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A Small Offering—A Great Grace

Friday of the Second Week of Easter John 6:1–15 The feeding of the five thousand is one of those Gospel moments that feels both grand and wonderfully ordinary. A huge crowd gathers, people are hungry, and the disciples are overwhelmed. It’s a scene we know well—needs that feel too big, resources that feel too small, and a quiet hope that maybe God can do something with what we have. Then comes the boy with five loaves and two fish. It’s not much. It’s barely enough for a family meal, let alone a hillside full of people. Yet Jesus receives this small offering with gratitude, blesses it, and multiplies it beyond anything anyone could have imagined. This is the heart of the story: God delights in using what we offer, even when it feels insufficient. Jesus doesn’t ask the boy for more. He doesn’t criticize the disciples for their lack of planning. He simply takes what is given and transforms it into abundance. So often we hold back because we think what we have isn’t en...

Receiving the One God Has Sent

Thursday of the Second Week of Easter John 3:31–36 In this passage, John the Baptist speaks with a clarity that feels both simple and profound. He reminds us that Jesus comes “from above,” carrying with him the very heart and voice of God. While we often struggle to understand God’s ways, Jesus reveals them—not through force or fear, but through truth spoken and actions done with love. John also names something we all experience: it’s not always easy to receive what God is offering. Sometimes we resist God's light because it asks something of us. Sometimes we hesitate to trust God because trust feels risky. And yet, John assures us that to receive Jesus is to receive life—real life, eternal life, the kind of life that begins now and grows within us. There’s a gentle invitation here: to listen again to the One who speaks God’s words, to open our hearts to the Spirit’s movement, and to let God’s love shape our choices. The contrast John draws—between accepting and rejecti...

Stepping Into the Light

Wednesay of the Second Week of Easter John 3:16–21 John 3:16 is one of the most familiar verses in all of Scripture—so familiar, in fact, that we sometimes forget to let its meaning sink in. “God so loved the world. . . ” Not tolerated, not put up with, not begrudgingly saved— loved . Jesus reminds us that the entire story of salvation begins with God’s desire for us to have life, real life, abundant life. But the passage doesn’t end there. Jesus goes on to speak about light and darkness, not as places we stand but as choices we make. The light isn’t meant to expose us to shame; it’s meant to free us. God’s light reveals what is true, what is healing, what leads us toward wholeness. Yet stepping into that light can feel vulnerable. It asks us to be honest—with God, with ourselves, with others. Still, Jesus assures us that the light is not something to fear. It is the very place where love meets us. God’s desire is not to condemn but to restore. The invitation is simple:...

Lifted Up to New Life

Tuesday of the Second Week of Easter John 3:7b–15 Today's Gospel continues the story of Nicodemus's encounter with Jesus. Nicodemus comes to Jesus with a heart full of questions, and Jesus meets him with an invitation into mystery. “You must be born from above.” It’s not a command meant to confuse him—it’s an opening into a deeper way of living. Jesus is gently telling Nicodemus that faith isn’t just about knowing the right answers; it’s about allowing God to transform and reshape us from the inside out. Then Jesus offers an image Nicodemus would recognize: Moses lifting up the serpent in the desert. In the Book of Numbers 21:4-9 , the people looked upon the bronze serpent and found healing. Jesus uses that story to point toward his own mission: He, too, will be “lifted up”—not to condemn, but to heal, restore, and save. This passage reminds us that God’s work in us is both mysterious and deeply personal. The Spirit moves in ways we don’t always understand, yet its ...

Born of the Spirit

Monday of the Second Week of Easter John 3:1–8 There’s something wonderfully honest about Nicodemus. He comes to Jesus under the cover of night—curious, cautious, and carrying more questions than answers. He’s a respected teacher, yet he knows there is something about Jesus he cannot ignore. And so he shows up, quietly hoping for clarity. Jesus responds with an invitation rather than an explanation: “You must be born from above.” It’s a phrase that puzzles Nicodemus and, if we’re honest, it puzzles us too. What does it mean to begin again? To be renewed? To let God’s Spirit reshape what we think is already set in stone? Jesus uses the image of the wind—unpredictable, unseen, yet undeniably real. You can’t control it, but you can feel it. You can’t see where it starts or ends, but you know when it moves through your life. That’s how the Spirit works: quietly, persistently, often in ways we don’t expect. Many of us, like Nicodemus, come to Jesus with our own nighttime q...

Peace Behind Locked Doors

Second Sunday of Easter or Sunday of Divine Mercy John 20:19–31 The disciples in today’s Gospel are gathered behind locked doors—afraid, uncertain, and unsure of what comes next. It’s a scene that feels surprisingly familiar. We all have our own “locked rooms” —places in our hearts where fear, disappointment, or doubt keep us closed in. And it’s into that space that Jesus enters. Jesus doesn’t wait for the disciples to calm down or get their act together. Jesus doesn’t wait for perfect faith. He steps right into their fear and speaks the words they most need: “Peace be with you.” Not once, but twice—because sometimes peace needs to be spoken more than once before it sinks in. Then Jesus shows them his wounds. The Risen Christ doesn’t hide the marks of suffering; he transforms them. Jesus' wounds become signs of love, not defeat. And in doing so, Jesus teaches us that our own wounds—our losses, our failures, our fears—can also become places where grace breaks throug...

Believe The "Good News"—Even When It's Hard to Believe

Saturday in the Octave of Easter Mark 16:9–15 The Gospel today gives us a very honest picture of the early disciples. Jesus has risen and has appeared to Mary Magdalene. She runs to share the good news, but the others don’t believe her. Then the risen Jesus appears to two more disciples walking on the road, who share their news of seeing Jesus, and again—they aren’t believed. It’s almost comforting to see that even the first followers of Jesus struggled to trust the Resurrection. When Jesus finally appears to the Eleven, he doesn’t scold them to shame them. Instead, Jesus names their unbelief and then immediately entrusts them with a mission: “Go into the whole world and proclaim the Gospel.” It’s as if Jesus is saying, “I know you struggled. I know you doubted. But I still choose you.” This is the heart of the passage: Jesus meets us where we are, but he doesn’t leave us there. The disciples’ hesitation didn’t disqualify them. Their fear didn’t cancel their calling. ...