Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters.
We gather today, in the heart of this Lenten season, a time of reflection, repentance, and a turning of our hearts back to the Lord. We are called to look at the world not with the distant eyes of spectators, but with the compassionate and courageous heart of Christ. We are called to see the wounds of our human family, and to ask ourselves: what is our role in their healing?
Look upon the world, dear faithful. See the violence that shatters the peace of a simple beauty salon, where women, created in the image and likeness of God, are cut down by the shrapnel of conflict. An Iranian missile does not discriminate; it claims the lives of Palestinian women and a Thai laborer alike. This is not merely a news item from a distant land. This is a cry that echoes the cry of Abel from the ground. It is the desecration of the sacred dignity of the human person. And to this, Christ our Lord proclaims, “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 vocation. We are all called to be artisans of peace. This means praying fervently for an end to war, yes. But it also means challenging the hatreds in our own hearts, refusing the language of division in our own communities, and supporting those diplomats, humanitarians, and everyday citizens who dare to build bridges where others only see walls.
Hear the cry of the persecuted and the silenced. See the young life, a teenager, extinguished under the heavy hand of a state, accused and executed in the turmoil of protest. Remember the athlete, his potential forever lost. The Book of Proverbs implores us: “Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, for the rights of all who are destitute.” Injustice flourishes in the silence of the good. Our faith cannot be a private comfort when our brothers and sisters are stripped of their rights, their voice, their very lives. We must be their voice. We must advocate through prayer, through raising awareness, through supporting organizations that defend human rights, and through demanding that our own nations pursue foreign policies rooted in human dignity, not merely political convenience.
And let us look, with sorrow and resolve, upon the failures of those placed in positions of trust. When a leader celebrated for justice is himself accused of profound injustice, when any figure entrusted with moral authority is revealed to have betrayed that trust, the wound is deep. It echoes the ancient standard set for an overseer: to be above reproach, self-controlled, respectable, not violent. These failings are not just personal tragedies; they are scandals that shake the very foundations of trust in goodness itself. They give fuel to the cynic and cause the little ones to stumble.
And here, in humility, I must speak of a shadow within our own beloved Church. We have witnessed, to our profound shame, the scandal of the abuse of the vulnerable and the failures in leadership to protect the flock. This moral failing has wounded souls, driven the faithful away, and obscured the radiant face of Christ. I call upon every one of you, the People of God, to aid in solving this profound crisis. Do not turn away in disgust. Do not let your faith be defined by the failings of men. Instead, I call you to be agents of purification. Demand transparency and accountability from your shepherds. Support the survivors with unwavering compassion and justice. Foster in your parishes and families a culture of absolute respect, integrity, and safeguarding for the young and the vulnerable. The Church is not a fortress of the perfect, but a field hospital for sinners. Yet, a hospital must be clean, or it will infect the very wounds it seeks to heal. You, the laity, in your holy witness and righteous expectation, are essential to this cleansing.
Now, envision with me, not with mere human optimism, but with the divine hope that is our inheritance. Envision a world where, through the grace of Christ and the courageous works of good men and women, these wounds are healed. See a world where peacemakers, blessed by God, have disarmed conflicts not with weapons, but with dialogue and relentless justice. See a world where the voice of the voiceless is heard in every hall of power, and the poor and needy find not only charity but their rightful place at the table of human fellowship. See a Church, humbled and purified, shining once more as a beacon of authentic love, where leadership is synonymous with service and holiness. This is not a naive dream. This is the Kingdom of God, for which we pray every day: “Thy Kingdom come.” It comes through our hands, our voices, our choices.
But hear now a warning, born not of fear, but of love and prophetic urgency. If we, the children of light, choose complacency; if we hear the cries of the innocent and change the channel; if we see injustice and whisper, “It is not my problem”; if we witness scandal in our own midst and look away for the sake of a false peace—then we are not salt of the earth, but dust on the road. We are not a city on a hill, but a ruin. If we do not contribute to a better world, the world will grow immeasurably worse. The violence will not remain “over there.” It will breed more violence, until it laps at our own shores. The silence in the face of persecution will become a universal silence, where no one dares speak for anyone, and tyranny reigns. The moral decay in leadership will become a universal cynicism, where no one believes in goodness, truth, or beauty anymore. We will construct not a civilization of love, but a global wasteland of alienation, fear, and despair. This is the apocalyptic warning: not fire from heaven, but the cold, dark emptiness of a world from which God’s faithful have retreated.
This Lent, let us not just give up chocolate. Let us take up the cross. Let us take up the work of peacemaking. Let us take up the defense of the destitute. Let us take up the mission of holding ourselves and our leaders, secular and ecclesiastical, to the highest standard of Gospel love. Let our prayer, our fasting, and our almsgiving be directed outward, as a powerful force for global healing.
Today, the Lenten journey asks us: will we be merely observers of a fractured world, or will we be, through Christ who strengthens us, its healers? The choice is ours. The time is now.
Amen.
What can we do?
In the face of violence that claims innocent lives, our practical contribution begins with the cultivation of peace in our own sphere. This means actively rejecting hatred in our conversations, especially online and in private. When discussions turn to conflict, we can refuse to dehumanize any group of people. We can support and donate to humanitarian organizations that provide aid to all civilians in war zones, regardless of nationality or creed. In our daily interactions, we can be mediators—calming tensions in our families, workplaces, and communities, embodying the patience and understanding that prevents smaller conflicts from escalating.
Confronted by injustice and persecution, our duty is to become informed and responsible advocates. We must seek out reliable news sources that tell the difficult stories of the oppressed. We can then use our voices by writing to elected representatives, supporting ethical businesses, and boycotting those that enable oppression. In our local communities, we can volunteer with or donate to organizations that assist refugees and asylum seekers, offering practical welcome. We must also examine our own biases and privileges, ensuring we are not silently complicit in systems that marginalize others.
When leaders fail morally, causing scandal and broken trust, our response must be one of principled accountability and personal integrity. We should demand transparency and ethical conduct from those in authority, not through mob outrage, but through sustained, reasoned civic engagement—voting, attending town halls, and supporting integrity in journalism. More importantly, we must hold ourselves to the same high standard. We build a better world by being scrupulously honest in our work, faithful in our relationships, and gentle in our authority, whether as a parent, a manager, or a friend. We rebuild trust from the ground up by being trustworthy individuals.
These are not grand, distant gestures, but the fabric of a faithful daily life: a word of peace, an act of justice, a stand for integrity. This is how light is spread, not all at once, but from one heart, one home, one community to another.
Go in peace.
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