| Song: (Begin with an appropriate song)
The motives of John Paul II in inviting the representatives of the religions of the world to pray together for peace, illuminate the significance of gathering together and encourage us to open our hearts to God.
L 1. Prayer for peace is not an element that comes after the commitment to peace. On the contrary, it is at the heart of the effort to create peace, peace with order, justice and liberty.
L 2.To pray for peace means to open the human heart to the outburst of Gods renewing power. With the life-giving strength of grace, God can open up paths to peace in places where only obstacles and impediments seem to exist. God can strengthen and broaden the solidarity of the human family, in spite of long histories of division and struggle.
L 3.To pray for peace means to pray for justice, for right relationships among nations. It also means to pray for freedom, especially for religious freedom, which is a fundamental human and civil right of every human being.
L 4.To pray for peace means to pray that we may receive Gods forgiveness and at the same time, grow in courage so that we are able to forgive others.
Leader: Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the children of God. Jesus was referring to those who truly work for peace, those who make peace happen. How did Jesus make peace?
In proclaiming the Beatitudes, Jesus included every dimension of our life. They are the only valid alternative in a globalized world that excludes the majority.
Proclamation of the Word of God: The Beatitudes (Mt. 5,1-12)
Silent Reflection
(If appropriate, the group can share a thought from their reflections)
Leader: We ask pardon for our complicity in the violence and injustice that disrupts our world.
(To each invocation, we respond: Forgive us, O Lord)
For hardness of heart
.
For wasting our gifts
For wanting too much
For wounding the earth
For ignoring the poor
For trusting in weapons
For refusing to listen
For desiring dominance
For wanting to win
For failing to risk
For failing to trust
For failing to act
For failing to love
For our cowardice
For our lack of commitment
For our pride
For our impatience
For our silence
.
(Suggestion: Using a bowl of water, each one can touch the water and make a sign of the cross on her/his heart as a sign of the conversion and the purification that we seek.)
Leader: Touch our hearts with sincere repentance and bring us back to You, Lord, so that violence does not deepen its roots in our lives nor the seeds of discord grow within us.
Silent pause
Leader: True peace is the fruit of justice. True peace is the fruit of respecting the dignity of all peoples and nations. True and lasting peace is born when justice and mercy meet.
Our response to the following invocations is: Change our hearts, O God
That we learn compassion
That we embrace non-violence
That our hearts are forgiving
That we are filled with mercy
That we act with justice
That we live solidarity
That we live with hope
That we trust and dare
That we be builders of peace
.
(If appropriate, each person lights a candle as a sign of the light that comes with conversion.)
Leader: O God of life and history, before You all storms are calmed. May we always find true joy in hearing Your Word. With mercy and compassion may we build your reign of peace. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.
Prayer (or song) of St. Francis:
Lord, make me an instrument of your peace:
Where there is hatred, let me sow love;
Where there is injury, pardon;
Where there is doubt, faith;
Where there is despair, hope;
Where there is darkness, light;
Where there is sadness, joy.
O divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
To be consoled as to console,
To be understood as to understand,
To be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive,
It is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
It is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Marian hymn
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