March 10, 2026 - Build a Civilization of Love

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

We gather today in a world that is at once wondrous and wounded. A world of breathtaking connection, yet profound isolation. A world that speaks endlessly of rights, yet so often forgets the foundational duty from which all rights flow: the sacred duty to recognize and protect the inviolable dignity of every human person, created in the image and likeness of God.

This dignity is the bedrock of our life together. It is the truth echoed in the simple, divine command: Thou shalt not kill. This is not merely a prohibition against a final, violent act. It is a commandment to cherish life at every stage, in every condition. It calls us to build a culture of life that rejects not only physical violence, but the violence of indifference, the violence of contempt, the violence that allows a human being to be reduced to a punchline or a problem.

Consider the profound witness of a grieving family, who, in the shadow of an unimaginable loss from a reckless prank, speak not of vengeance but of mercy for the young ones involved. In their refusal to add more brokenness to a broken situation, they point us toward a higher law—the law of grace. They show us that protecting human dignity means upholding the worth of every soul, even those who falter, and choosing the difficult path of reconciliation over the easy descent into wrath. Imagine, dear faithful, a world where such mercy is not the rare, stunning exception, but the cultivated norm. A world where every life is held as precious, and our communities are so infused with mutual care that such tragedies become unthinkable. This is the world we are called to build.

This culture of life finds its first school and its surest fortress in the family. For the family is where we first learn that we are loved not for what we do, but for who we are. It is where we learn the grammar of self-gift. As Saint Paul instructs: Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it. This is the radical blueprint: love that is faithful, sacrificial, and life-giving. It is a love that forms a sanctuary of stability and unconditional acceptance.

Look at the courage of those who, even in faraway lands, defend this truth at great personal risk. When women are threatened for the simple, human act of playing football, or for refusing a gesture that would betray their conscience, we see an attack on the very freedom and integrity upon which a loving family depends. The family cannot thrive where the human person—man or woman—is not free. To defend the family is to defend the sanctuary where persons are formed, and thus to defend the very possibility of a society built on love, not coercion. Envision a world where every home becomes a domestic church, a small haven of Christ-like love, radiating stability and nurturing citizens capable of great generosity. This is our mission.

Yet, this beautiful vision is assailed by a culture that often treats the human person and the gift of love not as a mystery to be honored, but as a commodity to be consumed. It reduces the profound intimacy of persons to a transaction, a mere source of pleasure isolated from commitment, responsibility, and love. Our Lord warned us that the corruption of love begins in the heart: But I say unto you, That whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her already in his heart. He calls us to integrity, to a chastity that is not a repression of love, but its purification and elevation. It is the virtue that allows us to see others not as objects for our use, but as subjects to be cherished.

The societal struggles with the pervasive access to degrading material, and the efforts to shield the young from it, are a surface symptom of this deeper sickness of the heart. It is a sickness that fractures our interior unity, making us prisoners of our own impulses, and makes genuine, self-giving love impossible. Imagine a world where we have mastered our impulses not out of fear, but out of reverence—reverence for God, reverence for others, and reverence for our own dignity. A world where our gaze is cleansed, and we can look upon one another with the clarity of love. This is the freedom Christ offers.

My dear brothers and sisters, to work for this world is our Christian vocation. Yet, we in the Church cannot credibly call the world to integrity if we do not tirelessly seek it within our own walls. One of the great wounds we carry, a shadow that dims our light, is the failure to always protect the little ones entrusted to our care. The scandal of abuse, and the failure of transparency and accountability that allowed it to fester, remains a source of deep shame and a crippling obstacle to our mission. I call upon every one of you, the faithful, to aid in solving this. Demand and support structures of absolute accountability and prevention. Be vigilant in your parishes. Pray for healing for survivors. Insist that the Church be a place of unwavering safety and holiness. Our credibility to heal a wounded world depends on our relentless work to heal this wound within ourselves.

For we stand at a crossroads. The path before us is split. One path is paved by the hands of good men and women, animated by faith, who choose daily to protect life, uphold the family, and live with moral integrity. This path, though narrow and demanding, leads with Christ’s help to a civilization of love. It leads to the world we have dared to imagine: a world of mercy, stable love, and purified hearts.

But there is another path, a wide and descending road. It is the path of the passive heart, the indifferent soul. If we choose this—if we think the problems of human dignity, of family, of moral decay are for others to solve—then we choose a different future. We will see a world where life is increasingly cheapened, where the very concept of family dissolves into transient arrangements, where the human heart, fed on a diet of consumption and fantasy, becomes incapable of real love. We will see a world not of community, but of isolated individuals, easily manipulated, morally adrift, and spiritually barren. This is not merely a societal decline; it is a form of desolation, a living apocalypse of the human spirit. The warning is dire because the stakes are eternal.

Therefore, do not be afraid. Do not be overwhelmed. Begin today. In your homes, love with a sacrificial love. In your communities, be agents of mercy and defenders of the vulnerable. In your own hearts, seek the purity of Christ through prayer and the sacraments. Hold your Church accountable to be the spotless bride Christ calls her to be.

With our eyes fixed on Jesus, and our hands joined in this sacred work, let us go forth. Let us build, piece by piece, act of love by act of love, the kingdom He has promised. For with God, all things are possible.

Amen.


What can we do?

Look at the world not as a distant spectator, but as a neighbor. Our daily actions, rooted in a commitment to human dignity, are the practical levers of change. Here is how you can contribute.

In the face of events that show the fragility of life, like a tragic prank turning fatal, protect dignity by choosing mercy over vengeance and patience over anger. In your daily life, this means actively refusing to participate in the culture of ridicule, online or in person. When someone makes a mistake, choose to de-escalate, not humiliate. Defend the absent in conversation. Advocate for restorative justice over pure punishment in your community discussions. See the inherent worth in every person you encounter, especially when it is difficult.

To defend the sacred bonds of family and marriage, look beyond your own home. It begins with actively honoring your commitments with fidelity, respect, and self-giving love. Then, extend that strength outward. Support organizations that offer shelter and aid to women and families fleeing persecution or violence, as in the case of athletes facing threats for their conscience. In your community, be a friend to families under strain. Offer practical help—a meal, childcare, a listening ear—to strengthen the fabric of all families around you.

In a world where integrity is eroded by commodifying the human person, champion moral courage. Support laws and technologies that protect the vulnerable, especially the young, from exploitation. But more personally, cultivate a discipline of the eyes and the heart. Consume media that uplifts and respects human dignity. In your conversations and choices, reject the casual objectification of others. Foster relationships built on authentic respect, not use. By guarding your own integrity, you become a quiet beacon for a culture of genuine respect.

This work is not grand or distant. It is in the checkout line, the school meeting, the online comment, the quiet choice at home. Build peace by building up the person in front of you. See clearly, love courageously, and act justly in your small corner of the world. From there, grace spreads.

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.