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Storytime Tapestry Newsletter
The newsletter devoted to spreading love and cultural
awareness throughout the world.
Special Treat – Johann Christoph Arnold
June
30, 2006
Johann Christoph Arnold is a pastor and
the author of ten books, including Seeking Peace, Why Forgive?. He can be
reached through his assistant Sam Hine at: shine@bruderhof.com
A New Weapon in the War on Terror
Johann Christoph Arnold
May 28, 2006
President Bush's speech to West Point graduates on May 27, 2006 worries me. His vision of taking the fight
against terrorism "to every shore and outpost in pursuit of enemies
everywhere" is frightening. This is not the America that I know and
love. We have always been a country that was ready to give generously to the
needs of other nations--a country that was respected all over the world. All
this is being destroyed now. Bush's new agenda reminds me of how, with a
similar vision of world domination, the Nazis swept across Europe in the 1930s.
Terrorism can never be overcome with violence. For every terrorist that we
kill, one hundred others will come to the forefront. The Cold War (a struggle
the president referred to in his address) was not won militarily; it was won
through God's intervention in history, with the peaceful fall of the Berlin Wall. Earlier, America fought
communism with only one result: we produced more and more communists. President
Eisenhower's "domino theory" came true as one country after another
fell under Soviet dominance. We will have similar results with Bush's plan.
Through using violence, we will do nothing else but produce more terrorists who
will wreak devastation on the next generation. We can never export true democracy.
It has to be given from within a nation.
There must be a better way to protect our nation and the lives of all people
who long for peace. In these last years, despite the endless religious talk
that goes in Washington, we have become a heathen nation that completely
disregards the dignity of human life and the integrity of other peoples on the
planet.
If we truly long for freedom and democracy, we have to spread a different
message--one of peace and nonviolence that respects all nations and all people
from Damascus to Tehran and from Kyoto to Darfur. If we want
peace, let's remember Jesus, the "Prince of Peace," who told us to
love our enemies and to pray for those who persecute us. This is the most
powerful weapon to combat terror.
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