Before His Cross, Came Ours

Daily Reflection – 5/19/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus raised his eyes to heaven and said, “Father, the hour has come. Give glory to your son, so that your son may glorify you, just as you gave him authority over all people, so that your son may give eternal life to all you gave him. Now this is eternal life, that they should know you, the only true God, and the one whom you sent, Jesus Christ. I glorified you on earth by accomplishing the work that you gave me to do. Now glorify me, Father, with you, with the glory that I had with you before the world began. I revealed your name to those whom you gave me out of the world. They belonged to you, and you gave them to me, and they have kept your word. Now they know that everything you gave me is from you, because the words you gave to me I have given to them, and they accepted them and truly understood that I came from you, and they have believed that you sent me. I pray for them. I do not pray for the world but for the ones you have given me, because they are yours, and everything of mine is yours and everything of yours is mine, and I have been glorified in them. And now I will no longer be in the world, but they are in the world, while I am coming to you.” ( John 17:1-11)

Reflection

Today’s Gospel is a privilege to read. We are allowed to step into the intimacy between Jesus and His Father.

“Jesus raised his eyes to heaven and said…”

What follows is not teaching. It is prayer. And even if we don’t understand every sentence, it still speaks straight to the heart.

This passage is known as the High Priestly Prayer. In the Hebrew tradition there were many priests, but only one High Priest. The High Priest did not intercede for one person or one family. He interceded for the whole people. And on the Day of Atonement, only he entered the Holy of Holies.

That helps us understand Jesus. He is our Great High Priest. He is the Mediator between God and humanity.

And the sacrifice He offers is not symbolic.

He offers Himself. He is the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world. He is the Passover Lamb — the Paschal Lamb — whose sacrifice is once for all.

In this prayer Jesus speaks of “the hour.” The hour refers to His suffering and death. To the human eye the Cross looks like defeat. But in this prayer Jesus reveals the truth: it is glory.

That sounds strange until we see what glory is in the Gospel. Glory is not display. Glory is love.

The Cross manifests the scope of divine power by disclosing the depth of divine love. If glory defines what the crucifixion is, then the crucifixion defines what glory means.

Jesus gives the Father glory through perfect obedience. He completes the work He was sent to do. And then the Father glorifies the Son.

There is one sentence in this prayer that always humbles me.

Jesus prays for His disciples — and then He says: “I pray not only for these, but for those you have given me…”

He prayed for us.

Two millennia ago, Jesus prayed for you and for me. That is not a metaphor. That is not a poetic thought. It is reality.

Before He carried His own Cross to Calvary, He brought ours to the Father. He carried our struggles into that conversation. He offered our lives to the Father before He offered His own.

Jesus prays that we remain in the world, but not belong to it. He prays for our protection — not from difficulty, but from being swallowed by the spirit of the world. He prays that we receive eternal life.

And eternal life is more than endless time. It is qualitative more than quantitative. It is the life of God within us — a life that begins now. It is peace that steadies us, joy that is not fragile, love that is not conditional.

Jesus also speaks of knowing God. Not merely knowing about God, but knowing Him personally.

This is the heart of Christianity: the knowledge of God as Father, made possible through Jesus Christ. To see Jesus is to see what God is like — a God whose love is not theoretical, but sacrificial.

Whenever I read this Gospel, I can’t help but picture Jesus in prayer — focused, intense, fully united with the Father. He knows He is physically leaving His friends. He knows how difficult the world is. And He refuses to leave us alone. So He prays.

Today, place your life where Jesus placed it.

Before the Father. Your worries. Your burdens. Your crosses.

And remember: you are not forgotten.

You are prayed for.

Prayer of The Day

“Jesus, it is hard to keep fighting. Sometimes it feels like I make little progress. Give me hope when I am tired, faith when I am overwhelmed, and strength to keep seeking your will in all things. Amen.”

Daily Note

Jesus carried you into His prayer before He carried His Cross. When life feels heavy, remember this: you are not alone. You are held — and you are prayed for.

