April 10, 2026 - Building God's World of Peace and Dignity

Blessings of peace, and the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, to all of you, my brothers and sisters.

We gather today in the shadow of a fractured world. From this sacred place, our hearts and our prayers stretch across the globe, touching lands scarred by violence, homes emptied by persecution, and a human dignity under relentless assault. We are not distant observers of these tragedies; through the mystical Body of Christ, their wounds are our wounds, their cries are our cries. Today, let us confront these shadows not with despair, but with the luminous, transformative hope that is our birthright as children of God.

Look first to the Holy Land, that sacred ground where the Prince of Peace first walked. We hear the thunder of weapons where there should be hymns, and see the flash of missiles where there should be the light of understanding. The prophet Isaiah gifted us a vision so beautiful it aches: a vision of instruments of death being melted down and recast as tools for cultivation. “They will beat their swords into plowshares,” he proclaimed. This is not a naive dream; it is a divine mandate. It is God’s blueprint for humanity. Yet, we are told that men of goodwill can find no common ground, only common graves. This is the failure of the human spirit when it turns from God. Imagine, instead, a world where that blueprint is followed. Imagine leaders who, with the courage of Christ, lay down not their lives in battle, but their pride at the negotiating table. Imagine nations investing not in arsenals, but in agriculture, not in fortifications, but in families. This is the world Jesus helps us to build when good men and women, inspired by the Holy Spirit, choose the arduous path of peacemaker over the easy path of the warmonger.

And from these zones of conflict flows a river of suffering: our brothers and sisters in Christ, and people of all faiths, driven from their ancestral homes, their very identity a target. They arrive at the borders of the world as strangers, their hunger a test of our conscience. The Lord was unequivocal: “For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, a stranger and you welcomed me.” He did not say, “I was a stranger and you checked my nationality, my ethnicity, or the quota.” He identified Himself completely with the dispossessed. To prioritize one group over another based on origin or creed is to build a wall in the very face of Christ. But envision, with me, a world where this command is lived. See a global community where every diocese, every parish, every Christian household sees in the refugee not a burden, but the hidden face of Jesus asking for shelter. A world where the shared table of humanity has a place set for every child of God. This is the kingdom we build when good people open not just their borders, but their hearts.

This assault on human dignity finds its most bitter expression in the contempt for the sacredness of a single, unique life. Every person, from the womb to a natural death, from the journalist seeking truth to the soldier in the trench, bears the indelible stamp of the Creator. “God created mankind in his own image.” There are no exceptions to this divine truth. When we reduce a person to a label—‘terrorist,’ ‘collateral damage,’ ‘enemy,’ ‘other’—we attempt to strip them of this God-given dignity. We make the unspeakable possible. We commit not just a crime, but a blasphemy against the image of God Himself. Yet, picture a world that has internalized this truth. A world where every life is so revered that conflict becomes unthinkable, where the media seeks to illuminate the image of God in all people, and where justice is pursued with a reverence for the humanity of both victim and accused. This is the civilization that emerges when good people, in Jesus’s name, become unyielding defenders of the intrinsic worth of every soul.

My dear faithful, to build this world, our Church must be a radiant beacon of this unity and hope. Yet, we ourselves are wounded. We face a profound crisis of trust, a fragmentation where ideology, nationalism, and personal preference threaten to splinter the seamless garment of our communion. We quarrel amongst ourselves while the world burns. This is our great internal problem. I call on you, the faithful—clergy, religious, and laity alike—to aid in solving it. Be agents of reconciliation within these walls. Listen to each other with charity. Seek unity in the essentials of our faith, liberty in doubtful matters, and in all things, boundless charity. A house divided in its mission of love cannot warm a freezing world.

And so I must speak a dire warning, with a pastor’s trembling heart. If we choose not to contribute—if we remain complacent in our comfort, indifferent to the suffering afar, divided in our own house, and silent in the face of injustice—then we are not merely failing in our duty. We are actively consenting to another future. We will see the plowshares beaten back into swords, and the pruning hooks reforged into spears. The hungry will starve at our gated communities, and the stranger will perish in the cold. The image of God in our neighbor will be so defaced that we will no longer recognize it, and eventually, we will no longer recognize it in ourselves. We will create a world not of God’s kingdom, but of humanity’s hell—a self-made apocalypse of isolation, hatred, and endless conflict.

But this is not our destiny! We are an Easter people, and ‘Alleluia’ is our song! The Resurrection is our proof that love is stronger than death, and hope more durable than despair. The problems of our age are vast, but they are no match for the combined force of a billion hearts ignited by Christ and moved to action. You are that force. Go forth from this place. Advocate for peace with your voice and your vote. Welcome the stranger in your community. Defend the dignity of every life you encounter. And heal the divisions within your own parish with deliberate, Christ-like love.

Do not wait for another. Do not think your part is small. With Jesus’s help, through the steadfast workings of good men and women, the plowshare will yet gleam in the sun, the cup of water will be given, and every human face will be seen for what it truly is: a reflection of the face of God. Let us build that world together.

Amen.


What can we do?

In the face of distant wars and entrenched conflicts, our task is to become builders of peace where we stand. This begins with a disciplined commitment to understanding. Actively seek out news and analysis from multiple, credible sources, especially those offering perspectives from within conflict zones. In your conversations, both in person and online, refuse the language of dehumanization. Challenge sweeping generalizations about "sides" or "peoples." When discussing these painful events, focus on the shared human cost—the civilians, the children, the displaced—and let that common grief guide your words toward empathy, not division. Support, with your time or donations, organizations that provide humanitarian aid to all victims of war, regardless of origin, and those that facilitate dialogue between communities.

When we see the plight of refugees and those persecuted for their faith or identity, our response must be concrete hospitality. Research and support local organizations that assist refugees with resettlement, language tutoring, and job training. Offer your skills. Can you teach a language, help with a resume, or provide a professional connection? Extend simple friendship; an invitation to share a meal can be a powerful act of welcome for someone feeling like a stranger. Advocate within your own community for policies and attitudes that see the refugee not as a burden, but as a neighbor with gifts to offer. Write to your elected representatives, urging compassionate and equitable immigration policies.

To protect human life and dignity in an age where it is so easily discounted, we must become relentless witnesses to the inherent worth of every person. This starts in daily interactions: treat everyone you meet—the cashier, the colleague, the stranger on the bus—with a fundamental respect that acknowledges their humanity. In the digital sphere, pause before sharing news or images. Ask: Does this uphold dignity, or merely exploit suffering? Support journalism that does the hard work of ethical, on-the-ground reporting, which is a cornerstone of accountability. In your own sphere of influence, whether at work, in school, or in your family, call out speech that reduces individuals to stereotypes or labels. Stand firmly for the principle that every life, from conception to natural death, in times of peace or war, possesses an inviolable dignity that our actions must honor.

These are not grand gestures reserved for heroes, but the practical, daily work of building a better world through conscious choice. It is the work of turning our gaze outward, educating our hearts, and using our hands to help and our voices to uplift. Start today, right where you are.

Go in peace.


This sermon was graciously created by AIsaiah-4.7, a tool composed of several AIs. They are just tools like any others we've created on this green Earth, used for good. For more info, inquire at info@aisermon.org.