Where Love Never Stops

Daily Reflection – 3/18/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus answered the Jews: “My Father is at work until now, so I am at work.” For this reason, they tried all the more to kill him, because he not only broke the Sabbath but he also called God his own father, making himself equal to God. Jesus answered and said to them, “Amen, amen, I say to you, the Son cannot do anything on his own, but only what he sees the Father doing; for what he does, the Son will do also. For the Father loves the Son and shows him everything that he himself does, and he will show him greater works than these, so that you may be amazed. For just as the Father raises the dead and gives life, so also does the Son give life to whomever he wishes. Nor does the Father judge anyone, but he has given all judgment to the Son, so that all may honor the Son just as they honor the Father. Whoever does not honor the Son does not honor the Father who sent him. Amen, amen, I say to you, whoever hears my word and believes in the one who sent me has eternal life and will not come to condemnation, but has passed from death to life. Amen, amen, I say to you, the hour is coming and is now here when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God, and those who hear will live. For just as the Father has life in himself, so also he gave to the Son the possession of life in himself. And he gave him power to exercise judgment, because he is the Son of Man. Do not be amazed at this, because the hour is coming in which all who are in the tombs will hear his voice and will come out, those who have done good deeds to the resurrection of life, but those who have done wicked deeds to the resurrection of condemnation. “I cannot do anything on my own; I judge as I hear, and my judgment is just, because I do not seek my own will but the will of the one who sent me.” (John 5:17-30)

Reflection

This is one of those passages of scripture that should stop us cold. It is a profound declaration that defines the perfect love. And it comes from the lips of Jesus Christ.

The news of God’s love for us and His plan for us is laid out for you and me. So, let’s walk through this slowly.

When the religious leaders charged that Jesus was making himself equal with God, Jesus replied that he was not acting independently of God because his relationship is a close personal Father-Son relationship. He and the Father are united in heart, mind, and will. The mind of Jesus is the mind of God, and the words of Jesus are the words of God.

Jesus tells us that his identity with the Father is based on complete trust and obedience. Jesus always did what his Father wanted him to do. His obedience was not just based on submission, but on love. He obeyed because he loved his Father. Isn’t that what obedience is supposed to be? The Father loves the Son and shares with him all that he is and has. We are called to give our lives to God with the same love, trust, and obedience which Jesus demonstrated for his Father.

Jesus then reminds us of what that love means. “I will never forget”, says the Lord. This is God’s perfect love. This is how we are loved by him. Even if all our earthly loves were to crumble and we were left with nothing but dust in our hands; God’s unique and faithful love is always burning for all of us. Always burning for you and me.

The perfect love. Unbridled. Constant. Always forgiving. Forever committed.

To prove that love to us, He made it manifest in action. Jesus took our sins upon himself and nailed them to the cross. He, who is equal in dignity and stature with the Father, became a servant for our sake to ransom us from slavery to sin. He has the power to forgive us and to restore our relationship with God because he paid the price for our sins.

I am overcome when I reflect on that. The ultimate love shed for you and for me. The ultimate love which is God. That’s how much you and I are loved. Unto death and beyond.

Are you ready to accept the totality of this love? Are you ready to become a true follower of His way?

Prayer of The Day

“Lord, increase my love for you and unite my heart and will with yours, that I may only seek what is pleasing to you”.

Daily Note

Jesus took our sins upon himself and nailed them to the cross. He, who is equal in dignity and stature with the Father, became a servant for our sake to ransom us from slavery to sin. He has the power to forgive us and to restore our relationship with God because he paid the price for our sins. Jesus offers us abundant, life, peace, and joy.