He Solved This For Us

Daily Reflection – 5/18.2026

Sacred Scripture

The disciples said to Jesus, “Now you are talking plainly, and not in any figure of speech. Now we realize that you know everything and that you do not need to have anyone question you. Because of this we believe that you came from God.” Jesus answered them, “Do you believe now? Behold, the hour is coming and has arrived when each of you will be scattered to his own home and you will leave me alone. But I am not alone, because the Father is with me. I have told you this so that you might have peace in me. In the world you will have trouble, but take courage, I have conquered the world.” (John 16:29-33)

Reflection

The disciples say to Jesus,
“Now you are speaking plainly.” They think they understand. Jesus knows better.

He tells them the truth: “You will be scattered… and you will leave me alone.”

Some will falter. Some will stay. All of them are known. All of them are loved.

Jesus does not pretend they are stronger than they are. He does not correct their confidence. He simply tells them what is coming — and then gives them something stronger than confidence:

“Take courage. I have overcome the world.”

That changes everything. Because it means His peace is not based on how well we hold up. It is based on what He has already done.

The world’s peace depends on things going right. When things fall apart, peace disappears. But Jesus speaks these words knowing everything is about to fall apart. And still He says: “In me you may have peace.”

Not later. Not when life settles down. Now. That kind of peace does not remove difficulty. It holds us inside it. We see how much we need that.

We look at the world — violence, division, anger — and it feels overwhelming. We look closer —
our own families, our own lives — and sometimes it feels no different. And we think: “This is too much. Jesus does not deny that. But He refuses to let it be the final word.

“I have overcome the world.”

Not “I will.” Not “I hope to.” “I have.” That means what we are facing is real — but it is not final. So, we live differently. We believe when it is easier not to. We hold on when it would be easier to let go. We remain people of hope even when hope feels thin. This is not optimism.

This is trust in His victory.

The disciples who struggled were strengthened. What scattered them did not define them. And the same is true for us. We will have trouble. Jesus says that plainly. But we are not alone in it. His presence does not leave. His peace does not break. His victory does not change.

So we keep going. Not because life is easy. But because He already won this.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, when I feel overwhelmed, steady me in your peace. Help me trust what you have already done more than what I see in front of me. Stay with me and strengthen me. Amen.”

Daily Note

Jesus does not promise a life without trouble. He promises that trouble will not have the final word. When everything feels uncertain, return to Him. That is where peace holds.

When Grief Learns The Shape Of Joy

Daily Reflection – 5/15/2026

Sacred Scripture

“Amen, amen, I say to you, you will weep and mourn, while the world rejoices; you will grieve, but your grief will become joy. When a woman is in labor, she is in anguish because her hour has arrived; but when she has given birth to a child, she no longer remembers the pain because of her joy that a child has been born into the world. So you also are now in anguish. But I will see you again, and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy away from you. On that day you will not question me about anything. Amen, amen, I say to you, whatever you ask the Father in my name he will give you.”(John 16:20-23)

Reflection

Jesus says something to the disciples in this passage that must have sounded almost impossible:

“You will weep and mourn, while the world rejoices… but your grief will become joy.”

Not disappear. Not be denied. Not explained away.

Become joy.

That is a strange promise, because most of us would settle for less. We would settle for relief. We would settle for survival. We would settle for simply making it through the day without falling apart. But Jesus speaks of something deeper than relief. He speaks of transformation.

The disciples are standing on the edge of a sorrow they cannot yet imagine. Jesus knows it. He knows they are about to watch everything they believed in collapse in front of them. They will feel confused, abandoned, and out of step with a world that seems to move on as if nothing has happened. And still, he tells them that sorrow will not have the last word.

That matters, because it means Jesus does not save us by sparing us from grief. He saves us by entering it with us and carrying us through it.

And that is why this passage still speaks so clearly today.

We know what it is to stand in that place where our private grief feels invisible while the world keeps going. We know what it is to carry sadness quietly and wonder if joy will ever feel honest again. Jesus does not shame that experience. He names it. And then he warns us not to confuse the middle of the story with the end of it.

The Church gives us these words long before we know exactly how much we will need them. Scripture is placed before us on a calendar not because the Church can predict our lives, but because she trusts that God’s Word arrives on time. A passage once heard politely suddenly becomes personal. A promise once skimmed becomes the one thing holding us steady. This is grace, not coincidence.

