
Daily Reflection – 1/9/2026
Sacred Scripture
Now there was a man full of leprosy in one of the towns where he was; and when he saw Jesus, he fell prostrate, pleaded with him, and said, “Lord, if you wish, you can make me clean.” Jesus stretched out his hand, touched him, and said, “I do will it. Be made clean.” And the leprosy left him immediately. Then he ordered him not to tell anyone, but “Go, show yourself to the priest and offer for your cleansing what Moses prescribed; that will be proof for them.” The report about him spread all the more, and great crowds assembled to listen to him and to be cured of their ailments, but he would withdraw to deserted places to pray. ( Luke 5:12-16)
Reflection
Today’s Gospel brings us to the very heart of Jesus’ ministry. Tender. Compassionate. Loving. Unceasing. All‑encompassing. A love like no other — and a love He asks us to share.
But before we can share the love of Christ, we must learn how to love Him. We must seek Him out, sit at His feet, follow Him through the Gospels, watch what He does and listen to what He says. He wants to teach us how to become fishers of men, and the first lesson is this: love touches what the world refuses to touch.
The leper in today’s passage did not simply need physical healing — he needed to be seen, acknowledged, embraced. Jesus could have healed him with a word spoken from a distance. Instead, He stretched out His hand and touched the untouchable. That touch restored more than skin; it restored dignity, belonging, and hope.
Jesus loves to meet our physical needs, but He longs even more to meet our deepest need — the healing of our souls. He wants us to come to Him not only for relief, but for relationships. Not only for comfort, but for conversion. Not only for help, but for eternal life.
And He wants us to love others in the same way.
Quietly. Selflessly. Without applause.
Too often we want our compassion to be noticed. We want our generosity to be appreciated. But true acts of mercy are done simply out of love. Hidden kindness purifies the heart. Unseen compassion shapes us into the likeness of Christ.
Then we are ready for the next step.
Christ calls us to love the “lepers” of today — the modern outcasts, the ones on the margins, the ones the world avoids. Those who feel unattractive or unwanted. Those whose illnesses are long and exhausting. Those with mental or emotional wounds. Those who believe their sins are unforgivable. Those who are homeless, abandoned, or alone. Those who silently cry, like Henri Nouwen once wrote, “Please love me.”
This was the cry of the leper.
This is the cry of countless souls around us.
And Jesus invites us to respond as He did — by reaching out, by touching the untouchable, by loving those who rarely receive love
Prayer of The Day
“Lord Jesus, teach me to love as You love.
Stretch out my hand toward those I would rather avoid.
Give me the courage to touch the untouchable,
to see the unseen,
to love the unloved.
Purify my intentions so that my compassion flows from a heart shaped by Yours.
Make me an instrument of Your tenderness in a world starving for affection, acceptance, and hope.”
Daily Note
The Lord Jesus is always ready to show us his mercy and to free us from whatever makes us unclean, unapproachable, or unloving. As He loves us, so too are we to love,








