Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters, gathered here and joined with us in spirit across the world.
We gather in this sacred season of Lent, a time of reflection, repentance, and ultimately, renewal. Our gaze is fixed on the Cross, that ultimate sign of suffering transformed by love, and on the empty tomb, our everlasting promise of hope. Yet, we do not live with our eyes closed to the world God so loved. We see it in its agony and its yearning. Today, our hearts are drawn to three profound wounds upon the Body of Humanity, wounds that cry out to heaven and demand a response from every conscience.
First, we behold the scandal of conflict and violence impacting the innocent. We see the instruments of war, born of human pride and fear, falling where children should be learning and playing. The cry of a single child, terrified by the thunder of weapons, is a cry that drowns out all justification. The Lord’s warning echoes through the ages with terrible clarity: “But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea.” To wound a child, physically or spiritually, to rob them of peace, of safety, of a future—this is an offense that shakes the very foundations of justice. We are not called to choose sides in geopolitical strife; we are called, irrevocably, to choose the side of the child. Every child in a warzone, of any nation, of any faith, is our child. Their terror is our failure.
Secondly, we witness the ancient evil of persecution, now dressed in modern garb. It is the silencing of the voice, the imprisonment of conscience, the crushing of the human spirit’s need to seek truth and express it. We think of those artists, writers, and peaceful believers who, for the crime of a thought or a drawing, find themselves in darkness, their years stolen, their dignity assaulted. To them, Christ speaks directly: “Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” This beatitude is not a passive consolation; it is a defiant proclamation of their ultimate victory and a searing indictment of their oppressors. A society that fears a cartoon or a prayer is a society already in chains. The persecution of religious freedom and expression is a cancer that eats away at the soul of the world, leaving behind a barren landscape of conformity and fear.
Thirdly, and perhaps most insidiously, we confront a quiet violence: the neglect of our most sacred duty within the domestic church—the family. The neglect of a child, the failure to nurture, to protect, to love, is a betrayal of a divine trust. The Apostle’s instruction is gentle yet firm: “And, ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath: but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.” This is not merely a suggestion for religious education; it is the blueprint for forming a human person in love. When a child is left in spiritual, emotional, or physical poverty by those who should be their first guardians, the world grows colder. This neglect seeds the future with isolation, anger, and despair. It is here, in the very heart of the home, that we either build a civilization of love or lay the groundwork for a culture of indifference.
My brothers and sisters, these are not merely news items. They are symptoms of a profound sickness—a global failure of fraternity. They represent a world forgetting that it is, in truth, one family under God. And we, the Church, are not immune to this sickness. We too face a great internal challenge, a problem we must name and solve together: the scandal of a faith that remains a private comfort, rather than a public force for transformation. Too often, we keep the Gospel within the walls of our churches and our hearts. We have charity, but lack audacity. We have doctrine, but lack missionary zeal. We are polite, but we are not prophets. This is our problem: a timid Church in a world crying out for bold, selfless love.
I call upon every baptized person here and now: you are the solution. You are the good men and women through whom Christ wishes to solve these great wounds. Envision with me, not a fantasy, but the future Christ died to make possible. Envision a world where the resources spent on missiles are poured into schools, where the courage of a cartoonist is met with global applause for truth, not with prison bars. Envision a world where every child is awaited as a blessing and nurtured in the secure love of a family. This is not a naive dream. This is the Kingdom of God, yearning to break into our history through your hands, your voices, your votes, your professions, and your prayers.
But hear now a warning, spoken in love but with the gravity of the prophets. If we choose to remain passive—if we hear the cry of the child and change the channel, if we learn of the imprisoned artist and simply sigh, if we see the fractured family and look away—then we are not merely ignoring problems. We are consenting to a world that is actively unraveling. We are building our own millstones. A world that abandons its children, silences its conscience, and neglects its foundational relationships is not a world moving forward. It is a world in spiritual and moral freefall. It is a society constructing its own apocalypse—not with fire from heaven, but with the cold, slow fire of indifference, which consumes the soul long before it consumes the cities. The dystopia we fear in stories will be born not from monsters, but from the quiet, daily choice to do nothing.
Therefore, in this Lent, let our fasting be from indifference. Let our almsgiving be the gift of our courageous action. Let our prayer be the fuel for a revolution of tenderness. To the powerful, speak for the powerless. To the silenced, be a voice. To the neglected child, be a protector. Within our own Church, reject comfortable piety. Demand of yourself and your communities a faith that gets its hands dirty in the work of justice, that visits the prisoner in spirit and in fact, that strengthens families not only with words but with concrete support.
Today, the Lenten journey invites us to turn, to change, to act. The Cross shows us the depth of the world’s pain. The Empty Tomb shows us the power of God to overcome it. That same power now dwells in you. Do not hide it. Do not bury it. Set it ablaze.
Go forth, and remake the world.
Amen.
What can we do?
In the face of conflict that harms the innocent, your practical contribution begins with a refusal to accept indifference. Seek out and support, with your time or donations, humanitarian organizations that provide direct aid to civilians in war zones, such as those delivering medical care, food, and shelter. In your own community, be a welcoming presence to refugees and immigrants who have fled violence. Advocate, through letters to elected officials, for policies that prioritize the protection of civilians and de-escalation in conflicts. The goal is to actively extend the circle of your concern beyond your immediate horizon.
When freedom of conscience and expression is crushed, your role is to be a guardian of those freedoms where you live. Support persecuted artists, journalists, and writers by reading their work, sharing their stories, and, if possible, contributing to legal defense funds or exile networks. Make a conscious choice to consume news from a variety of sources, especially local reporters on the ground. In your daily conversations, defend the right of others to hold and express differing views, fostering a culture of respectful dialogue over silencing dissent.
Regarding the profound duty to nurture and protect children, your action starts within your own sphere of influence. If you are a parent or caregiver, prioritize presence—quality time, attentive listening, and providing a stable, loving environment. Support families in your community who may be struggling; an offer of childcare, a meal, or simply non-judgmental friendship can be a lifeline. Advocate for and volunteer with programs that ensure all children have access to healthcare, nutrition, and education. Mentor a young person, showing them through your attention that they are valued.
These are not grand, distant gestures, but the daily, deliberate choices that weave a fabric of greater peace and justice. It is in the concrete act of helping one person, defending one right, and nurturing one child that the wider world begins to heal.
Go in peace.
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