And this Gospel teaches us something essential: joy rooted in Christ is not fragile.

The world offers many substitutes for joy—success, comfort, distraction, recognition—but none of them last. They cannot hold us when life becomes heavy. Only the joy that comes from belonging to Christ can remain when everything else begins to shake. That joy has passed through death and come out alive on the other side.

This kind of joy is not loud. It does not require constant certainty or constant happiness. It simply means there is something underneath us that does not give way.

But living from that place takes work. Real work.

Faith is not simply prayer, and it is not simply reading Scripture. It is prayer and Scripture woven into how we live—how we speak, how we stand, how we remain faithful when it would be easier to withdraw. It is the courage to remember who we are and whose we are, especially when the world offers easier stories.

That courage is not always easy. There are days when faith feels natural and strong. And there are days when remaining turned toward God feels like an act of will. But that too is discipleship.

Those who followed Jesus before us did not endure because life was gentle. They endured because they believed there was something truer than suffering. That belief carried martyrs, quiet witnesses, and faithful believers whose names we will never know. It carries believers still.

So perhaps the question is not how we avoid sorrow. Perhaps the question is how we remain inside God’s story when sorrow comes.

And the answer is simple, though not easy: stay close. Pray. Remember. Stand up for what is true. Refuse the false comforts that cannot save. Trust that even now, grief is being taught the shape of joy.

Because Jesus is not absent from your sorrow.
He is already there,

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, when sorrow feels heavy and joy feels far away, keep me rooted in your promise. Teach me not to mistake the middle of the story for the end. When I am tired, stay near. When I am shaken, steady me. When I forget, remind me that I belong to you Take my grief, my fear, my unfinished trust, and carry them all into your resurrection life. Jesus, I trust in you. Amen.”

Daily Note

Jesus never promises that we will avoid sorrow. He promises that sorrow will not have the last word. Those who follow him are not protected from grief, but they are never abandoned in it. We live by faith when we remember that Christ’s victory is deeper than our present pain and stronger than the world’s passing story. Joy may come quietly, slowly, even through tears—but in Christ, it will come.

When Worship and Doubt Stand Together

Daily Reflection – 5/14/2026

Sacred Scripture

Now the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain to which Jesus had directed them. And when they saw him they worshipped him; but some doubted. And Jesus came and said to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age.” (Matthew 28: 16-20)

Reflection

The disciples go up the mountain because Jesus told them to. That detail matters to me. They don’t fully understand what’s coming; they just show up where they were asked to be.

And the Gospel says something almost painfully honest:
They worshiped — and some doubted.

Not before. Not later. At the same time.

Jesus doesn’t call them out for it. He doesn’t pause until everyone feels settled or confident. He moves toward them — all of them — and speaks anyway. “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me,” he says. Then — incredibly — he places the future of that authority into their hands.

He sends people who are still afraid. People who don’t yet feel ready. People who are still working things out.

That should tell us something about God.

God does not wait for us to become fearless. God calls us and then walks with us as we become.

The world they were being sent into was unstable, violent, divided, and uncertain. They were not commissioned to fix it all, conquer it, or stand above it. They were sent to enter it, to teach a way of living, to welcome people into a life shaped by love, and — most of all — to stay.

And Jesus promises only one thing to make this possible:
“I am with you always.”

Not a map. Not a guarantee of success. Presence.

When we place this beside the Beatitudes, the picture deepens. God names as blessed the poor, the grieving, the persecuted — not because those conditions are good, but because God draws near in them. God is not impressed by strength. God is moved by need.

To see the world as God sees it is to stop looking away from broken places — in others, and in ourselves — and to trust that God is already there, waiting for us. That’s why the Church can never be a fortress.
It has to be a field hospital.

People arrive wounded — physically, emotionally, spiritually. We don’t ask how they got hurt before we help. We don’t promise instant cures. We tend wounds, we sit with pain, we offer what we have. And we trust the Divine Physician to do what only God can do.

