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Seeing With Your Heart

The Fourth Sunday of Lent John 9:1–41 The story of the man born blind is one of the most tender and challenging encounters in the Gospels. Jesus gives sight to someone who has never seen a sunrise, a loved one’s face, or the beauty of creation. Yet the miracle becomes the center of controversy. The religious leaders question it, deny it, and try to explain it away. They can’t accept that God might be at work in a way they didn’t expect. Meanwhile, the man who was healed grows in clarity—not just in his physical sight, but in his spiritual vision. With each question he’s asked, he becomes more confident, more courageous, more aware of who Jesus truly is. By the end of the passage, he sees more clearly than anyone else in the story. This Gospel invites us to reflect on the difference between seeing with our eyes and seeing with our hearts. Sometimes we, too, can become so used to our assumptions, routines, or fears that we miss the quiet ways God is moving in our lives. We...

The Grace of Honest Humility

Saturday of the Third Week of Lent Luke 18:9–14 Jesus’ parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector is one of those stories that gently—but firmly—holds up a mirror to our heart. Two people go to the Temple to pray. One stands tall, listing his virtues and comparing himself to others. The other stands at a distance, unable to lift his eyes, and simply says, “O God, be merciful to me, a sinner.” Only one goes home justified—and it’s not the one we might expect. The Pharisee isn’t a villain. He’s doing many good things. But somewhere along the way, his prayer stopped being a conversation with God and became a performance about himself. His heart is closed, not because he’s “bad,” but because he doesn’t think he needs anything from God. The tax collector, on the other hand, comes with empty hands. He knows his faults. He knows his need. And that honest humility becomes the doorway through which God’s mercy rushes in. Lent invites us into that same pos...

The Heart of It All

Friday of the Third Week of Lent Mark 12:28–34 In today’s Gospel, a scribe approaches Jesus with a sincere question: “Which is the first of all the commandments?” It’s a question that cuts through complexity and gets right to the heart of faith. Jesus doesn’t hesitate. He names the two great commandments that hold everything else together: Love God with your whole heart, soul, mind, and strength—that is, with your entire being—and love your neighbor as yourself. What’s striking is how simple—and how challenging—this really is. We often think holiness requires extraordinary feats, but Jesus reminds us that the spiritual life begins with love. Not abstract love, but lived love. Love that shows up in our tone of voice, our patience, our generosity, our willingness to forgive, and our attentiveness to those who feel unseen. The scribe recognizes the beauty of Jesus’ answer and responds with humility. Jesus then tells him, “You are not far from the Kin...

Choosing the Stronger Voice

Thursday of the Third Week of Lent Luke 11:14–23 In today’s Gospel, Jesus frees a man from a demon that had stolen his voice. Instead of celebrating this moment of healing, some people accuse Jesus of acting by the power of evil. Others demand more signs, as if the miracle right in front of them wasn’t enough. Jesus responds with a simple but piercing truth: a divided heart cannot stand. Every day, we experience our own version of this inner division. We want to follow Christ wholeheartedly, yet other voices tug at us—fear, resentment, pride, old habits, or the subtle temptation to rely on our own strength instead of God’s. Lent invites us to notice these competing voices and choose, again and again, the One who brings freedom. Jesus describes himself as the “stronger one” who enters the house, binds the enemy, and restores what was stolen. That’s not just a dramatic image—it’s a promise. Whatever has silenced us, weighed us down, or kept us from living fully...

Fulfilled in Love

Wednesday of the Third Week of Lent Matthew 5:17–19 Jesus’ words in today’s Gospel can feel a bit surprising at first: “I have not come to abolish the law but to fulfill it.” In a world that often treats rules as obstacles or burdens, Jesus reframes everything. He isn’t tightening the screws or adding more weight to our shoulders. He’s revealing the heart behind God’s commandments—a heart rooted in love. For Jesus, the law is not a checklist but a pathway. It’s meant to shape us into people who reflect God’s goodness in the ordinary moments of life. When Jesus says that not even the smallest letter of the law will pass away, he’s reminding us that God’s wisdom is trustworthy, steady, and life–giving. The commandments aren’t meant to restrict us; they’re meant to free us–to help us become the kind of people who can love deeply, act justly, and walk humbly with our Lord. Lent is a perfect time to rediscover this. Instead of seeing God’s teachings as demands, we...

Forgiven People, Forgiving Hearts

Tuesday of the Third Week of Lent Matthew 18:21–35 Peter’s question to Jesus is one we’ve all asked in our own way: “How many times do I have to forgive?” Peter suggests a generous number—seven times—but Jesus responds with something far more radical: seventy–seven times. In other words, forgiveness isn’t something we count. It’s something we live. Jesus follows with a parable that hits close to home. A servant is forgiven an impossible debt—one he could never repay in a thousand lifetimes. Yet that same servant refuses to forgive a fellow servant who owes him a tiny fraction of what he himself had been forgiven. The contrast is jarring, and it’s meant to be. Jesus wants us to see ourselves in that first servant. We are the ones who have been shown immeasurable mercy. And that mercy is meant to reshape how we treat one another. Forgiveness is rarely easy. It stretches us. It humbles us. It asks us to loosen our grip on the hurt we’ve been carrying...

Where God's Grace Surprises Us

Monday of the Third Week of Lent Luke 4:24–30 Today’s Gospel gives us a rare glimpse into a moment when Jesus’ own hometown struggled to accept Him. The people of Nazareth had known him for years—watched him grow up, worked alongside him, shared meals and stories. They thought they knew exactly who Jesus was. But when Jesus spoke of God’s mercy reaching beyond Israel—toward outsiders, strangers, even enemies—their familiarity quickly turned into resistance. They could not imagine that God might work in ways that stretched beyond their expectations. It’s easy to shake our heads at the crowd in Nazareth, but if we’re honest, we’ve all had moments like this. Moments when God’s grace feels too wide, too generous, too surprising. Moments when we want God to act according to our plans, our comfort zones, our sense of fairness. Moments when we resist the idea that God might be inviting us to grow, to forgive, or to see others with new eyes. Jesus reminds his h...