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Tuesday, March 24, 2026

What We Choose to Belong To

In all the things God gives, the world is still unhappy.
God pours out beauty, goodness, creation itself—
and somehow, we want to remake it in our own image.
We chase what we desire, what we think is good.
And in all the noise, it’s often the loudest, the angriest,
the farthest from God
who seem to get the most attention.

The world lifts up what looks good on the surface—
recognition, attention, influence, self‑reliance.
The best the world imagines.
But they stay on the surface.
They polish and reshape the outside
so it seems as though those of the world are in control.

Heaven offers something entirely different—
poverty of spirit, mercy, humility, surrender, trust.
These don’t sparkle.
They don’t win applause.
But they open the heart to God.
They make room for grace to breathe.

And Jesus draws the line clearly:

“You belong to what is below; I belong to what is above…
For if you do not believe that I AM,
you will die in your sins.”

He isn’t scolding us.
He’s revealing a truth we could never discover on our own.

Worldly virtues keep us in control.
Heavenly virtues let God be God.

Worldly virtue says, “I can fix myself.”
Heavenly virtue whispers, “Lord, I need You.”
Worldly virtue says, “Be strong.”
Heavenly virtue says, “Be honest.”
Worldly virtue says, “Climb higher.”
Heavenly virtue says, “Come lower, and I will lift you.”

And Jesus stands before us—
not accusing, not shaming—
but inviting us to choose where we want to belong.

Do we want the life that ends with us,
or the life that begins with Him?

Because the moment I believe that He is
that He is Lord,
that He is mercy,
that He is the One who saves—
something shifts inside me.

I stop building myself from the outside in.
I let Him shape me from the inside out.
And slowly, gently, almost quietly,
I begin to belong to what is above.

Prayer

Lord, 

Open my eyes to the gifts You pour out each day.
Free my heart from the noise of the world that keeps me restless.
Teach me the quiet virtues of heaven—mercy, humility, and trust.
Break the illusion that I can save or shape myself.
Let Your grace rise within me and make me new from the inside out.
Draw me away from what is below and toward the life that begins in You.
May I belong, fully and freely, to what is above. 

Amen


Monday, March 23, 2026

When the Stones Drop

 

Readings 032326 

I am a sinner.
For a long time, my sins didn’t trouble me…
The world told me they made me cool—
helped me fit in with the crowd.

But other people’s sins?
Whether their sins were real
or ones I only imagined,
those bothered me.
Their sins were probably no worse than mine,
yet it’s always easier to point a finger than open a heart.
Easier to name someone else’s guilt
than face the truth living quietly in my own soul.

But forgiveness—real forgiveness—comes from God.
And when it comes, it changes the way we see everything.

Susanna stood innocent before false accusers.
The woman in the Gospel stood guilty before real ones.
Two very different stories…
yet in both, God steps in—
not with stones,
but with mercy that exposes the truth
and restores the dignity of the one who stands before Him.

Jesus bends down and writes in the dust,
and suddenly every accuser remembers
their own hidden story.
One by one, the stones drop.

And maybe that’s the invitation today:
to let our stones fall.
To stop rehearsing what others have done
and finally let God touch what we have done.
Because the moment we stand honestly before Him,
we hear the same words the woman heard:
“Neither do I condemn you.
Go, and sin no more.”

Forgiveness is a wonderful thing.
It frees the one who receives it…
and the one who finally stops throwing stones.

Prayer

Lord Jesus,
You know my sins and still You look on me with love.
Teach me to drop the stones I hold against others.
Open my heart to the truth You reveal in mercy.
Give me the courage to stand honestly before You.
Speak again Your healing words: “Neither do I condemn you.”
Lead me to walk in Your forgiveness and live anew. 

Amen