The Question That Changes Everything

Daily Reflection – 3/17/2026

Sacred Scripture

There was a feast of the Jews, and Jesus went up to Jerusalem. Now there is in Jerusalem at the Sheep Gate a pool called in Hebrew Bethesda, with five porticoes. In these lay a large number of ill, blind, lame, and crippled. One man was there who had been ill for thirty-eight years. When Jesus saw him lying there and knew that he had been ill for a long time, he said to him, “Do you want to be well?” The sick man answered him, “Sir, I have no one to put me into the pool when the water is stirred up; while I am on my way, someone else gets down there before me.” Jesus said to him, “Rise, take up your mat, and walk.” Immediately the man became well, took up his mat, and walked. Now that day was a sabbath. So the Jews said to the man who was cured, “It is the sabbath, and it is not lawful for you to carry your mat.” He answered them, “The man who made me well told me, ‘Take up your mat and walk.’” They asked him, “Who is the man who told you, ‘Take it up and walk’?” The man who was healed did not know who it was, for Jesus had slipped away, since there was a crowd there. After this Jesus found him in the Temple area and said to him, “Look, you are well; do not sin any more, so that nothing worse may happen to you.” The man went and told the Jews that Jesus was the one who had made him well. Therefore, the Jews began to persecute Jesus because he did this on a Sabbath. (John 5:1-16)

Reflection

There is a moment in this Gospel that always stops me: a man who has been lying on his mat for thirty‑eight years is suddenly confronted with a question that seems almost absurd in its simplicity.

“Do you want to be well?”

Jesus does not ask about the man’s past. He does not ask who failed him, who stepped over him, or why healing has taken so long. He asks a question that reaches beneath the story and touches the soul.

Because sometimes the deepest paralysis is not in the body — it is in the will.

Many of us know what it is to lie on a mat we never intended to keep. A disappointment that hardened. A grief that settled in. A habit of resignation that became easier than hope. We learn to live with what wounds us, and over time the mat becomes familiar, even when it is suffocating.

Jesus’ question is not a rebuke. It is an invitation.

“Do you want to be well?”

Do you want to rise from the place where life has stalled? Do you want to step out of the story you’ve been repeating? Do you want to be healed in the places you’ve stopped believing healing is possible?

The man does not answer with desire. He answers with reasons. With history. With the logic of someone who has been disappointed too many times.

And Jesus cuts through all of it. He does not wait for perfect faith. He does not demand a flawless confession. He simply speaks a word that creates the very future it commands:

“Rise, take up your mat, and walk.”

Healing, in this story, is not something the man achieves. It is something he consents to. A grace he allows to reach him. A future he steps into because Jesus makes it possible.

This is the invitation of Lent: to let Christ speak into the places where we have grown still, to let His voice interrupt the long rehearsed explanations, to let His mercy lift what we cannot lift on our own.

Healing is not passive. It is a walk — a movement toward the One who calls us out of paralysis and into life.

Prayer of The Day

“Jesus, speak into the places where I have grown still. Stir what has gone dormant. Heal what has hardened. Give me the courage to rise when you call, and the grace to walk with you toward the life you desire for me.”

Daily Note

Healing begins the moment we stop explaining our paralysis and start listening for Christ’s voice. His question remains the same: Do you want to be well?

Believing BEFORE We See

Daily Reflection – 3/16/2026

Sacred Scripture

At that time Jesus left [Samaria] for Galilee. For Jesus himself testified that a prophet has no honor in his native place. When he came into Galilee, the Galileans welcomed him, since they had seen all he had done in Jerusalem at the feast; for they themselves had gone to the feast. Then he returned to Cana in Galilee, where he had made the water wine. Now there was a royal official whose son was ill in Capernaum. When he heard that Jesus had arrived in Galilee from Judea, he went to him and asked him to come down and heal his son, who was near death. Jesus said to him, “Unless you people see signs and wonders, you will not believe.” The royal official said to him, “Sir, come down before my child dies.” Jesus said to him, “You may go; your son will live.” The man believed what Jesus said to him and left. While the man was on his way back, his slaves met him and told him that his boy would live. He asked them when he began to recover. They told him, “The fever left him yesterday, about one in the afternoon.” The father realized that just at that time Jesus had said to him, “Your son will live,” and he and his whole household came to believe. Now this was the second sign Jesus did when he came to Galilee from Judea. (John 4:43-54)

Reflection

We live in a culture captivated by entertainment. Much of our free time is spent watching, scrolling, consuming — letting our senses be captured by spectacle. The Galileans were no different. They welcomed Jesus not because they believed in Him, but because they were dazzled by the wonders He performed. Their hometown son had returned with a bag of “tricks,” and they were eager for the show.

But entertainment can drown out the still, small voice that calls us to something deeper — to the beauty of truth rather than the thrill of spectacle.

Not so the royal official.

