When Righteousness Leads from The Heart

Daily Reflection – 6/12/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus said to his disciples: “I tell you, unless your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will not enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. “You have heard that it was said to your ancestors, You shall not kill; and whoever kills will be liable to judgment. But I say to you, whoever is angry with his brother will be liable to judgment, and whoever says to his brother, Raqa, will be answerable to the Sanhedrin, and whoever says, ‘You fool,’ will be liable to fiery Gehenna. Therefore, if you bring your gift to the altar, and there recall that your brother has anything against you, leave your gift there at the altar, go first and be reconciled with your brother, and then come and offer your gift. Settle with your opponent quickly while on the way to court. Otherwise, your opponent will hand you over to the judge, and the judge will hand you over to the guard, and you will be thrown into prison. Amen, I say to you, you will not be released until you have paid the last penny.” (Matthew 5: 20-26)

Reflection

Jesus doesn’t mince words here. He looks at His disciples and says something that must have stunned them:

“Unless your righteousness surpasses that of the scribes and Pharisees…”

In other words:

“You can’t just look holy. You have to be transformed.”

The Pharisees mastered the externals — the rules, the rituals, the optics. But Jesus is after something deeper, something far more demanding:

A heart that has been reshaped by love.

That’s why He goes straight to anger. Not murder. Not violence. Not the catastrophic outcomes.

He goes to the spark.

Because Jesus knows: Sin doesn’t begin with the act — it begins with the attitude. The quiet resentment. The unspoken contempt. The simmering anger we think we can manage on our own.

Jesus isn’t tightening the law. He’s revealing its true depth:

Holiness begins where no one else can see.

And then He gives us the path:

If you’re angry, reconcile.

If you’ve wounded someone, go repair it.

If there’s division, bridge it before you stand before God.

Not because God needs our perfection, but because love cannot flourish in a divided heart.

This is the righteousness Jesus calls us to — not performative, not external, not rule‑based, but a righteousness born from a heart aligned with His own. It’s harder. It’s deeper. It’s more honest. And it’s the only path that leads to real freedom.

Jesus is telling us:

“Don’t just avoid the fire. Deal with the spark.”

That’s the work of discipleship — the quiet, interior work that transforms the way we live, speak, forgive, and love.

Prayer of The Day

Lord Jesus, reshape my heart so that my righteousness begins where Yours begins — in love. Heal the anger I carry, soften the places that resist reconciliation, and make my heart a place where Your peace can take root.”

Daily Note

Anger is loud, but reconciliation is holy. And holiness always begins with the courage to say:

“I want my heart to look like Christ’s.”

When Love Becomes The Law

Daily Reflection – 6/10/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus said to his disciples: “Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets. I have come not to abolish but to fulfill. Amen, I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest letter or the smallest part of a letter will pass from the law, until all things have taken place. Therefore, whoever breaks one of the least of these commandments and teaches others to do so will be called least in the kingdom of heaven. But whoever obeys and teaches these commandments will be called greatest in the kingdom of heaven.” (Matthew 5:17-19)

Reflection

When Jesus says He came not to abolish the Law but to fulfill it, He isn’t tightening the rules — He’s revealing the heart behind them.

Jesus isn’t raising the bar. He reveals the bar was always love.

The Law was never meant to be a checklist. It was meant to be a compass — pointing us toward the kind of life that reflects God’s heart.

And Jesus steps into history and says: “Watch Me. This is what the Law looks like when it’s alive.”

Not rigid. Not cold. Not transactional. But love embodied — love that heals, restores, forgives, and transforms.

That’s why He warns us not to loosen even the smallest commandment. Not because God is keeping score, but because every commandment is a doorway into becoming more like Him.

The danger isn’t breaking the rules. The danger is shrinking the life God is trying to grow in us.

Fulfillment isn’t about perfection. It’s about alignment.

When your heart aligns with Christ, your life begins to echo His — in your choices, your tone, your patience, your mercy, your courage.

This is not a one‑day conversion. It’s a long obedience in the same direction. A daily “yes” to becoming who God already sees in you.

