Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters.
We gather today in this sacred season of Lent, a time of reflection, repentance, and profound hope in the Resurrection. We look upon our world, this beautiful and wounded garden entrusted to our care, and we see the shadows that stretch across it. We see a culture that, in so many ways, has forgotten the fundamental language of love, the intrinsic grammar of human dignity written by God into every soul from the very moment of conception.
The prophet Jeremiah reminds us of a sacred truth: “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you.” Every life is a thought of God, a unique and irreplaceable word in His eternal dialogue with creation. When a society closes its ears to this first whisper of existence, when it permits the silencing of that divine word through the tragedy of abortion, it does not merely commit an act of violence against an individual. It begins to dismantle the very foundation of human solidarity. It tells the powerful lie that some lives are inconvenient, that some persons are problems to be solved rather than brothers and sisters to be welcomed. We see this lie travelling across oceans, influencing debates and hardening hearts. But we must ask ourselves: can a civilization built upon such a rejection of its own most vulnerable members ever truly know peace? It cannot. For peace is the tranquility of order, and the first order is to cherish what God has cherished first.
This disregard for life manifests in other terrible ways. We see it in the scourge of war, which rends the fabric of families and nations. In the Holy Land, a land sanctified by the footsteps of the Prince of Peace, we hear of children named Mohammed and Othman, aged five and seven, killed alongside their parents. Their names are written in the book of life, and now in the book of our grief. Where is the peacemaker here? Where is the child of God who, as the Beatitude proclaims, works to break the cycle of retaliation and hatred? War is the failure of humanity. It is the admission that we have forgotten how to see the image of God in the face of our enemy. Every rocket fired, every life cut short, is a cry of despair that echoes all the way to heaven, a confession that we have chosen the barren desert of violence over the difficult but fertile path of dialogue, justice, and reconciliation.
And when the human spirit is crushed by such violence, or when it rebels against the tyranny of lies, we witness another shadow: persecution. Our brother, Bobi Wine, speaks from a hidden place, fearing for his life for daring to seek righteousness and justice for his people. He walks in the footsteps of those of whom our Lord said, “Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness.” This beatitude is not a mere consolation; it is a revelation of a mighty spiritual truth. It tells us that the power of truth and love, even when silenced by force, holds a divine dignity that worldly power can never possess. The persecution of Christians, and of all people of goodwill who seek religious freedom and justice, is a testament to the enduring threat that a conscience illuminated by God poses to the kingdoms of oppression. It shows us that the battle for the human soul is the most consequential battle of our age.
My dear friends, these are not three separate crises. They are one crisis with three faces. It is the crisis of a world trying to build a future without reference to the Father of all life. It is a world that seeks solutions in power, in exclusion, in the silencing of the weak and the inconvenient. And if we continue on this path, the warnings are written not only in Scripture but in the logic of our own actions. We risk building a world that is not a common home, but a collection of fortified islands of fear—a world where the unborn are discarded, the dissenter is disappeared, and the child is a casualty. This is not a prophecy of a distant apocalypse; it is the clear and present trajectory of a humanity that chooses to live without love, without mercy, without the courageous defense of the least among us.
But this is not our destiny! For we are an Easter people, and ‘Alleluia’ is our song! We do not merely diagnose the disease; we carry the cure. The cure is Jesus Christ, and His healing works through our hands, through our voices, through our choices. Envision with me, through the eyes of faith, the world He empowers us to build.
Imagine a world where every expectant mother is surrounded by a circle of support, where society says, “You are not alone; we will welcome this child with you.” A world where the defense of life from conception to natural death is the first article of our social covenant. Imagine a world where conflicts are met not with tanks, but with tireless diplomats and brave peacemakers who, as children of God, build bridges where others build walls. A world where the names of children in Gaza, in Ukraine, in Sudan, are whispered in prayers for their safety, not recited in lists of the dead. Imagine a world where no Bobi Wine must flee into the night, where every person can profess their faith and their conscience without fear, because the right to do so is held as sacred by all.
