March 24, 2026 - Build the Kingdom with Jesus's Help

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

We gather today in the shadow of the Cross, in this sacred season of Lent, a time of profound reflection on the brokenness of our world and the boundless mercy of the One who entered into that brokenness to redeem it. We look upon the landscape of our modern age, a world of dazzling connection and yet cavernous isolation, of immense wealth and yet intolerable poverty of spirit. We see the works of human hands capable of curing disease and exploring the stars, yet we also see those same hands clenched in fists of hatred or turned inward in acts of self-destruction. The readings presented to us today are not mere news items; they are a diagnostic of the soul of our time, a litany of wounds crying out for the healing balm of Christ’s love.

First, we behold the ancient, terrible specter of violence against the innocent. In the Holy Land, a place sanctified by the footsteps of the Prince of Peace, we see cycles of retaliation and hatred that consume the children of Abraham. A life is lost in tragedy, and the response is not a cry for justice tempered by mercy, but a wave of vengeance that targets villages, homes, and the defenseless. This is not the way. This is the logic of the world, a logic that always demands an eye for an eye until the whole world is blind. But we are called to a different logic, the logic of the Gospel. “Blessed are the peacemakers,” our Lord teaches us, “for they will be called children of God.” To be a child of God is to resemble our Father, who so loved the world that He gave His only Son. A peacemaker is not passive; a peacemaker is a courageous architect of a new reality. He is the one who builds a bridge where others erect a wall, who extends a hand where others wield a stone, who sees in the face of the so-called enemy a brother or sister for whom Christ died. Imagine, my brothers and sisters, a world where this beatitude is lived! A world where the energy spent on planning attacks is spent on planning communities; where the funds that procure weapons procure wells and schools; where the land that is disputed becomes land that is shared, cultivated together for the common good. This is not a naive dream. This is the Kingdom of God, and it is built by the hands of good men and women who, with Jesus’s help, dare to make peace.

Then, we turn our gaze to the dignity of the human conscience, to the sacred right to seek God according to the light given to us. In places where the state seeks to regulate the outward signs of inner belief, to push faith into a purely private corner, we see a different kind of conflict—a conflict not of arms, but of identity. Our Lord proclaimed, “Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” Persecution wears many garments. Sometimes it is violent and bloody; other times it is bureaucratic and cold, a slow erosion of the space where faith can breathe and serve the public square. A society that fears the visible expression of belief is a society that fears the transcendent, that seeks to build a city of man without any window open to the City of God. But we are called to be that window! We are called to be witnesses, not to impose, but to propose; not to dominate, but to serve. Envision a world where every person, in freedom and truth, can seek the face of God and live their faith in charity. A world where the diversity of belief leads not to suspicion and regulation, but to a respectful dialogue aimed at the common good. This world is built by good men and women who, with Jesus’s help, defend religious freedom for all, knowing that the first freedom is the freedom to say “yes” to God.

And we must, with pastoral clarity and deep compassion, confront the sickness of a culture that trivializes the profound gift of human sexuality. We see a digital marketplace that reduces the sacred mystery of the human person, created in the image and likeness of God, to a commodity for consumption. It promises intimacy but delivers isolation; it promises liberation but forges chains of addiction and objectification. The Apostle Paul’s urgent counsel rings through the centuries: “Flee from sexual immorality. All other sins a person commits are outside the body, but whoever sins sexually, sins against their own body.” To sin against the body is to sin against the temple of the Holy Spirit, to fracture the integrity of the person who is meant for love and self-gift. This is not a condemnation of persons, who are always loved by God, but a condemnation of a system that exploits human loneliness and weakness for profit. Imagine a world healed of this! A world where human love is seen not as a pleasure to be consumed, but as a promise to be cherished; where the dignity of every person, in their masculinity and femininity, is revered; where families are sanctuaries of stability and unconditional love. This world is restored by good men and women who, with Jesus’s help, live and proclaim the beauty of chastity and faithful love.