Jesus doesn’t ask us to admire the Law. He asks us to embody it — to let love become the shape of our lives.

And when we do, even imperfectly, we become living proof that God’s commandments aren’t burdens. They’re pathways to freedom.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, align my heart with Yours. Shape my thoughts, my words, and my actions so they reflect the love You fulfilled perfectly. Let obedience become joy, and let my life become a small but faithful echo of Your own.”

Daily Note

St. Irenaeus said, “The glory of God is a living man.”

A living man is one whose life is shaped by the One who fulfilled the Law. When we let Christ’s love animate us, we don’t just follow commandments — we become living signs of God’s presence in the world.

Living As A Christian

Daily Reflection – 6/9/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus said to his disciples: “You are the salt of the earth. But if salt loses its taste, with what can it be seasoned? It is no longer good for anything but to be thrown out and trampled underfoot. You are the light of the world. A city set on a mountain cannot be hidden. Nor do they light a lamp and then put it under a bushel basket; it is set on a lampstand, where it gives light to all in the house. Just so, your light must shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your heavenly Father.” (Matthew 5:13-16)

Reflection

Every one of us has spent time wondering what God wants of us. Some have done it while discerning a vocation. Others have done it in quiet moments of faith. Still others have asked the simple but profound question: “What could God possibly want from me?”

Today’s Gospel gives the answer with striking clarity. Jesus calls every Christian — not a select few, not the spiritually elite — to be an influence on the world around them. He names that influence with two images: salt and light.

Salt enhances flavor and preserves what is good. To “be salt” means to intentionally shape the lives around us through the unconditional love of Christ expressed in concrete good deeds.

Light reveals what is true. To “be light” means to witness openly to the truth of God’s Word — especially the truth of who Christ is and how He died and rose for our salvation.

But Jesus goes further. He reminds us that it is not enough to be good — we must be seen to be good. The spirituality of the Gospel is not private comfort or inner tranquility. It is outreaching, public, missionary. We are not only disciples; we are proclaimers. We are called to set the world ablaze with the light of Christ.

And here is the deeper layer: Jesus does not say, “Try to become salt” or “Try to be light.” He says: “You are the salt of the earth.” “You are the light of the world.”

This is not a task. It is an identity — something rooted in who we are as followers of Christ.

Salt only fails when it loses its distinctiveness. Light only fails when it is hidden. So the danger is not that Christians will be ineffective. The danger is that Christians will become indistinguishable.

The Gospel is not asking us to “do more.” It is asking us to become visible.

Visible in mercy. Visible in courage. Visible in compassion. Visible in integrity. Visible in the way we treat the vulnerable. Visible in the way we carry hope into dark places.

Our job is not to change people. Our job is to change ourselves so that our lives radiate a goodness others cannot help but notice.

That goodness does not need to be dramatic. It only needs to be real.

When we help an elderly woman with her groceries, our light shines. When we speak to the classmate others ignore, the world brightens. When we visit a grieving neighbor — cookies in hand, compassion in heart — the kingdom of God inches closer.

Jesus tells us we are the light of the world not because we transform others, but because our light gives God room to transform them. That is why we shine. That is why we are sent. That is why this Gospel still matters.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus Christ, You have commanded us to be the Light of the World and the Salt of the Earth. Give us strength, courage, and humility so that our lives may reflect Your goodness and draw others closer to You. Amen.”

Daily Note

Jesus is the true light of the world, and we reflect His light only by following Him. It is not enough to know His teachings — we must walk as He walked, love as He loved, and care as He cares. When we follow Him, our lives become a lamp for others, guiding them along the same path of light that Christ Himself walks before us.

The God Who Lifts The Lowly

Daily Reflection – 6/8/2026

Sacred Scripture

When Jesus saw the crowds, he went up the mountain, and after he had sat down, his disciples came to him. He began to teach them, saying: “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are they who mourn, for they will be comforted. Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the land. Blessed are they who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be satisfied. Blessed are the merciful, for they will be shown mercy. Blessed are the clean of heart, for they will see God. Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God. Blessed are they who are persecuted for the sake of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are you when they insult you and persecute you and utter every kind of evil against you falsely because of me. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward will be great in heaven. (Matthew 5:1-12a)

Reflection

When Jesus climbs the mountain and sits down, He is not simply teaching — He is revealing the heart of God. The Beatitudes are not advice, not ideals, not spiritual slogans. They are the portrait of Christ Himself, and therefore the blueprint for every disciple who wants to follow Him.