He walked twenty miles to find Jesus, not for a sign, but out of desperate hope. He begged Jesus to come heal his son. Instead, Jesus tested him: “You may go. Your son will live.” Would he trust the word of Christ without seeing the miracle?

He did.

“The man believed what Jesus said to him and left.”

And when he learned that his son recovered at the exact moment Jesus spoke, he and his whole household came to faith. He didn’t settle for coincidence; he sought truth — and truth revealed Christ.

At this halfway point in Lent, we are invited to ask ourselves what has captured our attention and dulled our desire for God. Have we allowed the “cotton candy” of distraction to replace the deeper nourishment of faith? Do we worship in a way that merely feels relevant, or in a way that calls us to transcendence? Are we waiting for a sign, or are we opening our hearts to the Savior?

The Lord wants to bring us to a place where we walk by His word, trust His promises, and journey according to His voice. Lent is the season when God seeks to make us new — and when we are called to cooperate with that renewal. Like the royal official, we are invited to step forward in faith, trusting that Christ’s word is enough to lead us into the light.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, your love never fails and your mercy never ends. Give me the courage to surrender my pride, my fears, and my doubts to your wisdom and care. Strengthen my faith, deepen my hope, and make my love steadfast as I walk in your light.”

Daily Note

Lent is God’s invitation to renewal — a renewal of faith, vision, and trust. Our part is to cooperate with that grace, to let His light draw us out of the shadows of distraction and into the clarity of His word. Like the royal official, we are called to believe before we see, to trust Christ’s promise even when the outcome is still unfolding. When we walk by faith, we discover that His word is already at work in us and in those we love.

Trust Is The Foundation for Love

Daily Reflection – 3/13/2026

Sacred Scripture

One of the scribes came to Jesus and asked him, “Which is the first of all the commandments?” Jesus replied, “The first is this: Hear, O Israel! The Lord our God is Lord alone! You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength. The second is this: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. There is no other commandment greater than these.” The scribe said to him, “Well said, teacher. You are right in saying, ‘He is One and there is no other than he.’ And ‘to love him with all your heart, with all your understanding, with all your strength, and to love your neighbor as yourself’ is worth more than all burnt offerings and sacrifices.” And when Jesus saw that he answered with understanding, he said to him, “You are not far from the Kingdom of God.” And no one dared to ask him any more questions. ( Mark 12:28-34)

Reflection

When the scribe asks Jesus which commandment stands above all the rest, he is not looking for a rule — he is looking for the center. The one truth that makes sense of everything else. And Jesus gives it plainly: Love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength. And love your neighbor as yourself.

Two commandments, but one love.
One movement of the heart that begins in God and flows outward into the world.
One orientation that shapes how we see, how we choose, how we live.

And at the heart of that love is trust.

You cannot love God with your whole being without trusting that God is with you, for you, and faithful to you. Loving God is not simply affection or devotion — it is the daily decision to entrust your life, your fears, your hopes, and your future into God’s hands. It is believing that God will care for you even when circumstances shake, even when outcomes are unclear, even when the path ahead feels uncertain.

Trust is the soil in which love grows.

Loving God with all our heart means trusting that God holds our deepest joys and wounds.
Loving God with all our soul means trusting that God is present in the unseen places.
Loving God with all our mind means trusting God’s wisdom above our own.
Loving God with all our strength means trusting God enough to act, to serve, to give, even when it stretches us.

And loving our neighbor is the visible expression of that trust.
It is the way God’s love becomes real in the world.

This love is not sentimental. It is demanding. It asks us to stretch beyond ourselves, to listen when we would rather turn away, to forgive when we would rather hold on, to give when we would rather protect. It asks us to see each person — not as an interruption or an obstacle — but as someone God loves.

But Jesus never commands what He does not empower.
We love because God first loved us. We trust because God has proven faithful. We give because God has given Himself to us.

In a world marked by division, suspicion, and fear, this commandment is not only relevant — it is urgent. To love God and neighbor is to resist the forces that tear us apart. It is to stand in the truth that every person is held in God’s heart. It is to live as if love is stronger than fear, stronger than anger, stronger than the darkness around us.

Jesus tells the scribe, “You are not far from the kingdom of God.” Not because he knew the right answer, but because he recognized the right center.

