
“Good is the Lord to one who waits for him, to the soul that seeks him.” (Lamentations 3:25)
Continue reading “The Goodness That Waits”
“Good is the Lord to one who waits for him, to the soul that seeks him.” (Lamentations 3:25)
Continue reading “The Goodness That Waits”
Sometimes my heart aches with longing—for the Spirit to fall, not just on me, but on all of us. There are moments when the lyrics of Bright City’s Come Holy Spirit feel less like a song and more like a cry from deep within:
“Come Holy Spirit, fall on us. Burn like a fire, living flame of love.”

Lately the Lord has been helping me get real with myself. It’s only by knowing myself in a deeper way that I can deepen my relationship with God, and know my true need. It’s the opportunity to grow in humility, thinking of myself less, and allow divine love to stir the generosity in my heart.
Continue reading “Staying in My Holy Lane”
We often pray for God to take away our problems—remove the obstacles, fix the marriage, change the circumstances. But what if the problem isn’t the problem? What if God isn’t changing your situation because He’s trying to change you?
Continue reading “When God Doesn’t Remove the Problem”
During a recent conversation, a friend shared something tender and transformative: that in prayer, God had revealed to her that she is a Daughter of Grace. The phrase lingered in my heart, stirring reflection. What does it mean to live as a Daughter of Grace?
Continue reading “Daughter of Grace: Living Beyond the Ledger”
Ronald Rolheiser writes, “What God asks is simply that we come home, that we share our lives with him, that we let him help us in those ways in which we are powerless to help ourselves.” It’s a gentle invitation—not to perfection, but to presence.
Continue reading “Coming Home to Grace”
“From the four winds come, O breath, and breathe upon these slain, that they may live.”
— Ezekiel 37:9
There is a place in scripture where the prophets cry out to the four winds—north, south, east, and west—summoning breath, life, and judgment to the whole earth. It is a call not confined to one nation or people, but a divine summons that stretches across creation. The four winds symbolize the totality of God’s reach: His message is not local, but universal. His Spirit moves across every border, every language, every soul.
Continue reading “Where the Prophets Call to the Four Winds”
Today, we honor St. John Paul II – poet, philosopher, pilgrim, prophet and Pope – whose voice once rang out across the iron grip of Communist Poland with a message that could not be silenced: God is real, and human dignity is sacred.
Continue reading “The Power of God’s Word”
“It is not that I want merely to be called a Christian, but to actually be one.”
—St. Ignatius of Antioch

We live in a world saturated with signs of God’s presence—sunrises that silence us, acts of mercy that defy logic, the ache of beauty that stirs something eternal in us. And yet, Saint Paul’s words in Romans 1:16–25 cut through our modern noise with unsettling clarity: “Although they knew God, they did not accord him glory as God or give him thanks.”
Continue reading “From Faith to Faith: When Knowing Isn’t Enough”