Posts

Returning to Give Thanks

Wednesday of the Seventh Week of Easter John 17:11b–19 As Jesus travels along the border between Samaria and Galilee, ten lepers cry out to him from a distance. They know their need. They know their suffering. And they know that Jesus is their only hope. With a word of compassion, Jesus sends them to the priests—and along the way, they are healed. But the heart of this passage is what happens next. Only one returns. One man—an outsider, a Samaritan—comes back, praising God with a loud voice and falling at Jesus’ feet in gratitude. All ten received healing, but only one allowed that healing to become a moment of relationship, worship, and transformation. Gratitude has a way of opening our hearts. It shifts us from focusing on what we lack to recognizing what God is already doing. It turns blessings into encounters. It transforms ordinary moments into holy ones. Jesus’ question echoes gently into our own lives: “Where are the other nine?” Not as a scolding, but as an in...

The Courage to Forgive, the Humility to Serve

Tuesday of the Seventh Week of Easter John 17:1–11 In this Gospel passage, Jesus speaks honestly about the challenges of discipleship. He names the reality that stumbling blocks will come, that forgiveness will be demanded of us again and again, and that faith—even faith the size of a mustard seed—has power beyond what we imagine. It’s one of those moments where Jesus is both comforting and stretching us at the same time. The call to forgive repeatedly can feel overwhelming. We know how deeply hurt can settle into the heart, how resentment can take root, and how difficult it is to let go. Yet Jesus invites us to see forgiveness not as a burden but as a pathway to freedom—freedom for the other person, yes, but also freedom for ourselves. Forgiveness loosens the grip of anger and opens space for healing. Then Jesus shifts the conversation to humility. Jesus reminds his disciples that following him isn’t about earning praise or recognition. It’s about serving with a willin...

Have Hope in Christ

Monday of the Seventh Week of Easter John 16:29–33 There’s something tender and very human about this moment in John’s Gospel. The disciples finally feel like they understand Jesus—“Now you are speaking plainly,” they say with relief. But Jesus gently reminds them that their confidence will soon be shaken. They will scatter. They will feel alone. Their faith will wobble. And yet, Jesus doesn’t shame them. He doesn’t withdraw his trust. Instead, Jesus offers them a promise that has carried believers for centuries: “In the world you will have trouble, but take courage—I have conquered the world.” At its heart, this passage is about realistic hope. Jesus doesn’t pretend life will be easy. He doesn’t promise a trouble‑free path. Instead, Jesus names the truth: life brings confusion, fear, and moments when we feel scattered inside. But Jesus also names a deeper truth—one that steadies the soul. God is with us in every moment, and Christ’s victory is already at work beneath...

"Father, Glorify Your Name in Us"

Seventh Sunday of Easter John 17:1–11a In today’s Gospel, we are invited into one of the most intimate moments in all of Scripture: Jesus praying. Not teaching about prayer, not offering a parable, but opening his heart to the Father on the night before his Passion. It is a window into the very relationship at the center of all creation—the love between the Father and the Son. What stands out is how deeply Jesus holds his disciples—past, present, and future—in that prayer. Jesus speaks of the glory he shares with the Father, but then immediately turns to us: “I pray for them . . . for they are yours.” Even as Jesus faces suffering, his concern is that we be protected, united, and rooted in the love that binds Father and Son. This passage reminds us that Christian life is not something we achieve by effort alone. It is something we receive. Jesus prays that the Father “glorify” him, and in doing so, Jesus reveals that true glory is not about power or success—it is about l...

Ask in My Name

Saturday of the Sixth Week of Easter John 16:23b–28 In this passage, Jesus speaks with a tenderness that feels almost like a farewell gift. He tells the disciples that a new kind of relationship with God is opening before them—one marked by confidence, intimacy, and trust. “Whatever you ask the Father in my name he will give you.” These words are not a blank check for wishes; they are an invitation into deeper communion with God. To pray “in Jesus’ name” means to pray from the heart of Jesus—seeking what he seeks, loving what he loves, trusting as he trusts. Jesus reassures the disciples that God already loves them. They don’t need to earn that love or prove themselves worthy of it. They simply need to accept it and follow where God leads them. Jesus also speaks of his mission with clarity: Jesus came from God, entered our world, and now returns to God. In that movement, Jesus carries all of us with him. Our prayers, our hopes, our struggles—they are gathered into Jesus...

Sorrow That Turns Into Joy

Friday of the Sixth Week of Easter John 16:20–23 Jesus speaks honestly to his disciples: there will be moments of sorrow, confusion, and loss. Jesus doesn’t pretend that faith removes hardship. Instead, Jesus offers a promise that reaches into the deepest places of the human heart: your grief will turn into joy. Not might . Not could . Will. Jesus uses the image of a woman in labor—painful, overwhelming, and yet purposeful. The suffering is real, but it is not the end of the story. Something new is being born. In the same way, Jesus tells his disciples that their coming sorrow at his death will give way to a joy that no one can take away. This is not just a message for the disciples long ago. It is a message for us today. We all carry seasons of waiting, uncertainty, or heartache. We all know what it feels like to wonder when the light will return. Jesus doesn’t dismiss those feelings. He acknowledges them—and then he promises transformation. The joy Jesus speaks of...

Sent With a Promise

The Solemnity of the Ascension Matthew 28:16–20 The scene on the mountain in Galilee is both simple and profound. The disciples gather where Jesus told them to go. Some worship. Some doubt. And Jesus meets them all—right there, in their mixture of faith and uncertainty. Before giving any command, Jesus offers reassurance: “All power in heaven and on earth has been given to me.” In other words, You’re not stepping into this mission alone or unprepared. I am the One who sends you, and I am the One who strengthens you. Then comes the Great Commission— Go, make disciples, baptize, teach. These are not tasks reserved for experts or perfect believers. They are invitations for ordinary people—people like the disciples, people like us—to share the love we’ve received. We do this through kindness, through witness, through the way we live our faith in daily life. And Jesus ends with one of the most comforting promises in all of Scripture: “I am with you always, until the e...