Tuesday, July 17, 2018



WAR AND PEACE

INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily is, “War and Peace.”

I never read Tolstoy’s book - War and Peace - but I did see the movie. Both are very long.

What’s your take on  War and Peace - not the book, not the movie, but the reality?

HISTORY

How well did you do in history?  What were your text books like? What are today’s history books like in comparison? What are the meetings like that put together history courses for those in high school, college, West Point, the Naval Academy, the Air Force Academy, and Master’s Programs?

Most of us had U.S. history - so we know about the French and Indian wars, the Revolutionary War, War of 1812, the Civil War, the Mexican War and the Cuban wall, then World War I and II, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, and Afganistan wars.

I think the closest war to Annapolis was the Battle of the Severn - March 25, 1655. Annapolis was once the U.S. Capital 1783-84. If that stayed that way, would we have been in for damage in the Civil War? 

In doing some note taking last night, I spotted that the Treaty of Paris was signed on Duke of Gloucester and Main Street in 1783. I was trying to picture that scene. Where are the papers right now?

I have never taken an Annapolis city tour - so I wonder what they say about War and Peace - perhaps mentioning the Naval Academy in our midst.

A few years ago at St. John’s College we had four script plays to commemorate what was going on in Annapolis 150 years ago during the Civil War. Robert Warden, of our parish, got St. Mary’s into the story telling. I remember there was no direct fighting in town. Ooops! I think there were some bar fights.  Then there was the big Parole Camp out near Parole - for prisoners.

I’ve been to Gettysburg - which is close to Maryland - but I haven’t gotten to Antietam - near Sharpsburg, Maryland yet. I have to put that onto my bucket list.

TODAY’S READINGS

Today’s readings triggered for me to take this  tiny look at the issue of war and peace for last night and this morning. Both readings and the psalm - address the issue of cities attacked, under siege,  and captured or destroyed  in the Biblical Times.

The Bible deals with wars and rumors of war - all through its pages.

The history of the world has lots of pages that cover war.

With airplanes and big guns - mortars and missals - diminish the value of  walls and castles.

What’s your take on War?  What’s your take on peace?

ONGOING WAR

I’m sure there is plenty of study about war - being ongoing - that there is always some fighting somewhere in our world - with hopes for peace.

Right now there is ongoing fighting in Syria, Yemen, Iraq, Afghanistan, the Ukraine, Somalia, and lots of other places.

What is our ongoing take on all this?

Be grateful for those who serve and protect us?

Keep praying for peace.

Be peaceful in our own families, with neighbors, with the older and the younger generation. It should mean we be at peace with ourselves and do all we can to everyday peacemakers in everyday situations.

CONCLUSION

Just some wonderings about war and peace.

1 comment:

ed said...

That was a tricky reading to preach on so I liked what you did with it!

I also liked "maybe Jesus was having a bad day"!