Jesus never healed just to solve a problem. He healed to restore dignity, belonging, and faith — to reconnect people to life itself. So maybe our calling isn’t as grand or abstract as we imagine.

Maybe we are simply asked to practice triage:

  • to bandage what we can,
  • to listen when words fail,
  • to stand beside someone who is hurting,
  • to choose mercy when it would be easier to turn away.

Every small act — every quiet kindness — becomes a brick in the Kingdom.  And somehow, mysteriously, God uses even us.

Honestly?
That sounds like a life worth signing up for — even for extra shifts.

Prayer of The Day

“Jesus, you call me before I feel ready and walk with me as I learn.
Take what I can give — small, imperfect, sincere — and place it where it is needed.
Teach me to stay near those who suffer, gentle with others and with myself,
and faithful to your presence in all things. Amen.”

Daily Note

Those who follow Jesus are people of hope — not because life is easy, but because God does not abandon us in our need. If God draws close to the poor, the grieving, and the wounded, so must we. We cannot claim faith while ignoring the people God loves first.

To follow Christ is to move toward suffering with compassion, believing that love lived patiently — even in small ways — participates in the healing of the world.

Hardwired for God, Guided by the Spirit

Daily Reflection – 5/13/2026

Sacred Scripture

“I have much more to tell you, but you cannot bear it now. But when he comes, the Spirit of truth, he will guide you to all truth. He will not speak on his own, but he will speak what he hears, and will declare to you the things that are coming. He will glorify me, because he will take from what is mine and declare it to you. Everything that the Father has is mine; for this reason I told you that he will take from what is mine and declare it to you”( John 16:12-15)

Reflection

The disciples are standing on the edge of a future they cannot yet see. Jesus is speaking truths they cannot yet grasp. His words must have sounded like a riddle — familiar, but just out of reach.

Even as He speaks of things that will unsettle them, Jesus anchors them in assurance: they will not be alone, and they will be equipped for the mission He began in them.

Pentecost proves that promise. The same disciples who were confused, frightened, and unsure became bold witnesses — not because they suddenly understood everything, but because the Holy Spirit filled them with a strength beyond their own.

And that’s where this Gospel meets you and me.

At the deepest level of our being, we desire God. St. Augustine captured it perfectly:

“You have made us for Yourself, O God, and our hearts are restless until they rest in You.”

Every longing, every dream, every love, every moment of beauty — all of it is a faint reflection of the One we were made for. Whether we recognize it or not, we are always seeking God.

St. Thomas Aquinas approaches the same truth from another angle: Because we were made for God, we are directed toward God. We are hardwired to choose what we perceive as good — because every genuine good reflects Him.

So the challenge of life is not to desire God. We cannot help but desire Him.

The challenge is to see clearly:

  • to choose the true good over the false one
  • to reach for what is real rather than what is illusion
  • to let our desires be shaped by truth rather than distortion

And this is why Jesus’ promise in today’s Gospel matters so deeply:

He sends the Holy Spirit — the Spirit of Truth — to guide us.

The Spirit clarifies what is genuine and exposes what is counterfeit. The Spirit aligns our desires with God’s desires. The Spirit leads us into the goodness for which we were created.

The Holy Spirit is already within us, waiting for us to listen, to trust, and to follow — so that our lives can move toward the true good that God intends.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, fill me with your Holy Spirit and guide me in your way of life, truth, and goodness. Free me from ignorance of your truth, and from deception and moral blindness caused by sinful pride and the refusal to believe and obey your word of truth. May I love you with all of my heart, mind, and strength, and seek to please you in all things.”

Daily Note

Jesus promised that the Spirit of Truth would guide His disciples into all truth — not once, not occasionally, but continually. He knew they could not understand everything on their own. He knew they would need help, clarity, and strength long after He returned to the Father.

And so do we.

The Holy Spirit takes what Jesus has spoken and opens it within us — revealing God’s wisdom, God’s power, and God’s glory in ways we could never reach by ourselves.

This is how we live in the freedom of His love. This is how we walk in the truth. This is how we become who we were created to be.

