
Daily Reflection – 3/27/2026
Sacred Scripture
The Jews picked up rocks to stone Jesus. Jesus answered them, “I have shown you many good works from my Father. For which of these are you trying to stone me?” The Jews answered him, “We are not stoning you for a good work but for blasphemy. You, a man, are making yourself God.” Jesus answered them, “Is it not written in your law, ‘I said, “You are gods”’? If it calls them gods to whom the word of God came, and Scripture cannot be set aside, can you say that the one whom the Father has consecrated and sent into the world blasphemes because I said, ‘I am the Son of God’? If I do not perform my Father’s works, do not believe me; but if I perform them, even if you do not believe me, believe the works, so that you may realize and understand that the Father is in me and I am in the Father.” Then they tried again to arrest him; but he escaped from their power. He went back across the Jordan to the place where John first baptized, and there he remained. Many came to him and said, “John performed no sign, but everything John said about this man was true.” And many there began to believe in him. (John 10:31-42)
Reflection
The scene is tense: stones in hand, hearts hardened, ears closed. Jesus stands before them — truth embodied — and still they refuse to hear.
It’s easy to shake our heads at the scribes, but the truth is uncomfortable: we, too, can become deaf to the voice of Christ.
We become deaf when we ignore injustice because speaking up feels costly. We become deaf when Lent ends and we slip quietly back into old habits. We become deaf when we cling to the illusion that we can fix ourselves by sheer force of will.
The deeper truth is this:
We want to change, but we cannot change ourselves. We want to believe more deeply, forgive more freely, love with fewer conditions — but our efforts alone never seem to get us there.
We try harder, push harder, strategize harder… and still find ourselves stuck.
That’s why this passage matters.
Jesus doesn’t ask us to perfect ourselves. He asks us to entrust ourselves. Transformation is not a self‑improvement project. It is a relationship.
It begins when we finally say:
“Lord, I can’t bend myself toward forgiveness — bend me.”
“Lord, I can’t loosen my expectations — loosen me.”
“Lord, I can’t quiet my prejudices — quiet me.”
These are not admissions of failure. They are acts of faith.
Because the God who formed our hearts is the only One who can remake them.
This is the promise of today’s Gospel:
When we are helpless, God is not.
When we are stuck, God is not.
When we are hardened, God is not.
Now is the moment to open the door — even a crack — and let God do what only God can do.
Prayer of The Day
“Lord, as we draw near to the commemoration of Your suffering and death, help me to unite my crosses to Yours. Let me see Your presence in my daily struggles. Give me the grace to trust that You are shaping me, even when I cannot see how. Jesus, I trust in You.”
Daily Note
God’s love is not abstract. It is personal, intentional, and directed toward you.
But love requires surrender — not the surrender of dignity, but the surrender of self‑reliance. We cannot save ourselves by being “good enough.” We are saved by opening our hands, loosening our grip, and letting God be God.
Living faith is not about perfection. It is about yielding — letting God take the center again.
And when we do, everything begins to shift.








