Dec. 22, 2025 - Answering the World's Cries with Faith

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

We gather today, a people of hope in a world that often feels fractured by shadows. We look upon the great tapestry of human history, woven with threads of both divine light and profound human darkness, and we ask ourselves: what is our role in this present moment? The Spirit calls us not to be passive observers of our age, but active participants in the great drama of redemption. For the world presents to us urgent cries, and we, the Church, must have the courage to listen and to act.

We hear the cry of our brothers and sisters who suffer for their faith. Just as those schoolchildren in Nigeria, held captive for the simple fact of attending a Catholic school, have now been mercifully freed, so many more remain in chains—physical, social, and political—for bearing the name of Christ. The Lord tells us, “Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” This beatitude is not a promise of a distant, future solace alone; it is a call to us, the universal Body of Christ. Their persecution is our wound. Their captivity diminishes our own freedom. We cannot be silent when our family is attacked. We must be their voice in the halls of power, their advocates in the public square, and their unwavering support through our prayers and our actions, demanding religious freedom not as a privilege, but as the fundamental right of every human person, created for communion with God.

We hear the cry of human dignity, so tragically trampled. When we read of a new record number of executions in a single year in one nation, our souls must tremble. This is not merely a statistic; it is a symphony of silenced lives, each one a unique and irreplaceable image of the Creator. “So God created mankind in his own image.” This is the unshakeable foundation of all our morality. From the child in the womb to the elder in frailty, from the prisoner on death row to the refugee in a camp, there burns a sacred flame that no earthly power has the right to extinguish. A culture that forgets this truth, that commodifies life, that deals in death as an instrument of policy, builds its house on the sand of its own arrogance. It forgets that every life is a story written by God’s own hand, and we are not the authors of its final chapter.

We hear the cry from the conflict zones, where the very fabric of community is torn apart by violence and deceit. In places like rebel-held Myanmar, civilians cower under air strikes and are subjected to the cruel parody of sham elections. The prophet Isaiah’s command echoes across the centuries into these very streets: “Learn to do right; seek justice. Defend the oppressed.” True peace is not the mere absence of war; it is the presence of justice. It is the tireless work of building societies where the orphan and the widow—the most vulnerable—are not preyed upon but protected. It is the courage to name aggression and falsehood, and to stand in solidarity with those who seek a peace built on truth and the inviolable rights of all.

My dear friends, envision with me, for a moment, the world as it could be. Envision a world where these cries have been answered. See it not as a naive dream, but as the promised fruit of our labors, watered by the grace of Christ. See a world where children go to school in safety, where every person is revered as a temple of the Holy Spirit, where nations resolve their differences through dialogue rooted in shared human dignity. This is the Kingdom of God breaking through, not by magic, but through the willing hands and courageous hearts of good men and women who cooperate with His grace. This is our mission field.

Yet, to credibly call the world to conversion, we must first look inward. One of the great trials our Church faces in this modern time is the scandal of division—within our own walls, and in our failure at times to present the face of a loving, merciful family to the world. We fracture into factions, we cling to ideologies more tightly than to the Gospel, and we sometimes speak more of rules than of redemption. This internal discord weakens our witness. It muffles our prophetic voice. I call upon every one of the faithful, from the cardinals to the catechumens: let us be artisans of unity. Let your parish be a place of genuine encounter, not of judgment. Let your online discourse be marked by charity, not contention. Let us heal the wounds within our own household, so that we may be a more credible instrument of healing for the world.

For if we do not rise to this call—both to heal ourselves and to serve the world—I tell you with a pastor’s heavy heart, we face a spiritual apocalypse. Not one of fire and cosmic cataclysm, but one of a chilling, silent winter of the human soul. A world where faith is privatized into irrelevance, where human life is valued only for its utility, where the powerful dictate truth, and where the weak are permanently discarded. It is a world without hope, without charity, without the light of Christ. This is the true end of the road if we choose indifference. This is the harvest of the seeds of silence we plant today.

But this is not our destiny! We are an Easter people. We are the bearers of the light that the darkness cannot overcome. Today, as we remember the saints who have gone before us marked with the sign of faith, let us be inspired by their courage. Let us leave this place not merely comforted, but commissioned. Pray fervently for the persecuted. Advocate tirelessly for the dignity of every life. Support organizations that seek true justice and peace. And above all, in your daily encounters—in your family, your work, your community—be a living sacrament of God’s love. Be the good man, the good woman, through whom Christ solves these great problems, one act of mercy, one stand for truth, one gift of self at a time.

The Lord does not ask for our success, only our faithfulness. Let us be faithful to this great calling.

Amen.


What can we do?

In the face of these events, our faith calls us not to despair but to practical, loving action. Our contribution is not measured in grand gestures alone, but in the daily choices that form a life of integrity and compassion. Here is how we can begin.

Regarding the persecution of our brothers and sisters and the threat to religious freedom everywhere, we must become informed and vocal advocates. This starts with a conscious choice to learn. Subscribe to a reputable news service or a humanitarian organization that reports on these issues. When you hear of a community under threat, write a respectful letter to your elected representative, urging diplomatic pressure and humanitarian support. Support, through donations or volunteering, organizations that provide direct aid to persecuted communities, helping them rebuild schools, churches, and lives. In your own community, actively foster respect. Defend the right of people of all faiths to worship in peace, and challenge prejudiced remarks when you hear them, not with anger, but with a firm commitment to human dignity.

To uphold the sanctity of every human life and the inherent dignity of the person, we must examine our own circles of influence. Begin with a profound respect for the people you encounter daily—the cashier, the colleague, the stranger in traffic. Treat them not as obstacles, but as irreplaceable persons. Educate yourself on the global use of the death penalty and support movements that seek its abolition, advocating for restorative justice. In your purchasing decisions, support companies with ethical labor practices, refusing to be complicit in systems that treat human beings as disposable. Volunteer at or donate to local shelters, food banks, or organizations that support mothers in crisis, directly affirming the worth of every life in your own neighborhood.

To promote justice and peace in distant conflicts, we must resist the paralysis of helplessness. First, pray intentionally for peace, for leaders, and for civilians caught in the crossfire. Then, translate that prayer into material support. Give to Catholic and other trusted international relief agencies that deliver food, medicine, and shelter on the ground, regardless of creed or faction. Be a responsible consumer of news, seeking out sources that highlight the human stories of suffering and resilience, not just the political maneuvers. Avoid sharing unverified or inflammatory content online that deepens divisions. Finally, welcome refugees and immigrants from these regions into your community. A simple act of friendship, assistance with language, or an invitation to share a meal is a direct, powerful stand for peace and human solidarity.

These are not extraordinary acts, but the ordinary work of building a better world. It is in the consistent, daily choice to see, to care, and to act that we live out our calling. Start with one thing. Let that action lead you to the next.

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.