The Long Journey Back to Humanity

Catholic Peacebuilding with Armed Actors

The Long Journey Back to Humanity: Catholic Peacebuilding with Armed Actors
"While the formal literature of peacebuilding and the political delineation of conflict-resolution roles describes the actions of church leadership as mediator, facilitator, guarantor, observer, advocate, or human rights activist, the emic, and perhaps more accurate, understanding of church leadership finds itself embracing the space that lies between the spiritual and ecclesiological roles of pastor and prophet, with the difficulties, weaknesses, and potential such a space affords."

This chapter begins an inquiry into the experiences of Catholic leadership with armed groups and actors. The purpose is two fold. First, an initial empirical exploration will provide an overview of the types of experiences, approaches, and challenges faced by church leaders in contexts of open violence where they face and must deal with armed actors. At best we must emphasize the ideas of beginning an inquiry and exploratory based on contact and discussion with leaders primarily in Colombia, the Philippines, and Uganda. Second, and far more difficult to address, a theology of peacebuilding will be proposed and explored that suggests an initial framing of how the ortho-praxis, the face-to-face interaction of church leadership with the phenomenon of armed actors, is informed by and informs their ortho-doxa, the theology and belief system supporting that action…

Lederach, John Paul. “The Long Journey Back to Humanity: Catholic Peacebuilding with Armed Actors.” In Peacebuilding: Catholic Theology, Ethics, and Praxis, edited by Robert J. Schreiter, R. Scott Appleby, and Gerard F. Powers, 23–55. Maryknoll, New York: Orbis Books, 2010.

Reprinted with the permission of Orbis Books.

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