
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.







