(For Joan Sebastian Guerrero, Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, and all whose names become prayers)
The earth cried out
before anyone spoke.
Before the reports were written.
Before the questions were asked.
Before explanations searched
for words
that could never mend
a shattered morning.
Joan Sebastian Guerrero,
twenty-six years old,
left home
to earn another day’s bread.
Like countless others,
he carried no weapon—
only work,
only hope,
only another ordinary Monday.
Yet somewhere
fear had already loaded its weapon.
The streets of Biddeford
had not prepared themselves
for mourning.
The sea kept breathing
against the rocky shore.
Gulls circled above the harbor.
Morning opened
its quiet hands.
Then,
without warning,
another human life
returned
to the heart of God.
Only days before,
another name—
Lorenzo Salgado Araujo—
had entered
the same painful silence.
How many names
must heaven remember
before the earth remembers
what every human life is worth?
Borders divide nations.
Fear divides neighbors.
But the image of God
bears no passport.
It crosses every language,
every race,
every line
drawn by human hands.
I think of the Psalmist:
The Lord is near
to the brokenhearted.
Near enough
to gather
a mother’s tears.
Near enough
to hear
the trembling voice
of a frightened immigrant.
Near enough
to stand beside
those who no longer know
whether tomorrow
will welcome them
or wound them.
The Church
must not stand
at a safe distance.
Our calling
has never been
to explain suffering,
but to enter it.
To pray
where others curse.
To embrace
where others reject.
To speak truth
where silence
protects injustice.
To love
until fear
loses its authority.
Perhaps
this is how
the kingdom of God
still comes—
not with louder voices,
not with stronger weapons,
but with ordinary disciples
who refuse
to surrender compassion,
who keep opening
the doors of welcome,
who continue
lighting candles
even when darkness
appears endless.
The earth
still cries out.
The blood
still cries out.
The Holy Spirit
still groans
within creation.
And Christ,
who once carried
His own cross
through the violence
of an empire,
still walks beside
every wounded traveler,
calling each by name,
until justice
flows again,
until mercy
embraces truth,
until every stranger
finds a home,
and every tear
is gathered
into the everlasting peace
of God.
– TaeHun Yoon, July 14, 2026

























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