Jesus begins with those the world overlooks: the poor, the grieving, the meek, the hungry. Not because suffering is holy, but because need creates space for God. The rich can forget Him. The powerful can ignore Him. But the poor — in spirit or circumstance — know that without God, they have nothing. And that honesty becomes the doorway to blessing.

Those who mourn are blessed not because grief is good, but because God draws near to the brokenhearted. Those who hunger for righteousness are blessed because they refuse to make peace with a world that is less than God’s dream. Those who are merciful, pure in heart, and peacemakers are blessed because they are living out the very character of Christ.

And then Jesus does something astonishing: He blesses the persecuted. Not because persecution is noble, but because when the world resists the Kingdom, it reveals just how different the Kingdom truly is.

The Beatitudes show us a God who lifts up the lowly, who stands with the oppressed, who refuses to abandon those who struggle. This is the God Jesus reveals — a God who is not impressed by power, not seduced by wealth, not blinded by success.

And if this is who God is, then two things must mark the life of every disciple:

Hope — because God meets us in our poverty, our grief, our hunger, our struggle. Solidarity — because God stands with the poor, the wounded, and the forgotten, and we cannot claim to follow Him while standing anywhere else.

The Beatitudes are not a list of virtues. They are an invitation: See the world as God sees it. Love the world as Christ loves it. Stand where Jesus stands.

This is the life of the Kingdom. This is the life of the disciple. This is the life Jesus blesses.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, You call me to holiness and to the happiness that only You can give. Open my eyes to see where true blessing lies. Give me the courage to reject the false promises of the world and to desire only the life that leads me to You.”

Daily Note

Jesus never drives us like cattle. He leads us like a shepherd. He does not force us into the Kingdom — He draws us with the sound of His voice. The Beatitudes are that voice: gentle, steady, unmistakable. They call us not to perfection, but to trust — to follow Him into a life shaped by mercy, justice, humility, and hope.

Letting Jesus Be More Than We Expect

Daily Reflection – 6/5/2026

Sacred Scripture

As Jesus was teaching in the temple area he said, “How do the scribes claim that the Christ is the son of David? David himself, inspired by the Holy Spirit, said: ‘The Lord said to my lord, “Sit at my right hand until I place your enemies under your feet.”’ David himself calls him ‘lord’; so how is he his son?” The great crowd heard this with delight. (Mark 12:35-37)

Reflection

There’s a moment in today’s Gospel that feels startlingly modern. Jesus stands before people who think they already know Him. They’ve reduced Him to a category: son of David, teacher, rabbi — interesting, but nothing more. Then Jesus asks the question that breaks their frame:

“If David calls Him Lord, how can He be merely his son?”

He isn’t arguing. He isn’t trying to win a debate. He’s revealing a truth they never imagined:

He is more than they expected. More than they allowed. More than they were willing to see.

And the people — the ordinary people — “heard Him with delight.” That line reaches straight into modern life. Because we live in a world that shrinks everything: our attention. our relationships, our sense of self. even our understanding of God

We scroll past people. We scroll past ourselves. We scroll past God. And without realizing it, we reduce Jesus too: to a comforting idea ,to a Sunday obligation ,to a moral compass, to a background presence we acknowledge but rarely engage

But Jesus still asks the same question today:

“Why do you keep shrinking Me down? Why do you let the noise of life define what I can be for you?”

The people in the Gospel delighted in Him because, for one moment, they saw Him as He truly is — not reduced, not simplified, not managed — but Lord. And here’s the truth that meets us in 2026:

We don’t delight in God because we don’t give Him enough space to be God.

We give Him: leftover minutes, distracted prayers. half‑attention.

And then we wonder why we don’t feel anything.

