About
Theology & Peace
Theology & Peace began with a simple conviction: Christian faith should make us less violent, not just more articulate about violence.
In 2007, a group of theologians, pastors, and activists gathered around the work of scholar René Girard, whose insights into rivalry, scapegoating, and the mimetic nature of human desire offered a revelatory rereading of the Christian gospel. Girard’s work exposed the uncomfortable truth that violence is not an exception in human relationships, but an insidiously persistent pattern.
We believe a more loving pattern is possible — a pattern of belonging, courage, and deepening peace that makes hope contagious.
But that kind of
peace takes practice.
So Theology & Peace launched conferences and conversations dedicated to discovering how nonviolence can be practiced, not just preached, in real human contexts like schools, courtrooms, relationships, prisons and politics. Over the years, our gatherings increasingly centered on disarming violence with life-changing love wherever scapegoating is causing harm: racial violence, mass incarceration, weaponized shame, unjust economics, LGBTQ+ exclusion, and the encroaching nationalism corrupting the Church itself.
Gradually, the rigors of this work revealed a further question: how can Girard’s mimetic theory help us disarm violence by actively creating the peace we want to see instead? Again and again, we learned the same lesson: violence isn’t undone by resistance alone. It’s undone when people experience that something altogether better is possible.
Today, Theology & Peace helps aspiring peacemakers connect mimetic theory with everyday action so they can transform conflict into community and make hope contagious in a wounded world.
Gathering a Beloved Community of clergy, laypeople, activists, and scholars, we’re creating a multifaith culture that grows us toward a more loving world.
Peace isn’t an otherworldly ideal to affirm. It’s a concrete reality we can practice daily. If you’ve ever longed for a spiritual community that offers more than toothless good intentions or rigid, oppressive “shoulds,” you’re in the right place.

