
We begin
as a perfect union of matter and spirit. We receive the blessings of
the Eternal from sky and earth. In our outstretched hands we can feel
the energy of the universe. We receive the blessings of the Eternal
from water, which nourishes and sanctifies life. We receive the blessings
of the Eternal from the primal fire, the pulsating heart of creation.
We experience the wonder of life multidimensional and transcendent.
We extend our hands upwards and we are showered with abundance. We ask
and we receive. A universe of plenty flows to us, through us. It is
in us. We become filled with endless possibilities.
We need to remember where we came from; to know that we are one. To
understand that we are of an undivided whole: race, color, nationality,
creed, gender are beams of light, refracted through one great prism.
We begin as perfect and journey through life to become more perfect
in the singularity of "I" and in the multiplicity of "we";
a more perfect union of matter and spirit. - - This is human striving.
This is where, in Shelley's words, " . . . hope creates from its
own wreck the thing it contemplates." This is what Browning spoke
of: Our 'reach exceeding [our] grasp'. This is a search for heaven within,
a quest for our eternal home.
In our soul's Magnificat, we become conscious of the cosmos within us.
We hear the music of peace, we hear the music of cooperation, we hear
music of love. We hear harmony, a celestial symphony. In our soul's
forgetting, we become unconscious of our cosmic birthright, plighted
with disharmony, disunity, torn asunder from the stars in a disaster
well-described by Matthew Arnold in Dover Beach: " . . . the world,
which seems to lie before us like a land of dreams, so various, so beautiful,
so new, hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light, nor certitude
nor peace, nor help for pain. And we are here, as on a darkling plain,
swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight, where ignorant armies
clash by night."

" . . . Today Dover Beach is upon the shores of the Potomac River
in Washington, D.C. Our leaders think the unthinkable and speak of the
unspeakable inevitability of nuclear war; of a nuclear attack on New
York City, of terrorist attacks throughout our nation; of war against
Iraq using nuclear weapons; of biological and chemical weapon attacks
on civilian populations; of catastrophic global climate change; of war
in outer space. "
When death (not life) becomes inevitable, we are presented with an opportunity
for great clarity, for a great awakening, to rescue the human spirit
from the arms of Morpheus through love, through compassion and through
integrating spiritual vision and active citizenship to restore peace
to our world. The moment that one world is about to end, a new world
is about to begin. We need to remember where we came from. Because the
path home is also the way to the future.
In the city I represent in the United States Congress, there is a memorial
to Peace, named by its sculptor, Marshall A. Fredericks the "Fountain
of Eternal Life". A figure rises from the flames, his gaze fixed
to the stars, his hands positioned sextant-like, as if measuring the
distance. Though flames of war from the millions of hearts and the dozens
of places wherein it rages, may lick at our consciousness, our gaze
must be fixed upward to invoke universal principles of unity, of co-operation,
of compassion, to infuse our world with peace, to ask for the active
presence of peace, to expand our capacity to receive it and to express
it in our everyday life. We must do this fearlessly and courageously
and not breathe in the poison gas of terror. As we receive, so shall
we give.
As citizen-diplomats of the world, we send peace as conscious expression
where ever, whenever and to whomever it is needed: to the Middle East,
to the Israelis and the Palestinians, to the Pakistanis and the Indians,
to Americans and Al Queda, and to the people of Iraq, and to all those
locked in deadly combat. And we fly to be with the bereft, with those
on the brink, to listen compassionately, setting aside judgment and
malice to become peacemakers, to intervene, to mediate, to bring ourselves
back from the abyss, to bind up the world's wounds.
As we aspire
to universal brotherhood and sisterhood, we harken to the cry from the
heart of the world and respond affirmatively to address through thought,
word and deed conditions which give rise to conflict: Economic exploitation,
empire building, political oppression, religious intolerance, poverty,
disease, famine, homelessness, struggles over control of water, land,
minerals, and oil.
We realize that what affects anyone, anywhere affects everyone, everywhere.
As we help others to heal, we heal ourselves.
Our vision of interconnectedness resonates with new networks of world
citizens in nongovernmental organizations linking from numberless centers
of energy, expressing the emergence of a new organic whole, seeking
unity within and across national lines. New transnational web-based
email and telecommunications systems transcend governments and carry
within them the power of qualitative transformation of social and political
structures and a new sense of creative intelligence.