The Presence That Follows The Parting

Daily Reflection – 5/12/2026

Sacred Scripture

But now I am going to the one who sent me, and not one of you asks me, ‘Where are you going?’ But because I told you this, grief has filled your hearts. But I tell you the truth, it is better for you that I go. For if I do not go, the Advocate will not come to you. But if I go, I will send him to you. And when he comes he will convict the world in regard to sin and righteousness and condemnation: sin, because they do not believe in me; righteousness, because I am going to the Father and you will no longer see me; condemnation, because the ruler of this world has been condemned.( John 16:5-11)

Reflection

Life is filled with good‑byes.

From childhood to adulthood, every threshold requires us to release something — a season, a place, a person, a version of ourselves. Some good‑byes are gentle. Others break us open. And even when a good‑bye is followed by a new “hello,” the letting‑go is never easy.

The Apostles understood this deeply. They had already said good‑bye to their former lives to follow Jesus. Now they face the unthinkable: saying good‑bye to Him. Their hearts are heavy with the same ache we feel when someone we love steps beyond our reach.

But Jesus does something extraordinary. He doesn’t deny their sorrow. He doesn’t minimize their fear. He reframes the moment.

He tells them that His departure is not a loss — it is a gift.

And here is the part we often overlook: It was necessary for Jesus to leave so that the Holy Spirit could come.

Why? Why couldn’t Jesus remain with us and still send the Spirit? Why is His absence the doorway to a greater presence?

The answer is Pentecost.

Jesus took on human flesh to walk beside us. The Holy Spirit enters into humanity to live within us.

Jesus is God with us. The Spirit is God in us.

That is the astonishing promise of this passage: God has united Himself to us in a way that transforms our very identity. The Holy Spirit completes God’s work in us. He shares His gifts, His strength, His life. He turns children of darkness into children of God.

And here lies the profound realization:

Our lives are not defined by our failures, weaknesses, fears, or sins. Our lives are defined by His love — and our willingness to live from that love.

Each of us is a temple of the Holy Spirit. Each of us carries God’s presence. Each of us is held, guided, strengthened, and renewed from within.

So live free of anxiety. Live free of regret. Live free of the stories that tell you you’re not enough.

Let your life be defined by the One who lives in you.

When Jesus promised the Spirit, He had every generation in His heart — including ours. He knew the trials, the separations, the griefs, the good‑byes we would face. And He wanted us to have a presence that could never be taken away.

His love is constant. His kindness endures forever. And His Spirit remains with us always.

Prayer of The Day

“Come, Holy Spirit, and let the fire of Your love burn in my heart. Make me desire only what is pure, lovely, holy, and good. Give me the courage to cast aside all that is not pleasing in Your sight, and fill me with Your strength, Your peace, and Your life.”

Daily Note

Good‑byes are painful — especially the permanent ones. But the measure of a life is not whether we avoid good‑byes. It is whether we leave behind something that endures.

Let your kindness be remembered. Let your compassion be felt. Let your love be the imprint that remains long after you are gone. For when our final good‑bye comes

When Our Faith Is Shaken . . .

Daily Reflection – 5/11./2026

Sacred Scripture

“When the Advocate comes whom I will send you from the Father, the Spirit of truth that proceeds from the Father, he will testify to me. And you also testify, because you have been with me from the beginning. I have told you this so that you may not fall away. They will expel you from the synagogues; in fact, the hour is coming when everyone who kills you will think he is offering worship to God. They will do this because they have not known either the Father or me. I have told you this so that when their hour comes you may remember that I told you. ( John 15:26-16:4)

Reflection

Jesus speaks these words at the Last Supper, knowing full well what awaits His disciples. He tells them plainly that He is speaking this way “so that your faith may not be shaken.” He knows suffering is coming — persecution, hostility, confusion — and He knows how easily faith can tremble under the weight of fear.

Our own experience echoes theirs. Faith is not shaken only by dramatic persecution; it is shaken by:

  • illness or the death of someone we love
  • betrayal or disappointment by people we trusted
  • the quiet erosion caused by stress, exhaustion, or discouragement
  • the failures of those who were supposed to guide us
  • the relentless noise and distraction of modern life

Jesus names the reality: faith can be shaken. But He also gives the remedy: the Spirit of Truth.