But when we give Him room — even a little — He breaks the frame again. He becomes more than we expected. More than we allowed. More than we thought we needed. And suddenly, He shows up in the places we thought were too ordinary: in the person we overlooked, in the moment we rushed past, in the ache we tried to ignore, in the quiet that finally caught up with us.

That’s where delight begins. Not in understanding everything, but in recognizing Him again. The same Lord David saw. The same Lord who stood in the temple. The same Lord who stands beside us now.

If we let Him be more than we expect, He becomes more than we ever imagined.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, You are more than my expectations, more than my categories, more than my limited understanding. Break open the small places in my heart where I have reduced You. Be my Lord — in my thoughts, my choices, my relationships, my work, and my quiet moments. Let me recognize You again, and delight in Your presence.”

Daily Note

To call Jesus “Lord” is not a title — it’s a surrender. Everyone serves something: ambition, fear, distraction, comfort, control. Only one Lord sets us free.

Where have I reduced Him — and where is He asking to be Lord again?

We Show Our Love for Him By Living His Love

Daily Reflection – 6/4/2026

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

This declaration of God’s unity and call to love God with all our being and to love our neighbor as our self is still central in Jewish worship today. It is called the “Shema” — Hebrew for “Hear!” — because God has a message for us that will make the difference between life and death.

Jesus stresses the commandment to love God, and to love our neighbor. It is the one love. All others come from that. We need to say this often to ourselves lest we forget it.

It is a love which is based on giving everyone their due, their rights and genuine care. Think of the great mortal loves in your life. When we are in love, we know our priorities — we know each day how we will devote our time and talents. And when we are in love, we find time to nourish our relationship. So now let’s take the big leap with thought and talk about its extension in our daily life.

God loves each person individually and calls us to let ourselves be built into a spiritual house. He wants us to reflect on our response to him through our holiness and offering of self to him. He is a personal God and we experience his touch in the presence of Jesus. Christian love requires of us to root out of our hearts and minds these distorted perceptions and to convert our hearts and minds to a true and compassionate love of God and of others.

But love is also demanding. To love means to go beyond ourselves, truly to face another person, to rise above our own need, to stretch out to someone, to see the faces of those who desperately need our love, to risk discomfort, to give our time and energy and indeed to give ourselves to others. Love involves total giving and sacrificing oneself. It is true that love has to do with feelings, but it has far more to do with commitment, challenge and letting go. Wholehearted loving does not stop at any time and it cannot be done with. It has to do with being there for the other. Further, without being loved it is impossible to love.

During this time of turmoil, it is imperative that we remember that to interfere with a person’s life is interfering with God’s rights and disobeying his command. Our neighbor is created in the image and likeness of God. It is God who gave us our existence and every gift we possess. All that we have and possess we owe to his love and generosity. That is why it is necessary for us to love him, honor his name and respect his presence in the lives of others.

If one does not have love, he has nothing. If one spends his time in prayer but cannot show love towards his neighbor, he does not have true love in him, nor does God abide in him.

Prayer of The Day

“We love you, Lord; and we desire to love you more and more. Grant to us that we may love you as much as we desire, and as much as we ought. Give us in our hearts pure love, born of your love to us, that we may love others as you love us.”

Daily Note

For God is love and those who abide in love abide in God. They care about their neighbors. They reach out to them. They support them. They encourage them to persevere. If we obey the two Commandments of love, our daily communion with God is being perfected through Christ, with Christ and in Christ. If we obey the two Commandments of love, we are not far from the Kingdom of God.

Measuring Faith

Daily Reflection – 6/3/2026

Sacred Scripture

Some Sadducees, who say there is no resurrection, came to Jesus and put this question to him, saying, “Teacher, Moses wrote for us, ‘If someone’s brother dies, leaving a wife but no child, his brother must take the wife and raise up descendants for his brother.’ Now there were seven brothers. The first married a woman and died, leaving no descendants. So the second brother married her and died, leaving no descendants, and the third likewise. And the seven left no descendants. Last of all the woman also died. At the resurrection when they arise whose wife will she be? For all seven had been married to her.” Jesus said to them, “Are you not misled because you do not know the Scriptures or the power of God? When they rise from the dead, they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but they are like the angels in heaven. As for the dead being raised, have you not read in the Book of Moses, in the passage about the bush, how God told him, ‘I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob’? He is not God of the dead but of the living. You are greatly misled.” (Mark 12:18-27)

Reflection

The Sadducees approached Jesus with a question that wasn’t really a question. It was a trap disguised as logic — a hypothetical meant to make the resurrection look foolish. But beneath their cleverness was a deeper limitation: they could not imagine a God whose power extended beyond the boundaries of their own understanding.

