March 25, 2026 - Choose Light: Build God's World Now

Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters.

We gather today, a people of hope in a world of shadows. We look upon the works of human hands and human hearts, and we see both the radiant image of God and the deep scars of sin. The Lord has placed us in this moment, not by accident, but by divine providence, to be witnesses, to be healers, to be the very instruments of His peace and renewal. Let us consider the landscape of our modern world, not with despair, but with the clear-eyed vision of faith, seeing both the wounds and the path to healing.

We see the scourge of war, where the machinery of conflict grinds the innocent to dust. The news speaks not of abstract strategies, but of a committed pharmacist, a homesick blogger—human lives, unique and beloved by God, extinguished. Each one a universe of hopes, of loves, of prayers, now silenced. This is the bitter fruit of our failure to make peace. For we are called, as the Gospel teaches us, to be blessed as peacemakers, to be called children of God. A peacemaker is not passive. A peacemaker actively builds, reconciles, and defends the sanctity of every life. Imagine, my brothers and sisters, a world where the energy spent on weapons is spent on wells; where the strategies of division are replaced by the diplomacy of solidarity. This is not a naive dream. It is the kingdom of God, yearning to break through. With Jesus’s help, through the courageous work of good men and women who refuse to accept hatred as inevitable, this can be our future. But if we remain indifferent, if we see conflicts in distant lands as someone else’s tragedy, we fuel the very fires that consume the innocent. We risk building a world where the only language left is that of the sword, a dire path leading to a darkness where no human dignity can survive.

We see, too, a moral decay that seeps from the shadows into the very light of our daily lives. It is a culture that too often glorifies what degrades the human person, that sells intimacy as a commodity and reduces the sacred mystery of the human body to a transaction. We hear of fortunes made from the exploitation of human vulnerability, of loneliness turned into profit. Against this, the Apostle Paul gives us a compass for our minds and hearts: “Whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.” We must ask: what are we feeding our spirits? What are we allowing to shape the hearts of our children? Envision a world where our media, our art, our digital squares uplift and ennoble; where they speak of love that is self-giving, beauty that is authentic, and truth that sets us free. This world is possible when good men and women, inspired by Christ, create and support what is excellent. But if we consume poison and call it entertainment, if we remain silent in the face of a culture that mocks purity and nobility, we will find our own hearts desolate, our relationships fractured, and our society adrift in a sea of emptiness, incapable of recognizing true love when it is offered.

And we see the perennial wound of injustice, the abuse of power by the strong against the weak. We see it in headlines that speak of a woman, decades later, still seeking justice for a profound violation. It echoes the ancient, divine command: “Learn to do right; seek justice. Defend the oppressed.” In every age, the cry of the wounded rises to heaven. It is the cry of the waitress, the refugee, the forgotten elder, the unborn child. This cry is a summons to each of us. Imagine a world where systems protect the vulnerable, where the powerful are accountable, and where every person can live in security and respect. This is the justice of the Kingdom. It will be built by good men and women who have the courage to speak for those without a voice, to challenge corrupt structures, and to live with integrity in their own domains. Yet, if we turn a deaf ear to this cry, if we are complicit through our silence or our inaction, we build not a society but a pyramid of oppression. The warning is clear: a world that does not defend the least of its brothers and sisters stores up not treasure, but wrath; it creates a moral vacuum where cruelty becomes normalized and no one is safe.

Within this great mission for the world, the Church herself, our mother and guide, is not without need. One of our great trials in this modern time is the scandal of division—within our own communities, between nations and peoples, and even within the Body of Christ itself. How can we preach reconciliation to the world when we are fractured? How can we be peacemakers if we harbor prejudice or resentment against our own brother, our own sister in the faith? I call upon every one of the faithful, from the cardinals to the children in catechism: be artisans of unity. Heal the rift in your family. Forgive the offense in your parish. Reach across the lines of culture, politics, and tribe within our own Catholic communion. Let the Church be a living witness of reconciled humanity, so that our plea for peace in the world will have credibility and power.

Today, we recall the Annunciation of the Lord, that pivotal moment when a humble “yes” from the Virgin Mary changed the course of all history. She did not wage a war, produce a film, or pass a law. She offered her faithful heart, and through her, God entered our world to save it. This is our model. Our task is to offer our own “yes”—our hands to build peace, our minds to seek what is noble, our voices to demand justice, our hearts to foster unity.

The choice before us is stark, and the time is now. We stand between two futures. One is a future of light, built by the willing hands of the faithful, cooperating with God’s grace—a world of peace, dignity, and communion. The other is a path of shadows, a descent into a man-made apathy of endless conflict, soul-crushing degradation, and entrenched injustice. This second path leads not to a fiery end from the sky, but to a colder, more terrible end: the death of hope, the extinction of empathy, a world where the image of God in the human person is finally and utterly obscured.

Do not let this happen! You are not bystanders. You are children of God, called to be peacemakers. You are disciples of Christ, called to think on what is excellent. You are the Church, called to seek justice and live in unity. Go forth from this place, and let your life be your sermon. Build the world of love that God dreams of, and that our suffering world so desperately needs.

Amen.


What can we do?

In the face of widespread suffering from war, we can become practical peacemakers. This begins with a disciplined choice in our consumption of information. Seek out news sources that humanize all sides of a conflict, that tell the stories of civilians, aid workers, and those building bridges. Support, with your donations or time, humanitarian organizations providing medical care, food, and shelter to those displaced. In your own conversations, refuse to dehumanize entire nations or peoples. Challenge hateful rhetoric, not with more anger, but with a steadfast focus on our shared human dignity and the urgent need for a ceasefire and dialogue.

Confronting a culture that often celebrates the cheap and the degrading requires conscious curation of our attention. We vote with our clicks, our views, and our subscriptions. Actively choose to support media, artists, and storytellers who create content that uplifts, educates, and reveals truth and beauty. In your own home, have the courage to set boundaries on content that reduces human beings to objects. Foster conversations about the inherent dignity of every person, and support platforms and creators who build community rather than exploit loneliness.

When confronted with injustice and the abuse of power, our call is to be defenders of the vulnerable in our immediate spheres. Start by being a person of impeccable integrity in your own workplace and community. Listen, truly listen, to those who feel powerless. Believe them. Support local organizations that provide legal aid, shelter, and advocacy for survivors of abuse. Use your voice, whether in a parent-teacher meeting, a community board, or a conversation with friends, to speak up for fairness, due process, and accountability. Teach the young people in your life, by word and example, about respect, consent, and the courage to stand against a bully.

These are not grand, distant gestures. They are the daily, practical choices that weave a fabric of peace, dignity, and justice. It is in the quiet consistency of our actions that the world is remade.

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.