Blessings of peace to all of you, my brothers and sisters.
We gather today, a people united in faith, yet we cannot ignore the cries of a fractured world that echo even within these sacred walls. We look upon the landscape of our time and see the ancient scourges of hatred and fear wearing modern faces, wounding the very Body of Christ which is humanity itself.
From the lands once walked by the Prince of Peace, we hear the thunder of war. In Lebanon, in Gaza, and in so many forgotten corners, the earth drinks the blood of the innocent, and mothers weep for children who will never return home. Hours of ceasefire are shattered by new waves of strikes. We must ask ourselves: have we, the human family, become so numb to the drumbeat of violence that we accept it as the inevitable rhythm of history? The Lord calls us to a different vocation. He calls us to be peacemakers. For it is the peacemakers, those who dare to build bridges in the ruins, who will be called children of God. This is not a passive wish, but an active command. It is a call to diplomacy over destruction, to dialogue over retaliation, to the courageous and tireless work of sowing justice, which is the only seed from which true peace can grow.
And as the machinery of war grinds on, so too does the silent, targeted persecution of our brothers and sisters in faith. In Nigeria and elsewhere, our family is attacked, not for any crime, but for the righteousness of their belief, for the cross they dare to carry. They are held without hope, tried without justice, living the words of Christ: “Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” Their blessedness is a stark challenge to our comfort. Do we hear their cries? Do we feel their plight as our own? Or does the distance of miles lull us into a forgetfulness that is a sin of omission? The persecuted Church is not a distant reality; it is the bleeding wound on the side of Christ’s mystical body, and we are all members of that one body.
This assault on faith is intimately linked to a deeper crisis: the erosion of the sacred dignity of every human life. When we read that medical evacuations are suspended because a healer was killed on his mission of mercy, we witness a terrible inversion. The commandment “You shall not murder” is not a mere rule; it is the foundational recognition that every person, from conception to natural death, is an icon of the Creator, imbued with an inviolable sanctity. This sanctity is mocked when a hospital becomes a target, when the wounded are denied care, when any life is deemed expendable in the pursuit of power or ideology. A culture that does not hold life as sacred in the womb will not hold it sacred in the refugee camp, in the prison cell, or on the battlefield. It is one seamless garment of dignity, and we are watching it be torn asunder.
My dear friends, I must speak with a pastor’s heart of a grave illness within our own household, one that weakens our voice to speak to these external wounds. It is the poison of indifference. It is the comfortable separation of our Sunday worship from the suffering of Monday’s world. It is the notion that faith is a private comfort rather than a public force for transformation. This spiritual complacency is a crisis for the modern Church. When we close our hearts to the global suffering of our family, when we prioritize petty divisions over universal charity, we betray our mission. We are called to be a light on the lampstand, not a flame hidden under a bushel of our own insecurity or comfort.
Therefore, I call upon every baptized member of this faithful flock: aid your Church in curing this sickness of indifference! Let your faith be active! Let your prayer be the fuel for action. Support those organizations that bring aid and advocate for the persecuted. Raise your voice for diplomatic solutions and for the rights of the unborn, the migrant, and the victim of war. Live in such a way that your very presence is a testament to the sanctity of life. Become a peacemaker in your own family, your community, your digital sphere. We are not called to be mere spectators of prophecy, but active participants in the Gospel.
For I must warn you, with the gravity that these times demand, of the path we are on. If we, the people of God, do not rise up—if we remain locked in our enclaves of comfort, if we allow the culture of death and division to proceed unchallenged by our love—then we are choosing a desolation. We will inherit a world not of God’s kingdom, but of our own making: a permanent state of war, a normalized persecution, a forgotten sacredness where human beings are but tools and casualties. This is not the fire of divine wrath, but the cold, dark ash of human failure. It is the apocalypse of the abandoned commandment, a world where love has grown so cold it can no longer spark hope.
But this is not our destiny! We are an Easter people, and ‘Alleluia’ is our song! Envision with me, through the eyes of faith, the world Christ dreams for us and empowers us to build. Envision a world where the peacemakers have succeeded, where swords are beaten into plowshares not by decree, but by the converted hearts of former enemies. See a world where our persecuted brothers and sisters are not only blessed in heaven but protected and revered on earth, where the Church stands unafraid and radiant in every land. Picture a world where the sanctity of life is the unquestioned pillar of every law, every medical practice, every act of governance—where every child is welcomed, every elder honored, and every stranger protected.
This vision is not a fantasy. It is the divine potential planted in the soil of this present moment, waiting for the labor of good men and women, watered by the grace of Jesus Christ. He is our help. He is the source of our courage and the model of our self-giving love. The problems of this age are vast, but they are no match for the combined force of a faithful people in motion, guided by the Holy Spirit.
Let us go forth from this place, then, not as a discouraged flock, but as a joyful army of mercy, builders of the civilization of love. Let us heal our Church of its indifference by plunging it into the urgent needs of the world. Let us answer hatred with creative love, despair with unwavering hope, and death with a defiant proclamation of life. The Lord is with us. We have no excuse for fear. We have only the imperative to love, and to act.
Amen.
What can we do?
In the face of overwhelming news, it is easy to feel that our personal actions are insignificant. Yet, the world is changed by the cumulative weight of countless daily choices made in faith and conscience. Here is how we can practically contribute.
Confronting War and Violence: Peace is not a passive state but an active pursuit. Begin by refusing to contribute to the culture of conflict in your own circles. Actively listen to understand perspectives different from your own, especially on difficult topics, without resorting to caricature or hostility. Support and donate to humanitarian organizations providing aid to all victims of conflict, regardless of side, focusing on their shared human dignity. In your conversations and on social media, be a voice that de-escalates rhetoric, challenges misinformation, and highlights stories of human suffering and resilience over political point-scoring. Write to your political representatives, urging them to prioritize diplomacy, humanitarian corridors, and a lasting peace over prolonged warfare.
Responding to Persecution and Injustice: When people are persecuted, denied fair trials, or silenced, our duty is to be a witness and an advocate. Educate yourself about the plight of persecuted communities, including our Christian brothers and sisters, but extending solidarity to all who suffer for their beliefs or identity. Support legal aid charities and human rights organizations that work to provide representation and document abuses. Use your voice to keep these stories alive in your community, breaking the silence that allows injustice to fester. In your own life, practice courage by defending the dignity of anyone who is marginalized or unfairly treated in your workplace, school, or neighborhood.
Upholding the Sanctity of Life: To honor life is to affirm its value at every stage and in every condition. This begins with profound respect in daily interactions—showing patience, kindness, and refusing to treat anyone as disposable. Support local crisis pregnancy centers, hospices, and organizations that provide practical care for the vulnerable. Advocate for and support policies that protect civilians in conflict zones and ensure access to medical care, recognizing that the failure to protect human life in one arena weakens its defense everywhere. Cultivate a mindset that sees the inherent worth in every person you meet, especially those with whom you disagree or who are easily overlooked.
These are not grand gestures, but the steady, faithful work of building a better world from the ground up. It starts with how we speak, where we direct our attention and resources, and the dignity we afford to every single human being we encounter. Change the atmosphere around you, and you change the world.
Go in peace.
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