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The god of peace is never glorified by human violence.

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The god of peace is never glorified by human violence.

Thomas Merton

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The God of Peace

Topic: Overcoming Adversity

“There is only one kind of violence that captures the Kingdom of Heaven. It is the seeming violence of grace, which is really order and peace. It establishes peace in the soul’s depth even in the midst of passion. It is called “violent” by reason of the energy with which it resists passion and sets order in the house of the soul. This violence is the voice and the power of God Himself, speaking in our soul. It is the authority of the God of peace, speaking within us, in the sanctuary, in His holy place. The god of peace is never glorified by human violence.“

Thomas Merton

Thomas Merton (born January 31, 1915, in Prades, France – died December 10, 1968, in Bangkok, Thailand) was a Trappist monk, writer, poet, and spiritual thinker whose life bridged the worlds of contemplation and social engagement. The son of artists—an American mother and a New Zealand father—Merton spent his early years in France, England, and the United States. After losing both parents at a young age, he pursued studies at Cambridge and later at Columbia University, where he earned a master’s degree in English literature. Though immersed in the intellectual and cultural life of New York, Merton experienced a profound spiritual awakening that led to his conversion to Catholicism in 1938.

In 1941, seeking solitude and union with God, Merton entered the Abbey of Gethsemani in Kentucky. Within the cloister, he discovered not an escape from the world but a deeper way of engaging it. His autobiography, The Seven Storey Mountain (1948), recounting his restless youth and the path to his monastic vocation, became an unexpected bestseller, resonating with postwar readers searching for direction and meaning. Over the following decades, Merton wrote prolifically—journals, essays, poetry, and spiritual reflections—exploring prayer, contemplation, identity, and the presence of God in the midst of ordinary life. Works such as New Seeds of Contemplation and No Man Is an Island express his conviction that true contemplation is rooted in love, attention, and the recognition of divine presence in all creation.

In his later years, Merton emerged as a powerful voice for interfaith dialogue, peace, and social justice. He corresponded with spiritual figures such as the Dalai Lama, Thich Nhat Hanh, and D.T. Suzuki, discovering resonances between Christian mysticism and Eastern contemplative traditions. His writings on nonviolence, racial justice, and nuclear disarmament reflected a spirituality that united inner transformation with moral responsibility. Merton’s untimely death during an interreligious conference in Thailand marked the end of a life devoted to bridging contemplation and compassion. His legacy endures as an invitation to seek God in silence, to live truthfully, and to recognize the deep unity that underlies the world’s divisions.

Merton's works often showcased his deep commitment to fostering understanding among different faiths. As a student of comparative religion, he sought to highlight the universal values and shared wisdom that transcended the boundaries of individual faith traditions. His exploration of Eastern religions and their intersections with Christian mysticism was particularly groundbreaking for its time. Merton's dialogues with leading Asian spiritual figures, such as the Dalai Lama, D.T. Suzuki, a prominent scholar of Zen Buddhism, and Thich Nhat Hanh, a renowned Vietnamese monk, further cemented his reputation as a pioneering figure in interfaith dialogue.

Unfortunately, Merton's life was tragically cut short when he died on 10 December 1968. Despite his untimely death, his influence continues to reverberate in contemporary religious and spiritual discourse. Through his writings and activism, Merton fostered a greater awareness of social justice issues within the church and inspired a more inclusive, holistic approach to spirituality. His legacy as a monastic scholar, a prolific writer, and a tireless advocate for interfaith understanding endures, solidifying his place as one of the most influential Catholic figures of the 20th century.

(1915-1968) Christianity

Merton, Thomas. A Thomas Merton Reader. Edited by Thomas P. McDonnell, Image Books, 1974.

Thomas Merton


Thomas Merton’s Call for Peace

Born in 1915, [Thomas] Merton entered the Trappist monastery of the Abbey of Gethsemani in Kentucky in 1941, and in 1948, published his best-selling autobiography, “The Seven Story Mountain.” He went on to write another hundred influential books of poetry, theology, spirituality and political essays before his sudden death on December 10, 1968.
It’s with gratitude and consolation that I think of this peacemaking monk and writer. For while Daniel and Philip Berrigan taught me resistance to the culture of war, Dorothy Day models hospitality to the poor, and Dr. King exemplifies the methodology of active nonviolence, Thomas Merton embodies for me the creative, spiritual life of peace. By spending hours in prayer, wandering through the woods, reading about every topic under the sun, corresponding with thousands of people around the world, and sharing his spiritual discoveries and prophetic pronouncements with everyone, Merton lived a full life of peace and shared that peace with the world. He calls us all to work for an end to violence and war and become who we were created to be—peacemakers.

–John Dear [Thomas Merton’s Call for Peace].

Merton’s Essay in the Catholic Worker

Merton’s essay in “The Catholic Worker” published in the early 1960s, for example, is a kind of talisman. If he’s right, then we had all better get to work opposing war, practicing nonviolence, and creating a new culture of peace. Here’s how it begins:

“The duty of the Christian in this time of crisis is to strive with all our power and intelligence, with our faith and hope in Christ, and love for God and humanity, to do the one task which God has imposed upon us in the world today. That task is to work for the total abolition of war. There can be no question that unless war is abolished, the world will remain constantly in a state of madness and desperation in which, because of the immense destructive power of modern weapons, the danger of catastrophe will be imminent and probable at every moment everywhere. The church must lead the way on the road to the nonviolent settlement of difficulties and toward the gradual abolition of war as the way of settling international or civil disputes. Christians must become active in every possible way, mobilizing all their resources for the fight against war. Peace is to be preached and nonviolence is to be explained and practiced. We may never succeed in this campaign but whether we succeed or not, the duty is evident.”

–Thomas Merton [essay in “The Catholic Worker” (published in the early 1960s)].

John Dear, “Thomas Merton, Peacemaker”

John Dear’s new book, “Thomas Merton, Peacemaker” (Orbis), is available from www.amazon.com. See also: www.johndear.org www.campaignnonviolence.org and www.merton.org

Resources

  • A Thomas Merton Reader by Thomas Merton, Thomas P. Mcdonnell (Editor) - goodreads website
  • Thomas Merton’s Call for Peace, by John Dear
  • John Dear’s new book, “Thomas Merton, Peacemaker” (Orbis), goodreads website

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