He promises the Advocate — the One who stands beside us, the One who testifies to Him, the One who strengthens what is weak and steadies what is trembling. Jesus wants us to know that we will never face the darkness alone. The Spirit is the divine presence that holds our hand when our own strength fails.

Even when our prayers seem unanswered, the Spirit is there — guiding, consoling, renewing, reminding us that faith itself is a gift from God, and the Giver never abandons His gift.

In a world overflowing with distraction, pressure, and competing demands, the need for the Spirit is even greater. Most of us live multiple vocations at once — family, work, ministry, responsibility — and it is not always easy to feel the power of the Resurrection in the middle of ordinary life. But ongoing conversion, the slow and steady shaping of our hearts, is the work of the Spirit within us.

We must become aware of Him. To many, the Spirit feels amorphous, abstract, distant. But He is as real as the Father and the Son — the same God, the same love, the same presence.

When faith feels fragile, there is no better prayer than: “Come, Holy Spirit, fill my heart.” Or that ancient cry of the Church: “Heal our wounds, our strength renew; on our dryness pour Thy dew.”

The Spirit comes. The Spirit steadies. The Spirit strengthens. And the Spirit keeps our faith from being shaken.

Prayer of The Day

“O merciful God, fill our hearts, we pray, with the graces of your Holy Spirit — love, joy, peace, patience, gentleness, goodness, faithfulness, humility, and self‑control. Teach us to love those who hate us and to pray for those who mistreat us, that we may be children of Your love. In adversity grant us patience; in prosperity keep us humble. Guard the door of our lips; help us to lightly esteem the pleasures of this world and thirst for heavenly things. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.” (Prayer of Anselm, 1033–1109)

Daily Note

We have been given the Holy Spirit not as an idea, but as a presence — a strength that lives within us. The Spirit gives courage when we are afraid, perseverance when we are weary, and clarity when confusion threatens to overwhelm us. Every challenge becomes bearable when we remember that we do not face it alone. The Spirit stands beside us, within us, and for us — the steadying presence Jesus promised.

The Words To Steady Our Hearts

Daily Reflection – 5/8/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus said to his disciples: “As the Father loves me, so I also love you. Remain in my love. If you keep my commandments, you will remain in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commandments and remain in his love. I have told you this so that my joy might be in you and your joy might be complete.” (John 15: 9-11)

Reflection

In today’s scripture, Jesus speaks a truth as enduring as the stars—God’s unfathomable love for us. It is a love that stretches across the universe, touching each heart with a warmth and depth that is both invigorating and consoling. This love, pure and unchanging, invites us into a divine dialogue that reveals the essence of who we are and whose we are.

Further, these words are not merely uttered but anchored in an astonishing reality—He loves us “just as the Father loves me.” This divine affection, perfect in its essence, is bestowed upon us with a generosity that knows no bounds. The love that the Father bears for the Son, a love perfect and complete, is the same love extended to each one of us. Saint Paul understood this intimately when he wrote, “He loved me and gave his life for me” (Gal 2:20).

Jesus’s words reveal a truth about our existence. We are not solitary wanderers on this earth, left to fend against the tempests of life with nothing but our fragile strength. We are cherished beyond measure by a Love that went to the cross for our sake. This divine love is neither abstract nor distant but as real as the air we breathe and as constant as the beating of our hearts.

Yet knowing of this love is only the beginning. Jesus invites us—commands us—“Remain in my love.” This is a call to action, a challenge to dwell deeply and securely within this love, shaping our lives and decisions around its compelling force. It is here, remaining in that love, that we find the fulcrum of our faith and the source of our joy. As we remain in His love, we align ourselves with His will, embedding our existence in something eternal.

To live in accordance with God’s commandments is to engage in a profound act of love, mirroring the love Jesus has for the Father by cherishing His will. Through this lens, the commandments transform from rules to follow into expressions of love to live by. Our love for God—and for what He loves—compels us to love others, spreading the warmth of God’s affection through kindness, mercy, and compassion.

