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When Love Is Met With Betrayal

Wednesday of Holy Week Matthew 26:14–25 Holy Week invites us into the most vulnerable moments of Jesus’ earthly life, and today’s Gospel brings us face‑to‑face with one of the most painful realities of human experience: betrayal. Judas goes to the chief priests, asking, “What will you give me if I hand him over to you?” Meanwhile, Jesus sits at table with his friends, fully aware of what is unfolding, yet still offering himself in love. What’s striking is not only Judas’ choice, but Jesus’ response. Jesus doesn’t lash out. He doesn’t expose Judas publicly. Jesus doesn’t withdraw his love. Instead, Jesus continues to share a meal with Judas. Jesus chooses communion even when someone at the table is choosing betrayal. There’s something deeply comforting—and deeply challenging—about that. Jesus knows what it feels like to be wounded by someone close. He knows the sting of disappointment, the ache of broken trust, the heaviness of being misunderstood. And yet, Jesus remains ...

When Love Feels Costly

Tuesday of Holy Week John 13:21–33, 36–38 Today’s Gospel places us right in the middle of a deeply human moment at the Last Supper. Jesus is troubled in spirit. He knows betrayal is near. Jesus knows Peter—full of passion and good intentions—will deny him before dawn. And yet, Jesus stays at the table. He keeps loving. He keeps giving himself away. Holy Week often brings us face-to-face with the uncomfortable truth that discipleship isn’t neat or predictable. Even those closest to Jesus—those who walked with him, learned from him, loved him—struggled to remain faithful when fear and pressure closed in. Judas turns away. Peter falters. The others scatter. And Jesus, knowing all of this, continues to pour out love. There’s something incredibly comforting about that. Jesus doesn’t love us because we always get it right. Jesus loves us knowing our weaknesses, our inconsistencies, our moments of fear and confusion. He sees the whole truth of who we are and chooses to st...

The Fragrance of Love

Monday of Holy Week John 12:1–11 There’s something tender and almost disarming about the scene in today’s Gospel. Jesus is at table with his friends—Lazarus, Martha, and Mary—just days before his Passion and crucifixion. The air is thick with tension; everyone senses that something is coming, even if they can’t name it. And right in the middle of that heaviness, Mary does something startlingly beautiful. She breaks open a jar of costly perfume and pours it over Jesus’ feet, filling the whole house with its fragrance. Mary’s gesture is extravagant, even impractical. Judas certainly thinks so. But Jesus receives it for what it truly is: an act of love freely given, a gift that anticipates his burial, and a reminder that love is never wasted. Holy Week invites us into this same kind of wholehearted love. Not the efficient kind. Not the “what’s the minimum I need to do” kind. But the kind that pours itself out because the One we love is worth everything. Mary doe...

Walking With Jesus Through His Passion

Palm Sunday of the Lord's Passion Matthew 26:14–27:66 Palm Sunday invites us into the most sacred and challenging week of our faith. We begin with palm branches and hosannas, but the Gospel quickly carries us into the deep sorrow of the Passion. Matthew’s account is long, emotional, and layered with human frailty—betrayal, fear, denial, violence, and abandonment. Yet woven through it all is a love so steady and self–giving that it refuses to turn back. Notice how Jesus moves through these events with a quiet, unwavering fidelity. He shares a final meal with his friends, even the one who will betray him. Jesus prays in the garden with a heart full of anguish, yet still says, “Your will be done.” He endures false accusations, mockery, and cruelty without losing his compassion. Even on the cross, Jesus' love does not falter. The Passion reveals not only who Jesus is, but who we are. Do we see ourselves in Peter’s fear, in the disciples’ flight, in the crowd’s sh...

When Grace Becomes Impossible To Ignore

Saturday of the Fifth Week of Lent John 11:45–56 Today’s Gospel picks up right after the raising of Lazarus, one of the most astonishing signs Jesus performs. Many who witnessed it begin to believe in Jesus—how could they not? A man who had been dead for four days is now walking, breathing, and speaking. Life has broken into a place of death, and people can’t help but talk about it. But not everyone responds with faith. Some run to the Pharisees, and the leaders gather in fear. They worry about losing control, about Rome’s reaction, about the disruption Jesus is causing. Instead of seeing the miracle as a revelation of God’s power, they see it as a threat. Their hearts tighten. Their plans harden. And from that moment, the plot to kill Jesus begins to take shape. It’s a sobering reminder that the same grace that opens one heart can be resisted by another. God’s presence can be unmistakable, yet still unwelcome. Not because God is unclear, but because fear can make ...

Staying Rooted in God

Friday of the Fifth Week of Lent John 10:31–42 There’s a quiet but powerful thread running through this Gospel passage: Jesus stands in the middle of hostility, accusation, and misunderstanding, yet Jesus remains utterly grounded in who he is and in the mission the Father has entrusted to him. The crowd is ready to stone Jesus, not because of anything he has done, but because his very identity unsettles them. Jesus doesn’t react with fear or anger. He responds with clarity, calm, and a steady confidence rooted in his relationship with God. Jesus knows that no amount of misunderstanding or rejection can separate him from God's love. That confidence allows Jesus to stand firm even when others turn against him and to continue to reveal God's heart—patiently, consistently, and lovingly. What's striking is that Jesus doesn't force belief. He simply invites: “If you do not believe me, believe the works.” In other words, look at the fruit. Look at the goodness. Look ...

"Before Abraham Came to Be, I AM"

Thursday of the Fifth Week of Lent John 8:51–59 Today’s Gospel brings us into one of the most profound and breathtaking moments in all of Scripture. Jesus speaks openly about life, death, and the promise that those who keep his word “will never see death.” The crowd struggles to understand him, and their questions grow sharper. How can this man—who appears so ordinary—claim something so extraordinary? Then Jesus says the words that change everything: “Before Abraham came to be, I AM.” In that moment, Jesus is not simply teaching. He is revealing. Jesus is not offering an opinion about God—he is speaking as God. The divine name spoken to Moses at the burning bush now comes from the lips of Jesus. It is a moment of stunning clarity, yet it is met with resistance, confusion, even hostility. This Gospel invites us to reflect on how God reveals the Godself in our own lives. Sometimes God’s presence is unmistakable—a moment of grace, a sudden peace, a prayer answ...