May we do the same — trusting God fully, and loving others freely.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, teach me to trust You with my whole heart. Help me believe that You are with me in every moment and that Your care is steady and sure. Let that trust deepen my love for You and shape my love for others. Free me from fear, self‑protection, and hesitation. Let Your love take root in me so deeply that it becomes the way I move through the world. Amen.”

Daily Note

Trust is the quiet foundation of love. When you trust that God is with you and for you, your heart becomes free to love others with courage, patience, and generosity.

The Wholeness Only He Can Bring

Daily Reflection – 3/12/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus was driving out a demon that was mute, and when the demon had gone out, the mute man spoke and the crowds were amazed. Some of them said, “By the power of Beelzebub, the prince of demons, he drives out demons.” Others, to test him, asked him for a sign from heaven. But he knew their thoughts and said to them, “Every kingdom divided against itself will be laid waste and house will fall against house. And if Satan is divided against himself, how will his kingdom stand? For you say that it is by Beelzebub that I drive out demons. If I, then, drive out demons by Beelzebub, by whom do your own people drive them out? Therefore, they will be your judges. But if it is by the finger of God that I drive out demons, then the kingdom of God has come upon you. When a strong man fully armed guards his palace, his possessions are safe. But when one stronger than he attacks and overcomes him, he takes away the armor on which he relied and distributes the spoils. Whoever is not with me is against me, and whoever does not gather with me scatters.” (Luke 11:14-23)

Reflection

When Jesus healed the man who could not speak, the crowd didn’t know how to interpret the goodness in front of them. Some questioned His motives. Others demanded more proof. Jesus didn’t defend Himself — He simply named a truth that reaches into every part of our lives:

“A kingdom divided against itself cannot stand.”

He wasn’t only talking about spiritual forces. He was talking about us — the divided places in our hearts, the tug‑of‑war between fear and faith, the inner conflicts that leave us tired and scattered.

We know these places well:

  • wanting peace but feeding worry
  • wanting to trust God but holding tight to control
  • wanting to grow but clinging to what’s familiar
  • wanting clarity but living in old patterns

Jesus doesn’t shame us for this. He simply tells the truth: division weakens us.

But He doesn’t leave us there.

He describes a “strong man” guarding his house — a picture of the forces that hold us captive: fear, resentment, pride, self‑protection, and the old stories we keep repeating. These forces feel entrenched. They feel permanent. They feel like they’ve been guarding the house for years.

But Jesus says that when someone stronger arrives, everything changes. The grip loosens. The chains fall. The house is reclaimed.

This is the movement of grace: Christ steps into the divided places of our lives and brings a wholeness we cannot manufacture on our own.

For many believers, this movement is captured in a simple prayer: Empty me. Fill me. Use me.

It is the posture that makes room for healing.

Because the truth is: We cannot be filled until we are willing to be emptied. We cannot be made whole while clinging to what divides us. We cannot be used until we yield the parts of us that resist God’s leading.

When we empty ourselves — of fear, pride, resentment, and self‑protection — we create space for Christ to bring unity where we’ve been split. When we allow Him to fill us, His strength becomes our steadiness. And when we let Him use us, our lives expand into the purpose He always intended.

Jesus doesn’t just defeat what binds us. He restores what was broken. He fills what was empty. He uses what once felt unusable. He brings coherence to the divided places of our lives.

This is the wholeness we cannot make alone.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord, empty me of what divides me. Fill me with Your strength and peace. Use me in ways that reflect Your wholeness and love. Make me whole in You. “Amen.

Daily Note

When I yield to Christ, He brings the wholeness I cannot create on my own.

