, and bullet points.  Ivan J. Kauffman measured his hope by oceans. Ivan died on July 15, 2015, as he neared the age…

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Evangelizing as a people of peace:
Paul’s clue, John Paul’s globalism, Francis’s principles

Posted on March 13, 2015November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

To judge from some of its wildest critics and enthusiasts alike, Gaudium et spes and its friendly engagement with the modern world would almost seem to have made the Church as a body superfluous.  The Council fathers certainly called for partnership with all people of good will and gave fresh recognition to the vocations of the laity in secular spheres. But the English title for the document has always been “The Pastoral Constitution for the Church in the Modern World,” not merely “people of good will” in the modern world or even “Catholics” in the modern world.  Still, the challenge is to envision the Church acting as a body at work for the common good without evoking either a pre-conciliar confusion of “the Church” with the hierarchy alone, or a contemporary specter of faithful Catholics as triumphalistic culture warriors. In this paper I will argue that together Popes Paul, John Paul, and Francis have projected a more winsome though perhaps more difficult vision of the Church moving together as a global people of peace in the modern world. Buried in Pope Paul’s Evangelii nuntiandi is a critical clue to the social posture of churches as communities of witness. Central to John Paul’s vision of a civilization of love is a communitarian political theory that coordinates respect for local identities with networks of global solidarity. Francis’s Evangeli gaudium pulls these threads together with four key principles for peacemaking, which make clear:  Not only are evangelization and social engagement integral to one another, they find their unity in the tasks of building up a people whose very presence in the world is a peacemaking witness among the nations. After all, for Francis, peace-building is people-building, and vice versa.

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Lenten reflection

Posted on March 10, 2015November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

March 10: Tuesday of the Third Week of Lent At some point in almost every Christian ethics course I teach I find an occasion to clarify: “Christian ethics is not really a should, so much as a therefore.” The gospel reading for today explains why. It begins with what does seem like a huge and…

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Peacemaking is everybody’s business

Posted on February 17, 2015November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

For decades now, popes and episcopal conferences have been insisting that to work for peace is the vocation of all Christians. Too often, however, peacemaking seems the domain of special vocations or technical specialists. This is certainly not the church’s hope. As Pope John Paul II proclaimed in his World Day of Peace message at…

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“As”

Posted on January 30, 2015November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

A pebble in our shoes, that little word: “Forgive us our sins as …” “as we forgive those who forgive us.” As we forget? No, of course not. And yet I do remember. And remembering I hurt anew, wincing. And wincing I stumble, just a bit, just enough, to bump you, but it feels like…

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What is marriage now?
A Pauline case for same-sex marriage

Posted on October 23, 2014November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

Amid endless debates concerning same-sex relationships and same-sex marriage, one biblical passage is often curiously absent. In 1 Corinthians 7, Paul reflects on the merits of married and single life. If unmarried persons struggle with sexual self-control, he says, they should marry, “for it is better to marry than to be aflame with passion.” The…

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“The Little Nation”
by Jessica Powers

Posted on October 6, 2014November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

Having recently discovered the poetry of Jessica Powers, thanks to Give Us This Day, I find this one especially delightful and apropos in these days that tempt us even more than usual to trust in violence. I guess it also provides a salutary antidote to my own somewhat gloomier poetry!  The Little Nation Having no…

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My Bucket List

Posted on September 21, 2014November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

A Maturing Zen Christian Localist Manifesto Eat a nutritious breakfast. Figure out how to use a prayer book and start saying the liturgy of hours. Find a local parish with a priest who loves and listens to the people; attend weekly. Find a local public radio station and lock it in. Marry someone who prays…

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Why I wish Richard Rohr would finish his book

Posted on September 11, 2014November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

Massimo Faggioli, a leading scholar of the Second Vatican Council and my colleague here at the University of St. Thomas, has remarked that in the celebratory wake of the council, reformers made a strategic blunder. By disposition, they found ideas and theology more exciting than institutions and structure. Having achieved far more than they had…

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Thoughts in a season of dreary news

Posted on September 1, 2014November 10, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

So is this how it ends — civilization we call it? First, a few trillion insults uncountable mounting thoughtless words, and a billion well-meaning projects each with fruits unintended unforeseen misdirected sinned and singed by one human condition now globalized across a heating planet.

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Washing feet, getting real

Posted on July 28, 2014July 28, 2014 by Gerald Schlabach

Homily for liturgy of footwashing Bridgefolk 2014 Texts: Psalm 33, Philippians 2:1-11, John 1:1-27 Perhaps you have read the novels of the Southern writer Walker Percy. Percy had barely begun a medical career in the early 1940s when he contracted tuberculosis. During his long recuperation he began reading the Russian novelist Dostoevsky, the Danish philosopher…

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Yoder and the limits of Matthew 18 (follow-up to “Only those we need can betray us”)

Posted on July 18, 2014July 18, 2014 by Gerald Schlabach

After sharing reflections on my relationship to John Howard Yoder and his legacy in a previous blog entitled “Only Those We Need Can Betray Us,” I received the following comments (which I have edited somewhat) from a senior Mennonite scholar: _______________________________________________________________ Thanks for your pain-ridden comments on Yoder.  I can’t say I had tears, but…

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Only those we need can betray us: My relationship with John Howard Yoder and his legacy

Posted on July 10, 2014November 4, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

Recently Paul Martens and Jonathan Tran of Baylor University “interviewed” me by email for forthcoming articles they are preparing for The Christian Century and The Other Journal, along with co-authors David Cramer and Jenny Howell.  Their work seeks both to investigate and to reflect theologically on now-well-documented sexual abuse by John Howard Yoder, leading spokesman for Christian pacifism and…

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Idea map for A Pilgrim People: Becoming a Catholic Peace Church

Posted on May 5, 2014May 31, 2017 by Gerald Schlabach

This is the “idea map” that got me started on the book project that has occupied my sabbatical this year.  Inevitably the book has undergone some reshaping, and probably will until the end.  But conceptually, this still makes the connections.

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Recent posts

  • Washing All Our Relatives’ Feet:
    A Homily for Creation Care
  • Of Elves and Theologians
  • Where Have You Gone, Malcolm Gladwell?
    An Open Letter
  • A Pilgrim People:
    Becoming a Catholic Peace Church
  • Ars Profetica
  • We Are All Monks Now
  • The Mystery in Ordinary Churches

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  • Department of Theology, University of St. Thomas
  • St. Peter Claver Catholic Church

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