
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.








