Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters, on this holy Sunday, the day of the Lord’s Resurrection. In the glorious light of Easter, we celebrate the ultimate victory of life over death, of love over hatred, of God’s boundless mercy over humanity’s gravest failings. Yet, as we rejoice, we cannot close our eyes to the shadows that stretch across our modern world, shadows that the light of the Risen Christ calls us, His disciples, to dispel.
Look with me upon the landscape of our time. We see nations, like those mentioned in our readings, trading threats of unleashing ‘hell,’ where the closure of a strait becomes a lever of power, spiking the cost of human livelihood and pushing the world to the precipice of a wider conflict. To this, the Lord’s word echoes through the ages with piercing clarity: “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.” This is not a passive blessing for those who simply wish for peace. It is a divine commission, an active call to be artisans of peace, to build bridges where others dig trenches, to speak dialogue where others shout ultimatums. We are called to be children of God not by birthright, but by our labor—the labor of reconciliation.
And what is it we are called to reconcile? We must reconcile our world to the fundamental, sacred truth of the human person. This truth is so beautifully proclaimed: “For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made.” Yet, how does our world treat this wonderful creation? We hear of a seven-month-old child, knit together in love, struck down by violence in a city street. This is not merely a crime; it is a sacrilege against the Creator. It is a symptom of a culture that has grown numb to the sanctity of life, that forgets the inherent dignity stamped upon every soul from conception to natural death. When a child in a pram is not safe, we must ask: what have we built? A society that protects markets more fervently than it protects mothers and infants? The peace we seek is impossible without a profound, societal conversion to the gospel of life.
This disregard for life and the thirst for conflict converge most terribly in the persecution of the faithful. As we are reminded, “Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” On this very Easter Sunday, while we gather in security and joy, our brothers and sisters in other lands huddle in fear. They are targeted for their faith, their churches struck by missiles and drones, their celebration of the Resurrection drowned out by the screams of sirens and the cries of the wounded. To choose an ‘Easter escalation’ is to wage war not just on a people, but on hope itself. We stand in solidarity with all who suffer for righteousness. Their persecution is our wound; their steadfast faith is our instruction.
My dear brothers and sisters, envision with me the world that is possible. Envision a world where, with Jesus’s help channeled through the workings of good men and women, these wounds are healed. See a world where diplomats are true peacemakers, where economies serve human flourishing, not fuel conflict. See a world where every child is welcomed, protected, and cherished as a masterpiece of God. See a world where every person can worship in peace, where the freedom to seek God is the foundation of every just society. This is not a utopian dream. This is the Kingdom of God, for which we pray every day: “Thy Kingdom come.” It comes through us.
Yet, to be effective instruments in the world, we must also have the courage to look within our own spiritual home. One of the great trials for the Church in our time is the scandal of division—within our communities, between generations, across ideological lines. We fracture over secondary issues while the world desperately needs our unified witness to primary truths: to love, to mercy, to Christ. I call on every one of the faithful here and across the globe: aid in solving this. Be agents of communion. Listen more than you speak. Seek understanding before demanding agreement. Let the Eucharist we share be the true source of our unity, a unity that is not uniformity, but a symphony of diverse gifts harmonized by one Spirit. A divided Church cannot heal a divided world.
Hear now a warning, spoken not in anger, but in the anguish of a father for his children. If we, the people of God, retreat into comfort and silence; if we leave the work of peace to the cynical, the defense of life to the indifferent, the cry of the persecuted to echo unheard; if we allow our own internal strife to paralyze our mission, then we must foresee the consequences. We will inherit a world of ever-widening conflict, where life is cheap and fear is the ruler. We will see a spiritual desolation, a hell of our own making, not brought by divine wrath, but chosen by human apathy. The apocalyptic danger is not a spectacle of angels and beasts, but the quiet, incremental death of charity, the extinguishing of hope, the triumph of the culture of death in all its forms. This is the path we choose by inaction.
But today is Sunday! Today is the day the Lord has made! The stone is rolled away! We are an Easter people, and ‘Alleluia’ is our song! We do not face these shadows with fear, but with the formidable, joyous hope of the Resurrection. Let us go forth from this place, then, not merely as congregation, but as a mission. Be a peacemaker in your family, in your workplace, in your community. Defend life in your words, your votes, your support for mothers in need. Pray and advocate for the persecuted. And above all, be a living stone in the Church, building up unity with love.
The Risen Christ walks before us into the fray of our world. He is already in the negotiating rooms, in the hospital wards, in the bombed-out churches, in the hearts of the grieving. He is there, and He calls us to join Him there. Let us answer, “Here I am, Lord.” Let us build, with Him, a world worthy of the children of God.
Amen.
What can we do?
In the face of global tensions and distant conflicts, our role is not one of passive worry, but of active, local peacemaking. This begins with our own hearts and our immediate circles. We can consciously refuse to engage in or amplify the rhetoric of hatred and division, whether in online comments, family discussions, or workplace conversations. Seek out and support reliable journalism that provides context, not just sensational headlines. In your community, you might support or volunteer with organizations that welcome refugees or aid victims of conflict, turning abstract geopolitical strife into tangible human solidarity.
When we hear of violence that strikes the most innocent, it can feel overwhelming. Our practical response is to fiercely protect and celebrate the dignity of every person in our own sphere. This means offering tangible support to families in your community—new parents, struggling single parents, or isolated elders. It can involve supporting local initiatives that provide safe spaces for children, or advocacy groups working against gun violence and for mental health resources. In daily interactions, choose kindness over impatience, seeing the inherent worth in the cashier, the stranger, or the difficult colleague. Defend the vulnerable in your words and actions.
Persecution and large-scale suffering call for a courage that is both compassionate and clear-eyed. We can start by educating ourselves about the realities faced by persecuted communities, both abroad and within our own nations. Support, through donations or awareness, the work of credible humanitarian and human rights organizations that provide direct aid and advocacy. In your daily life, be a defender of religious freedom and respectful dialogue. Stand against prejudice when you encounter it, whether it’s a derogatory joke or a harmful stereotype. Create spaces of welcome in your own parish and community, ensuring no one is marginalized for their faith or background.
Our faith is made real through these daily, practical choices. By cultivating peace in our speech, defending dignity in our actions, and standing in solidarity through our support, we weave a counter-narrative of hope. We transform anxiety into purpose, one deliberate, loving act at a time.
Go in peace.
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