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Thursday, June 18, 2026

Humble Enough to Pray as Jesus Taught Us

Readings 061826

There are moments in life
when faith must rise
from the quiet of our hearts
and stand in the open.

My daughter faced that moment
when the Fellowship of Christian Athletes
asked her to pray.
She prayed often.
She loved God deeply.
But she feared she couldn’t pray
like the others.

So I told her gently:
Be humble enough
to pray the way Jesus taught you.
Pray the Our Father
the prayer that belongs to every believer,
the prayer that carries
the heartbeat of the Gospel.

And when her name was called,
she took a breath
and began, “Our Father…”
And suddenly the whole room joined her.
The walls didn’t divide.
The labels didn’t matter.
The Body of Christ
prayed as one.

Afterward, the Catholic athletes thanked her—
not for being bold,
but for being faithful.
For giving them a prayer they knew,
a prayer they prayed every day,
a prayer that reminded them
who they were.

Today’s Gospel reminds us
that God sees the heart,
not the performance.
He asks for sincerity,
not style.

When we pray as Jesus taught,
we stand on holy ground—
united, steady, unafraid.

May we never be ashamed
of the prayer that shaped the saints,
strengthened the martyrs,
and still gathers God’s children
into one voice.

May we be humble enough
to simply pray
as Jesus taught us…
and trust Him
with the rest.


This is how you are to pray:

Our Father who art in heaven,
hallowed be thy name,
thy Kingdom come,
thy will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread;
and forgive us our trespasses,
as we forgive those who trespass against us;
and lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil.


Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Truth Has a Name

 

Readings 061726

There are man‑made truths everywhere.
Politics and economics.
Race and ethnicity.
And now even the deepest realities—
gender, sexuality, the value of human life, morality—
are being reshaped, redefined,
treated as clay in human hands.

People cling to their truths fiercely,
even when they claim they don’t.

But there is an absolute truth,
and it does not rise from our opinions,
our preferences,
or our carefully defended ways of living.
Truth belongs to God alone.

And whenever we treat our truth as the truth,
we slip into a quiet idolatry—
a worship of self
that Jesus warns us against.

When you give, He says,
do not give to be seen.
When you pray,
do not pray to be admired.
When you fast,
do not fast to be noticed.
Because the moment we seek the spotlight,
we stop seeking the Father.
The moment we chase approval,
we stop chasing truth.

But God calls us back
to the hidden place—
the place where only He sees,
only He knows,
only He rewards.
In that secret room,
there is no image to protect,
no personal truth to defend,
only the God who is truth.

Scripture gives us an example.
Elisha does not cling to his own vision.
He lifts the fallen mantle and asks,
“Where is the LORD?”
Not “Where is my way?”
Not “Where is my truth?”
But “Where is the LORD?”

That is humility.
That is the doorway to real truth.

So let your heart take comfort today—
not in your certainty,
not in your opinions,
but in the Lord who sees in secret
and leads us into the truth that saves.

Prayer

Lord God, 

You alone are truth,

and every good path begins in You.

Free my heart from the idols I create.

Draw me into the hidden place of Your presence.

Teach me to seek Your face above all things.

Lead me into the truth that saves.

Amen