Losing Yourself To Find Yourself

Daily Reflection – 2/19/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus said to his disciples: “The Son of Man must suffer greatly and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests, and the scribes, and be killed and on the third day be raised. Then he said to all, “If anyone wishes to come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me. For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will save it. What profit is there for one to gain the whole world yet lose or forfeit himself?” (Luke 9:22-25)

Reflection

Well, that’s pretty challenging on the second day of Lent! Jesus reminds us that if we lose our life for His sake, our life will be saved.

Lose our life? In today’s culture? Sure, sounds as if it is contra to all that society teaches us, right? Aren’t we supposed to be self-sufficient? Aren’t we supposed to climb the ladder of success? Aren’t we supposed to buy into the barrage of advertising that centers on doing things and buying things that make our SELVES more attractive? And then we are supposed to carry a cross?

Yes, and that’s the hard part for many people. That’s usually where we run into our stumbling blocks on being true disciples of Christ. We want Salvation. We want eternal happiness. But we don’t want to have to do anything hard to get there. Nowhere in the Bible does Jesus say, just be a good person and you’re in. Nowhere does he say, just say a few magic words and you’re in. Nope. He’s always talking about us having to do things. Things like, having faith. Things like living for others. Things like forgiving others.

For those who want to walk with him, Christ’s call is radical and unequivocal. He asks us to “renounce” ourselves. This is a difficult word for the mentality of today. It does not mean that we must deny what we are. We are called to abandon that part of ourselves that goes against the life of Christ and his teachings. With verse 25, we understand clearly that Jesus does not ask us to lose ourselves. He rather invites us to discover our true self by following him. It is not by a lukewarm and lazy attitude, but only with all their heart and all their strength that His disciples can follow the path of the Master.

In fact, if we walk in the footsteps of Christ, now just as at the time of the Apostles, it is inevitable that we will have to have to swim against the tide and, at times, become a “sign of contradiction” in society. For fear of losing face or security, will we turn back before the various obstacles, or move forward with confidence, audacity and the gift of ourselves? It is true that his call is demanding. But to those who give themselves because of Christ and the Gospel, the joy and the rewards promised are offered a hundredfold (see Mark 10:28-30).

And yes, we, too, must take up our crosses and follow Him. Each one of us will have his or her own cross to carry, and that will vary from time to time. Whatever our particular cross we, like Jesus, must lose ourselves in generous self-giving, rather being self-centered in trying to grab as much as possible for ourselves. Serving other people’s interests rather than our own will bring out the very best in us.

Each day we must die to sin and rise to new life. That involves repenting for the sins we’ve already committed, and then resisting temptations to sin in the future. Following Christ is certainly demanding, but for Jesus and for us the way of the cross leads to eternal happiness and glory. That makes it all worthwhile.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, I give you my hands to do your work. I give you my feet to go your way. I give you my eyes to see as you do. I give you my tongue to speak your words. I give you my mind that you may think in me. I give you my spirit that you may pray in me. Above all, I give you my heart that you may love in me, your Father, and all mankind. I give you my whole self that you may grow in me, so that it is you, Lord Jesus, who live and work and pray in me.”

Daily Note

The cross you carry today is not meant to break you — it’s meant to reveal you.

Lent Is An Invitation, Not An Obligation

Daily Reflection – 2/18/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus said to his disciples: “Take care not to perform righteous deeds in order that people may see them; otherwise, you will have no recompense from your heavenly Father. When you give alms, do not blow a trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets to win the praise of others. Amen, I say to you, they have received their reward. But when you give alms, do not let your left hand know what your right is doing, so that your almsgiving may be secret. And your Father who sees in secret will repay you. When you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, who love to stand and pray in the synagogues and on street corners so that others may see them. Amen, I say to you, they have received their reward. But when you pray, go to your inner room, close the door, and pray to your Father in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will repay you. When you fast, do not look gloomy like the hypocrites. They neglect their appearance, so that they may appear to others to be fasting. Amen, I say to you, they have received their reward. But when you fast, anoint your head and wash your face, so that you may not appear to be fasting, except to your Father who is hidden. And your Father who sees what is hidden will repay you.” (Matthew 6:1-6, 16-18)

Reflection

Lent begins not with a demand, but with an invitation.

