Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters, on this Saturday, a day of quiet reflection before the Lord’s Day.
We gather as a family of faith, but we cannot gather in ignorance of the world that groans outside these walls. It is a world that cries out, a world that echoes with the very sounds the Lord told us would come. We hear of wars and rumors of wars. We see nation rising against nation, not as ancient history, but as today’s devastating headlines from the Middle East, where panic fills the roads and the specter of death descends from the skies. The Lord told us not to be alarmed, for such things must happen, but He did not tell us to be indifferent. He did not grant us permission to turn away. To hear of war and feel nothing is to become deaf to the suffering of Christ in our brothers and sisters.
And where does this tide of conflict and hatred flow? It flows, with particular cruelty, against the very body of Christ. In places like Nigeria, our faith is paid for in blood. “Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness,” the Lord proclaims. And we see that blessedness in the courageous witness of our brothers and sisters who hold fast to His name while gunmen surround their villages. Theirs is the kingdom of heaven, a promise of eternal solace. But what is our promise to them? We cannot offer only prayers from a distance while they offer their lives. Their martyrdom is a searing question posed to our comfortable faith: What will you do?
This violence without is mirrored by a quieter, more insidious decay within. It is a moral confusion that seeps into the hearts of the young and the old alike through the very screens we hold in our hands. A nation now moves to ban its youth from social media, a desperate shield against a flood of falsehood, impurity, and predation. The Apostle Paul urged us to think on what is true, noble, right, pure, lovely, and admirable. Yet our digital squares are too often forums for what is false, base, corrupt, vile, and hateful. We are losing the habit of excellence, of praiseworthy thought, and in doing so, we are starving our souls and poisoning the wellspring of future virtue.
Yet, my dear friends, do not lose heart. We are not prophets of doom, but heralds of hope. I ask you to envision, with the eyes of faith, a world transformed. Envision a world where, through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the tireless work of good men and women, these wounds are healed. See a world where diplomats, inspired by the Gospel of peace, lay down their agendas and take up the cause of reconciliation. See a world where the persecution of Christians ceases not because the faith is extinguished, but because its relentless, peaceful love has disarmed the persecutor. See a world where our digital arenas are not battlegrounds of the soul, but vibrant marketplaces of truth, beauty, and genuine encounter, where the young are not protected from the world by walls, but are formed in virtue so they can sanctify the world.
To build this world, the Church herself must be a flawless instrument. And here we must, in humility, acknowledge a grave illness within our own house: the scandal of division, of cliques and factions, where ideology and personal ambition too often fracture the unity for which Christ prayed. We argue over liturgies and labels while the world burns and our brethren are slain. This internal strife paralyzes our mission and mutes our prophetic voice. I call upon every one of you, the faithful, to aid in solving this. Be agents of unity in your parishes. Reject the gossip that divides. Seek communion before being right. Let your first loyalty be to Christ and His Body, the Church, not to any earthly camp. Heal the fractures from within, so we may be a credible healer for the world.
For if we do not act—if we hear of war and change the channel, if we learn of persecution and offer only a fleeting sigh, if we surrender our minds and our children’s hearts to digital degradation, and if we nurse our own divisions—then we choose a different vision. We choose the apocalypse not as revelation, but as ruin. A world where conflict, fed by our indifference, consumes continents. Where the light of faith is snuffed out in region after region, leaving a spiritual darkness we cannot imagine. Where human dignity is erased, not by tyrants alone, but by our own surrendered capacity to see the true, the good, and the beautiful. We will have built, by our inaction, a kingdom not of God, but of man at his very worst.
The choice is ours, this day. The Lord does not ask us to succeed by the world’s measure, but to strive by the measure of the Cross. He asks for our hands, our voices, our prayers, and our unwavering courage. Let us go forth from this place not as an audience that has heard a sermon, but as an army of peace, a chorus of consolation, a school of virtue, and a family truly united. Let us build, with the help of the Savior, the world of peace, justice, and love that is His promise and our sacred duty to begin.
Amen.
What can we do?
In the face of overwhelming news, our call is not to despair but to engage. Our faith must be lived in practical, tangible actions that weave threads of peace, solidarity, and integrity into the fabric of our daily world. Here is how we can begin.
Confronting War and Conflict: The images of panic and displacement call us to be builders of peace right where we are. This starts with informed and charitable discourse. Resist the temptation to reduce complex conflicts to simplistic "sides" in casual conversation. Seek out credible, nuanced sources of news that explain root causes and human suffering, not just dramatic headlines. Actively support, through donations or volunteer time, humanitarian organizations providing aid to all victims of war, regardless of creed or nationality. In your own community, extend a special welcome to refugees and immigrants, helping them find belonging. Peace is built person by person, through understanding and practical compassion.
Addressing Persecution and Violence: When our brothers and sisters face violence for their faith, our solidarity must be active. First, be informed. Follow the work of organizations that monitor religious freedom and report on persecuted communities. Make their plight known through respectful conversations and by sharing their stories. Write to your political representatives, urging them to prioritize religious freedom and humanitarian protection in foreign policy. Support, financially if you can, Catholic and ecumenical charities that provide direct aid—food, medicine, legal aid, and trauma care—to these afflicted communities. Do not let their suffering be invisible.
Countering Moral Decay and Social Fragmentation: The digital world presents profound challenges to human dignity, especially for the young. Your primary mission field is your own home and habits. Practice intentional digital stewardship. Create tech-free times and spaces in your family life to foster real conversation and presence. Critically evaluate the media you consume; choose what uplifts, educates, and reveals truth rather than what merely agitates or demeans. In your workplace and social circles, be a person of unwavering integrity. Refuse to participate in gossip, and have the courage to gently correct falsehoods. Mentor a young person, offering them a model of virtue lived joyfully in the modern world. Build community—invite neighbors over, check on the lonely, participate in local initiatives. A healthy society is built from the ground up, through virtuous individuals in strong communities.
These are not grand, distant gestures, but the daily work of a faithful life. We change the world by how we choose to see, speak, and serve in our own sphere. Let your actions, however small they seem, be deliberate contributions to a culture of life, peace, and human dignity.
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.