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Love That Chooses, Love That Sends

Friday of the Fifth Week of Easter John 15:12–17 In this short but powerful passage, Jesus brings us to the very heart of his mission and ours: “This is my commandment: love one another as I love you.” Not “love one another when it’s easy,” not “love one another when you agree,” but love as I love you. That’s a tall order, and Jesus knows it. His love is patient, sacrificial, forgiving, and endlessly creative. Yet Jesus invites us into that same way of loving—not as servants following orders, but as friends who share his heart. Jesus goes even further: “No one has greater love than this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.” Most of us will never be asked to give up our lives in a dramatic way. But every day offers small opportunities to “lay down our lives”—to set aside our preferences, our pride, our comfort—for the sake of someone else. A listening ear, a patient response, a generous gesture, a willingness to forgive: these are the daily ways we imitate the love ...

"Remain in My Love"

Thursday of the Fifth Week of Easter John 15:9–11 There is a beautiful tenderness in Jesus’ words today: “As the Father loves me, so I also love you.” It’s one of those lines we could sit with for a lifetime. Jesus is not offering a distant or conditional love—he is inviting us into the very love that flows between Jesus and God. It is steady, faithful, and life‑giving. Jesus then gives us a simple but profound invitation: “Remain in my love.” Remaining is not passive. It’s a daily choice to stay rooted in Jesus—through prayer, through forgiveness, through choosing compassion when it would be easier to withdraw or judge. Remaining means letting Jesus' love shape our reactions, our priorities, and even the way we speak to one another. Jesus connects this remaining with keeping his commandments, not as a test of loyalty but as a pathway to deeper relationship. When we live Jesus' teachings—when we love, serve, forgive, and seek truth—we step more fully into the love Je...

Remain in Me and Live

Wednesday of the Fifth Week of Easter John 15:1–8 Jesus’ image of the vine and branches is one of the most comforting and challenging teachings in the Gospel. It’s comforting because it reminds us that we are never meant to navigate life on our own. We are connected—intimately, lovingly—to Jesus, the true vine. Our strength, our growth, our fruitfulness all flow from that relationship. And it’s challenging because Jesus is honest: without him, we wither. Without Jesus, we lose the very life that sustains us. In this passage, Jesus speaks about pruning. Anyone who has tended a plant knows pruning can look harsh—cutting away branches, trimming back growth. But pruning is always for the sake of life. Jesus tells us God prunes every fruitful branch “so that it bears more fruit.” Sometimes the pruning in our lives comes through change, loss, correction, or the quiet nudge of the Spirit inviting us to let go of what no longer leads us toward love. It’s not punishment; it’s care...

A Peace the World Cannot Give

Tuesday of the Fifth Week of Easter John 14:27–31a There is a moment in today’s Gospel when Jesus offers a gift that feels almost too good to be true: “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you.” It’s the kind of peace we long for when life feels overwhelming, when our hearts race with worry, or when the world around us seems loud and unsettled. Jesus knows this. He speaks these words on the eve of his Passion—when fear is thick in the air and the disciples are bracing for loss. And yet, Jesus offers peace. But Jesus is clear: his peace is not the world’s version of peace. The world’s peace often depends on circumstances—quiet moments, resolved conflicts, predictable days. Jesus’ peace is different. It is rooted not in what is happening around us, but in who is holding us. Jesus' peace is steady, enduring, and deeply personal. Jesus tells the disciples not to let their hearts be troubled or afraid. Not because everything will be easy, but because Jesus will not aba...

The Spirit Who Teaches Our Hearts

Monday of the Fifth Week of Easter John 14:21–26 In this tender moment of the Gospel, Jesus speaks to his disciples with the kind of reassurance that reaches across centuries and lands gently in our own hearts. Jesus reminds them—and us—that love is not just a feeling but a way of living. “Whoever has my commandments and observes them is the one who loves me.” It’s not meant to be a burden; it’s an invitation into relationship. Love becomes the doorway through which God makes a home within us. Jesus knows the disciples are anxious about his departure. They fear being left alone. We know that feeling too—those seasons when God seems distant, when life feels confusing, when we wonder if we’re navigating things on our own. Into that fear, Jesus promises the Advocate, the Holy Spirit. Not a distant force, but a companion. Not a temporary helper, but the One who will “teach you everything and remind you of all that I told you.” The Holy Spirit is God’s gentle presence in the...

"Do Not Let Your Hearts Be Troubled"

Fifth Sunday of Easter John 14:1–12 There are moments in life when Jesus’ words feel like a lifeline: “Do not let your hearts be troubled.” He speaks them not from a place of comfort, but on the night before his Passion—when fear, confusion, and uncertainty were already settling into the hearts of his disciples. Jesus knows what they are feeling, and he knows what we feel too. Jesus' words are not a command to “just stop worrying,” but an invitation to trust the One who walks with us through every valley. In this passage, Jesus reveals something deeply personal: He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. Not simply a guide, not merely a teacher, but the very path to God. When we feel lost, Jesus is the Way. When we feel confused, he is the Truth. When life feels heavy or diminished, Jesus is the Life that restores and renews. Thomas and Philip ask honest questions—questions we might ask ourselves. “Lord, we do not know where you are going; how can we know the way?” Their u...

Seeing the Father in the Face of Jesus

Memorial of Saint Athanasius, Bishop and Doctor of the Church John 14:7–14 There’s a beautiful honesty in Philip’s request: “Show us the Father, and that will be enough for us.” It’s the kind of longing many of us carry—a desire for clarity, reassurance, something unmistakably divine to steady our faith. Jesus responds not with frustration, but with a tender invitation to look again: “Whoever has seen me has seen the Father.” In this moment, Jesus reveals something profound: God is not distant, abstract, or hidden behind layers of mystery. The Father’s heart, compassion, mercy, and desire for our flourishing are fully revealed in Jesus. If we want to know what God is like, we look at Jesus—his patience with the confused, his gentleness with the wounded, his courage in the face of injustice, his unwavering love. Jesus goes even further. He tells the disciples that his words and works flow from the Father dwelling in him. And then Jesus extends an astonishing promise: tho...