Matthew 6:1–6, 16–18 is Jesus’ gentle reminder that the spiritual life is not a stage and God is not an audience. He knows our tendency to drift toward self‑focus, to measure our worth by what others see, to turn even holy practices into subtle performances. And so He calls us back to the quiet places — the secret places — where the heart can breathe again.

This passage is traditionally read on the threshold of Lent because it reorients us before we take a single step. Jesus is not asking us to punish ourselves or prove our devotion. He is inviting us to return to intimacy with the Father. Prayer, fasting, and almsgiving are not spiritual hurdles to clear; they are pathways that lead us back to God. They interrupt the routines that numb us. They loosen the grip of habits that quietly shape us. They create space where God can speak and we can finally hear.

When we pray more intentionally, we step out of the noise and into the presence of the One who knows us. When we fast, even in small ways, we discover that our appetites do not define us and our impulses do not rule us. When we give, we remember that generosity is not loss but freedom. These practices are not meant to weigh us down. They are meant to wake us up.

Lent is the season that breaks the routine long enough for us to ask the questions we avoid when life moves too quickly: Who am I becoming? What have I taken for granted? What needs to change? Where have I grown lukewarm? What part of my heart has drifted into hiding? These questions are not meant to shame us. They are meant to free us. They open the door to the renewal God longs to give.

Three times in this passage, Jesus assures us that “your Father who sees in secret will repay you.” This is not a transactional promise. It is a relational one. God sees the quiet effort, the hidden struggle, the small sacrifice, the desire beneath the discipline. And He responds not with reward, but with renewal — a renewal of heart, of clarity, of compassion, of purpose.

Lent is not about earning God’s love. It is about making room to receive it. It is not about proving our holiness. It is about rediscovering our dependence. It is not about obligation. It is about an invitation to return, to listen, to soften, to be reshaped from the inside out.

As this holy season begins, step into it with openness rather than dread, with expectancy rather than fear. The Father who sees in secret is already waiting there.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, give me a lively faith, a firm hope, a fervent charity, and a great love of you. Take from me all lukewarmness in the meditation of your word, and dullness in prayer. Give me fervor and delight in thinking of you and your grace, and fill me with compassion for others, especially those in need, that I may respond with generosity”.

Daily Note

The Lord gives us spiritual food and supernatural strength to walk the path before us. Lent is not a test of endurance; it is a preparation for transformation. As you begin this season, ask Jesus for a fresh outpouring of His Spirit — the strength to fast with humility, to pray with sincerity, and to give with compassion. The way of the cross is not easy, but it is the way that leads to life. May this season awaken in you a deeper faith, a steadier hope, and a renewed love that reflects the heart of Christ.

When Trust Opens Our Eyes

Daily Reflection – 2/17/2026

Sacred Scripture

The disciples had forgotten to bring bread, and they had only one loaf with them in the boat. Jesus enjoined them, “Watch out, guard against the leaven of the Pharisees and the leaven of Herod.” They concluded among themselves that it was because they had no bread. When he became aware of this he said to them, “Why do you conclude that it is because you have no bread? Do you not yet understand or comprehend? Are your hearts hardened? Do you have eyes and not see, ears and not hear? And do you not remember, when I broke the five loaves for the five thousand, how many wicker baskets full of fragments you picked up?” They answered him, “Twelve.” “When I broke the seven loaves for the four thousand, how many full baskets of fragments did you pick up?” They answered him, “Seven.” He said to them, “Do you still not understand?” (Mark 8:14-21)

Reflection

There is a moment in today’s Gospel when Jesus sounds almost weary — not angry, not condemning, but heart‑tired in the way love grows tired when it keeps offering itself and isn’t yet received. The disciples are worried about bread, and Jesus is trying to give them something far greater: a way of seeing, a way of trusting, a way of living that begins and ends in God.

His warning about the “leaven of the Pharisees” isn’t about doctrine or ritual. It’s about what rises inside a person when the wrong things feed the heart. The Pharisees and Sadducees let pride, self‑certainty, and spiritual self‑reliance ferment within them. Their hearts rose with their own counsel, not with the wisdom of God. And because of that, they could not recognize the One standing before them.

Jesus wants a different leaven in us — the leaven of faith.
Faith that grows quietly.
Faith that softens the heart.
Faith that makes room for trust.