When God Doesn’t Seem To Be Moving

Daily Reflection – 3/11/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus said to the Jews: “If I testify on my own behalf, my testimony is not true. But there is another who testifies on my behalf, and I know that the testimony he gives on my behalf is true. You sent emissaries to John, and he testified to the truth. I do not accept human testimony, but I say this so that you may be saved. He was a burning and shining lamp, and for a while you were content to rejoice in his light. But I have testimony greater than John’s. The works that the Father gave me to accomplish, these works that I perform testify on my behalf that the Father has sent me. Moreover, the Father who sent me has testified on my behalf. But you have never heard his voice nor seen his form, and you do not have his word remaining in you, because you do not believe in the one whom he has sent. You search the Scriptures, because you think you have eternal life through them; even they testify on my behalf. But you do not want to come to me to have life. “I do not accept human praise; moreover, I know that you do not have the love of God in you. I came in the name of my Father, but you do not accept me; yet if another comes in his own name, you will accept him. How can you believe, when you accept praise from one another and do not seek the praise that comes from the only God? Do not think that I will accuse you before the Father: the one who will accuse you is Moses, in whom you have placed your hope. For if you had believed Moses, you would have believed me, because he wrote about me. But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe my words?”( John 5:31-47)

Reflection

There are seasons when you look at your life and quietly wonder if God has stepped back. Not abandoned you — just… paused. Gone still. Let things sit where they are, unresolved and unmoving. You pray, you wait, you try to stay faithful, but nothing seems to shift. And in that silence, it’s easy to imagine that heaven has gone quiet too.

Into that kind of moment, Jesus speaks a sentence that feels like a lifeline:
“My Father is still working, and I also am working.”

He says it after healing a man who had been stuck for thirty‑eight years — a man who had grown used to disappointment, used to being overlooked, used to nothing changing. Jesus steps into that long ache and brings movement where there had been none. And when people question Him, He doesn’t defend Himself. He simply reveals the truth: God never stopped working. Not for a moment.

There is something deeply comforting in that.
Jesus isn’t frantic. He isn’t rushing. He isn’t trying to prove anything. He is simply aligned with a Father who is always moving toward life — even when we can’t see it, even when we’ve stopped expecting it.

And then Jesus says something even more intimate: He does nothing on His own. He listens. He watches. He moves with the Father the way a heartbeat moves with breath — naturally, quietly, without strain. There is no distance between them. No confusion. No tug‑of‑war. Just a steady, shared life.

Maybe that’s the invitation in this passage. Not to work harder. Not to force something open. Not to pretend we’re fine.

But to rest in the truth that God is already moving — in ways we can’t yet see, in places we’ve stopped believing, in corners of our lives that feel long abandoned.

Jesus isn’t telling us to catch up. He’s telling us we’re not alone.

The Father is still working. Jesus is still working. And the places in us that feel stuck are not forgotten.

Sometimes the work of God is loud and unmistakable. Sometimes it is quiet and hidden.
But it is never absent.

And maybe today, that’s enough to hold onto.

Prayer of The Day

“Father, meet me in the places that feel unmoving. Remind me that Your work does not stop, even when I cannot see it. Help me trust Your quiet movements and rest in Your steady love. Amen.”

Daily Note

Even when I feel stuck, God is still moving toward me.

When Your Story Needs A New Beginning

Daily Reflection – 3/10/2026

Sacred Scripture

There was a feast of the Jews, and Jesus went up to Jerusalem. Now there is in Jerusalem at the Sheep Gate a pool called in Hebrew Bethesda, with five porticoes. In these lay a large number of ill, blind, lame, and crippled. One man was there who had been ill for thirty-eight years. When Jesus saw him lying there and knew that he had been ill for a long time, he said to him, “Do you want to be well?” The sick man answered him, “Sir, I have no one to put me into the pool when the water is stirred up; while I am on my way, someone else gets down there before me.” Jesus said to him, “Rise, take up your mat, and walk.” Immediately the man became well, took up his mat, and walked. Now that day was a sabbath. So the Jews said to the man who was cured, “It is the sabbath, and it is not lawful for you to carry your mat.” He answered them, “The man who made me well told me, ‘Take up your mat and walk.’” They asked him, “Who is the man who told you, ‘Take it up and walk’?” The man who was healed did not know who it was, for Jesus had slipped away, since there was a crowd there. After this Jesus found him in the Temple area and said to him, “Look, you are well; do not sin anymore, so that nothing worse may happen to you.” The man went and told the Jews that Jesus was the one who had made him well. Therefore, the Jews began to persecute Jesus because he did this on a Sabbath. (John 5:1-16)

Reflection

“Do you want to be made well?”

There is a quiet, uncelebrated place where Jesus does His deepest work. It is not the public place. It is not the impressive place. It is the place where your long‑held conditions live. The places you’ve grown used to. The places you’ve stopped expecting to change.

