- Br Johannes Maertens

- 17 hours ago
Adapted from Br Johannes' reflection at our monthly vigil outside the Home Office in February 2026.

Less than two weeks ago, I was in the refugee camp in Dunkirk, speaking with a young man from West Africa. He told me how he had tried to cross from Libya to Italy on a small boat—perhaps a fishing boat. The crossing went wrong. In the middle of the Mediterranean, people around him were crying, fading away, slipping into the deep cold silence. He and fourteen others survived. Around a hundred people disappeared into the water. That experience has marked or perhaps scarred his life forever. Next year, we may well be standing here naming some of those very people.
When I stand here outside the Home Office, this is not, for me, a political action. It is not driven by anger, even though righteous anger has its place. What we do here is liturgy; prayer, lament. Not hidden away in private, but in public, so that society can see and hear that there is real reason to lament.
And why here? Because this is the place where decisions about borders, belonging, and human life are made every day. For many of our refugee friends, this building symbolises waiting, anxiety, and judgment: judgment on their lives, their stories, and their casework. That is why we keep vigil here.
Here, too, we proclaim the Gospel. Jesus never told us to keep the Good News inside the church walls. He told us to bring it to those who need it. Our Gospel today speaks with disarming clarity. And I hope the people inside this building can hear these words—especially those who are people of faith, of any faith.
Jesus is asked: “Which commandment is the first of all?” He answers by quoting the Shema, the heartbeat of Jewish prayer:
Hear, O Israel: the Lord our God, the Lord is one. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength.
And then He closes this off with a verse from Leviticus: ‘You shall love your neighbour as yourself.’
He is not adding a second idea. He is revealing the visible form of the first. The Shema becomes flesh in the neighbour.
Jesus binds the two together as one movement of the heart. To love God is to love the neighbour. To love the neighbour is to love God. Because God is love, and without love, we do not know God at all.
It is vital to emphasise this double command today, not least because there are people in this country, in the United States, in Russia, and elsewhere who are hijacking religious symbols, the name of Christ, and the very word ‘Christianity’ to drive an anti-Christ agenda, to launder their racism and their nationalism in the language of faith.

Mother Maria Skobtsova understood this with prophetic sharpness. She challenges us! What we do in church, at Mass or, as the Orthodox call it, ‘the Divine Liturgy’, where we celebrate Christ’s self-giving love, Christ’s self-emptying on the Cross, she links directly to what we do outside the church walls.
She wrote: ‘If at the centre of the Church’s life there is this self-giving Eucharistic love, then where are the Church’s boundaries? Where is the periphery of this centre? … The whole world becomes the single altar of a single temple, and for this universal liturgy we must offer our hearts, like bread and wine, so that they may be transformed into Christ’s love … and given as food for the world.’
For her, the altar is never confined to stone and sanctuary. The whole world is the altar.
Every street, every detention centre, every refugee hotel, every immigration office (and we can extend this to every prison, hospital, homeless shelter, or family where abuse happens) - every place where a human being waits in fear or hope, these are the places where Christ walks out of the church and into the world. And if He walks there, then we must walk there too.
To quote these powerful words of Pope Francis: ‘The Church (and this is all of us Christians) is called to come out of herself and go to the peripheries, not only the geographical ones, but also the existential peripheries: those of the mystery of sin, of pain, of injustice, of ignorance and indifference to religion, of intellectual currents, and of all forms of misery.’
Mother Maria believed the Eucharist is not only something we receive; it is something we become. The bread and wine are transformed so that we may be transformed, our hearts offered, our lives broken open in love, our presence given as nourishment to those who hunger for dignity, safety, and recognition.
So as we stand here, we are not outside the liturgy or the sacred. We are in its very heart. This piece of pavement here becomes our altar. The people whose names we speak, whose stories we honour, whose suffering we refuse to ignore, they are not interruptions to our prayer. They are the icons through whom God looks back at us.
To love God with all our heart means returning again and again to the Source, letting God’s mercy shape our inner being, praying with honesty, even praying with our unbelief. But that love cannot remain interior. It must spill outward. It must take the shape of hospitality, gentleness, solidarity, and practical care. It must take the shape of sleeves rolled up, of advocacy, of refusing to walk past those wounded by systems that should protect them.
To love God and to love neighbour is not sentiment. It is incarnation. It is the conviction that every person— man, woman, trans, straight, gay, refugee, migrant, detainee, survivor, stranger—is a sacrament of Christ’s presence. In them is the ‘very icon of God’, as Mother Maria Skobtsova said: ‘every poor person is the very icon of God incarnate in the world’.

And as a Church, when we remember the Passion—the suffering of Christ —when we hold up the Crucifix or the Cross, it is a symbol not of identity, but of struggle. As Fr Donald Senior CP wrote: ‘To remember the Passion is to stand with the crucified peoples of the world.’
So the question before us is simple and searching: what does love look like here?Not in theory, but on this pavement, in this city, in this moment.
Love looks like showing up. Love looks like refusing to abandon people who are neglected and suffering. Love looks like bearing witness when others turn away. Love looks like insisting that every human being is our brother, our sister, our kin. Love looks like believing that the boundaries of compassion are always wider than the boundaries of policy, borders, politics…
If the whole world is the altar, then every act of mercy is liturgy.
Every gesture of solidarity—or meaningful compassion—is Eucharistic. Every defence of the vulnerable is a hymn of praise. Every insistence on human dignity is a prayer that rises like incense. As we keep vigil, we offer our hearts like bread and wine.
We ask God to transform them into something capable of sustaining others—into ‘God-manly hearts,’ as Mother Maria said, hearts that carry Christ’s love into the places where it is most needed.
This is the sacrament of brother. This is the Gospel lived in the street.
This is the commandment that holds the whole Law and the Prophets—and the commandment by which our human laws and policies must be measured:Love God. Love your neighbour. And let nothing divide the two. Amen.
Br Johannes Maertens