But trust is hard when life has taught us to protect ourselves. As we age, we often become more cautious, more skeptical, more “realistic.” We call it wisdom, but sometimes it is simply fear wearing a wiser face. We become sharp in worldly calculations and dull in spiritual sight.

Why does this happen?
Why do we, like the disciples, miss what is right in front of us?

We misunderstand when we live distracted lives.
The disciples were worried about what they lacked. They forgot Who was in the boat with them. We do the same. We get so caught up in what we fear we don’t have that we overlook the God who has never failed to give us what we truly need.

We misunderstand when we measure everything by ourselves.
When the first question of the heart is “What does this mean for me,” our vision shrinks. We lose the horizon of God’s purposes. We become trapped inside our own small calculations.

We misunderstand when we forget what God has already done.
Grace has carried us farther than we ever deserved, yet we treat yesterday’s blessings as expired. Gratitude fades, and fear rushes in to fill the space.

Jesus’ question — “Do you still not understand?” — is not a scolding. It is an invitation.
A gentle, piercing invitation to remember.

Remember who has been in your boat. Remember who multiplied what you thought was not enough. Remember who has never abandoned you, even when your trust faltered.

A heart rooted in Christ does not panic at scarcity.
A soul anchored in His faithfulness does not collapse under fear.
A mind shaped by His presence sees differently — more clearly, more truthfully, more lovingly.

If God has brought us this far with only partial cooperation on our part, imagine what He could do with a heart fully yielded. Imagine the peace that would rise. Imagine the good that would flourish. Imagine the burdens that would finally loosen under His hand.

Jesus is not asking for perfection. He is asking for trust. He is asking for memory. He is asking for a heart willing to see again.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord, grant me the grace to trust You more deeply, to remember Your faithfulness, and to let Your love shape my vision. Make my heart the place where Your leaven of faith can rise.”

Daily Note

Mark shows us that the disciples’ greatest struggle was not ignorance but vision — how they interpreted what they saw. The cure is always the same: Jesus Himself. His touch, His presence, His teaching, even His rebuke — but most of all His unwavering faithfulness to disciples who were sometimes nearsighted, sometimes confused, sometimes afraid. He is just as faithful to us.

The Grace Hidden In God’s Silence

Daily Reflection – 2/16/2026

Sacred Scripture

The Pharisees came and began to argue with him, asking him for a sign from heaven, to test him. And he sighed deeply in his spirit and said, “Why does this generation ask for a sign? Truly I tell you, no sign will be given to this generation.” And he left them, and getting into the boat again, he went across to the other side. (Mark 8:11-13)

Reflection

Mark 8:11–13 is a short passage, but it carries a weight that presses directly on the human heart. The Pharisees demand a sign from Jesus, not because they want to believe, but because they refuse to trust unless God performs on their terms. Jesus sighs from the depths of His spirit and walks away. It is one of the most sobering moments in the Gospel: the Son of God standing before them, and they cannot see Him because they are too busy looking for something else.

And if we’re honest, we know that feeling. We, too, hunger for signs.

The Christian mystics teach that the spiritual life moves in two currents: consolation and desolation. God gives both. In consolation, everything feels aligned. Prayer flows. Gratitude rises easily. We sense God’s nearness like sunlight warming our skin. These moments are gifts—pure grace.

But then the season shifts. The warmth fades. The heart feels barren, dry, unresponsive. We pray, and the words fall flat. We seek God, and He seems to step back into the shadows.

This is the moment when many of us begin to look for signs again.“ Lord, show me something. Give me a feeling. Give me a word. Give me proof.”

But here is the paradox the mystics understood: the absence of signs is itself a sign.
God’s silence is not abandonment. It is invitation.

In desolation, God gently asks us to remember why we chose to follow Him in the first place. Was it because of the gifts—or because of the Giver? Was it the sweetness of prayer—or the One who listens? Was it the miracle or the Miracle‑Worker?

Only in dryness do we learn to distinguish the sign from the Savior.

St. Teresa of Ávila kept a simple bookmark in her prayer book, and on it she wrote:

“All things pass; God never changes.
Whoever has God lacks nothing.
God alone suffices.”