Bethesda is a Nazareth. Thirty‑eight years of waiting is a Nazareth. The mat is a Nazareth. The story the man tells himself — “I have no one to help me” — is a Nazareth.

And Jesus walks straight into that hidden place and asks the question that exposes the heart:

“Do you want to be made well?”

He is not asking about desire. He is asking about readiness. He is asking about identity. He is asking about the part of you that has lived so long with a wound that it has become familiar, even safe.

Nazareth is where Jesus asks the questions that bypass your excuses and touch your truth.

The man answers with reasons — why he can’t, why others get ahead, why the system is against him. But Jesus does not engage the reasons. He speaks directly to the part of the man that still remembers who he was before the wound:

“Stand up, take your mat, and walk.”

This is what Jesus does in the Nazareth of your heart. He speaks to the part of you that still knows how to rise. He calls you out of the story you’ve rehearsed. He gives you authority over what once held you. He turns your mat into your testimony

And then — in the quiet, after the miracle — He returns with the second word:

“See, you have been made well. Do not return to what made you sick.”

Prayer of The Day

“Jesus, Come into the quiet places of my heart — the places I’ve stopped expecting to change.
Speak Your healing word over the parts of me that have grown accustomed to limitation.
Lift me from the stories that have held me, and teach me to walk in the freedom You give.
Amen.”

Daily Note

In the Nazareth of my heart, Jesus asks the question that frees me to rise.

The Nazareth of Your Heart

Daily Reflection – 3/9/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus said to the people in the synagogue at Nazareth: “Amen, I say to you, no prophet is accepted in his own native place. Indeed, I tell you, there were many widows in Israel in the days of Elijah when the sky was closed for three and a half years and a severe famine spread over the entire land. It was to none of these that Elijah was sent, but only to a widow in Zarephath in the land of Sidon. Again, there were many lepers in Israel during the time of Elisha the prophet; yet not one of them was cleansed, but only Naaman the Syrian.” When the people in the synagogue heard this, they were all filled with fury. They rose up, drove him out of the town, and led him to the brow of the hill on which their town had been built, to hurl him down headlong. But he passed through the midst of them and went away. (Luke 4:24-30)

Reflection

Every person carries a Nazareth within — a place so familiar, so shaped by old stories and old defenses, that even Jesus feels out of place when He walks in. Nazareth is not the site of our glory. It is the site of our resistance. It is the part of the heart that says, “Not here, Lord. Anywhere but here.”

And yet, this is exactly where Jesus goes.

In Luke 4, Jesus returns to His hometown with the fullness of God’s Kingdom in His voice. Instead of welcome, He meets suspicion. Instead of joy, He meets anger. Instead of faith, He meets the quiet, stubborn refusal of people who cannot imagine that God’s mercy could be bigger than their expectations.

But Jesus does not withdraw. He does not retaliate. He does not shame them.

He simply walks through their resistance untouched, carrying the same love He arrived with. The love that heals. The love that restores. The love that waits.

This is the miracle of Nazareth:
Jesus remains Himself even when we cannot receive Him.

And He does the same with you.

Your Nazareth is the place where your disappointments live.
Where your cynicism learned to protect you.
Where your pride hides your wounds.
Where your faith feels thin and your hope feels tired.

It is the place you keep familiar because familiar feels safer than free.

But Jesus walks into that room — the one you’ve kept closed — and says with a gentleness that disarms every defense:

“I am not afraid of this place.
Let Me love you here.”

He knows the resistance. He knows the fear. He knows the old stories that whisper, “Not worthy. Not ready. Not enough.”

And still He comes.

Because love always walks toward the wound. Mercy always seeks the closed door. Grace always chooses the place we avoid.

Let Him walk into the Nazareth of your heart. Let Him stand in the place that feels too familiar to change. Let Him speak a new word where old words have lived too long.

He is not intimidated by your history. He is not discouraged by your patterns. He is not surprised by your resistance.

He simply wants to be with you in the place you’ve never believed He would enter.

And that —
that is where healing begins.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord, enter the familiar places of my heart — even the ones I guard. Let Your steady love meet me where I resist You most. Heal what is wounded, soften what is hardened, and teach me to trust the mercy that never ends.”

