DAILY DEVOTIONS, LIFELONG FAITH

Do Catholics Favor War? The Urgent Task of Praying for Peace

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The short answer is, โ€œNo.โ€

Catholics favor peace. As the Book of Judges teaches, the Lord is peace (cf. 6:24). But to understand why Catholics favor peace, we must first understand what peace is.

Peace is not merely the absence of war. It is fullness of life (cf. Mal. 2:5). That is precisely the meaning of shalom, which implies wholeness and integral well-being in oneโ€™s physical, social, and spiritual dimensions. In this sense, peace is not a human achievement, but a gift from God. It is ultimately attained not so much by rejecting violence, but by accepting Him. The preeminent expression of this is a blessing from the Book of Numbers: โ€œMay the Lord shine his face upon you and give you peaceโ€ (Num. 6:26).

For Christians, the peace that God desires for the world was given definitively in Jesus, the โ€œPrince of Peaceโ€ (cf. Is. 9:5). In Christ, we come to see peace not merely as a static state of affairs, but in the dynamism of a person. Jesus Himself โ€œis our peaceโ€ (Eph. 2:14).

Much more could be said about how Jesus fulfills that promise of peace by reconciling God and man through His death and resurrection, but for now, suffice it to say that peaceโ€”in its fullest senseโ€”is not just a Christian ideal, but the very heart of the Gospel message.


And yet, peace โ€œfails.โ€ I donโ€™t need to argue for that. The world is ravaged by war, as it always has been.

But peace doesnโ€™t fail because of God. It fails because of us. Despite having a highly developed โ€œjust-warโ€ theory, the Catholic Church has never advocatedโ€”and will never advocateโ€”war as a preferred method of resolving international conflict. โ€œWar can never be an adequate means for completely resolving problems between nations,โ€ said Pope St. John Paul II with vigor in 1991. โ€œIt never has been and never will!โ€

At the very least, we can say that Catholics urge world leaders to seek every possible means of resolving conflicts before resorting to arms. Chief among these, of course, are dialogue and negotiation.

If these fail, a nation may legitimately use force, provided that the โ€œdamage inflicted by the aggressorโ€ is โ€œlasting, grave, and certain.โ€ There must also be โ€œserious prospects of success,โ€ and โ€œthe use of arms must not produce evils and disorders graver than the evil to be eliminatedโ€ (CCC 2309).


So much for the just-war doctrine. We still donโ€™t have an answer to the question of whether Catholics can favor any particular use of force should they believe all the conditions of a just war are met.

If itโ€™s any consolation, the first thing to say is that, in most cases, it doesnโ€™t matter, because itโ€™s not directly up to you. The task of evaluating the circumstances surrounding a threat and determining whether the use of force is legitimate falls to โ€œthose who have responsibility for the common good.โ€ To a certain extent, in a democratic republic, such responsibility pertains to all citizens, but to each in his or her respective way. In the United States, such responsibility belongs primarily to Congress, who has the sole authority to formally declare war, and, in his constitutional role as Commander-in-Chief, the president.

Thatโ€™s not to say that Catholics shouldnโ€™t make their voice heard at the polls, in public demonstrations, and in letters to congressional representatives. That, in fact, is their duty as citizens. Moreover, Catholics donโ€™t have to wait for a directive from the Vatican or the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. The pope and the bishops will never publicly declare that some particular war is just (though they will come close to saying that certain wars are unjust).

The problem is that we live in a world where everyone has to have an opinion, and everyone is constantly listening to everybody elseโ€™s opinion on the internet. Catholics are judged โ€œgoodโ€ or โ€œbadโ€ depending on whether they support this or that war. They feel pressure to take a strong position on a specific intervention, and to do it as Catholics rather than as citizens.  

Itโ€™s highly unlikely you will ever have all the necessary information to judge whether an armed intervention is legitimate according to the just-war criteria outlined above. On the other hand, there are cases where it is easy to determine whether a particular use of force is unjust, such as when civilians are targeted, terrorism is embraced, chemical weapons are deployed, or attempts are made to eliminate entire national, ethnic, religious, or linguistic groups.


As difficult as it is to determine whether any particular war is just or not, there is one thing Catholics must always do, and which they probably do too little of. And that is to pray.

Unless you are a leader entrusted with the responsibility of protecting the common good, you have no needโ€”as a Catholicโ€”to take a solid position on the justness of any particular war. You do have a responsibility to pray for peace, and to pray for it fervently. โ€œIt is more necessary than ever,โ€ wrote Pope Leo XIV in his first Message for the World Day of Peace, โ€œto cultivate prayer, spirituality, and ecumenical and interreligious dialogue as paths of peace and as languages of encounter within traditions and cultures.โ€ For most of us, that is a much more profitable use of time then listening endlessly to talking heads praising or denouncing any particular military action.

Many will think Iโ€™m being soft. Many will accuse me of copping out. Many will think Iโ€™m a pacifist.

But Iโ€™m simply inviting Catholics to redirect their attention and energy to deepening the faith that empowers us to navigate a dizzyingly complicated world and to serve our brothers and sisters in a way most concordant with the Faith we profess each Sunday.

For many years, I was fully engaged in promoting peace through research, writing, and diplomacy, especially during my service in the Vaticanโ€™s state department. The only thing that kept me from being overwhelmed by the horrendous violations of human rights and appalling persecutions of millions of innocent men, women, and children in many parts of the globe was the practice of prayer. The assurance it gave me that God is still at work in the world did not in any way detach me from the urgent task of promoting justice and advocating peace, especially by striving to protect the innocent and giving voice to the vulnerable.

Egregious violations of human rights must not be tolerated. The means of assuring those revered rights are various, and they do not exclude armed intervention. So, without a prayer life, anger, despair, and cynicism would have gotten the best of me long ago.

One thing Iโ€™ve learned is that anyone who believes that God sent His Son into the world to be our peace canโ€”indeed mustโ€”always pray.

Where to start? Try this prayer by Pope Francis. Start anywhere. Start today.


Photo by Richard R. Schรผnemann on Unsplash

cropped-Daniel-Gallagher_Headshot-2

Daniel B. Gallagher, a Lecturer in Literature and Philosophy at Ralston College, holds degrees in philosophy and theology from the Catholic University of America and the Pontifical Gregorian University. Prior to teaching at Notre Dame and Cornell, Professor Gallagher had worked on the secretarial staffs of Popes Benedict XVI and Francis as an English and Latin specialist.

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