This is the civilization of love. It is not a utopian dream. It is the mandate of the Gospel. It begins here, in this assembly, and it spreads through every family, workplace, and public square where a Christian bears witness.
Yet, to be this leaven in the world, our own house must be strong. One of the great trials our Church faces in this modern time is the crisis of credibility born of our own failures—the failure to always protect the little ones entrusted to our care, the failure of transparency, the shadow of clericalism that can obscure the radiant face of Christ’s humility and service. This wound hinders our voice and causes the righteous to stumble. I call upon you, the faithful, the People of God, to aid in solving this profound problem. Do not be distant observers. Hold your shepherds to account in charity. Demand holiness, transparency, and above all, a relentless, preferential love for the vulnerable. Be the saints in the pews who, by your own integrity, your own commitment to justice within our community, help cleanse and renew your Mother, the Church. A humble, penitent, and pure Church is the instrument the world needs.
Therefore, let us leave this place not with heaviness, but with a holy determination. Let the Lenten fast you keep be not just from food, but from indifference. Fast from the cynical word that says, “Nothing can change.” Fast from the silence that lets injustice go unchallenged. And in place of that indifference, feed the hungry for justice. Clothe the naked dignity of the unborn with your advocacy. Visit the prisoner of conscience with your prayers and your voice. Welcome the stranger fleeing persecution.
The choice before us is stark: to collaborate with God’s grace in building a kingdom of life, peace, and freedom, or to acquiesce to the slow descent into a culture of death, war, and fear. The Lord has formed each of you in the womb for this very hour. He has set you apart. You are appointed as prophets to the nations. Go forth, then, as peacemakers. Go forth as defenders of life. Go forth as witnesses to truth, even when it is costly. Do not be afraid. For the One who knew you before you were born walks with you. And with His help, through the workings of good men and women of faith, the dawn of a new world awaits.
Amen.
What can we do?
In the face of these profound challenges, our faith calls us not to despair, but to concrete, practical action in our daily lives. Our contribution is not measured in grand gestures alone, but in the steady, faithful commitment to building a culture of life, dignity, and peace. Here is how we can begin.
Regarding the sanctity of life, your daily work is to build a society where every life is welcomed and supported. This begins with how you treat the people already in your life. Practice radical hospitality. Support families in your community practically—offer childcare, deliver a meal, or simply listen without judgment. Advocate for and volunteer with organizations that provide comprehensive support to mothers, fathers, and children, both before birth and long after. In conversations, choose empathy over accusation, seeking to understand the fears and pressures that lead others to make tragic choices. Your goal is to make the choice for life not only a moral imperative but a tangibly easier and more supported one.
Concerning the persecution of our brothers and sisters and the defense of religious freedom, your task is twofold: solidarity and vigilance. First, educate yourself. Follow reputable news sources that report on the plight of persecuted communities globally. Support, through donations or awareness campaigns, organizations like Aid to the Church in Need or the Catholic Near East Welfare Association. Second, protect freedom where you live. Engage respectfully in public discourse, defending the right of all people to live their faith peacefully. In your workplace or school, be the person who respectfully insists that conscience and faith have a place in the public square. Write to your political representatives, urging them to consider religious freedom in foreign policy and at home.
In the agonizing reality of war and conflict, we are called to be peacemakers. This starts with the peace we cultivate in our own hearts and homes. Refuse to harbor hatred. In discussions about conflict, challenge yourself to understand the history and pain of all sides, not just your own. Actively combat misinformation by seeking out diverse, credible sources before forming or sharing an opinion. Support humanitarian aid organizations that serve all victims of war without distinction. In your community, build bridges with people of different ethnicities and faiths. Simple friendship is a powerful antidote to the dehumanization that fuels conflict. Advocate for and support diplomatic solutions and dialogue, making your voice heard in favor of peace over perpetual strife.
These are not distant ideals, but practical steps. Begin with one. Let your daily actions—your kindness, your informed voice, your charitable support, your pursuit of understanding—be the leaven that slowly transforms the world around you. Do not grow weary. The work of building a better world is the work of a lifetime, done one faithful choice at a time.
Go in peace.
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