The Sadducees believed only in what they could see. No angels. No spiritual realm. No resurrection. No life beyond this life.

Their world was flat. Their heaven was earthly. Their God was small.

And Jesus answers them with a diagnosis that reaches across centuries:

“You are greatly misled.”

Not because they lacked intelligence. Not because they were malicious. But because they tried to understand divine realities with human categories.

We do the same.

We try to “figure out” life by thinking harder, analyzing more, replaying conversations, or trying to decode God’s will as if it were a puzzle we could solve with enough mental effort. But thinking is not prayer. And analysis is not surrender.

There are moments when our minds become noisy — when confusion, emotion, or fear cloud our judgment — and Jesus’ words land with surprising gentleness:

“You are misled because you do not know the Scriptures or the power of God.”

He is not shaming us. He is inviting us to stop shrinking God down to the size of our own reasoning.

The path forward is humility — the kind that says:

“Lord, I don’t understand. And I don’t need to — not yet. Teach me. Lead me. Reveal what I cannot see.”

When we stop forcing clarity, God often gives it. When we stop trying to control outcomes, God often shows the way. When we stop insisting on our categories, God reveals His power.

Jesus ends the exchange with a truth that reorients everything:

“He is not the God of the dead, but of the living.”

Faith is not about clinging to what we can explain. Faith is about trusting the God whose life, power, and presence stretch far beyond what we can imagine.

Prayer of The Day

Lord, I want to know Your truth, not my version of it. When I am misled by my own thoughts, emotions, or assumptions, draw me back to You. Teach me to be humble, to listen, and to trust Your power more than my understanding. Jesus, I trust in You.”

Daily Note

The Sadducees’ question may seem distant, but the heart of it is timeless: Do we live as if this world is all there is, or do we live as people of the resurrection — people who trust that God’s power extends beyond death, beyond fear, beyond confusion, and beyond the limits of our own minds?

The Image of God

Daily Reflection – 6/2/2026

Sacred Scripture

Some Pharisees and Herodians were sent to Jesus to ensnare him in his speech. They came and said to him, “Teacher, we know that you are a truthful man and that you are not concerned with anyone’s opinion. You do not regard a person’s status but teach the way of God in accordance with the truth. Is it lawful to pay the census tax to Caesar or not? Should we pay or should we not pay?” Knowing their hypocrisy he said to them, “Why are you testing me? Bring me a denarius to look at.” They brought one to him and he said to them, “Whose image and inscription is this?” They replied to him, “Caesar’s.” So Jesus said to them, “Repay to Caesar what belongs to Caesar and to God what belongs to God.” They were utterly amazed at him. (Mark 12:13-17)

Reflection

There is a quiet moment in Mark’s Gospel when the Pharisees hold up a coin, its metal cold and stamped with the face of Caesar. They think they have cornered Jesus with a question about loyalty, about taxes, about the tangled obligations of living under earthly rule.

But Jesus does not look at the coin the way they do. He sees something deeper. He sees a question not about Caesar, but about us.

“Whose image is this?” He asks.

A simple question. A devastating question. A question that echoes far beyond the marketplace and into the marrow of our lives.

The coin bears Caesar’s image. But we bear God’s.

And suddenly the whole scene shifts. This is not about taxes. This is not about politics. This is not about navigating the demands of the world.

This is about identity.

Jesus is reminding us that the world may lay claim to our duties, our time, our labor — but it cannot lay claim to our soul. The world may ask for what is stamped with its image, but only God can ask for what is stamped with His.

And that is us.