That is the wisdom Jesus longed for the Pharisees to understand. That is the wisdom He longs for us to embrace.

The Cross is the only sign we ever truly needed. On it, Jesus opened the floodgates of mercy, forgiveness, and eternal life. Everything else is commentary.

When we live in that truth—really live in it — we can savor the moments of consolation without clinging to them, and we can walk through desolation without fear. We can whisper to ourselves each morning:

“I am surrounded by God’s love. It is my shield. It strengthens me. I am never alone, for He holds me.”

I wish I could pray those words with you right now. But even in silence, God is praying them over you.

The absence of signs is not a punishment. It is the quiet doorway into deeper faith.

It is Christ inviting us to trust Him simply because He is God—and because He is good.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, thank You for the signs You have already placed before me — especially the Sign of the Cross, where You poured out Your life so that I may know eternal life. Teach my heart to trust You not only in moments of consolation, but also in the quiet spaces where You seem hidden. Deepen my faith so that I recognize Your presence in the real, steady ways You have already moved in my life. Help me to follow You not for the signs, but for who You are — my Savior, my strength, and my constant companion. Amen.”

Daily Note

Discipleship takes time, courage, and a willingness to walk even when the path feels dim. The disciples were slow to “get Jesus,” and so are we — even with the gift of the Resurrection and the Holy Spirit within us. True faith is not built on signs; it’s built on trust. Today, practice believing without demanding proof. Let your heart rest in the truth that God is present, even when He feels silent. That is the faith that matures us, strengthens us, and draws us closer to Christ.

The Quiet Power of C ompassion

Daily Reflection – 2/13/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus left the district of Tyre and went by way of Sidon to the Sea of Galilee, into the district of the Decapolis. And people brought to him a deaf man who had a speech impediment and begged him to lay his hand on him. He took him off by himself away from the crowd. He put his finger into the man’s ears and, spitting, touched his tongue; then he looked up to Heaven and groaned, and said to him, “Ephphatha!” (that is, “Be opened!”) And immediately the man’s ears were opened, his speech impediment was removed, and he spoke plainly. He ordered them not to tell anyone. But the more he ordered them not to, the more they proclaimed it. They were exceedingly astonished and they said, “He has done all things well. He makes the deaf hear and the mute speak.” (Mark 7:31-37)

Reflection

Today’s Gospel reveals once again the extraordinary tenderness of Jesus Christ — a tenderness that is not sentimental, but deeply attentive, deeply personal, and deeply transformative.

The man brought to Jesus could not hear and could barely speak. He lived in a world of muffled sound and limited expression. And Jesus, seeing him, does something remarkable: He takes him aside, away from the crowd, into a private space where healing can happen without spectacle. Jesus adapts Himself to the man’s reality. He does not speak first — because words would fall on ears that cannot hear. Instead, He uses touch. He places His fingers in the man’s ears. He touches his tongue. He looks up to heaven and sighs — a sigh that carries compassion, longing, and divine power. Then He speaks a single word: Ephphatha — “Be opened.”

This is tenderness in action. This is love that adjusts itself to the needs of the one before Him. This is compassion that sees not just the condition, but the person.

And it is a model for us.

How often do we step outside of ourselves long enough to truly enter the life of another? How often do we pause the noise of our own fears, insecurities, and preoccupations to notice what someone else might be carrying?

Kindness is not merely being polite.
Kindness is seeing.
Kindness is entering.
Kindness is responding to the quiet needs of another with gentleness and care.

When was the last time you tried to understand what was happening inside your spouse — not just what they said, but what they felt? When was the last time you looked at your child and recognized the insecurity behind the behavior, and spoke words that affirmed their goodness and worth? When was the last time you saw a gift in a coworker and encouraged it into the light?

These are not small gestures.
These are acts of kindness — and kindness is never insignificant. Kindness is the language the deaf can hear and the blind can read. Kindness cuts through fear, posturing, indifference, and self‑protection.

Yes, there are moments that require challenge or tough love. But when we are unsure, when the path is not clear, when the situation is ambiguous, the Gospel gives us a simple compass: “Whenever in doubt, do the kind thing.”

And why? Because Christians are called to a deeper hearing — a hearing shaped by faith. We believe God is active in the world. We believe God is building a kingdom of goodness, mercy, and peace. We believe God is near, speaking, healing, restoring.

