Aug. 30, 2025 - Renewing Faith in a Broken World

Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters, on this Saturday, a day we traditionally set aside to honor the Blessed Virgin Mary and reflect on the quiet strength of her faith.

We gather today in a world that groans under the weight of its own contradictions—a world capable of breathtaking charity and unspeakable cruelty, often in the same breath. We have seen the innocent, like the children of Bethlehem under Herod’s rage, struck down in places of sanctuary and learning, their lives extinguished by the very hatred that seeks to mock the divine. We witness the persecution of those who, like the apostles, flee from one city to another, carrying only the Gospel and a heart for service, as our brave sister Gena Heraty did in Haiti, only to be met with violence and captivity. And we see all around us the shadow of moral decay, a celebration of the unfruitful works of darkness that poison human dignity and fracture the sacred bonds of community.

These are not merely news stories; they are symptoms of a deeper sickness—a turning away from the light of Christ. When we allow fear to silence our witness, when we tolerate the degradation of the human person, when we cease to be outraged by the profanation of the sacred, we participate in a quiet apostasy. The Church herself, in this modern age, faces a great internal challenge: a crisis of credibility born of our own failings, a wound that weakens our voice and dims our light in a world that desperately needs it. We cannot speak of love if we do not practice justice; we cannot preach conversion if we do not embody contrition.

But hear me, dear faithful: this is not a call to despair. It is a call to arms—spiritual arms, forged in prayer and action. For I have seen a vision of what can be, a world reborn through the workings of good men and women who refuse to let darkness have the final word. Imagine a world where our churches are not fortresses of fear but beacons of boundless charity, where the legacy of missionaries is not one of suffering but of societies transformed by love, where the digital squares of our age are not arenas of degradation but forums for virtue and encounter. This is not a naive dream. This is the Kingdom of God, and it is built by our hands, with the help of Jesus, who walks beside us in every step we take toward our brother, our sister, in need.

Yet we must also speak the truth in its fullness. If we choose comfort over courage, if we hide our faith as a private hobby rather than live it as a public mission, then we must heed the apocalyptic warning. A world that continues to slaughter the innocent, that kidnaps the merciful, and that glorifies sin is a world writing its own epitaph. It is a world building a culture of death, and such a culture cannot stand. It will collapse under the weight of its own emptiness, its own isolation, its own despair. The darkness, left unchallenged, does not simply remain—it grows.

Therefore, I call on you, the faithful—each and every one of you. Aid our Holy Church in her hour of need by becoming living examples of transparency, humility, and reform. Atone for past failures with future holiness. Let your families be schools of virtue. Let your workplaces be arenas of integrity. Let your online presence be a testament to charity. Support those who are persecuted; welcome those who are fleeing; confront, with gentle firmness, the works of darkness. Do not wait for another to begin. The time for renewal is now.

For the Lord has not abandoned us. He is here, in the quiet of this Saturday, in the resilience of the persecuted, in the courage of those who reprove darkness, and in the heart of every person who chooses to love when it is difficult to love. Let us go forth from this place not as passive observers of a declining world, but as active builders of the new creation.

Amen.


What can we do?

When we see violence against sacred spaces, begin by becoming guardians of peace in your own community. Visit your local places of worship—not just your own—to show solidarity. Support interfaith dialogues and community watch programs. Write to local representatives advocating for better protection of religious institutions. Small acts of presence matter: attend a prayer service at a vulnerable congregation, or simply stop to talk with the caretakers of these spaces. Your visible support makes hatred harder to act upon.

For those suffering persecution abroad, let your compassion become action. Support reputable organizations that work for the release and protection of missionaries and aid workers through donations or advocacy. Educate yourself and others on the realities faced by those serving in high-risk regions. Write letters of encouragement to their families or communities—such gestures reinforce that they are not forgotten. Sometimes the most powerful weapon against oppression is sustained attention.

In the face of moral decay, commit to being an example of integrity in your own circles. Refuse to participate in or share content that degrades, stereotypes, or objectifies others. Use your voice online and offline to call out harmful behavior and promote respect. Support media and platforms that uphold human dignity. Mentor young people in your community—teach them through word and action how to engage with others thoughtfully and honorably. Change often begins in ordinary interactions.

Remember that transformation is built through consistency, not grand gestures. Live justly, love kindness, and walk humbly—not as abstract ideals, but as daily practice.

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.