We are the ones shaped by His hands. We are the ones breathed into by His Spirit. We are the ones who carry His likeness in the quiet chambers of our being.

To “render unto God what is God’s” is not a transaction. It is a homecoming. It is the returning of the heart to the One who formed it.

And yes, we live in the world. We walk its streets, obey its laws, shoulder its responsibilities. But we do not belong to it.

We belong to the One whose image we bear.

And when the world’s demands collide with God’s call, the choice becomes clear — not because it is easy, but because it is true. We stand with the One who stamped His likeness upon us. We stand with the One who calls us His own. We stand with the One who asks not for our coins, but for our lives.

For to give God what is God’s is to give Him ourselves — our love, our obedience, our courage, our devotion, our willingness to be His even when the world pulls us elsewhere.

And in that giving, we discover the deepest truth of all: that God does not merely ask for our lives — He longs to dwell within them.

Prayer of The Day

“Father of all creation, You who shaped us in Your image and sealed us with Your breath, teach us to recognize what belongs to You. Help us to walk through this world without letting it claim our hearts. Give us courage when Your truth stands at odds with the world’s demands. Strengthen us to choose You first, always, and to offer You not just our words, but our very lives. May Your image shine in us, and may our lives reflect the One who made us. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.”

Daily Note

The world may ask for what bears its image, but God asks for what bears His. And that is you. When you give Him your heart, you return to the One who has always called you His own.

The Light In A Darkened Vineyard

Daily Reflection – 6/1/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus began to speak to the chief priests, the scribes, and the elders in parables.“A man planted a vineyard, put a hedge around it, dug a wine press, and built a tower. Then he leased it to tenant farmers and left on a journey. At the proper time he sent a servant to the tenants to obtain from them some of the produce of the vineyard. But they seized him, beat him, and sent him away empty-handed. Again he sent them another servant. And that one they beat over the head and treated shamefully. He sent yet another whom they killed. So, too, many others; some they beat, others they killed. He had one other to send, a beloved son. He sent him to them last of all, thinking, ‘They will respect my son.’ But those tenants said to one another, ‘This is the heir. Come, let us kill him, and the inheritance will be ours.’ So they seized him and killed him, and threw him out of the vineyard. What then will the owner of the vineyard do? He will come, put the tenants to death, and give the vineyard to others.

Have you not read this Scripture passage: The stone that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone; by the Lord has this been done, and it is wonderful in our eyes?” They were seeking to arrest him, but they feared the crowd, for they realized that he had addressed the parable to them. So they left him and went away.( Mark 12:1-12)

Reflection

This parable is not just a story about ancient tenants and an absentee landowner. It is a mirror held up to every generation — including ours. Jesus wasn’t simply recounting Israel’s history; He was revealing the human heart. He was revealing my heart. He was revealing our world.

The landowner entrusts everything — the vineyard, the hedge, the tower, the winepress. He gives the tenants everything they need to flourish. And then He steps back, not in abandonment, but in trust.

That is the part that strikes me today: God trusts us far more than we trust ourselves.

He entrusts us with:

  • our gifts
  • our relationships
  • our work
  • our resources
  • our influence
  • our time
  • our very breath

And like the tenants, we can forget that none of it is ours. We can forget the Giver. We can forget the purpose. We can forget the responsibility.

When we hoard what was meant to be shared, when we grasp what was meant to be given, when we reject the Son in favor of our own control — we repeat the parable in our own time.

And yet… God does not stop sending messengers. He does not stop calling us back. He does not stop offering grace. He does not stop believing that we can still bear fruit.

Even when the world feels like it is unraveling — violence, division, greed, indifference — the vineyard is still His. The cornerstone is still Christ. The light still shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.

Allow me to repeat that: The cornerstone is still Christ. The light still shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.

The parable ends with judgment, yes — but also with promise:

“The stone the builders rejected has become the cornerstone.”

What humanity rejects, God redeems. What the world discards, God raises up. What seems lost, God restores.

And that includes us.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, You are the cornerstone — steady, true, unshakable. Teach me to remember that all I have is a gift, all I am is grace, and all I do is meant to bear fruit for Your kingdom. Keep me from the blindness of the tenants. Keep me from forgetting the Giver. Make me a faithful worker in Your vineyard, grateful, generous, and grounded in Your love. Amen.”