If we are not hearing good news, if we are overwhelmed by fear or hopelessness, perhaps it is because our ears have grown dull. Perhaps we need to hear Jesus speak that same word to us: “Be opened.”

Be opened to the presence of God around you.
Be opened to the needs of others.
Be opened to the quiet invitations of grace.
Be opened to the possibility that God is doing more than you can see.

Jesus “does all things well.” Follow His example. Be a person of kindness, of compassion, of deep listening. Peer inside another and be for them what God is for you — a presence of mercy, tenderness, and love.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, fill me with your Holy Spirit and inflame my heart with love and compassion. Make me attentive to the needs of others that I may show them kindness and care. Make me an instrument of your mercy and peace that I may help others find healing and wholeness in you.”

Daily Note

What we believe shapes what we hear. If we are not hearing good news, perhaps our hearts have grown closed. Jesus speaks to us today the same word He spoke to the deaf man: “Be opened.” Be opened to grace. Be opened to healing. Be opened to the God who is already at work around you, making noise as He builds His kingdom. Trust that He can remove your fear, your grief, your pride, your hurt — and open you to the fullness of His love.

A Crumb of Mercy, A Feast of Grace

Daily Reflection – 2/12/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus went to the district of Tyre. He entered a house and wanted no one to know about it, but he could not escape notice. Soon a woman whose daughter had an unclean spirit heard about him. She came and fell at his feet. The woman was a Greek, a Syrophoenician by birth, and she begged him to drive the demon out of her daughter. He said to her, “Let the children be fed first. For it is not right to take the food of the children and throw it to the dogs.” She replied and said to him, “Lord, even the dogs under the table eat the children’s scraps.” Then he said to her, “For saying this, you may go. The demon has gone out of your daughter.” When the woman went home, she found the child lying in bed and the demon gone. (Mark 7:24-30)

Reflection

Reflection (Poetic Version)

Faith.
A single syllable carrying the weight of eternity. A word worn thin by overuse, yet still pulsing with the power to steady a trembling heart and open the door to God.

We hear it everywhere —
in locker rooms, in campaign speeches, in commercials promising things they can’t deliver.
But beneath all that noise, faith remains what it has always been: the quiet courage to reach for God even when the world tells you not to.

And today, a Gentile mother shows us what that courage looks like.

She comes to Jesus with a heart cracked open by love. No credentials. No standing. No reason to believe she should be heard. But love pushes her forward and desperation becomes her prayer.

She absorbs the silence. She endures the rebuff. She refuses to retreat. Because when your child is hurting, you will walk through fire if it means touching the hem of hope.

She doesn’t ask for a miracle on her terms. She doesn’t demand a place at the table.
She simply asks for a crumb — because she knows that even a fragment of God’s goodness
is enough to heal what is broken.

Her faith becomes a lantern in the dark. It glows brightest in the shadows of uncertainty. it strengthens under the weight of sorrow. It teaches us that faith is not the absence of struggle
but the decision to cling to God while the storm rages on.

Her faith is not self‑centered. It is intercession. It is love stretched wide. It is a mother standing in the gap for a child who cannot stand for herself. And in a world aching for compassion,
her persistence becomes a holy echo. She kneels — not in defeat, but in surrender. Her humility is not weakness; it is the soil where trust takes root.

And she endures. Oh, how she endures. Like the widow before the unjust judge, she keeps knocking, keeps hoping, keeps believing that the heart of God is kinder than the world around her.

And she is right. Her daughter is healed. Her faith is honored. Her story becomes a beacon for every soul who has ever whispered a desperate prayer into the silence.

We need that reminder. We need that kind of faith — the kind that clings to the Great Physician, the One who mends bodies and souls, the One who sees us, the One who answers.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord, your mercy stretches farther than our fear. Give me the courage of this woman —
the persistence that does not fade, the humility that opens the heart, the love that refuses to give up. Strengthen my faith when I falter, and draw me deeper into your healing grace.
Amen.”

Daily Note

Her faith grew simply by being near Jesus. She began with a plea, but she ended in worship.
And Scripture whispers this truth to us still: No one who seeks Him with faith —outsider or insider, broken or whole — is ever turned away. May we seek Him with that same expectant heart.

