March 21, 2026 - Building Peace, Defending Dignity, Transforming Worlds

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

On this Saturday, a day of quiet anticipation for the Lord’s Day, we gather not in rest from the world, but to confront the world with the courage of our faith. We look upon the landscape of our time, and we see the shadows lengthening. We hear the echoes of ancient hatreds and witness the fresh wounds inflicted upon the body of humanity. Yet, we do not look with despair, for we are an Easter people, and our hope is not of this world, but it must transform this world.

We see the scourge of war and violence. The machinery of conflict grinds on, from the plains of Europe to the deserts of the Middle East, where retaliations spiral and the price is counted not only in billions of dollars of damage, but in billions of tears, in shattered childhoods, and in generations taught that the sword is the only answer. To this, the Lord speaks a simple, revolutionary truth: “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.” This is not a passive blessing for those who simply avoid conflict. It is a call to the most arduous labor: the active, relentless, creative pursuit of peace. It is the work of diplomats, yes, but also of teachers who instill respect, of community leaders who bridge divides, of mothers and fathers who raise children to see the face of Christ in the stranger. Imagine, my brothers and sisters, a world where this beatitude is our blueprint. A world where the resources spent on weapons are poured instead into wells, schools, and hospitals. A world where the peacemaker is the greatest hero. This is the world Christ’s disciples are called to build, brick by brick, prayer by prayer, act of courage by act of courage.

And we see the ancient poison of persecution, which now wears modern guises. It targets our Christian brothers and sisters in many lands, who worship in secret for fear of violence. It targets other religious minorities, driven from ancient homelands. And it targets the courageous of every faith, like that brave woman in Tunisia, Saadia Mosbah, imprisoned for defending the dignity of migrants, for seeing a brother and sister where others saw only a threat. To all who suffer for righteousness, for the fundamental right to worship, to speak, to defend the vulnerable, the Lord proclaims: “Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” Their blessing is their crown, but our duty is their shield. We cannot be silent. Our solidarity must be vocal, tangible, and persistent. We must be a Church that is a safe harbor, a voice for the voiceless, a family that never abandons its own or its neighbors.

This leads us to the very foundation of it all: the inviolable dignity and sanctity of every human life. “So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them.” This is not a metaphor. It is the bedrock of our civilization. It is the truth that shatters every ideology of exclusion, every policy of cruelty, every barrier of indifference. When we read of a young migrant, like Royer Perez-Jimenez, dying alone in custody, we do not see a statistic or a political problem. We see a child of God. We see the face of Christ, who told us, “I was a stranger and you did not welcome me.” A world that forgets this truth is a world that is building its own hell. But imagine the world that remembers! A world where every life is greeted as a gift, where borders are managed with justice and compassion, where no one is disposable, and the old, the unborn, the poor, and the migrant are seen with the awe that is due to a living icon of the Creator.

Yet, to be this light to the world, we must also have the courage to let that light purify our own home. One of the great trials of the Church in our time remains the shadow of clericalism—a mentality that separates the ordained from the flock, that can foster arrogance and, in its most terrible form, create environments where the vulnerable are abused and the sin of cover-up prevails. This wound cripples our witness. We cannot preach the dignity of every person if we do not honor it radically within our own walls. I call on every one of you, the faithful, to aid in solving this. Demand transparency. Support survivors. Foster a Church where every baptized person—mother, doctor, laborer, child—is valued, heard, and empowered in their mission. Be a people of humble service, not of privilege. Help your shepherds to be servants.

The path to the world we envision is narrow and steep. It requires more than good wishes; it demands the works of good men and women animated by grace. It requires your hands, your voice, your resources, your vote, your prayer. If we retreat into private piety, if we say “peace, peace” where there is no peace, if we avert our eyes from the persecuted and the perishing, then we are not salt of the earth; we are flavorless dust. And the world will darken. The wars will multiply until they consume us. The cries of the persecuted will be drowned out by the roar of the mob. The image of God in the human person will be so defaced that we will no longer recognize ourselves, and we will inhabit a spiritual wasteland, a living apocalypse of our own making. This is not the prophecy of a vengeful God, but the logical end of a humanity that chooses to live without love, without sacrifice, without Christ.

But this is not our fate! For we have seen the empty tomb. We know that love is stronger than death. The problems of our age are vast, but they are not greater than the power of God working through a humble, committed, and unified people. Let us leave this place not as an audience, but as an army of peacemakers. Let us go forth as defenders of the persecuted. Let us go forth as guardians of human dignity, seeing in every face, especially the most sorrowful, the face of our Savior.

With Jesus’s help, through the workings of good men and women, a new dawn is possible. Let us be the ones who make it rise.

Amen.


What can we do?

In the face of distant conflicts and staggering financial costs, our contribution to peace begins with the currency of understanding. We can consciously seek out news sources that explain the complex roots of a conflict, not just its violent eruptions. In our conversations, we can refuse to dehumanize entire nations or peoples, recognizing that governments and populations are not the same. We can support, through donations or volunteer time, humanitarian organizations that aid all victims of war impartially, and we can advocate for diplomatic solutions in our civic engagements, reminding our leaders that the true cost of war is measured in lives, not dollars.

When we hear of the unjust imprisonment of those who defend the marginalized, our task is to become amplifiers of their cause and defenders of dignity in our own circles. We can educate ourselves about the plight of persecuted religious and ethnic minorities globally, using our voices on social media to raise awareness where it is safe to do so. We can write to our elected representatives, urging them to prioritize human rights in foreign policy. Locally, we can extend a direct hand of friendship to migrants, refugees, and those of minority faiths in our own communities, offering practical help, fellowship, and a steadfast commitment to their right to live without fear.

The tragic loss of a young life in custody is a stark call to uphold the inherent dignity of every person. We can advocate for compassionate and just immigration policies that respect the sanctity of life and the desperation that drives migration. We can support legal aid charities that work to ensure due process and humane treatment. In our daily conduct, this belief in dignity means actively opposing language that reduces people to labels, offering kindness to those who are struggling, and seeing the face of a fellow human being in everyone we meet, regardless of their origin or status. It means building a culture of life through everyday respect.

Our faith is made practical in these conscious, deliberate actions. By choosing understanding over prejudice, advocacy over indifference, and unwavering respect over dismissal, we build, brick by brick, the world we believe is possible. Start where you are. Use what you have.

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.