Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters.
We gather today in the spirit of this Lenten season, a time of profound reflection on our own mortality, our failings, and the boundless mercy of God who calls us to conversion. We are called not merely to personal piety, but to a radical reorientation of our hearts toward the world God so loves. Today, we must confront the shadows that fall across our modern world, shadows cast by our own inventions and our own indifference.
First, we must speak of a new and insidious wilderness in which our children wander. It is a digital landscape, crafted not for their flourishing, but for their captivity. Algorithms are designed to ensnare their attention, to lead them deeper into a maze of comparison, anxiety, and loneliness. We have heard the chilling verdict of courts recognizing this addiction for the harm it is. What have we built, if our greatest tools of connection become instruments of isolation for the young? The Lord’s warning echoes through the centuries 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.” This is not merely a condemnation of individual malice, but a prophetic judgment on any system, any enterprise, that places profit before the sacred, fragile psyche of a child. We, as a society, bear a millstone of complicity if we look away.
From this hidden violence of the spirit, we turn to the brutal, physical violence inflicted upon the vulnerable. In the Holy Land, and in so many forgotten corners of our world, the cry of the afflicted rises to heaven. The Psalmist gives voice to God’s own command: “Defend the poor and fatherless: do justice to the afflicted and needy. Deliver the poor and needy: rid them out of the hand of the wicked.” We hear of families driven from their homes, living in terror, their dignity trampled underfoot by the boot of hatred. This is not a distant political issue; it is a fundamental failure of our shared humanity. When we see any people—any people at all—stripped of safety, of home, of hope, and we remain silent, we become bystanders to injustice. We cannot call upon the God of Abraham while ignoring the suffering of his children, of any faith, in the lands he walked.
And what of the very foundation of human dignity—the sacredness of life itself, from its most vulnerable beginning? The discovery of tiny, discarded bodies in Kenya speaks of a darkness that chills the soul. It is a grotesque betrayal of the Psalmist’s awe: “For thou hast possessed my reins: thou hast covered me in my mother’s womb. I will praise thee; for I am fearfully and wonderfully made.” Each of those lives, however brief, was a thought in the mind of God, a unique and marvelous work. Their silent testimony accuses a culture that has grown casual about life, that sees human beings as problems to be managed or burdens to be disposed of, rather than irreplaceable gifts to be cherished and protected.
My brothers and sisters, these are not separate crises. They are the symptoms of a single, profound sickness: the loss of the conviction that every person is a temple of the Holy Spirit, endowed with an inviolable dignity. This sickness infects our structures, our technologies, and our hearts.
I must also speak of a wound within our own household of faith. In this modern age, the Church herself faces a crisis of credibility, born of our own failures to live the Gospel of love with transparency and humility. Too often, the light of Christ has been obscured by the shadows of scandal, of clericalism, and of a retreat into comfortable irrelevance. We cannot preach justice to the world if we do not tirelessly pursue justice and healing within our own walls. I call upon every baptized believer—clergy, religious, and lay faithful—to aid in solving this. Be agents of renewal. Demand accountability, live with integrity, and rebuild trust through relentless acts of humble service and unconditional love. The Church must be a field hospital, not a fortress; and every one of you is a medic in that holy work.
Now, envision with me, not the world as it is, but the world as it could be, with Jesus’s help, through the workings of good men and women. See a world where technology is shaped by an ethic of love, designed not to addict, but to educate, to connect authentically, and to uplift the human spirit. See a world where the strong defend the weak, where ancient hatreds are dissolved by courageous dialogue, and where no family fears the knock at the door. See a world where every child is welcomed, every life celebrated from conception to natural death, and where the elderly are honored as living libraries of wisdom. This is not a naive dream. This is the Kingdom of God, yearning to break into our reality through our hands, our voices, and our votes.
But hear now a dire and necessary warning. If we choose the path of comfortable silence, if we accept the world’s shadows as inevitable, we are not merely failing in a duty—we are actively constructing a dystopia. A world where childhood is a commodity to be sold, where the vulnerable are permanently exiled, and where human life is valued only for its utility, is a world that has chosen death over life. It is a world building its own apocalypse—not with fire from heaven, but with the cold, slow decay of the human soul. We will drown in a sea of our own indifference, with millstones of our own making around our collective neck. The desolation we see in headlines will cease to be news and will become simply the landscape of our existence.
The choice is before us, this very day. Lent calls us to repent, to turn around. Let us turn from consumption to compassion, from scrolling to serving, from apathy to advocacy. Let us defend the little ones, both online and off. Let us raise our voices for those whose voices are silenced by violence. Let us build a culture of life that leaves no one behind.
Do not be afraid. The Lord walks with us into this wounded world. He is the light that no digital darkness can overcome, the peace that no violence can ultimately destroy, the love that called each of us into being. Let us go forth from this place not as passive observers of a declining age, but as active, joyful builders of a new one. Let us be the good men and women through whom Christ solves these great problems, one act of courage, one word of truth, one gesture of love at a time.
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 may feel small, but a world transformed is built from countless individual acts of conscience and love. Here is how we can begin.
Regarding the digital world and the protection of the young, we must become intentional stewards of our attention and our homes. Practically, this means auditing our own social media use. Set firm time limits on your devices and honor them. Create tech-free zones in your home, especially during meals and before bedtime. When you are with family or friends, be fully present—put the phone away. For the children in your care, engage openly about online dangers and set clear, age-appropriate boundaries. Support and advocate for local initiatives that promote digital literacy and healthy childhood development away from screens. Your conscious disengagement from the endless scroll is a quiet protest and a reclaiming of your God-given time and focus.
Confronting violence against the vulnerable requires us to build a culture of active peace. This starts with seeing and honoring the dignity of every person you encounter. In your community, seek out and support organizations that provide direct aid to those in crisis, whether they are refugees, victims of domestic violence, or the homeless. Donate, volunteer, or simply amplify their work. Write to your political representatives, urging them to prioritize humanitarian aid and diplomatic solutions over conflict. Perhaps most fundamentally, refuse to participate in the dehumanization of any group of people in your conversations, even when discussions are difficult. Choose words that recognize shared humanity over those that divide.
To uphold the sacredness of every human life, from conception to natural death, we must practice a consistent ethic of care. This means offering practical support to families in your parish and neighborhood—meals for new parents, respite for caregivers, companionship for the elderly and lonely. Volunteer at or donate to pregnancy support centers, hospices, and hospitals. Be a voice in your community for policies that support maternal health, prenatal care, and dignified end-of-life palliative care. In your daily interactions, treat every person—the cashier, the colleague, the stranger in distress—with a patience and respect that acknowledges their inherent, irreplaceable worth.
We are not called to solve every global crisis alone. We are called to tend faithfully to the part of the world within our reach, with the tools we have been given: our time, our attention, our resources, and our voice. Start there. Let your daily life be your most powerful sermon.
Go in peace.
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