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  2. Christendom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christendom

    The terms Christendom or Christian world [2] [3] commonly refer to the global Christian community, Christian states, ... order, and peace. ...

  3. World peace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_peace

    The larger world peace process and its foundational elements are addressed in the document The Promise of World Peace, written by the Universal House of Justice. [31] Statue of Buddha in the Darjeeling Peace Pagoda, India. This pagoda was designed by Japanese Buddhist monk Nichidatsu Fujii to unite people of all beliefs in their search for ...

  4. Christian Peace Conference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Peace_Conference

    The Christian Peace Conference (Czech: Křesťanská mírová konference) was an international organization based in Prague and founded in 1958 by Josef Hromádka, a pastor who had spent the war years in the United States, moving back to Czechoslovakia when the war ended and Heinrich Vogel, an evangelical theologian. [1]

  5. Catholic peace traditions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_peace_traditions

    On the most official levels Christian peace necessitated its defense against the attacks of external enemies. Christian peace involved the monastic or ascetic peace of a pure heart and life devoted to prayer; the episcopal peace, or pax ecclesiae, of a properly functioning free and unified church; and the social or imperial peace of the world. [30]

  6. Peace churches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_churches

    Peace churches are Christian churches, groups or communities advocating Christian pacifism or Biblical nonresistance. The term historic peace churches refers specifically only to three church groups among pacifist churches: Church of the Brethren, including all daughter churches such as the Old German Baptist Brethren, Old Brethren and Dunkard ...

  7. Religion and peacebuilding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_and_peacebuilding

    The first is “peace through religion alone”. This proposes to attain world peace through devotion to a given religion. Opponents claim that advocates generally want to attain peace through their particular religion only and have little tolerance of other ideologies. The second model, a response to the first, is “peace without religion”.

  8. List of pacifist organisations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pacifist_organisations

    Catholic peace traditions; Christian pacifism; Christian Peace Conference; Counter-recruitment; Jewish Peace Fellowship; Modern-war pacifism; Mother's Day Proclamation; Nonviolence; Nonviolent resistance; Pacifism in Islam; Peace churches; Peace journalism; Soldiers are murderers; World March for Peace and Nonviolence

  9. Christian pacifism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_pacifism

    From the beginning of the First World War, Christian pacifist organizations emerged to support Christians in denominations other than the historic peace churches. The first was the interdenominational Fellowship of Reconciliation ("FoR"), founded in Britain in 1915 but soon joined by sister organizations in the U.S. and other countries.