Reflections 8 – 14 July

·

Wednesday 8 July

Grace is not given to the perfect but to the available; God entrusts his work to ordinary hands with ordinary histories.

It humbles me that authority over what wounds and binds is shared with people no different from ourselves, called each by name.

The message at the heart of every commission is disarmingly simple: God has come near. We are sent to announce a nearness, not a distance.

Before I attempt anything for the Lord, I am asked first to believe that he is close. Only then can I help another sense how near he truly is.

Matthew 10:1-7

Thursday 9 July

There is a poverty asked of those who would carry God, a deliberate emptiness that keeps the hands free to receive and to give.

What we have been given without cost we are to offer without cost; the gospel cannot be hoarded.

My instinct is to secure myself first, to set out well provisioned against every possible need.

Yet the disciple’s truest equipment is peace, a blessing offered at each threshold. To enter any place wishing it peace is already to carry the kingdom there, lightly, without grasping or possessing.

Matthew 10:7-15

Friday 10 July

Discipleship offers no guarantee of safety; we are sent out vulnerable, asked to hold shrewdness and innocence together without letting either harden.

When the hour of testing comes, we are told not to rehearse our defense, for the Spirit will supply what we lack. This is a profound release from anxiety.

I have known difficult hours and found it true, that grace arrives precisely when we have nothing prepared.

Endurance is asked of us, yet never endurance alone. The Spirit endures within us, and what we cannot sustain by our own strength is sustained by another.

Matthew 10:16-23

Saturday 11 July

Three times the word is spoken against our fear, for God knows how deeply fear governs us.

The same providence that marks the falling sparrow has numbered even the hairs of our heads; such attentiveness is almost too much to believe, and yet it is the heart of the gospel.

I have leaned on this in seasons when control slipped from my hands. To be known so completely is to be safe even amid loss.

To acknowledge Christ before others is not boldness of temperament but simple faithfulness, the natural overflow of having first been known and loved by him.

Matthew 10:24-33

Sunday 12 July

Weariness is no obstacle to God; it is, in fact, the very condition he invites.

There is a rest he offers that the world cannot give, not the absence of labor but the presence of One who labors alongside us.

I have learned, slowly, to lay things down rather than carry them alone through the night. Surrender is not defeat; it is the wisdom to let go of what was never mine to bear.

The yoke is gentle because it is shared. What makes the burden light is companionship, the nearness of the One who pulls with us toward home.

Matthew 11:25-30

Monday 13 July

The peace Christ brings is not the absence of conflict; truth, when it is loved, will sometimes divide.

To place God above even our dearest is not to love them less but to love them rightly, within a love that is larger than our own.

The cross set before us is the daily surrender of the self that clings. Here is the strange arithmetic of the kingdom: life is found only in the willingness to release it.

I have come to trust this losing. The costliest path opens, in the end, onto the simplest tenderness, a cup of water given without thought of return.

Matthew 10:34–11:1

Tuesday 14 July

The saddest possibility in the spiritual life is not opposition but indifference, mercy drawing near and finding no welcome.

Familiarity can become its own blindness. Those nearest to grace are sometimes the slowest to be changed by it, grown accustomed to a gift they no longer notice.

I hear in this a warning meant for the comfortable believer, for the one who has received much and presumed upon it.

Repentance is not the gloomy word we fear; it is simply the turning that lets the light back in. The tragedy is only ever that the heart, so close to mercy, remained unprepared to be transformed.

Matthew 11:20-24

Get Flashes of Insight

We respect your email privacy

Search

Focal Points

AI Church History Church Reform Clericalism Communications & Media Compassion Culture Culture & Faith Deacons Digital Age Donald Trump Eucharist Faith Dialogue Gaza Gender Equality Hope Human Dignity Inclusion Just War Laity Lay Leadership Leadership Lent Liturgy Middle East Ministry Mission Peace Pope Francis Pope Leo XIV Poverty Priesthood Scripture Social Justice Synodality Theology Tradition Vatican Vatican II War Women Women's Ordination Women Deacons Women in Ministry Youth & Young People

Donate

All services bringing Flashes of Insight are donated.

Significant costs, such as those associated with site hosting, site design, and email delivery, mount up.

Flashes of Insight will shortly look for donations.