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Fourth Sunday of Easter John 10:1–10 In today’s Gospel, Jesus gives us one of the most comforting and personal images in all of Scripture: Jesus is the Shepherd who knows his sheep, calls them by name, and leads them to life. This isn’t a distant or abstract teaching—it's a window into the heart of God. Jesus tells us that the sheep follow the shepherd because they recognize his voice. That’s such a gentle and hopeful truth. We don’t learn the Lord’s voice all at once. It becomes familiar over time—through prayer, Scripture, the sacraments, and the quiet nudges of grace in daily life. And just as sheep instinctively avoid the voice of a stranger, Jesus reminds us that his voice brings peace, clarity, and life—not confusion, fear, or pressure. If something leads us toward anxiety or discouragement, it’s not the Shepherd. Jesus also says, “I am the gate.” It’s a surprising image, but a beautiful one. The gate is both protection and passage. Through him, we find safety f...

Go Into the Whole World

Feast of Saint Mark, Evangelist Mark 16:15–20 The Gospel for the Feast of Saint Mark gives us one of Jesus’ final and most powerful commissions: “Go into the whole world and proclaim the Gospel to every creature.” It’s a sweeping, hope‑filled mission—one that began with a small group of imperfect disciples and continues today through us. Jesus doesn’t send the disciples out alone. He sends them with his authority, with his presence, and with the promise that Jesus will work through them. The early Church didn’t grow because the apostles were brilliant strategists. It grew because they trusted that the risen Lord was truly with them. The same is true for us. Our mission isn’t about having perfect words or flawless confidence. It’s about allowing Christ to shine through our lives—through kindness, forgiveness, courage, and compassion. The Gospel describes dramatic signs that accompanied the early believers—healings, protection, new languages. While our signs today ...

Life Because of Jesus

Friday of the Third Week of Easter John 6:52–59 The Gospel today brings us into the heart of Jesus’ teaching on the Eucharist. The crowd is confused—even disturbed—by Jesus' words: “How can this man give us his flesh to eat?” Their reaction is understandable. Jesus is not speaking in gentle metaphors. He is revealing something astonishing, intimate, and deeply sacramental. Jesus doesn’t soften his message. Instead, he speaks even more clearly: “My flesh is true food, and my blood is true drink.” Jesus is telling us that God’s love is not distant or symbolic. It is embodied. It is given. It is shared. Jesus wants a relationship with us so close, so sustaining, that Jesus offers his very life as nourishment. This is not a God who stands far off. This is a God who draws near—so near that Jesus becomes our food. Jesus promises that whoever eats his flesh and drinks his blood “remains in me and I in him.” To “remain” in Jesus is to live rooted in his love, guided by ...

Drawn by God, Fed by Jesus

Thursday of the Third Week of Easter John 6:44–51 In today’s Gospel, Jesus speaks words that are both tender and deeply reassuring: “No one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draw him.” It’s a reminder that faith is not something we manufacture by sheer effort. It begins with God’s initiative—God’s desire for us, God’s gentle pull on our hearts. Sometimes we worry that our faith isn’t strong enough, or that we’re not doing enough, or that we’re somehow failing at the spiritual life. But Jesus tells us that the very desire to seek Jesus is already a sign that the God is drawing us. Your longing for peace, your hunger for meaning, your hope for healing—these are not accidents. They are grace at work. Jesus quotes the prophets: “They shall all be taught by God.” This means that God is not distant or silent. God teaches us through Scripture, through prayer, through the people who love us, through moments of clarity or compassion. And all of this teaching h...

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...