Feb. 27, 2026 - Choose Life, Build the Dawn

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

We gather today in a world that cries out. It is a cry that rises from the blood-soaked earth of ancient lands, where a child is left to bleed, not by the random chaos of war, but by the conscious, chilling inaction of those who could have offered aid. It is a whimper that echoes in a sterile hospital corridor, where the most vulnerable life—a tiny, precious child—is entrusted to our care, and that sacred trust is shattered by negligence. It is the silent, corrosive sigh of moral compromise in high places, where the powerful dine with darkness, pleading ignorance while their associations erode the very foundations of public trust.

These are not mere news items, my dear friends. They are symptoms. They are the fevered temperature of a world suffering from a profound sickness of the soul. It is the sickness of indifference, which allows us to watch suffering and say, “But we knew nothing about this.” It is the sickness of a degraded sense of human dignity, where the weak, the orphaned, the needy are seen as burdens, not as brothers and sisters bearing the indelible image of God. It is the sickness of moral twilight, where we prefer the shadows of complicity to the clear, demanding light of truth.

The ancient wisdom calls to us across the centuries: “Rescue those being led away to death; hold back those staggering toward slaughter.” To hear of a boy left to die, of ambulances blocked—this is not a political problem for others to solve. It is a direct, screaming command to the Christian conscience. God, who weighs the heart, perceives our knowledge. He knows when we have looked away. Each life is a universe of divine love, and to abandon one is to blaspheme against the Creator. We must be the ones who run toward the bleeding, who demand passage for mercy, who refuse to let geography or ideology strip any human of their sacred right to compassion.

And how can we defend life in a warzone if we do not uphold it in a place of healing? “Defend the weak and the fatherless; uphold the cause of the poor and the oppressed.” A hospital is meant to be a sanctuary of life, a modern embodiment of the Good Samaritan’s care. When that sanctuary fails through indifference or incompetence, the very fabric of our society is torn. It tells us that life is conditional, that care is a commodity. We must demand systems, everywhere, that reflect the unconditional love of Christ for every child, every patient, every soul trembling in fear or pain.

Yet, what fuels this global indifference? Often, it is the fruit of a deeper corruption, a moral numbness that begins not in the field or the hospital, but in the gilded halls of power and influence. “Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but rather expose them.” We see it when leaders, those entrusted with shaping our world, are found entangled with profound wickedness. Pleading ignorance is not an absolution; it is an indictment of a conscience that chose not to inquire, of a moral compass that failed to point true north. This corruption is a poison that seeps from the top down, justifying every smaller evil, every act of neglect, every withheld mercy. It tells the world that truth is flexible, that association has no cost, that darkness can be tolerated if it wears a suit.

My brothers and sisters, I must speak to you plainly of a shadow within our own house. This same sickness of moral compromise, this fear of exposure, this prioritization of institution over integrity, has touched the Church. We have seen, to our immense sorrow, how the failure to ruthlessly expose darkness, to prioritize the protection of the innocent over the protection of reputation, has caused catastrophic scandal and suffering. It has wounded the faithful and crippled our voice in the world. This is our cross to bear and our mission to repair. I call upon every one of you—clergy and laity alike—to be agents of relentless transparency and courageous reform within the Body of Christ. Demand accountability. Support the vulnerable. Be a light so bright that no shadow of past failure can remain. We cannot preach healing to the world if we do not zealously practice surgery upon ourselves.

Now, envision with me, through the eyes of faith, the world that is possible. Envision a world where the command to “rescue” is so ingrained that soldiers lay down their rifles to apply bandages, where borders are opened for ambulances, and where no child dies alone. Envision hospitals where the defense of the weak is the highest science, where every life is treated with the reverence of the Holy Infant. Envision corridors of power where association with corruption is an unthinkable scandal, and leaders are chosen for the clarity of their moral light. This is not a naive dream. This is the Kingdom of God, yearning to break through. It will not be built by angels, but by you. By good men and women, animated by the Spirit of Christ, who choose to see, to act, to defend, to expose, and to love when it is most costly.

For if we do not—if we choose the comfort of blindness, the silence of complicity, the inertia of despair—then we choose a different path. We choose the apocalypse. Not an apocalypse of divine wrath, but one of our own making. A world where the cry of the abandoned child becomes the universal soundtrack of humanity. A world where trust is extinct, where every institution is a hollow shell, where the strong prey upon the weak without restraint, and the image of God in every person is trampled into the dust. We will have built a hell of our own indifference, a wasteland where love has grown cold. This is the dire warning of our own potential. God will not force us to be good. He has given us freedom, and with it, the terrible responsibility to choose life or to choose death for our world.

The time for mourning is past. The time for action is now. Let us leave this place as a people on fire with a holy urgency. Let us be the rescuers who run toward the slaughter. Let us be the defenders who rebuild the sanctuaries of life. Let us be the light that exposes every dark deed, starting within our own hearts and our own Church. Let us build, with our own hands and hearts, the world Christ showed us—a world where not one of these little ones is lost.

Do this, and we will see the dawn. Refuse, and we embrace the night.

The choice is yours. Go, and build the dawn.

Amen.


What can we do?

In the face of violence against innocents, your practical duty is to become a relentless advocate for the overlooked. This means consciously shifting your attention and resources toward reputable humanitarian organizations operating in conflict zones. Research them, donate consistently if you can, and amplify their verified reports on your social networks. In your own community, support local refugee resettlement programs. The practical act is to refuse to let suffering become background noise; choose one cause, one organization, and commit to being a steady, informed supporter.

To defend human dignity and life, cultivate a habit of local vigilance and advocacy. This means holding institutions in your own community—hospitals, schools, social services—to account. Participate in town halls, write respectful but firm letters to local editors and officials about gaps in care, and support community health initiatives. Practice seeing the inherent dignity in every person you interact with daily, especially those in service roles or who are marginalized. Defending dignity starts by never tolerating its erosion in your immediate sphere.

Confronting moral corruption requires the courage of conscientious objection in your professional and personal circles. This means making ethical choices in your consumption and investments, supporting businesses with transparent practices, and withdrawing support from those mired in scandal. In your workplace, have the quiet courage to ask difficult questions about partnerships and policies. Teach the young people in your life, by example, to value integrity over access or prestige. Exposing darkness often begins with simply refusing to pretend you don't see it.

Each of these paths is walked not in a single grand gesture, but through the steady accumulation of daily choices: where you direct your attention, your resources, your voice, and your loyalty. We build a better world by constructing a life where justice, dignity, and integrity are the bricks and mortar of our ordinary actions.

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.