Daily Note

We often welcome Jesus until His presence touches the places we don’t want touched. But the freedom we long for is found precisely where we resist Him most. When we stop guarding our Nazareth and let Him in, grace finally has room to work.

When The Vineyard Speaks Back To Us

Daily Reflection – 3/6/2026

Sacred Scripture

Hear another parable. There was a householder who planted a vineyard, and set a hedge around it, and dug a wine press in it, and built a tower, and let it out to tenants, and went into another country. When the season of fruit drew near, he sent his servants to the tenants, to get his fruit; and the tenants took his servants and beat one, killed another, and stoned another. Again he sent other servants, more than the first; and they did the same to them. Afterward he sent his son to them, saying, `They will respect my son.’  But when the tenants saw the son, they said to themselves, `This is the heir; come, let us kill him and have his inheritance.’  And they took him and cast him out of the vineyard, and killed him. When therefore the owner of the vineyard comes, what will he do to those tenants?” They said to him, “He will put those wretches to a miserable death, and let out the vineyard to other tenants who will give him the fruits in their seasons.”

 Jesus said to them, “Have you never read in the scriptures: `The very stone which the builders rejected has become the head of the corner; this was the Lord’s doing, and it is marvelous in our eyes’? Therefore I tell you, the kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a nation producing the fruits of it.” When the chief priests and the Pharisees heard his parables, they perceived that he was speaking about them. But when they tried to arrest him, they feared the multitudes, because they held him to be a prophet. (Matthew 21:33–46)

Reflection

Some parables settle us. Others unsettle us in a way that feels strangely holy. This parable is one of those stories that asks us to listen slowly. Jesus tells it with a calm voice, but there is a kind of ache underneath — the ache of someone speaking truth that costs Him something to say.

A landowner plants a vineyard with care. He tends to every detail: the fence, the winepress, the watchtower. Nothing is hurried. Nothing is careless. It is the kind of work someone does when they love what they are making. And then, almost surprisingly, he entrusts it to tenants and steps away. The trust in that moment is quiet but immense.

When the season for fruit arrives, the story turns. Something in the tenants has shifted. Gratitude has thinned. Fear and grasping have taken its place. The servants who come to gather the harvest are met not with welcome, but with resistance. The landowner sends more — patient, hopeful, almost painfully hopeful — and the pattern repeats.

Then comes the line that lingers long after the story ends:
“Finally, he sent his son, saying, ‘They will respect my son.’”

There is something tender and vulnerable in that sentence. It is not the voice of a naïve landowner. It is the voice of someone who loves deeply enough to risk being wounded again. Love, in this parable, is not sentimental. It is persistent. It keeps reaching. It keeps hoping. It keeps sending the son.

And the tenants — caught in their own fear, their own illusions of control — cannot receive him.

It is tempting to keep this story at a distance, to let it remain about people long gone. But it brushes against something familiar in us. The way we sometimes forget that what we hold was first placed in our hands. The way we cling to control when we feel uncertain. The way we lose sight of the Giver because we are busy guarding the gift.

There is a quiet grief woven through this parable. Not the grief of punishment, but the grief of love that keeps offering itself and is not recognized. The grief of a God who sends small reminders, gentle invitations, unexpected messengers — and watches us overlook them because our attention is elsewhere.

Yet even here, hope is not absent. Jesus quotes the psalm:
“The stone the builders rejected has become the cornerstone.”

Rejection does not end the story. Failure does not end the story. God keeps building. God keeps restoring. God keeps bringing life out of what we thought was lost.

And perhaps this is the quiet center of the parable:
God keeps entrusting us with vineyards. Even when we forget. Even when we falter. Even when we turn away.

He keeps placing people in our care, work in our hands, love in our path —because He still believes fruit can grow in us.

Whatever God entrusts you, He is already imagining the fruit that could grow there.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord, let me receive what You place in my hands with humility and care. Soften the places in me that cling too tightly. Help me notice the messengers You send and the invitations I often overlook. Teach me to bear fruit that reflects Your love. Amen.”:

Daily Note

Every vineyard in your care carries a hope God has not let go of.

