I know of no issue more tragic than our unwillingness to live at peace with one another. . . . We fight over boundaries and tribal rights, religious differences and ancestral feuds, ideological imperialism and hurt feelings. Sometimes, we don't even know why we fight, other than, as the Scriptures say, that "there is no peace in us."

If we learn anything from the peace that is in us it is that it represents the highest good to which not only persons but whole people can be called, and we cannot be content with our own serenity and at the same time indifferent to the swirls of anger that threaten to rend the fabric of society all around us. To do so would be to make of ourselves hypocrites, content to save ourselves and lose the world. We cannot believe in the mandate of a God who is eternally and universally loving and also believe it is a love that could be confined to a universe as narrow as our own horizons.

So it is that to be makers of peace we beat swords into ploughshares and spears into pruning hooks, missiles into mass transit systems and biological weapons into AIDS research. It is conversion of heart that leads the way for a conversion of communal and national priorities, from those that denigrate life to those that sanctify it.

Erik Kolbell, What Jesus Meant