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When Jesus Calls Us By Name

Tuesday in the Octave of Easter John 20:11–18 There is something profoundly tender about this moment in the garden. Mary Magdalene stands outside the empty tomb, overwhelmed by grief, confusion, and the weight of everything she has just lived through. She is doing what many of us do when life unravels—she stays close to the last place she saw Jesus, even if it’s a place of sorrow. At first, she doesn’t recognize Jesus. Not in the angels. Not in the gardener. Not even in his voice—until he speaks her name—“Mary.” That single word breaks through her grief, her assumptions, her fear. It’s not a grand speech or a dramatic sign. It’s simply the voice of the One who knows her, loves her, and has never stopped seeking her. This is how the Risen Christ often comes to us—not in the spectacular, but in the personal. Not in the noise, but in the quiet recognition that we are known. Jesus calls us by name in prayer, in Scripture, in the kindness of others, in moments of une...

Running With Joy, Standing in Truth

Monday in the Octave of Easter Matthew 28:8–15 There’s a beautiful tension in today’s Gospel—one that feels surprisingly familiar to the spiritual life. Matthew tells us that the women at the tomb “went away quickly… fearful yet overjoyed.” What a phrase. It captures that holy mixture of awe, confusion, hope, and trembling that often accompanies moments when God breaks into our lives in ways we didn’t expect. They run with joy because the tomb is empty. They tremble because nothing will ever be the same. And right in the middle of that swirl of emotion, Jesus meets them. Not in the calm, not in the clarity, but in the "running". He greets them with a simple word—“Peace”—and sends them to share the news. Meanwhile, the religious leaders scramble to cover up the truth. They craft a narrative, pay off the guards, and try to control the story. Fear leads them to cling to power, to hide, to manipulate. Two responses to the Resurrection stand side by side: the openne...

Jesus Christ is Risen!

Easter Sunday—The Resurrection of the Lord Matthew 28:1–10 Easter morning begins not with certainty, but with love. Mary Magdalene and the other Mary go to the tomb simply because their hearts, filled with love for Jesus, won’t let them stay away. They carry grief, devotion, and the lingering ache of Good Friday. They are not expecting a miracle. They are just showing up. And then God surprises them. Before the women arrived, the earth shook, the stone rolls back, and an angel announces the news that has reshaped human history: the Jesus who was crucified, "is not here. . . . He has been raised from the dead.” The women are overwhelmed—“fearful yet overjoyed”—because experiencing resurrection always feels like that. It startles us. It stretches us. It fills us with joy and hope we didn’t know we were allowed to have. But the most beautiful moment comes next: Jesus meets them on the way. Jesus didn’t wait for them to arrive at the right place or to have ev...

When God Seems Silent—Waiting With Hope

Holy Saturday at the Easter Vigil Holy Saturday is a day suspended between sorrow and promise. The disciples do not yet know about the empty tomb. They are not celebrating. They are hiding, grieving, and trying to make sense of a world that suddenly feels unsafe and unfamiliar. Everything they thought they understood about Jesus—his power, his mission, his future—seems to have collapsed under the weight of the cross. This quiet day invites us into that same space of uncertainty. It is the day when God feels silent, when prayers seem unanswered, when the future is unclear. The disciples are not heroic today; they are human. They are confused, heartbroken, and afraid. And yet, even in their fear, they remain huddled together. They hold on to each other when they cannot yet hold on to hope. Holy Saturday reminds us that faith is not only about the moments when God feels close. It is also about the long, aching pauses when nothing seems to be happening. It is about trusting that God...

Behold The Love That Does Not Turn Away

Good Friday of the Lord's Passion John 18:1–19:42 Good Friday brings us to the foot of the Cross, the place where the depth of God’s love is revealed in a way that is both overwhelming and disarmingly simple. John’s Passion narrative is filled with movement—arrests, interrogations, denials, judgments—yet Jesus remains steady. He is not swept away by fear or anger. Jesus stands rooted in the truth of who he is and the mission he came to fulfill. What’s striking is how Jesus meets every moment with a quiet, unwavering love. He protects his disciples in the garden. Jesus speaks truth to Pilate without hostility. He looks at Peter with compassion, not condemnation. Jesus entrusts his mother and the beloved disciple to one another. Even in his final breath, Jesus chooses surrender rather than bitterness. Good Friday is not simply a story of suffering; it is a story of love that refuses to turn away. A love that absorbs violence without returning it. A love that forgives even ...

Love That Kneels

Holy Thursday—Evening Mass of the Lord's Supper John 13:1–15 Holy Thursday draws us into the quiet, intimate upper room where Jesus gathers with his closest friends. John tells us that Jesus knew “his hour had come” and that Jesus loved his own “to the end.” And then, in a moment that must have stunned the disciples, Jesus gets up from the table, removes his outer garment, kneels down, and begins to wash their feet. It’s such an ordinary act—washing dusty feet—but it becomes the clearest window into the heart of God. Jesus doesn’t teach love from a distance. He doesn’t love with words alone. Jesus loves by humbling himself, by taking the posture of a servant, by meeting his friends in the messiness of real life. Peter’s reaction is so relatable. Something in us resists being served. We prefer to stay in control, to keep our vulnerabilities hidden, to avoid letting anyone—especially God—get too close. But Jesus insists: “Unless I wash you, you have no share with me....

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 ...