When Jesus Puts His Finger On The Wound

Daily Reflection – 3/11/2026

Sacred Scripture

He summoned the crowd again and said to them, “Hear me, all of you, and understand. Nothing that enters one from outside can defile that person; but the things that come out from within are what defile. When he got home away from the crowd his disciples questioned him about the parable. He said to them, “Are even you likewise without understanding? Do you not realize that everything that goes into a person from outside cannot defile, since it enters not the heart but the stomach and passes out into the latrine? But what comes out of a person, that is what defiles. From within people, from their hearts, come evil thoughts, unchastity, theft, murder, adultery, greed, malice, deceit, licentiousness, envy, blasphemy, arrogance, folly. All these evils come from within and they defile.” (Mark 7: 14-23)

Reflection

There are moments in the Gospels when Jesus doesn’t confront the world “out there” — He confronts the world in here. Mark 7 is one of those moments. The religious leaders were worried about what might make them unclean from the outside. But Jesus turns the whole conversation inward. He points to the place no one else can see, the place we often avoid, the place where the real battles are fought.

He says, in essence:

“The danger isn’t what touches your hands. The danger is what grows in your heart.”

That’s a hard truth. Not because it’s harsh, but because it’s honest.

Sin doesn’t fall on us like rain.
It rises from the quiet corners of our desires — the places we don’t talk about, the thoughts we never say aloud, the intentions we bury under polite smiles and Christian language.

And yet… God sees it. Not to shame us. Not to expose us. But to heal us.

Like a physician who gently presses the tender spot to find the wound, God touches the places we’d rather hide. He brings them into the light so He can treat them, cleanse them, and make us whole.

But here’s the part we often resist:

Healing begins with honesty.

It’s easier to blame someone else. Easier to point to circumstances. Easier to hide behind spiritual language and pretend we’re fine.

But Jesus isn’t asking for perfection. He’s asking for truth.

Sit with Him long enough, and He’ll put His finger on one place — not ten, not twenty — just one place He wants to work with you. One corner of the heart where love could grow if you let Him in.

Maybe it’s patience. Maybe it’s humility. Maybe it’s generosity, or gentleness, or courage, or honesty. Every one of these is a form of love. Every one of these is something God longs to bring out from within you.

And here’s the miracle:
Jesus never asks you to fix yourself. He asks you to open yourself.

He is eager — truly eager — to pour His grace into the places where you struggle. He wants to shape your heart so that what comes out of you reflects Him: His kindness, His steadiness, His mercy, His truth.

Because the world doesn’t need more people who look clean on the outside.
The world needs people whose hearts have been touched by God,

Prayer of The Day

“Lord, fill me with Your Holy Spirit and make my heart like Yours. Strengthen my will, purify my desires, and teach me to love what is good. Heal what is wounded in me, and let Your grace shape what comes from within.”

Daily Note

Take a quiet moment today and look honestly at your heart. Not with fear. Not with shame. But with the courage of someone who knows they are deeply loved.

Ask yourself: Why do I do what I do? What motivates my choices? Are my actions shaped by love — or by how I want to be perceived?

Let Jesus meet you in that honesty. Let Him steady you. Let Him shape you. And let your heart grow closer to His.

Meeting God Where Your Heart Us

Daily Reflection – 2/10/2026

Sacred Scripture

Now when the Pharisees with some scribes who had come from Jerusalem gathered around him, they observed that some of his disciples ate their meals with unclean, that is, unwashed, hands. (For the Pharisees and, in fact, all Jews, do not eat without carefully washing their hands, keeping the tradition of the elders. And on coming from the marketplace they do not eat without purifying themselves. . . . So the Pharisees and scribes questioned him, “Why do your disciples not follow the tradition of the elders but instead eat a meal with unclean hands?” He responded, “Well did Isaiah prophesy about you hypocrites, as it is written: This people honors me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me; In vain do they worship me, teaching as doctrines human precepts.’ You disregard God’s commandment but cling to human tradition.” He went on to say, “How well you have set aside the commandment of God in order to uphold your tradition! For Moses said, ‘Honor your father and your mother,’ and ‘Whoever curses father or mother shall die.’ Yet you say, ‘If a person says to father or mother, “Any support you might have had from me is Corban”’(meaning, given to God), you allow him to do nothing more for his father or mother. You nullify the word of God in favor of your tradition that you have handed on. And you do many such things.” (Mark 7:1-13)

Reflection

There are moments when Jesus’ words feel strong, but His heart toward us is always gentle. In today’s passage, He isn’t trying to shame anyone or weigh us down. He’s inviting us back to something simple and freeing: a faith that comes from the heart, not from pressure or performance.

