Dec. 13, 2025 - Build God's Kingdom with Active Love

Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters, gathered here in this sacred space and joining us from across the world on this quiet Saturday, a day of reflection before the Lord’s Day.

We gather as a family of faith, but we cannot close our eyes to the world that groans outside our doors. It is a world crying out for the healing touch of Christ, a world where the topics of our daily news are not merely political issues, but profound spiritual crises that test the very fabric of our human dignity and our communion with God.

Look first to the Holy Land, a land sanctified by the footsteps of the Prince of Peace. There, we see not peace, but a devastating conflict. Gazans suffer profoundly, caught in a cycle of violence where every day of delay in peace is an eternity of anguish. In such moments, we must recall the divine vocation placed upon every human heart: “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.” To be a child of God is not a passive inheritance; it is an active calling. It means to be one who builds bridges where there are chasms of hatred, who speaks of reconciliation when others shout for retribution, who prays fervently and acts justly so that the tough choices of leaders may be guided by the tougher, yet more glorious, commandment of love. Imagine, my brothers and sisters, a world where the children of God—where we—so actively sow peace in our own communities, in our own hearts, that its ripple becomes a wave, reaching even the most entrenched conflicts. With Jesus’s help, good men and women can become the instruments that finally silence the weapons, not with the force of arms, but with the irresistible power of relentless, courageous love.

Yet, even as we speak of peace, we must acknowledge those for whom peace is a distant dream because they are persecuted for their conscience, for their faith, for their simple insistence on human dignity. From prisons in distant lands, a cry echoes. It is the cry of the righteous, like the courageous Narges Mohammadi, who bears witness to truth at great personal cost. Her plight, and that of so many unnamed brothers and sisters, calls to mind the Lord’s promise: “Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” This beatitude is not a consolation for a future alone; it is a charge to us in the present. Their blessedness is a mirror held up to our own comfort. Are we their accomplices in silence? Or are we their advocates in truth? We must envision a world where the kingdom of heaven is made manifest precisely by our collective defense of the persecuted, where the global community of the faithful becomes a shield for the defenseless and a megaphone for the silenced. This is the work of good men and women, inspired by Christ, who refuse to let the light of human dignity be extinguished.

And how does the human spirit endure such trials? It turns to God in worship. It finds sanctuary in communion. Consider the profound witness of our brothers and sisters in Colombia, who carved a cathedral of praise 180 meters underground. In the darkness of the earth, in the peril of their labor, they knew a fundamental truth: “For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them.” They built not just with tools, but with faith, declaring that no depth, no darkness, no power on earth can separate us from the love of God made present when we gather in His name. This is the ultimate answer to persecution and strife: an unbreakable communion. We must foster a world where religious freedom is not a concession, but the very bedrock of a just society, allowing every human heart to seek its Creator, whether in soaring basilicas or in humble, hidden depths.

Yet, as we contemplate these global wounds, we must also have the courage to look within our own spiritual home. One of the great trials for the Church in our modern time is the scandal of division—within our communities, between generations, across ideologies. We fracture into camps, speaking past one another, allowing the unity of the Body of Christ to be wounded by our own pride and lack of charity. This internal discord weakens our witness to a world desperate for unity. I call on all the faithful here today: aid in solving this. Be artisans of communion. Listen more than you speak. Seek to understand before demanding to be understood. In your families, in your parishes, in your online dialogues, be a force for binding up, not for tearing apart. Let our first and greatest act for the betterment of global society be to truly live as one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church.

For if we do not take up this cross of active love—if we remain indifferent to the peacemakers’ call, deaf to the cry of the persecuted, complacent in our own freedom while others are forbidden to worship, and content with division within our walls—then we must heed a dire warning. A world that chooses not love chooses its own annihilation. It is not God who sends apocalyptic fire, but humanity that ignites it. We will see not the end of days, but the end of our own humanity, consumed by the fires of hatred, injustice, and isolation we ourselves fueled. The desert will spread, not from a lack of water, but from a lack of mercy. The darkness will fall, not from an absent sun, but from extinguished souls.

But this is not our destiny! This Saturday calls us not to despair, but to preparation. Let us prepare our hearts for tomorrow’s Eucharist, where we receive the strength for this very mission. Let us be inspired by the martyrs, like Saint Lucy, who held the light of Christ so steadfastly that no darkness could overcome it. That is our task: to be bearers of that unconquerable light.

Envision with me, through the eyes of faith, the world that can be: a world where the peacemakers have built a lasting edifice of justice, where the persecuted are vindicated and celebrated, where every human heart can freely sing God’s praise, and where the Church shines as one beacon of hope. This is the Kingdom, and it is built by the hands of good men and women, brick by brick, prayer by prayer, act of kindness by act of kindness, with Jesus working tirelessly through us.

Let us go forth from this place not as passive observers of a troubled world, but as its active healers. Let us be the answer to the prayers of the suffering. Let us build the cathedral of a new world, from the deepest mines of human suffering to the highest aspirations of the human spirit, knowing that wherever we gather in His name to do this work, He is there, guiding our hands and strengthening our hearts.

Amen.


What can we do?

In the face of distant wars and entrenched conflicts, our task is to become architects of peace in our own communities. This begins with informed compassion. Seek out news from reputable, non-sensationalist sources that explain the human cost of conflict, not just the political maneuvers. Let this understanding move you to support humanitarian organizations providing aid to all civilians suffering in war zones, whether through donations or raising awareness. Crucially, practice peace in your daily interactions. Refuse to engage in or propagate the dehumanizing rhetoric that fuels division. Be the person who listens to understand, not to win an argument, and actively seek common ground with those who hold different views.

When we hear of persecution, whether of people for their faith, their activism, or their identity, we must counteract isolation with solidarity. Educate yourself about the specific situations and the names of those persecuted, like Narges Mohammadi. Write respectful, factual letters to your elected representatives, urging them to prioritize human rights in foreign policy. Support, either through time or resources, the legal and advocacy groups that work to defend prisoners of conscience. In your own sphere, be a defender of dignity. Stand up against gossip, prejudice, and bullying. Create environments—at work, in social groups, online—where every person is treated with inherent respect.

The profound human need to worship and seek meaning calls us to foster spaces of authentic connection. Actively participate in and support your own community of faith, recognizing it as a source of strength and a training ground for service. Extend this spirit of fellowship beyond your own group. Advocate for the religious freedom of all people in your town or city. Attend an interfaith gathering or a cultural celebration different from your own, not as a tourist, but as a respectful guest seeking to understand. In your daily life, create small "sacred spaces" of gathering—a regular coffee with a lonely neighbor, a family meal without devices, a team meeting that begins by acknowledging each person's contribution. These acts build the invisible cathedral of community that sustains us all.

Our practical faith is lived in the accumulation of small, conscious choices: to seek understanding over judgment, to act on solidarity over indifference, and to build bridges rather than walls. This is how we mend the world, one day at a time.

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.