Catholic group urges bishops to condemn war

A Catholic group of priests, former priests and laypeople called on U.S. bishops Nov. 11 to condemn war.

“Jesus calls us to be peacemakers in the midst of a violent world,” the Franz Jagerstatter People for Breaking the Silence said in the letter.

The group – named for an Austrian peasant beheaded for refusing to serve in Hitler’s army and beatified by the church last year – urged the bishops to “to condemn war in a loud and clear voice as immoral and contradictory to the teachings and life example of Jesus Christ.”

The letter, sent as the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops met in Baltimore, said the bishops should:

* Teach Catholics of all ages that Jesus calls his followers to be non-violent.

* Initiate education programs in every diocese so young Catholic men and women will form a conscience “founded on Holy Scripture and not take up the sword in wanton killing and destruction.”

* Help fulfill the message of Isaiah – “and they will train for war no more” – by removing all ROTC programs from Catholic schools in America.

* Call on the Catholic Church to fast and pray for the intercession of the Holy Spirit to “renew the face of the earth, where love and justice prevail without war and violence.”

The letter noted that the bishops had stated last November: “Our nation must focus more on the ethics of exit than on the ethics of intervention” in Iraq.

“We welcome that statement as helpful,” the letter said, “but urge you to use the substantial power and blessings you hold to bring the full church into unity with you on the ‘ethics of exit.’”

The Franz Jagerstatter group, along with Pax Christi Metro D.C./Baltimore, sponsored a speech the evening of Nov. 11 by Joshua Casteel, who had served in an Army intelligence unit in Iraq in 2004 and was an interrogator at the Abu Ghraib prison.

After concluding that systematic torture was being used against mostly innocent people and that his own participation in the war compromised his Christian witness, Mr. Casteel applied for and received conscientious objector status and left the Army

Mr. Casteel, who met Pope Benedict XVI briefly at the Vatican on March 14, 2007, was to speak at 7 p.m. at Ss. Philip and James, Charles Village.

Catholic News Service contributed to this story.

Catholic Review

The Catholic Review is the official publication of the Archdiocese of Baltimore.