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Monday, April 13, 2026

Born From Above: The Quiet Strength of Christian Boldness

 

Readings 041326 

I met a young man recently
who wants to know more about his Catholic faith.
People attack him,
mock him,
bully him
because he believes in Jesus.
He said, “I want to know more so I can defend myself.”
But beneath his words
was a deeper longing—
not to strike back,
but to stand firm in Christ.

Christian boldness
is not loud,
not harsh,
not a weapon in our hands.
It is the quiet strength
of a heart rooted in Christ
in a world that has grown cynical.

Jesus says,
“Unless one is born from above,
he cannot see the Kingdom of God.”
That rebirth
is not a single moment.
It is the daily choice
to let the Spirit make us new.

The early Church understood this.
They did not pray
for the threats to disappear.
They prayed for courage.
And Scripture says
they were filled with the Holy Spirit
and spoke the word of God with boldness
not with judgment,
but with love,
with clarity,
with Christ.

Saint Paul tells us,
“If you were raised with Christ,
seek what is above.”
Lift your gaze.
Anchor your life
in the Christ who sits
at the right hand of God.
When your eyes rest there,
fear loses its grip,
and boldness begins to grow.

And in our world—
a world of division,
cynicism,
and self‑protection—
one of the boldest acts
is simply this:
to love God
with all that you are,
and to love your neighbor
as yourself.

This is the boldness Christ asks of us:
not accusation,
not noise,
but a life reborn in Him—
steady,
faithful,
and full of love.

Prayer

Lord Jesus,
make my heart steady in Your love.
Let Your Spirit be my courage each day.
Rebirth me again into Your quiet strength.
Lift my eyes to what is above.
Teach me to love boldly without fear.
Keep me faithful, gentle, and true in You.

Amen


Sunday, April 12, 2026

Blessed Are Those Who Have Not Seen - Divine Mercy Sunday

 

Readings 041226 

Blessed be God.
Praise be to Jesus Christ, forever and ever.

Come, Holy Spirit—fill us with joy; set our hearts ablaze with Your presence.

Today, on Divine Mercy Sunday, we step into that upper room—
a room locked by fear,
a room heavy with worry,
a room that feels a lot like our own hearts sometimes.

And Jesus walks straight in.
No knocking.
No conditions.
Just mercy.
“Peace be with you.”

He shows His wounds—
not to accuse,
not to shame,
but to heal.
To say, This is how far My love goes.

Thomas wasn’t there.
And when he hears the news,
he wants what we all want
when life hurts—certainty.
He wants to see.
He wants to touch.
He wants proof.

And Jesus, in His mercy,
comes back for him.
Not to scold his doubt,
but to meet him in it.
To lift him out of it.
To give him what he needs
to take the next step of faith.

Then Jesus blesses us:
“Blessed are those who have not seen
and have believed.”

Faith is not something we build alone.
Faith is a gift—
poured into the heart
by the Holy Spirit.
It grows in the dark.
It grows in locked rooms.
It grows in the whisper:
“Jesus, I trust in You.”

And when we finally reach heaven,
it will not be because
of what we have done.
It will be His mercy,
His grace,
His sacrifice—
everything He has done
in us and for us.
Blessed be God.

In Acts, mercy becomes a way of life:
“There was no needy person among them.”
They shared.
They cared.
They lived as people
touched by mercy
who wanted to pass it on.

Most of us are not priests,
but every one of us is sent.
Every one of us can forgive.
Every one of us can lift a burden,
heal a wound,
offer patience,
or simply refuse
to let someone stand alone.

Divine Mercy Sunday reminds us:
God does not wait
for perfect faith.
He does not wait
for perfect people.
He steps into our locked rooms.
He shows us His wounds.
He calls us blessed
even when we cannot see.
And when we say yes—
even a small yes—
He makes it enough.

Jesus, have mercy on us
and on the whole world.

Praise be to Jesus Christ,
forever and ever.
Amen.

Prayer

Jesus, Mercy of the Father, 

breathe Your peace into my heart.
Step into the locked rooms of my fear.
Show me Your wounds that heal and restore.
Strengthen my faith when I cannot see.
Teach me to trust Your love in every moment.
Fill me with the Spirit of compassion and courage.
Send me to bring Your mercy to the world.

Amen