Yet, as we strive to heal these wounds of the world, we must also have the humility to acknowledge a wound within our own household. One of the great trials for the Church in our time is the crisis of credibility born of our own failures—the failure to always protect the little ones, the failure of integrity, the shadow of scandal that has obscured the light of Christ for so many. This is our cross to bear. And so, I call upon you, the faithful, not to turn away in disillusionment, but to join in the work of cleansing and renewal. We need your prayers, your holy lives, your insistence on transparency, and your service in our parishes and institutions. Be part of the solution. Help build a Church that is truly a field hospital, where all are welcomed, healed, and where those who serve are above reproach.

For we stand at a crossroads. The path of peacemaking, of defending conscience, of upholding human dignity—this is the narrow path that leads to life. It is the path of building, with Jesus’s help, that world we have dared to envision. But there is another path, a broad and easy road that the world often travels. It is the path of indifference. If we choose this path—if we hear of violence and simply change the channel, if we see religious freedom curtailed and think it does not affect us, if we consume a culture of exploitation and call it entertainment, if we ignore the sins within our own walls—then we choose a different future.

This is my dire and urgent warning: if we do not contribute, if we do not act, the world we will inhabit will be a world of ever-deepening shadows. The cycles of violence will spiral beyond any hope of control, leaving our children a legacy of ashes. The silencing of faith will create a spiritual vacuum, a silent, materialistic world where the human spirit, starved for meaning, will turn to new and cruel idols. The degradation of the human person will shatter the very foundation of society—the family—leaving a landscape of loneliness, where connection is a digital phantom and love is a forgotten word. This is not the fire of divine punishment from an angry God. It is the cold, logical consequence of human choices made without God, the apocalyptic reality of a humanity that has chosen, piece by piece, to abandon its own dignity and destiny.

But this is not our fate! We are an Easter people, and “Alleluia” is our song! The stone of the tomb is rolled away. The victory is won. The power to build the world of peace, freedom, and love is already given to us in the Risen Christ. It is a power that works through the mundane, through the daily acts of forgiveness, through the courageous stand for justice, through the pure and faithful love in our homes, through the humble service in our wounded Church.

Let us leave this place not as passive observers of a dying world, but as active co-creators, with Jesus’s help, of a world being born. Let us be the peacemakers. Let us be the defenders of conscience. Let us be the witnesses to love. Let us be the healers of our Church. Let us build, together, the Kingdom that is already among us.

Amen.


What can we do?

In the face of conflicts that harm innocent people, our practical contribution begins with informed compassion. We can consciously seek out news from reputable, non-sensationalist sources that provide context, not just headlines. This helps us understand the human stories on all sides, moving beyond simplistic narratives. In our own communities, we can support or volunteer with organizations that provide humanitarian aid to victims of war, regardless of their origin or creed. We can also model respectful dialogue in our own conversations, refusing to dehumanize any group of people, and challenging those who do. Peace is built person by person, through the daily choice to see our shared humanity.

Regarding the challenges to religious freedom, our role is to be both steadfast and understanding. We can start by educating ourselves on the principles of religious liberty, recognizing that the freedom to live our faith includes defending that same right for others. Practically, this means participating respectfully in the civic process—writing to representatives, voting with conscience, and supporting legal organizations that defend these fundamental rights. In our workplaces and schools, we can simply and quietly live our convictions with integrity, while also creating spaces where colleagues of different beliefs feel respected and safe. True faith needs no imposition, only the freedom to be lived authentically.

Confronting a culture that often commodifies intimacy and degrades human dignity requires a commitment to positive action. We can choose to support media, art, and entertainment that uplifts the human spirit and portrays relationships with respect. We can mentor young people, offering a counter-narrative to the one they find online—one that speaks of love, commitment, and the profound beauty of the human person. In our own families and friendships, we can foster environments of open, honest conversation about the challenges of living with integrity in a digital age. Most importantly, we can practice charity in our judgments, remembering that many are wounded by this culture, and our first response should be one of compassion, not condemnation.

These are not grand, distant gestures. They are the daily, practical choices of a life lived intentionally: to seek understanding over division, to champion dignity for all, and to build a culture of respect, one interaction at a time. This is how we plant the seeds of a better world.

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.