Gerald W. Schlabach

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Category: Resources

Washing All Our Relatives’ Feet:
A Homily for Creation Care

Posted on October 3, 2023October 4, 2023 by Gerald Schlabach

30 September 2023Final Sunday in the Season of Creation Lectionary texts: Our lectionary readings today did not include the well-known account of Jesus washing his disciples’ feet in John 13. Rather, they illuminate that event. So let us recall: During his final meal with his disciples Jesus surprises them by assuming the role of the…

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What is “just peace”?

Posted on March 2, 2018November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

What is “just peace?” In recent decades, representatives of various church traditions have called on their churches to move away from, replace, or transcend the “just-war” framework for discerning responses to war and violence in some way, in favor of a “just peace” framework. Recently and prominently, such a call came from Catholics gathered in…

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Just war? Enough already

Posted on June 2, 2017November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

Commonweal16 June 2017, pp. 9-14 A question for sports fans: What would you make of a coach who drills his team exclusively on last-minute desperation plays, while neglecting the basics? What would you make of players whose whole mindset was geared toward spectacular buzzer-beaters, but couldn’t play sound defense? In much the same manner, a…

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Pacifism in action [an interview with Gerald Schlabach]

Posted on February 15, 2017November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

U.S. CatholicFebruary 2017 Gerald Schlabach first started thinking about peace and violence in the mid-1980s. He and his wife worked for the Mennonite Central Committee in Nicaragua during a time of ongoing civil revolution. A member of the Mennonite church at the time, he was tasked with figuring out how the historically pacifist church should…

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Pope Francis’s peacebuilding pedagogy:
A commentary on his 2017 World Day of Peace message

Posted on January 2, 2017April 16, 2024 by Gerald Schlabach

It is not too soon to anticipate the challenge of “reception.” All signs suggest that Pope Francis’s 2017 World Day of Peace (WDP) message represents only an initial response to the appeal for clearer teaching on gospel nonviolence issued at the historic conference co-sponsored by Pax Christi International and the Pontifical Council on Justice and…

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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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Christian peace theology:
internal critique and interfaith dialogue

Posted on March 3, 2014May 31, 2017 by Gerald Schlabach

On March 1 I spoke at two break-out sessions on the topic of “Christian Peace Theology: Internal Critique and Interfaith Dialogue” at the Nobel Peace Prize Forum, Faith and Peace Day, in Minneapolis.  Here’s what I said I would do: This session will survey theological debates over war and violence within the Christian tradition in…

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“Confessional” nonviolence and the unity of the Church:
Can Christians square the circle?

Posted on March 1, 2014May 31, 2017 by Gerald Schlabach

Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 34, no. 1 (2014): 125-44. Abstract: Both within and among churches that have traditionally held to just war teaching, various formulas in the last 50 years have allowed for the recognition that Christian pacifism is a respectable tradition alongside just war. It is not obvious, however, how historic peace churches…

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Must Christian pacifists reject police force?

Posted on May 31, 2012May 31, 2017 by Gerald Schlabach

Abstract: Chapter 5 in A Faith not Worth Fighting for: Addressing Commonly Asked Questions About Christian Nonviolence, eds Tripp York and Justin Bronson Barringer, The Peaceable Kingdom Series, no. 1 (Eugene OR: Cascade Books, 2012). Click here to download or read on Academia.Com.

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Excerpts from Augustine On Christian doctrine

Posted on January 1, 2010June 19, 2014 by Gerald Schlabach

Translation is from series 1, vol. 2 of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers published 1886-1890 and in the public domain. Click here to read.

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Excerpts from Augustine’s City of God

Posted on January 1, 2010June 19, 2014 by Gerald Schlabach

These excerpts seek to give students and other new readers an overview of long argument that threads through of Augustine’s massive City of God.  Translation is from series 1, vol. 2 of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers published 1886-1890 and in the public domain. Click here to read. 

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Just policing:
how war could cease to be a church-dividing issue

Posted on May 31, 2004May 31, 2017 by Gerald Schlabach

Abstract: Might Christians who have long been divided along just-war and pacifist lines agree some day that just policing—and only just policing—is legitimate? In an essay first written as a resource for the first international dialogue between Mennonites and Roman Catholics, the author offers a thought experiment on what would be necessary for war eventually to cease to be…

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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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  • Academia.Com
  • Catholic Peacebuilding Network
  • Catholic Theological Society of America
  • Society of Christian Ethics
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