When Love Refuses To Look Away

Daily Reflection – 3/5/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus said to the Pharisees: “There was a rich man who dressed in purple garments and fine linen and dined sumptuously each day. And lying at his door was a poor man named Lazarus, covered with sores, who would gladly have eaten his fill of the scraps that fell from the rich man’s table. Dogs even used to come and lick his sores. When the poor man died, he was carried away by angels to the bosom of Abraham. The rich man also died and was buried, and from the netherworld, where he was in torment, he raised his eyes and saw Abraham far off and Lazarus at his side. And he cried out, ‘Father Abraham, have pity on me. Send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue, for I am suffering torment in these flames.’ Abraham replied, ‘My child, remember that you received what was good during your lifetime while Lazarus likewise received what was bad; but now he is comforted here, whereas you are tormented. Moreover, between us and you a great chasm is established to prevent anyone from crossing who might wish to go from our side to yours or from your side to ours.’ He said, ‘Then I beg you, father, send him to my father’s house, for I have five brothers, so that he may warn them, lest they too come to this place of torment.’ But Abraham replied, ‘They have Moses and the prophets. Let them listen to them.’ He said, ‘Oh no, father Abraham, but if someone from the dead goes to them, they will repent.’ Then Abraham said, ‘If they will not listen to Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded if someone should rise from the dead.’” (Luke 16:19-31)

Reflection

The story of the rich man and Lazarus is not a tale about punishment—it is a mirror held up to the human heart. It is Jesus whispering to us with aching tenderness: “Please don’t let your life become so full that you stop seeing the ones who need you most.” It is a story about connection, about the sacred responsibility we carry for one another, and about the tragedy that unfolds when we forget that every person is a doorway into the heart of God.

Lazarus lay at the rich man’s gate—close enough to touch, close enough to hear the laughter from the dining room, close enough to smell the bread he was never offered. And the rich man stepped over him day after day, not out of cruelty, but out of habit. Out of distraction. Out of the slow numbing that happens when comfort becomes a cocoon and we forget that love is supposed to stretch us.

Jesus isn’t condemning wealth. He’s grieving disconnection. He’s grieving the way we can become so wrapped in our own worlds that we stop noticing the quiet suffering at the edges of our lives. He’s grieving how easy it is to forget that compassion is not an accessory to faith—it is its heartbeat.

What breaks the heart of this passage is not the afterlife divide. It’s the earthly one. Two men lived within arm’s reach, yet worlds apart. One had wounds on his skin; the other had wounds on his soul. Both needed healing. Both needed each other.

And Jesus is pleading with us: Don’t let this be your story.

Because the truth is, Lazarus is still at the gate. He is the neighbor who feels invisible. The friend who hides their loneliness behind a practiced smile. The stranger whose pain we sense but don’t ask about. The family member we keep meaning to call. The person whose name we don’t know but whose suffering flickers across their eyes.

And the rich man? He is us on our distracted days. He is us when we are tired, overwhelmed, or afraid to get involved. He is us when we forget that love is not measured by grand gestures but by the courage to stop, to notice, to care.

Jesus tells this story not to frighten us, but to awaken us. To remind us that heaven begins whenever we choose connection over comfort, compassion over convenience, presence over indifference. To remind us that the gates between us are not locked—they are waiting to be opened.

And maybe the most hopeful truth in this passage is this: it is not too late. Not for us. Not for our relationships. Not for the people we’ve overlooked. Not for the parts of our hearts that have grown numb.

We can still see. We can still reach. We can still love.

And when we do, the distance between heaven and earth grows thin, and the world becomes a little more like the Kingdom Jesus dreamed for us.

Prayer of The Day

“ Lord Jesus, soften my heart until it beats in rhythm with Yours. Open my eyes to the people I pass by, the ones who carry quiet burdens, the ones who need a touch of kindness or a moment of my time. Break down the gates I’ve built—gates of fear, distraction, or self-protection—and teach me to love with courage, tenderness, and generosity. Let me never grow numb to suffering or blind to beauty. Make me a bridge of compassion in a world that forgets how to see. Amen.”

Daily Note

Today, pause long enough to notice someone you might normally overlook. A small word, a gentle question, or a moment of presence may be the very thing that reminds them they are seen, valued, and loved. Connection is holy—tend to it.