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Swords Into Plowshares: A Brief Reflection

January 25, 2026

I began reading Daniel Berrigan’s commentary on Isaiah this past week. My hope is that I will find spiritual sustenance for the long hall in the fight for true freedom and democracy. Hopefully Fr Berrigan will also give me inspiration as I find ways to be a counter-cultural witness in the midst of the mess that is this country and government.

It is personal for me. This corrupt regime has attacked the state I was born in (California), the country that was my late Mom’s home and native land (Canada), and now the state (Minnesota) where my parents raised me! Minnesota was where my Mom became a US citizen by giving up her own lifelong Canadian citizenship, and where I went to seminary and served as a pastor for three years before going into full-time ministry with the Air Force. It was in Minneapolis, during my second year of seminary, where I first raised my right hand and swore to support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic as a Chaplain Candidate, Second Lieutenant.

The illegal, immoral, unethical, and frankly un-constitutional actions of ICE, CBP, and DHS along with the other abominable actions by the so-called Department of “War” have been absolutely devastating. When you protest this administration in Mobile, Alabama as we have, you quickly realize that you are in a distinct minority. Either through the silence of complicity or the loud voice of support for this administration, it can really feel like you are all alone. With all of that in mind, I hope and pray that you, dear reader, will find inspiration for the living of these days and making a difference in ways large and small.

Over against those who would separate the pastoral from the prophetic, I offer here an exercise in pastoral prophecy. Isaiah and his school would have us read aright the signs of the times and, in the light thus gained, would urge us to render judgment on the times. The prophetic-pastoral concern permeates the book of Isaiah with moral clear-sightedness and courage under the threat of disaster…. (Isaiah: Spirit of Courage, Gift of Tears, p. 1)

From Isaiah’s time to ours and in every year in between, there has been war—a continuum of war with the swagger and braggadocio of the powers of death, declaring themselves the molders of human fate, the giver of all good. In their wake is a procession of of slaves and loot—and the dead…. (p. 2)

Isaiah lived in a time of whetted swords and rusted plowshares, of immense violence and social conflict and neglect of the poor. Then the oracle came to him—swords into plowshares! What does Isaiah have to say to us? (p. 4)

Isaiah and Daniel Berrigan have a lot to offer us if we will take the time to truly listen and learn. In the words of Thomas Merton who was a mentor to Fr Berrigan, Violence is not completely fatal until it ceases to disturb us. (Thoughts in Solitude, p. 114) May we always be disturbed by violence and may we never lose our voice!

7 Comments
  1. Shirley Hobson Duncanson's avatar

    Thanks for your words and reflection, Michael. One day there is a march of 50,000 people, in the streets of Minneapolis, in subzero temperature, singing songs of peace. The next day, there is the horrific death of a good man, at the hands of ICE. It’s encouraging to read Fr. Berrigan’s, “Violence is not completely fatal until it ceases to disturb us.” and your prayer, “May we always be disturbed by violence and may we never lose our voice.” May it be so.

  2. Donna's avatar
    Donna permalink

    For me, parallels to the same core struggles throughout time ease the burden, somewhat, because “we are still here”. Who can say why the same moral battles ebb and flow. “Why” only makes sense to me in the (quantum) context of ‘the stain’ left amidst the collective consciousness… it keeps spinning around in the cosmic blender! Haha…I won’t go there. No reason to move away from the inspiring verse of Isaiah and quotes by Berrigan. Thank you.

    Since you mentioned your connection to Minnesota, an interesting parallel of a personal sort… my husband is a Minnesota native. His great grandfather received a medal from the King for his service aiding the immigration of fellow Norwegians to Minnesota. This is also a bit ironic in light of current anti-immagrant affairs!

    Random tidbit… his grandfather and then his father (father was a WW2 tail-gunner and lived to tell about it) owned and operated an iconic men’s clothing store, downtown Minneapolis… for decades.

    P.s. if you have any interest, search YouTube for futurist, Arthur C. Clarke BBC interview at the 1964 World’s Fair. I find it faecinating… and hopeful.

    • Michael Moore's avatar

      I’ll look that up. Thanks! A tail-gunner? That was probably the loneliest and scariest seat on a bomber! I served two tours in the UK with the Air Force and did a lot of traveling to various old airfields and knew a fair number of WW2 vets who shared some stories with this Padre because they figured I would get it. What was the clothing store? My folks used to go shopping (and I’d tag along as a kid) in downtown Minneapolis and the suburbs.

      Love the story about your husband’s grandfather! Yes indeed, ironic given the situation today.

      • Donna's avatar
        Donna permalink

        Belleson’s

      • Michael Moore's avatar

        I looked it up. We would spend a lot of time at Southdale Mall and Galleria Mall in Edina. Not too far from Belleson’s. Small world!

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