Jesus’s words also reveals a truth about our existence. We are not solitary wanderers on this earth, left to fend against the tempests of life with nothing but our fragile strength. No, we are cherished beyond measure by a Love that went to the cross for our sake. This divine love is neither abstract nor distant but is as real as the air we breathe and as constant as the beating of our hearts.

To live in accordance with God’s commandments is to engage in a profound act of love, mirroring the love Jesus has for the Father by cherishing His will. It is through this lens of love that the commandments transform from mere rules to follow into expressions of love to live by. Our love for God and, consequently, for what He loves compels us to love others, to spread the warmth of God’s affection through acts of kindness, mercy, and compassion.

For those who have encountered a portrayal of God as anything less than loving, or who doubt their worthiness, Jesus reassures: “I love you… just as my Father loves me.” This is the heart of the Gospel, the core of our faith, and the source of our hope. It is an invitation to an eternal relationship founded on divine love, urging us to shift our gaze from the fleeting to the everlasting.

To dwell in God’s words of love is to accept the most profound invitation of all—to remain forever in the heart of God’s love, growing, learning, and loving in the boundless wonder of His presence

Prayer of The Day

Father above, we thank you and praise you for the gift of this day. Lord, thank you for all that you have blessed us with. Help us never to stray and to always remain in your loving care. You choose to pour out your love and mercy on us no matter what; help us never to forget this. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.”

Daily Note

There is nothing that brings more peace than knowing we have a God who loves us beyond measure and desires only our good. He is love itself, the source of all love; and there is nothing greater than loving and being loved. We have the chance to remain in the source of love, but we must choose to live by His commandments. If we do, we live in His love. If we choose our own way, we cut ourselves off from the life‑giving love He offers.

Loved By The Same Love That Holds The Son

Daily Reflection – 5/7/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus said to His disciples: As the Father has loved me, so I have loved you. Remain in my love. If you keep my commandments, you will remain in my love, just as I keep my Father’s commandments and remain in His love. I tell you this so that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be complete. (John 15: 9-11)

Reflection

There are few moments in Scripture where Jesus speaks with such direct, unguarded tenderness as He does in these verses. He is not teaching a parable, not correcting a misunderstanding, not confronting a challenge. He is simply revealing His heart. And what He reveals is staggering: “As the Father has loved me, so I have loved you.”

We hear those words so often that we forget their weight. Jesus is not saying He loves us generously, or kindly, or compassionately — though all of that is true. He is saying He loves us with the same love the Father has for Him. The eternal love. The perfect love. The love without beginning or end. The love that has never known fracture, disappointment, or distance. That is the measure He uses for us.

And He doesn’t speak it to humanity in general. He speaks it to each person who hears His voice. St. Paul understood this when he wrote, “He loved me and gave himself for me.” Divine love is not a general sentiment. It is personal, specific, intentional.

But Jesus doesn’t stop at revelation. He moves to invitation: “Remain in my love.” Remain. Stay. Abide. Don’t drift away from what I have already given you. Jesus knows the human heart — how easily it wanders, how quickly it doubts, how often it forgets what is true. So He gives us a command that is really a lifeline: stay where the love is.

And then He tells us how: “If you keep my commandments, you will remain in my love.” This isn’t a transactional statement. Jesus is not saying, “Obey me so I will love you.” He is saying, “Obey me so you can remain aware of the love that is already yours.” Sin doesn’t make God withdraw His love; it makes us withdraw our attention. Obedience keeps us aligned with the One who already loves us perfectly.

Jesus then reveals His purpose: “That my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be complete.” Not partial joy. Not fleeting joy. Complete joy. The kind of joy that doesn’t depend on circumstances, tone, or the shifting feel of a moment. The kind of joy that comes from knowing you are loved with the same love the Father has for the Son.

This is the heart of the Christian life: To know you are loved. To remain in that love. To live from that love. And to let that love shape your choices, your desires, your obedience, and your joy.

