TUMON, Guam — Across Guam, where nearly everyone is Roman Catholic, priests prayed for peace as residents of the U.S. Pacific island territory faced a missile threat from North Korea.

Archbishop Michael Byrnes instructed priests in Guam’s 26 churches to offer prayers for peace between the two nations and courage for military forces on the island. He asked for prayers for a “just resolution of differences, and prudence in both speech and action.”

Guam’s Catholic faithful attended Sunday Mass after several days of dramatic rhetoric between the two nuclear-armed nations. President Donald Trump threatened swift and forceful retaliation against North Korea, declaring the U.S. military “locked and loaded.”

There hasn’t been any widespread anxiety among Guam residents, even after Pyongyang vowed to complete a plan to attack waters near the island by mid-August.

Monte Mesa, who is vice-chairman of the Guam Visitors Bureau, said he found comfort in the Mass at Blessed Diego de San Vitores Catholic Church in Tumon.

“That God is in control of what is happening and if we have faith and believe in God all this rhetoric and war possibility here on Guam will be taken care of by God,” he said after the crowded Mass.

The church is a major influence on the devout island where 85 percent of the population is Catholic. The church is grappling with numerous lawsuits alleging sex abuse in a growing scandal that has rocked the tiny island where Catholicism is deeply woven into the Spanish-influenced culture of about 160,000 people.

The Archdiocese of Agana planned a noon Rosary prayer rally. Rallies are being held across the world in commemoration of Our Lady of Fatima’s appearance to three shepherd children, 100 years ago in Fatima, Portugal. “Praying for peace in our world and conversion of sinners is very much a part of the messages Our Lady imparted to the children in her appearances at Fatima,” the archdiocese said in a statement.

Father Francis X. Hezel, assistant pastor at Santa Barbara Catholic Church in Dededo, said he hasn’t heard of parishioners seeking comfort from the church amid the North Korea threat.

“It’s business as usual with this dark cloud hovering over us for sure,” he said. “I don’t think they’ll be trembling with fear.”

Hezel noted that Guam is familiar with the threats.

“The people of Guam are used to standing in a perilous position,” he said. “That’s the peril and the promise of the place.”