Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters, gathered here and joined in spirit across the world.
We gather in the light of the Resurrection, a light that reveals both the profound beauty of God’s creation and the terrible shadows we cast upon it. Our world is a tapestry woven with threads of immense hope and heartbreaking fragility. We see this in the stories that fill our days, stories that cry out for our prayer, our discernment, and our courageous action.
Consider the delicate and costly work of peacemaking. We hear of ceasefires and diplomatic maneuvers, of deals struck at a high price. The world watches as nations navigate the treacherous path away from the brink of conflict. This arduous work, so fraught with imperfection and compromise, is nevertheless a sacred undertaking. For did not our Lord himself declare, “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God”? To be a child of God is to inherit His creative love, and to use that love not to build walls, but to build bridges. To be a peacemaker is not a passive wish for quiet, but an active, tireless, and often thankless pursuit of justice as the foundation for true peace. It is a calling for statesmen, yes, but also for every family, every community, every one of us who must disarm the conflicts in our own hearts before we can hope to calm the storms of the world.
And what of those who are crushed by the wheels of conflict and power? We think of those held captive, separated from loved ones, their freedom and dignity stripped away. We give thanks for every prisoner who finds release, for every family reunited, as we have recently witnessed. Their ordeal is a piercing reminder of our Christian duty: “I was in prison and you came to visit me.” To visit the imprisoned is to affirm that no lock, no bar, no injustice can sever the bond of human solidarity rooted in Christ. It is to refuse to let any child of God be forgotten or abandoned. This is not mere charity; it is a defiant act of truth-telling against systems that would reduce a person made in the Divine Image to a mere pawn or a number.
For at the core of all these struggles—of war, of persecution, of every headline that wounds our spirit—lies one fundamental truth we have forgotten: “So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them.” This is the unshakeable foundation of human dignity. When we see this dignity violated, as we do in the harrowing suspension of medical evacuations for the wounded and the sick, our souls must cry out in protest. A vehicle deemed a threat contains within it a life deemed expendable, and the image of God is obscured by dust and fear. We cannot, we must not, become accustomed to such calculations. Every life, from the womb to natural death, in every land, under every flag, is a sacred icon of the Creator. To wound that life is to wound God’s own heart.
My brothers and sisters, envision with me the world that is possible, the world Christ died to redeem. Envision a world where the peacemakers are not the exception, but the norm—where children learn reconciliation before retaliation. Envision a world where no one is left to rot in a cell for political gain, because our global family refuses to tolerate it. Envision a world where the sacredness of every human life so governs our policies and our actions that medical aid flows like a river of mercy, unimpeded by walls or weapons. This is not a naive dream. This is the Kingdom of God, and it is built by the hands of good men and women who cooperate with Jesus’s grace. It is built by your hands.
Yet, to build this world, we must first heal our own home, the Church. One of the great trials of our time is the scandal of division—within our communities and with our fellow Christians. We fracture into camps, we cling to ideological labels, we build walls of suspicion where there should be bridges of communion. This internal conflict cripples our witness. It makes our call for global peace sound hollow. I call upon every one of the faithful, from the cardinals to the catechumens, to become artisans of unity within our own walls. Seek out those you disagree with. Listen, truly listen, with humility. Prioritize charity over being right. Let the Eucharist we share be the model for our fellowship, a communion that transcends every human difference. We cannot heal a fractured world if we are a fractured Body.
For there is a dire warning in our inaction. If we choose complacency—if we leave peace to politicians alone, if we ignore the imprisoned, if we grow numb to the violation of human dignity, if we nourish division within our own hearts and our Church—then we are not merely standing still. We are actively consenting to another path. We are choosing a slow, spiritual apocalypse. A world where mercy is extinguished, where the common good is a forgotten myth, and where our children inherit a legacy of coldness and chaos. This is not a punishment from an angry God, but the inevitable harvest of seeds we refused to plant: seeds of love, justice, and sacrificial courage.
But this is not our fate. For we are an Easter people, and ‘Alleluia’ is our song! The Resurrection is God’s definitive ‘yes’ to life over death, to love over hatred, to hope over despair. That same power that conquered the grave now dwells in you through baptism. You are the peacemaker the world awaits. You are the visitor to the imprisoned, in spirit and in action. You are the guardian of human dignity in your workplace, your social media, your voting booth. You are the healer of division in your parish.
Do not wait for another. Do not underestimate your role. With Jesus’s help, through the daily workings of good and faithful people, the desert will bloom. Let us go forth from this place, not merely comforted, but commissioned. Let us build the civilization of love, brick by brick, act of kindness by act of justice, until the world reflects at last the glorious image of its Creator.
Amen.
What can we do?
In a world where headlines speak of distant conflicts, profound injustice, and the erosion of human dignity, it is easy to feel powerless. Yet, the call to build a better world is answered not in a single grand gesture, but in the faithful accumulation of small, deliberate choices in our daily lives. Our contribution begins where we are.
Regarding Conflict and Peace, remember that peace is not merely the absence of war; it is the active cultivation of understanding. In your own sphere, be a peacemaker. This means listening more than you speak, especially to those with whom you disagree. Refuse to traffic in gossip or to amplify divisive rhetoric, whether at the family dinner table or on social media. Seek out reliable news sources that provide context, not just conflict. In your community, support or volunteer with organizations that bridge cultural and religious divides, fostering the personal connections that dismantle stereotypes and build the foundation for wider peace.
Concerning Persecution and Injustice, your practical solidarity is powerful. Begin by educating yourself on the issues. Learn about the cases of unjust imprisonment and persecution happening around the globe from reputable human rights organizations. Then, translate that awareness into action. This could mean writing respectful, factual letters to your elected representatives urging them to prioritize human rights in foreign policy. It can mean financially supporting or volunteering with groups that provide legal aid to the unjustly accused or that support prisoners of conscience and their families. Most fundamentally, it means looking for injustice closer to home—advocating for the marginalized in your own city and ensuring no one in your circle feels alone or abandoned.
To uphold Human Dignity and Life in every circumstance, start with a radical commitment to seeing the inherent worth in every person you encounter. This worldview must inform your actions. Challenge language that dehumanizes any group of people. In your spending habits, support companies with ethical labor practices. Be mindful of how your own words and actions either affirm or diminish the dignity of others, from how you speak to service workers to how you engage in difficult conversations. Support humanitarian aid organizations that provide medical care and essential services in crisis zones, recognizing that protecting life is a universal imperative that transcends borders and politics.
These are not abstract ideals. They are practical disciplines. We change the world by how we listen, how we spend, how we speak, and how we advocate. We build peace by the quality of our attention. We fight injustice by the focus of our concern. We honor dignity by the consistency of our respect.
Go in peace.
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