Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters, on this Saturday of the Second Week of Easter, a day that calls us to reflect on the light of the Risen Christ shining into the darkest corners of our world.
We gather in a time of profound contradiction. We possess technologies that connect continents in an instant, yet we witness a terrifying fragmentation of the human spirit. We have built systems of immense wealth, yet we have not eradicated the ancient poisons of hatred, violence, and indifference. The news that reaches us each day—the stories of arson driven by prejudice, of young lives extinguished in acts of unspeakable brutality, of leaders who choose the rhetoric of division over the labor of peace—these are not merely headlines. They are symptoms of a deep moral sickness, a cry from a world that has, in so many ways, forgotten its own sacred dignity.
Look at the landscape of our modern existence. We see the persecution of the righteous, of those who seek only to live in truth and worship in peace. They are harassed, attacked, and driven from their homes, their places of prayer reduced to ashes by the flames of intolerance. To them, and to all who suffer for the sake of righteousness, we must say with unwavering solidarity: you are not forgotten. The kingdom of heaven is yours, and your witness in the face of hatred is a beacon for us all. It calls us to defend the defenseless, to be a voice for the voiceless, and to recognize that an attack on one faith, on one people, is an assault on the very family of God.
We see, too, a chilling disrespect for the sanctity of life, the foundational stone of any just society. When the commandment “You shall not murder” is treated as a negotiable suggestion rather than an inviolable law written on the human heart, we descend into a culture of death. The tragic loss of a young life, treated as a disposable object, echoes a broader decay. It speaks of a world that has commodified human dignity, where the vulnerable, the unborn, the elderly, the poor, and the stranger are too often seen as burdens rather than brothers and sisters. This moral decay is the quiet crisis that fuels the louder explosions of violence. When we no longer see the face of Christ in our neighbor, we are capable of any horror.
In the face of these storms, what is the role of the Church? What is the role of the Successor of Peter? It is not to wield earthly power, but to offer unwavering moral guidance. It is to be, in the words of our Lord, a peacemaker. “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.” This blessing is not a passive wish; it is a vocation, a command to action. It requires us to condemn the tyrants—not merely those with armies, but the tyranny of greed, the tyranny of ideology, the tyranny of indifference that spends the billions of our common inheritance on walls and weapons while children hunger for bread and for hope. To be a peacemaker is to be a revolutionary of love, to actively dismantle the structures of sin and build in their place the architecture of encounter, justice, and fraternity.
I envision a world, my dear brothers and sisters, where these wounds are healed. I see a world where, with the grace of Jesus Christ flowing through the courageous works of good men and women, the arsenals are silent and the fields are sown with seeds of community. I see a world where every life, from conception to natural death, is greeted as a gift and protected as a treasure. I see a world where the persecuted are not only comforted but celebrated as the prophets of our age. This is not a naive dream. This is the Kingdom of God, and it is built here, brick by brick, act of mercy by act of mercy, through our hands.
Yet, to build this world, we must first fortify our own home. One of the great trials facing the Church in this modern time is the scandal of division within our own body. We are fractured by ideology, by preference, by a temptation to turn inward and argue over the furnishings while the house of humanity burns outside our doors. We bicker over forms while neglecting the substance of our mission: to bring Christ to the world. I call on every one of the faithful, clergy and laity alike, to aid in solving this. Let us lay down the weapons of judgment and accusation. Let us kneel together in humility and service. Let our unity be not in uniformity of opinion, but in our common baptism, our common Eucharist, and our common mission to be a field hospital for a wounded world. A divided Church has no credible word for a divided humanity.
Hear now a warning, spoken not in anger, but in the anguish of a father for his children. If we choose complacency—if we hear the cry of the persecuted and change the channel, if we see the culture of death advance and merely shrug, if we see leaders fan the flames of war and remain silent, if we allow our own internal divisions to paralyze our charity—then we choose a path of desolation. We will inherit a world not of peace, but of perpetual conflict; not of life, but of deepening shadows; not of communion, but of isolated, fearful tribes. This is the apocalyptic warning not of a vengeful God, but of the logical end of our own collective selfishness. We will have constructed our own hell, a world devoid of hope, because we refused to be its hope.
But that is not our destiny. Today, this Saturday, is a day between the Cross and the Resurrection. It is a day of quiet, but not of inactivity. It is the day the Lord lay in the tomb, and the faithful women prepared their spices. They did not know the miracle that dawn would bring, but they acted in love nonetheless. So must we. Let us leave this place as those women left their homes: not with grand plans, but with simple, determined love. Let us be peacemakers in our families, defenders of life in our communities, shelter for the persecuted in our nations, and healers of division within our Church. Let us spend our lives, not our billions, on the works of mercy.
For the tomb is empty. Christ is risen. And He walks with us into the fray of this world, not as a distant observer, but as the source of our strength. With His help, and through the workings of good men and women—through your works—the stone will be rolled away from the heart of our world.
Amen.
What can we do?
In a world where leaders argue over the cost of war while people suffer, our first practical duty is to become peacemakers in our own spheres. This does not require a podium. It means actively refusing to perpetuate division. In your family, workplace, and community, choose dialogue over derision. Listen to understand, not to win. When you encounter conflict, be the one who de-escalates, who seeks common ground. Support and volunteer with organizations that build bridges between communities, that feed the hungry, or that tutor children in underserved areas. Peace is built person by person, through a thousand small acts of respect.
When we see persecution and violence, whether across the globe or in our own cities, we must not become numb or look away. Our contribution is twofold: solidarity and protection. Stand in solidarity by educating yourself on the plight of persecuted communities and supporting, through legitimate channels, humanitarian groups that provide them direct aid. Protect the vulnerable around you. This could mean supporting a neighbor who is being harassed, reporting vandalism or hate speech, or simply being a kind and watchful presence in your neighborhood. Create spaces of welcome and safety where you are.
Confronting a culture that often treats life as disposable begins with a profound reverence for the dignity of every person you meet. In your daily life, this means rejecting gossip and slander that tear down others. It means offering patience and kindness to those who are struggling, rather than judgment. Support local crisis pregnancy centers, suicide prevention hotlines, or programs that mentor at-risk youth. Advocate for policies and community resources that address the root causes of violence—poverty, mental illness, lack of opportunity. Cherish life by being fully present to the people in front of you, valuing them not for their utility but for their inherent worth.
Our faith is lived in the mundane, in the choices we make when no one is watching. Let your optimism be an action. Let your faith be a practical force for good, today and every day.
Go in peace.
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