Jesus doesn’t ask us to pretend. He doesn’t ask us to hide our weariness. He doesn’t ask us to act more spiritual than we feel.

He simply asks us to be honest — to let our lips and our hearts move toward each other, even if the distance feels wide. He meets us in the middle of that gap with gentleness.

If your heart feels tired, He understands. If your faith feels thin, He understands. If your prayers feel small, He understands. And He loves you — fully, steadily, without hesitation.

Jesus knows how life can stretch us, distract us, and pull us in a dozen directions. He knows how easily we slip into routines that look faithful on the outside but feel empty on the inside. And He doesn’t scold us for that. He simply calls us back to Himself — softly, patiently, lovingly.

He wants your heart because He wants you. Not your perfection. Not your performance.
Just you.

When we come to Him honestly — even with confusion, even with weakness, even with “Lord, I want to want You” — He receives us with joy. Like a father running to meet his child, He closes the distance with compassion.

Let today be a day of gentleness. Let your heart rest in the truth that Jesus is not disappointed in you. He is drawing you closer, not pushing you away.

And every small step toward Him matters.

Prayer of The Day

“Jesus, draw my heart toward Yours with gentleness. Where I feel tired, give me rest.
Where I feel distracted, give me focus. Where I feel distant, bring me close. Teach me to love You with honesty and joy., Amen.”

Daily Note

God never asks you to be someone you’re not. He simply invites you to come as you are — tired, hopeful, imperfect, beloved — and let His love reshape your heart from the inside out.

When My Soul Leans Into Your Silence, Lord

A Contemplative Whisper Between the Soul and Christ

Sacred Scripture

After making the crossing, they came to land at Gennesaret and tied up there. As they were leaving the boat, people immediately recognized him. They scurried about the surrounding country and began to bring in the sick on mats to wherever they heard he was. Whatever villages or towns or countryside he entered, they laid the sick in the marketplaces and begged him that they might touch only the tassel on his cloak; and as many as touched it were healed. (Mark 6:53-56)

Reflection

Soul (in a breath barely above silence):
Lord… I’m here.
Not because I’m strong,
but because something in me can’t stay away from You.
There’s a place inside that aches quietly,
a place I don’t show anyone,
a place that only stirs when the world grows still.
I bring that place to You now.

Christ (soft as a hand resting on the heart):
I have been waiting for you here.
Not impatiently,
not with disappointment,
but with a tenderness that has no edges.
You don’t have to explain your ache.
I know it.
I have walked inside it with you
long before you found the words.

Soul:
Sometimes I feel like I’m reaching through fog,
hoping You’ll meet me on the other side.
I want to trust,
but the quiet can feel so vast.
And I wonder if You hear me
when my prayer is more of a sigh than a sentence.

Christ:
Your sigh reaches Me more quickly than your words.
Your longing is a prayer all its own.
You don’t need eloquence —
you need honesty.
Let your heart rest against Mine.
Let the silence between us be the place
where healing begins.

Soul:
Then here I am, Lord…
with the fear I hide,
the longing I bury,
the tiredness I pretend isn’t there.
I place it in Your hands
because mine are trembling.

Christ:
Let them tremble.
I am not asking you to be steady —
I am offering to steady you.
Let Me hold what you cannot.
Let Me touch the wound you’ve learned to live around.
Let Me be the quiet strength beneath your breath.

Soul:
Stay with me, Lord.
Not just in the holy moments,
but in the ordinary ones
where I forget how loved I am.

Christ:
I am already there.
In the breath you just took.
In the longing that brought you here.
In the quiet that wraps around you now.
You are not alone —
not for a heartbeat,
not for a moment,
not for a single step.

