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Wednesday, April 29, 2026

The Grace We Hand On

 Readings 042926 

I dropped my daughter off at the airport.
Heading off to work,
doing what she must
to make things better for her little family.
So much like me.
So much like her mother.

My wife and I are proud of our daughters—
Both are strong women of faith.
I see that.
But what moves me even more
is when others see faith alive in them
and they tell me.

They’ve stepped from their parents’s shadow,
found their own parish home,
their own circle,
Walking in the light of Christ.
And as a deacon, I get around.
In grocery aisles, parking lots, and church halls,
people stop me and say,
“Your daughters live their faith.”

And my heart goes back—
to the grace that shaped all of us:
the prayers whispered in the dark,
the hopes we carried,
the sacrifices made in love,
the lessons we tried to live
more than teach.

Because this is the sacred work of every Christian:
to share the faith we have received,
to let Christ’s light pass from life to life,
to hand on the Gospel
in quiet, steady ways.

Just as the Church in Acts
laid hands on Barnabas and Saul
and sent them forth,
trusting the Holy Spirit
to guide what they could not control,
so we, too, release the faith we share
into the lives of others.

And when someone recognizes that grace—
in our children,
in our friends,
in our communities—
we glimpse the truth of it all:
that the seeds planted in love
belong first to God,
and God makes them grow.

May the light we share
continue to move from heart to heart,
bearing fruit in God’s good soil.

Prayer

Lord Jesus,
Your grace is the light we walk in.
Strengthen the faith we share as Your people.
Let Your Word shape our hearts in quiet, steady ways.
Keep us rooted in Your mercy and truth.
And draw us deeper into the life of Your Spirit.
Amen

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

A Kingdom Built on Broken People

Readings 042826 

The Kingdom of God is not built on the strong,
the polished,
or the self‑assured.
It is built on those whom the Shepherd calls.

In Antioch, the hand of the Lord rested upon ordinary people —
men and women with mixed stories, mixed wounds, mixed pasts —
and a great number turned to the Lord.
There, in that imperfect community,
the disciples were first called Christians.
Not because they were flawless,
but because they belonged to Christ.

Jesus speaks with a steady, searching honesty:
“My works testify to me… but you do not believe
because you are not among my sheep.”
The dividing line is not brilliance, heritage, or success.
It is simply this:
Do we hear the Shepherd’s voice,
and do we follow where He leads?

Yet over the centuries, the flock has wandered.
Some chased other voices,
some sought other pastures,
and now many flocks stand divided,
scattered,
and vulnerable.

But Christ never spoke of many churches
competing for truth or splintered into tribes.
He spoke of one flock under one Shepherd,
one Body, one Bride —
a living Church born from His pierced side
and sustained by His Spirit.

And who stands at the foundation of this Kingdom?
Not the perfect —
but the broken who turn to the Lord.
Not the powerful —
but the ones who hear His voice
and rise when He calls their name.

This is the miracle of the Gospel:
Humanity in all its frailty
becomes the very stones
with which Christ builds His Church.
A Kingdom rising from mercy,
held together by grace,
gathered by the Shepherd
who knows His sheep
and calls each one home.

Prayer

Lord Jesus, 

Shepherd of the broken,
gather us again into Your one flock.
Call our names until our hearts awaken.
Bind our wounds with the mercy of Your Cross.
Build Your Kingdom upon our humble lives.
Lead us home by the sound of Your voice.

Amen