April 16, 2026 - Building Peace, Unity, and Life Together

Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters, gathered here and joined in spirit across the world.

We live in a moment of profound fracture. The news that reaches us each day speaks of a world groaning under the weight of division, violence, and a deep-seated fear of the other. We hear of fragile ceasefires in distant lands, where the hope for peace is as delicate as a spider’s web, threatened by the next gust of mistrust or pride. We hear of leaders, both political and spiritual, engaged in public rifts that scandalize the faithful and confuse the searching. And most grievously, we are confronted with the piercing cry of the innocent, as in the recent, heartbreaking loss of nine precious lives in a Turkish school—students and a teacher, whose futures were extinguished in an act of senseless violence. This is the world into which we are sent as disciples.

These are not merely political issues or distant tragedies. They are spiritual crises that strike at the very heart of our vocation as children of God. The longing for peace, the need for rightful authority, and the defense of life are not abstract concepts. They are the fabric of the Kingdom we are called to build.

Consider the peacemakers. Our Lord declared, “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God.” To be a child of God is to resemble our Father, and our Father is a God of reconciliation. When we see diplomats laboring through the night to avert war, we must see more than politics; we must see a holy work. But peacemaking is not reserved for palaces. It begins in our homes, in our parishes, in our online discourse. It is the courage to interrupt the cycle of insult, to forgive the debt of offense, to build a bridge where a wall is being erected. Imagine a world, my brothers and sisters, where every Christian household became a school of peace, where every parish community became a workshop of reconciliation. With Jesus’s help, good men and women, refusing the poison of hatred, could weave a global tapestry of understanding so strong that the drums of war would fall silent for lack of an echo.

This work requires guidance, and thus we speak of authority. The Scripture reminds us to obey and submit to our leaders, for they keep watch over our souls. This is not a call to blind allegiance, but to humble communion. The Church is not a democracy of opinion, but a body with a head, a flock with shepherds. When public rifts emerge, causing confusion and pain, it is a wound in the Body of Christ. Our call is not to take sides in worldly contention, but to pray fervently for unity, to offer our leaders the respect that aids their joyful service, and to model a obedience that is free and loving. A world healed needs anchors of truth and unity. The Church is to be that anchor. But she can only be so if we, the faithful, uphold the sacred trust of our communion, supporting our shepherds not with gossip and criticism, but with prayer, fidelity, and the joy of shared mission.

All of this is for the defense of the most fundamental truth: the Sanctity of Life. “You shall not murder.” This commandment is the bedrock of a civilized and holy society. It echoes in the cry of the unborn, in the plea of the refugee, in the loneliness of the elderly, and in the terrifying silence of a school hallway after violence. Each life is a unique, irreplaceable word spoken by God into existence. When that word is violently erased, the entire story of humanity is impoverished. We must envision a world where this commandment is written not only on stone, but on every human heart. A world where every child is welcomed, every person is protected, and every life is cherished from its natural beginning to its natural end. This is the world Jesus came to redeem. This is the world good men and women, inspired by the Gospel and empowered by grace, can build—a civilization of life and love.

Yet, we must look with clear eyes at one of the great challenges within our own household that hinders this witness: the scandal of division among the faithful. Our internal strife, our factions and bitter disagreements over matters both doctrinal and pastoral, bleed out into the world. They make our proclamation of peace sound hollow. They weaken our voice when we speak for life. They obscure the face of Christ, which is a face of perfect unity. I call on every one of you, my brothers and sisters, to make the healing of this division your personal crusade. Seek first to understand, then to be understood. Assume the good will of your fellow Catholic. Let charity be the rule in all your debates. We must be one, so the world may believe.

For I must offer you a dire warning, born not of fear but of love. If we choose not to be peacemakers, the world will descend into a chaos of its own making, where conflict is the only language and the human family is shattered into a billion lonely fragments. If we scorn the guidance of the Church and make ourselves the sole arbiters of truth, we will wander a spiritual desert, building towers of Babel that reach only toward our own pride, and our souls will wither from the lack of living water. If we continue to tolerate a culture that cheapens life, that sees violence as a solution and human beings as disposable, we will forge our own apocalypse—a world devoid of future, devoid of hope, a world where the image of God in the human person is finally and utterly defaced. This is not the will of God. This is the path we choose if we remain idle.

But this is not our destiny! We are an Easter people, and ‘Alleluia’ is our song! Even today, in this second week of Easter, we are bathed in the light of the Resurrection. The same power that conquered death is at work in you. The world’s deep brokenness is not a cause for despair, but the very field upon which God has sown us as seeds of transformation.

So, go forth from this place. Be the peacemaker in your street. Be the faithful son or daughter of the Church in your heart. Be the defender of life in your choices and your voice. Mend the divisions within your own reach. Do not be afraid. For we do not work alone. With Jesus’s help, through the quiet, persistent, courageous workings of good men and women, the dawn of a new world is possible. Let us build it together.

Amen.


What can we do?

In a world where headlines speak of fragile ceasefires and diplomatic tensions, our individual contribution to peace begins in our immediate sphere. We can choose to be de-escalators in our own conflicts. This means listening first to understand, not just to reply. It means refusing to traffic in gossip or stereotypes that deepen divisions, whether about a neighbor, a coworker, or an entire nation. In our daily conversations—around the dinner table, online, or in community groups—we can consciously steer dialogue away from polarization and toward shared human concerns. Support local organizations that bridge cultural or ethnic divides, and be a voice that advocates for respectful discourse, recognizing that peace is built person by person.

Amidst public debates about authority and leadership, our practical task is to engage with wisdom and discernment. Respect for religious authority is lived not through blind obedience, but through thoughtful, informed participation in our faith communities. This means taking the time to understand the teachings and the reasons behind them, asking sincere questions, and offering our own talents in service. It also means supporting our leaders through constructive dialogue and prayer, helping to foster unity rather than division from within. In the public square, we can model how to disagree with others—even those in authority—without resorting to personal contempt or demeaning language, upholding the dignity of every person in the process.

Confronted with news of violence that assaults the sanctity of life, our response must be to actively cultivate a culture of life in our everyday routines. This starts with a profound respect for the people right in front of us: offering patience to a frustrated child, kindness to a lonely elder, or assistance to someone struggling. We can support and volunteer with local initiatives that address the roots of violence—such as mentoring programs for youth, mental health resources, or community centers that provide safe spaces. In our choices, we can reject entertainment that glorifies cruelty and instead consume media that highlights human dignity and redemption. By consistently choosing to see and affirm the irreplaceable value in every person we meet, we build a barrier against the indifference that allows violence to fester.

These are not grand, distant gestures, but the close, daily work of building a better world through our attention, our words, and our small, consistent actions. It is in this faithful, practical soil that hope grows.

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.