Posts in Know Justice Know Peace

Laboring with the Resurrected Jesus | Know Justice, Know Peace: A Jesuit Antiracism Retreat

Laboring with the Resurrected Jesus | Know Justice, Know Peace: A Jesuit Antiracism Retreat

God never stops laboring for us and for our world, laboring for justice, reconciliation, and the end of racism. We clearly see this in the awakening that has spread throughout the world after the “lynching” of George Floyd. At the end of the Fourth Week of the Spiritual Exercises, St. Ignatius invites us to respond in gratitude to God’s unceasing love for us. In the last talk of our Jesuit Antiracism Retreat, Michael Bachmeier explains how this gratitude manifests in our willingness to surrender ourselves and join the labors of God through the marginalized.

Bear Witness to Suffering | Know Justice, Know Peace: A Jesuit Antiracism Retreat

Bear Witness to Suffering | Know Justice, Know Peace: A Jesuit Antiracism Retreat

Feeling grief for the suffering of others is one of the first steps toward a commitment to serve them. It helps us to have a greater sense of urgency for justice, as well as a deeper understanding of what is at stake. When we accompany those who suffer from racism in their mourning, we walk with our neighbors and bear witness to our Christian vocation. River Simpson, SJ, introduces us to the third week of our “Know Justice, Know Peace: A Jesuit Antiracism Retreat,” and invites us to remain faithfully present to the agonizing Jesus, through our accompaniment of the victims of racism.

Eucharist, Hope and Antiracism | Know Justice, Know Peace: A Jesuit Antiracism Retreat

Eucharist, Hope and Antiracism | Know Justice, Know Peace: A Jesuit Antiracism Retreat

The Eucharist, which is the source and summit of our faith, completely defies the logic of racism. Like the disciples on the road to Emmaus, Jesus’s breaking of the bread impulses us toward our community with renewed hope and consolation. Peter Bell reflects on letting the Body of Christ renew our antiracist commitment to one another.

White Apathy and the Crucifixion | Know Justice, Know Peace: A Jesuit Antiracism Retreat

White Apathy and the Crucifixion | Know Justice, Know Peace: A Jesuit Antiracism Retreat

Grieving with others is not the only way we commit to solidarity. Becoming aware of one’s participation in the oppression of others, is another way of opening the eyes of the heart and deciding to be responsible. Brian Engelhart, SJ, describes the apathy White people often exercise when dealing with the realities of racism that affect Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC), and finishes the third week of our “Know Justice, Know Peace: A Jesuit Antiracism Retreat” with one contemporary example, as well as with an invitation to get rid of indifference.

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