Spiritual
Practices of peacemaking",
Michael Battle says, "are essential to, crucial for, the mystical process
of losing and finding identity in God who constantly invites us toward
relationship and community. Any spirituality of nonviolence in the
community of peacemaking faces formidable challenges. The obvious
obstacle of "just war"--just one corollary of the constant struggle
for survival in a world seemingly bent on self-destruction--continues to raise
its ugly head. And what of other loud pretenders of Christian
"spirituality" who preach the validity of "just war," the
at-any-cost survival of the "righteous"?
Genuine
Christian "spirituality,"
Battle rightly insists, "involves no contradiction between individual and
communal fulfillment, but involves instead our participation in the divine
bending toward potentiality rather than destruction. Violence, that is,
destruction of reality, is in fact the antithesis of Christian spirituality.
Christian
spirituality,
practiced in the midst of a solipsistic and violent world, engenders divine
reality that bids the human heart toward peace, genuine wholeness, and toward
the "real" world of divine intent.