
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.