If governments
and their leaders, bound by hierarchy and patriarchy, wedded to military
might for legitimacy, fail to grasp the implications of an emerging world
consciousness for cooperation, for peace and for sustainability, they
may become irrelevant.
As citizen-activists the world over merge, they can become an irresistible
force to create peace and protect the planet. From here will come a new
movement to abolish nuclear weapons and all weapons of mass destruction.
>From here will come the demand for sustainable communities, for new
systems of energy, transportation and commerce. From here comes the future
rushing in on us.
How does one acquire the capacity for active citizenship? The opportunities
exist every day. In Cleveland, citizens have developed the ability to
intercede when schools are scheduled to be closed, and have kept the schools
open; to rally to keep hospitals open; to save industries which provide
jobs; to protect neighborhood libraries from curtailment of service, to
improve community policing; to meet racial, ethnic and religious intolerance
openly and directly.
Active citizenship begins with an envisioning of the desired outcome and
a conscious application of spiritual principles. I know. I have worked
with the people in my own community. I have seen the dynamic of faith
in self, faith in one's ability to change things, faith in one's ability
to prevail against the odds through an appeal to the spirit of the world
for help, through an appeal to the spirit of community for participation,
through an appeal to the spirit of cooperation, which multiplies energy.
I have seen citizens challenge conditions without condemning anyone, while
invoking principles of non-opposition and inclusion of those who disagree.
I have seen groups of people overcome incredible odds as they become aware
they are participating in a cause beyond self and sense the movement of
the inexorable which comes from unity. When you feel this principle at
work, when you see spiritual principles form the basis of active citizenship,
you are reminded once again of the merging of stardust and spirit. There
is creativity. There is magic. There is alchemy.
Citizens across the United States are now uniting in a great cause to
establish a Department of Peace, seeking nothing less than the transformation
of our society, to make non-violence an organizing principle, to make
war archaic through creating a paradigm shift in our culture for human
development, for economic and political justice and for violence control.
Its work in violence control will be to support disarmament, treaties,
peaceful coexistence and peaceful consensus building. Its focus on economic
and political justice will examine and enhance resource distribution,
human and economic rights and strengthen democratic values.
Domestically, the Department of Peace would address violence in the home,
spousal abuse, child abuse, gangs, police-community relations conflicts
and work with individuals and groups to achieve changes in attitudes that
examine the mythologies of cherished world views, such as 'violence is
inevitable' or 'war is inevitable'. Thus it will help with the discovery
of new selves and new paths toward peaceful consensus.
The Department of Peace will also address human development and the unique
concerns of women and children. It will envision and seek to implement
plans for peace education, not simply as a course of study, but as a template
for all pursuits of knowledge within formal educational settings.
Violence is not inevitable. War is not inevitable. Nonviolence and peace
are inevitable. We can make of this world a gift of peace which will confirm
the presence of universal spirit in our lives. We can send into the future
the gift which will protect our children from fear, from harm, from destruction.
Carved inside the pediment which sits atop the marble columns is a sentinel
at the entrance to the United States House of Representatives. Standing
resolutely inside this "Apotheosis of Democracy" is a woman,
a shield by her left side, with her outstretched right arm protecting
a child happily sitting at her feet. The child holds the lamp of knowledge
under the protection of this patroness.
This wondrous sculpture by Paul Wayland Bartlett, is entitled "Peace
Protecting Genius". Not with nuclear arms, but with a loving maternal
arm is the knowing child Genius shielded from harm. This is the promise
of hope over fear. This is the promise of love which overcomes all. This
is the promise of faith which overcomes doubt. This is the promise of
light which overcomes darkness. This is the promise of peace which overcomes
war.
Thank You.
Department of Peace. Thespiritoffreedom.com
- dedicated to becoming an electronic forum for peace, for sustainability,
for renewal and for revitalization. Now is the time to think, speak, write,
organize and take action to create peace as a social imperative, as an
economic imperative, and as a political imperative. Now is the time to
think, speak, write, organize, march, rally, hold vigils and take other
nonviolent action to create peace in our cities, in our nation and in
the world. And as the hymn says, "Let there be peace on earth and
let it begin with me." <<
back |