Daily Note

It is frighteningly easy to forget the Giver and cling to the gifts. It is easy to believe that what we have is ours by right, rather than ours by grace. But the truth is simpler and more beautiful:

Everything is a gift. Everything is entrusted. Everything is meant to bear fruit.And when we remember that, gratitude becomes our posture, generosity becomes our instinct, and Christ becomes our cornerstone again

Asking For The Faith We Need

Blog Posts - Verbum Dei Philippines

Daily Reflection – 5/29/2026

Sacred Scripture

Jesus entered Jerusalem and went into the temple area. He looked around at everything and, since it was already late, went out to Bethany with the Twelve. The next day as they were leaving Bethany, he was hungry. Seeing from a distance a fig tree in leaf, he went over to see if he could find anything on it. When he reached it he found nothing but leaves; it was not the time for figs. And he said to it in reply, “May no one ever eat of your fruit again!” They came to Jerusalem, and on entering the temple area he began to drive out those selling and buying there. He overturned the tables of the money changers and the seats of those who were selling doves.. Then he taught them saying, “Is it not written: My house shall be called a house of prayer for all peoples? But you have made it a den of thieves.”. Early in the morning, as they were walking along, they saw the fig tree withered to its roots. Peter remembered and said to him, “Rabbi, look! The fig tree that you cursed has withered.” Jesus said to them in reply, “Have faith in God. Amen, I say to you, whoever says to this mountain, ‘Be lifted up and thrown into the sea,’ and does not doubt in his heart but believes that what he says will happen, it shall be done for him. Therefore, I tell you, all that you ask for in prayer, believe that you will receive it and it shall be yours. When you stand to pray, forgive anyone against whom you have a grievance, so that your heavenly Father may in turn forgive you your transgressions.” (Mark 11:11-26)

Reflection

Faith is not a technique. It is not a strategy. It is a relationship — and our ability to live it depends entirely on how we see God.

When we look at our lives, we see so many things we want to change. We want to believe more deeply, forgive more freely, love with fewer conditions. But when we try to make those changes on our own, we fall short. We believe in God, yet when it comes to transforming ourselves, we rely on our own strength. We think better plans or stronger willpower will fix us. They rarely do.

What we need is not a new strategy. What we need is a new surrender.

Faith begins when we entrust ourselves to God — when we admit our weakness and ask Him to do what we cannot. “Lord, I cannot forgive this person. Bend my heart until it can let go.” “Lord, I am filled with judgments and prejudices that steal my peace. Quiet them so I can live again.” “Lord, I am tired of trying to fix myself. Transform me.”

To have faith is to believe that God loves us personally — not in theory, not in abstraction, but in the concrete details of our lives. It is to believe that the God who loves the world also loves you, and that His power is available to you in Jesus Christ. Faith is not knowing the commandments or attending church. Faith is trusting that God is with you, cares for you, and will act on your behalf.

But what do you do when God’s love feels absent? When you’ve been hurt? When you’ve been distracted or overwhelmed? When prayer feels distant and faith feels thin?

You ask.

The beauty of faith is that it can be requested at any moment. There are no prerequisites. Faith does not depend on our love for God but on God’s love for us. When we ask for faith, we are really asking for awareness — the awareness of God’s overwhelming love in our life. If we have that love, everything else follows. Without it, faith has no power.

So today, ask for the love that makes faith real. Ask for the love that transforms. Ask for the love that restores sight, softens hearts, and moves mountains.

Prayer of The Day

“Lord Jesus, increase my faith and make my fruitful and effective in serving you and bringing you honor and glory in all that I do. Help me to be merciful and forgiving towards others just as you have been merciful and forgiving towards me.”

Daily Note

When we pray with expectant faith, God gives us the strength to overcome the obstacles that stand in the way of His will. But expectant faith requires a forgiving heart. If we want God to hear our prayers, we must release the resentments that bind us. Forgiveness opens the door for grace. Expectant faith walks through it.