Prayer of The Day

Jesus, draw me into the silence where You speak without words. Let me feel Your nearness in the places I hide, and Your tenderness in the places I fear.
Hold my heart with a gentleness that steadies me, and let Your presence be the healing I have been seeking. Stay close to me today, Lord —
closer than my doubts,
closer than my wounds,
closer than my own breath.

Daily Challenge

Find a quiet moment today — even thirty seconds —
and let your soul whisper one truth to Christ.
Not a polished prayer.
Not a request.
Just the truth.
Let Him meet you there with the gentleness
that only a Savior who knows you completely can offer.

When Fear Whispers ” Not Yet”, God Still Speaks

Daily Reflection – 2/6/2026

Sacred Scripture

King Herod heard about it, for his fame had become widespread, and people were saying, “John the Baptist has been raised from the dead; that is why mighty powers are at work in him.” Others were saying, “He is Elijah”; still others, “He is a prophet like any of the prophets.” But when Herod learned of it, he said, “It is John whom I beheaded. He has been raised up.” Herod was the one who had John arrested and bound in prison on account of Herodias, the wife of his brother Philip, whom he had married. . . . Herod feared John, knowing him to be a righteous and holy man, and kept him in custody. When he heard him speak he was very much perplexed, yet he liked to listen to him. She had an opportunity one day when Herod, on his birthday, gave a banquet for his courtiers, his military officers, and the leading men of Galilee. Herodias’s own daughter came in and performed a dance that delighted Herod and his guests. The king said to the girl, “Ask of me whatever you wish and I will grant it to you.” . . .She went out and said to her mother, “What shall I ask for?” She replied, “The head of John the Baptist.” The girl hurried back to the king’s presence and made her request, “I want you to give me at once on a platter the head of John the Baptist.” The king was deeply distressed, but because of his oaths and the guests he did not wish to break his word to her. So he promptly dispatched an executioner with orders to bring back his head. He went off and beheaded him in the prison. He brought in the head on a platter and gave it to the girl. The girl in turn gave it to her mother. When his disciples heard about it, they came and took his body and laid it in a tomb. (Mark 6:14-29)

Reflection

Today’s Gospel is not an easy one. It’s raw, unsettling, and painfully human. The beheading of John the Baptist is not a story we tell to comfort ourselves. It exposes the fragile places in the human heart — fear, pride, resentment, insecurity, and the terrible things we do when truth asks more of us than we are ready to give.

But tucked inside this dark passage is a line that reveals everything:

“When Herod heard John speak, he was very much perplexed… yet he liked to listen to him.”

Herod wasn’t immune to truth. He wasn’t untouched by holiness. Something in him recognized the voice of God when John spoke. Something in him wanted to be better, braver, freer.

But fear won. Fear of losing face. Fear of losing approval.Fear of being changed.

And that is where this Gospel meets us.

Because every one of us knows that place — the place where truth stirs something deep inside us, but fear whispers, “Not yet.” The place where we feel the pull of God, but the weight of expectations keeps us frozen. The place where we know what is right, but we’re afraid of what it might cost.

John the Baptist gave his life for truth. But the deeper truth is this:

God’s work does not end when human courage falters. The stream of grace flows around every obstacle. The City of God remaineth.

The first disciples had to learn this. We are still learning it today.

Despite setbacks, despite losses, despite the moments when we fall short, the work of God continues. It does not depend on our perfection — only our willingness.

We are called to keep the lights bright in the City of God. Not hidden behind closed doors. Not buried in private belief. But shining — gently, courageously, faithfully.

The world does not need louder voices. It needs truer ones. It needs hearts that refuse to hide their light. It needs disciples who are willing to be faithful, even when it’s costly, even when it’s lonely, even when it’s misunderstood.

And the miracle is this: When we speak truth with love, when we stand with integrity,
when we refuse to betray the light within us…God does the rest.

The work continues. The Kingdom advances. The light spreads. And the world is changed — one faithful heart at a time.

Prayer of The Day

Lord Jesus, give me a heart that listens to Your truth without fear. Give me the courage to speak with love, the humility to act with integrity, and the strength to stand firm when the cost feels heavy. Form in me the likeness of Your own courage — steady, gentle, unwavering. Let my life shine with a light that does not hide, a truth that does not bend, and a love that does not fail. Amen.”

Daily Note

Truth doesn’t ask us to be fearless — only faithful.