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Held in God's Heart

Wednesday of the Third Week of Easter John 6:35–40 In today’s Gospel, Jesus continues his beautiful teaching on the Bread of Life. Jesus begins with a promise that reaches right into the deepest places of the human heart: “Whoever comes to me will never hunger, and whoever believes in me will never thirst.” These are words spoken not to perfect disciples, but to ordinary people—people who misunderstand, who question, who struggle to trust. In other words, people like us. Jesus reveals something astonishing about God—God wants us. Jesus desires that we come to him, that we be drawn into divine life, that we discover in God the love we’ve been searching for everywhere else. Jesus says, “I will not reject anyone who comes to me”—Not the weary. Not the doubting. Not the imperfect. Not the ones who feel they’ve failed too many times. There is no fine print. No exceptions. No hidden conditions. Just a wide‑open invitation. Jesus goes on to say that he came not t...

The Bread That Truly Satisfies

Tuesday of the Third Week of Easter John 6:30–35 The crowd in today’s Gospel is still trying to understand Jesus. They’ve seen the miracle of the loaves, they’ve chased Jesus across the lake, and now they ask for yet another sign—“What can you do?” It’s almost ironic. Jesus has just fed thousands, yet they’re still unsure. Still hungry. Still searching. And Jesus, with such patience, leads them deeper: “My Father gives you the true bread from heaven… I AM the bread of life.” We all know what it’s like to feel spiritually hungry. Even when life is full—busy schedules, good relationships, meaningful work—something inside us still aches for more. We long for love, truth, goodness, purpose, meaning, peace, connection, forgiveness, hope. The crowd thinks they need more proof. Jesus knows what they really need is more trust. They’re asking for manna like their ancestors received in the desert. Jesus offers something far greater—himself. Jesus doesn’t just give bread—he ...

Working for the Food That Endures

Monday of the Third Week of Easter John 6:22–29 The crowd in today’s Gospel is searching for Jesus with real intensity. They cross the lake, track down the disciples, and finally find Jesus in Capernaum. But Jesus gently names what’s really going on: “You are looking for me not because you saw signs, but because you ate the loaves and were filled.” It’s a moment of loving honesty. Jesus isn’t scolding them—he’s inviting them to look deeper. They’re focused on the bread that satisfied them yesterday. Jesus wants to offer them the Bread that satisfies forever. If we’re honest, we can recognize ourselves in that crowd. We often come to God because we want something fixed, solved, or provided. There’s nothing wrong with asking for help—Jesus welcomes that. But Jesus also wants to draw us into a relationship that isn’t based only on what we need, but on who Jesus is. Jesus redirects the crowd’s hunger: “Do not work for food that perishes, but for the food that endures for...

Hearts Burning on the Way

Third Sunday of Easter Luke 24:13–35 The road to Emmaus is one of the most tender and relatable stories in the Gospels. Two disciples walk away from Jerusalem carrying disappointment, confusion, and grief. They had hoped Jesus would redeem Israel, and now all they can see is the shattering of that hope. Their steps are heavy, their conversation uncertain, and their hearts discouraged. And then Jesus comes alongside them—unrecognized, unassuming, quietly present. He meets them where they are and walks at their pace. Jesus doesn’t correct them immediately or scold their lack of understanding. Instead, he listens. Jesus lets them pour out their sorrow. Only then does Jesus begin to open the Scriptures and help them see that God had been at work all along, even in the places that felt like loss. It’s striking that they don’t recognize Jesus until the breaking of the bread. Sometimes we only see God’s presence in hindsight—when we look back and realize that grace had been wa...

Do Not Be Afraid: I Am Here

Saturday of the Second Week of Easter John 6:16–21 The scene in this Gospel is so human it almost feels familiar: the disciples are rowing in the dark, the wind is picking up, and the waters are getting rough. They are doing their best, but the situation is bigger than their strength. It’s the kind of moment we all know—when we feel like we’re straining against forces we can’t control. Then Jesus comes toward them, walking on the water. And before he calms the storm, before he gets into the boat, before anything changes around them, he speaks the words they most need to hear: “It is I. Do not be afraid.” Notice what Jesus does not say. He doesn’t say, “You shouldn’t feel scared,” or “You should have more faith,” or “Why didn’t you handle this better?” Jesus simply offers his presence. This is the heart of the passage: Jesus meets us in the middle of the storm, not after it passes. He steps into the chaos, into the fear, into the uncertainty—and his presence bring...

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...