Jesus is not offering sentiment. He is offering a way of life — a life rooted in the deepest truth imaginable: You are loved with the love that holds the Son Himself

Prayer of The Day

Father, thank You for the love You have poured out through Your Son. Teach me to remain in that love, to trust it, to rest in it, and to let it shape every part of my life. Keep my heart steady, my steps faithful, and my joy rooted in You alone. Through Christ our Lord. Amen

Daily Note

The greatest truth you will ever carry is this: you are loved with the same love the Father has for the Son. Everything else in the Christian life flows from that one reality.

Abide and Become

Daily Reflection – 5/6/2026

Sacred Scripture

I am the true vine, and my Father is the vine grower. He takes away every branch in me that does not bear fruit, and every one that does he prunes so that it bears more fruit. You are already pruned because of the word that I spoke to you. Remain in me, as I remain in you. Just as a branch cannot bear fruit on its own unless it remains on the vine, so neither can you unless you remain in me. I am the vine, you are the branches. Whoever remains in me and I in him will bear much fruit, because without me you can do nothing. Anyone who does not remain in me will be thrown out like a branch and wither; people will gather them and throw them into a fire and they will be burned. If you remain in me and my words remain in you, ask for whatever you want and it will be done for you. By this is my Father glorified, that you bear much fruit and become my disciples.” (John 15:1-8)

Reflection

There is a profound beauty and majesty in today’s scripture. Jesus is not simply offering a metaphor; He is revealing the very structure of the spiritual life. “I am the true vine, and my Father is the vine grower.” With those words, He places Himself at the center of our existence — not as an accessory, not as an inspiration, but as the very source of life.

To abide in Christ is to allow His life to flow through ours. It is to let His strength become our strength, His love become our love, His endurance become our endurance. When Jesus says, “Apart from me you can do nothing,” He is not diminishing us — He is telling the truth about the human heart. We were never meant to live on self‑generated spiritual energy. We were created for communion, for dependence, for a life rooted in Him.

And when we remain in Him, fruit appears. Not because we strain for it, but because His life is active within us. Christianity is not a religion of “don’ts” but a life of “do’s” — a life where faith expresses itself in love, where belief becomes action, where grace becomes generosity. As St. Paul reminds us, “the only thing that counts is faith working through love.” And St. James echoes it: faith without works is barren, lifeless, unrooted.

But Jesus also speaks of pruning — and this is where the spiritual life becomes both humbling and hopeful. Pruning is not punishment; it is preparation. It is God removing what drains life so that what is truly alive can flourish. Pride, resentment, self‑reliance, vanity, fear — these are the dead branches that choke the Spirit’s work. And when God cuts them away, it hurts. But it is a holy pain, the kind that clears space for grace.

Spiritual pruning is God’s way of saying: “I see more in you than you see in yourself.” He prunes because He loves. He prunes because He knows what we can become. He prunes because fruitfulness is His desire for us, not an optional extra.

To abide in Christ is to surrender to this divine tending — to let Him shape us, cleanse us, strengthen us, and use us. It is to trust that His wisdom is greater than our plans, His timing wiser than our urgency, His vision deeper than our understanding. And when we live this way — rooted in Him, open to Him, responsive to Him — our lives become fruitful in ways we could never manufacture on our own.

Today, Jesus invites us to remain in Him. Not occasionally. Not when convenient. But continually — as the posture of our lives. And if we do, He promises that our lives will bear fruit that lasts, fruit that blesses others, fruit that glorifies God.

May we allow Him today to prune what must go, nourish what must grow, and make our lives fruitful for His glory.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, keep me close to You today. Cut away whatever weakens my love, distracts my heart, or pulls me from Your life. Teach me to remain in You with trust, humility, and surrender. Let Your life flow through mine so that my words, my actions, and my presence bear fruit that glorifies You. Make me a branch that stays rooted in Your love and alive in Your grace. Amen.”

Daily Note

There are many seductions in our world inviting us to make our home in them — success, approval, comfort, distraction. But every one of them leaves us emptier than before. Only Christ gives life. Only Christ sustains. Only Christ bears fruit in us that lasts.

When we make our home in Him, we discover that the very things we once chased begin to lose their power. We become anchored, nourished, strengthened. And slowly, quietly, beautifully, our lives begin to bear fruit — not because we tried harder, but because we finally remained where life truly is.