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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...

The Thirst Beneath The Thirst

The Third Sunday of Lent John 4:5–42 There’s something beautifully human about the scene at the well in today’s Gospel. Jesus is tired, thirsty, and sitting in the heat of the day. The Samaritan woman arrives carrying her own thirst—one much deeper than water could satisfy. She comes at noon, the hour when no one else would be there, perhaps hoping to avoid the eyes and whispers of others. Yet Jesus is already there, waiting for her. This is one of the most tender truths of the Gospel: God meets us not where we pretend to be, but where we actually are. Jesus doesn’t begin with judgment, a lecture, or a correction. He begins with a simple request: “Give me a drink.” It’s disarming. It’s relational. It opens a door. As their conversation unfolds, Jesus gently reveals the deeper longings in her heart—to be known, loved, forgiven, renewed, and for belonging, dignity, and a life that doesn’t leave her empty. She has tried to quench that thirst on her own in many w...

The Father Who Runs To Us

Saturday of the Second Week of Lent Luke 15:1–3, 11–32 In today's Gospel reading, Jesus is confronted by people grumbling about the company he keeps with tax collectors, sinners, and those deemed unworthy by others. In response, Jesus tells a powerful story, often called the Parable of the Lost Son or the Prodigal Son. It is one of the most moving stories in the Bible because it speaks directly to the human experience—our mistakes and wrong choices, our longing to belong, broken relationships, and our need for God's mercy and forgiveness. In this story, a younger son asks his father for his inheritance early. The son leaves home and wastes everything in reckless living. Eventually, he finds himself hungry, ashamed, and alone. Realizing how far he has fallen, he decides to return home, hoping only to be treated as a servant. But when the father sees his son returning, something surprising happens. Instead of anger or punishment, the father runs to meet his son, emb...

When the Vineyard is Entrusted to Us

Friday of the Second Week of Lent Luke 6:33–35, 45–46 In today’s Gospel, Jesus tells a story that feels unsettlingly close to home. A landowner lovingly plants a vineyard—fencing it, digging a winepress, building a watchtower—and then entrusts it to tenants. When harvest time comes and the owner asks for what is rightfully his, the tenants respond with violence and rejection. Even the son is cast out. At first glance, it’s easy to see this as a story about “them”—the religious leaders who rejected the prophets and, ultimately, Jesus. But perhaps we might recognize ourselves in it too. The vineyard is not only Israel; it is every gift God has placed into our hands. Our lives, our faith, our families, our time, our talents, our parish—none of these belong to us in the way we sometimes assume. They are entrusted to us. Lent invites us to slow down and ask an honest question: What kind of tenants have we been? Have we treated God’s gifts as some...

At The Door We Pass Every Day

Thursday of the Second Week of Lent Luke 16:19–31 In today’s Gospel, Jesus tells a story that feels uncomfortably close to home. A rich man lives in luxury, dressed in fine clothes, enjoying everything life has to offer. At his door lies Lazarus—poor, sick, and hungry—hoping for scraps. The striking detail isn’t cruelty or violence. It’s something quieter and more unsettling: the rich man simply doesn’t notice. Or perhaps he notices, but never lets what he sees change him. That door becomes the heart of the story. It’s the small distance between comfort and suffering, between having enough and having too much, between seeing and truly responding. The tragedy is not that the rich man is wealthy, but that his wealth closes him in on himself. Lazarus is right there, close enough to see every day, yet invisible to the rich man's heart. After death, the situation is reversed. Lazarus is comforted, the rich man is in anguish, and now he is the one longing for relie...

Greatness that Serves

Wednesday of the Second Week of Lent Matthew 20:17–28 As Jesus walks toward Jerusalem, he speaks openly with his disciples about what lies ahead—betrayal, suffering, and death. It is a sobering moment. Yet almost immediately, the conversation shifts when James and John ask for places of honor at Jesus' right and left. Their request feels jarring, but also very familiar. Even when we are close to Jesus, we can still be tempted to think in terms of status, recognition, and reward. Jesus meets this moment with patience and truth. Jesus helps his disciples—and us—see that God’s idea of greatness is very different from the world’s. Leadership in God’s kingdom is not about being above others, but about being with them and for them. “Whoever wishes to be great among you shall be your servant.” These words invite us to reconsider what success and faithfulness really look like. Jesus points to his own life as the model. Jesus did not come to be served, but to se...