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Tuesday, June 9, 2026

You Are the Salt. You Are the Light.

Readings 060926

I promised God I would go wherever He leads me.
Most days that promise feels light.
Some days it feels heavy.
And this weekend, it felt like both.

Corpus Christi.
First Communion.
A Baptism.
Preaching.
And our pastor still stranded in Africa.
The work was full, and so was my fatigue.

By Sunday afternoon, I thought I’d rest.
Just a nap.
Just a moment.
But at four o’clock the phone rang:
“Deacon, where are you?
We are waiting for you to bring us the Body of Christ.”

And there it was—
on the Feast of the Body and Blood of the Lord—
my own body tired, my own spirit dull,
my own salt losing its taste.

But Jesus never said,
“Try to be salt… try to be light.”
He said:
“You are the salt… you are the light.”

Salt preserves.
Salt purifies.
Salt awakens flavor.
And when Jesus names us salt,
He is naming our identity—
the deep truth of who we are in Him.

Light does not try to shine.
Light shines because of what it is.
To be united to Christ
is to share in His radiance—
a light that flows from being,
not from effort.

So when the nursing home called,
it wasn’t a summons to duty.
It was a reminder of identity.
A reminder that discipleship is not performance.
It is union with Christ
a transformed way of being
that lets His life shine through our tired bones.

And so I rose.
Still weary.
Still human.
But carried by grace.
And I brought the Body of Christ
to the Body of Christ.

And in that moment,
the salt found its taste.
The light found its flame.
And Christ, who called me,
was the One who carried me.

Prayer

Lord Jesus,
Let Your life restore my salt and steady my light.
When I am tired, be my strength.
When I am dull, be my flame.
Make my being a quiet witness to Your love.
And let all I do lead hearts back to the Father. Amen.

Monday, June 8, 2026

God Who Is, and We Who Receive

Reading 060826 

God speaks to us in so many ways—
through nature, through art, through Scripture, through prayer,
through the quiet turns and bruised places of our lives .
But most of the time,
we get in the way of hearing His voice.
We hurry.
We fill the silence.
We forget to receive.

And this is where the deeper meaning begins.
Our awakening to God is ontological
a matter of being, not doing.
God is not simply the Giver of things.
God is the Source of Being itself.
And the human person, before anything else,
is a receiver of that Being.

This is why trust matters.
For the Lord Himself sustains, guards, and blesses
those who entrust their lives to Him—
even when trust leads through scarcity,
through vulnerability,
or through the hidden persecutions of daily life.
God is not distant.
God is not asleep.
God is not defeated.
He provides, He protects, He purifies,
and He promises a joy the world cannot take.

And so the Beatitudes come to us
not as moral slogans,
but as the ontology of the Kingdom—
a revelation of what a human being becomes
when fully aligned with God.

So today,
let us step out of our own way.
Let us receive before we act.
Let us listen before we speak.
And let our very being
rest in the God who is always speaking.

Prayer 

Lord, 

You are the Source of all being.
You speak beneath every moment.
Teach my heart to receive before I act.
Clear the noise that clouds Your nearness.
Shape me in the truth of the Beatitudes.
Hold my life in Your sustaining love.

Amen