Friday, June 19, 2026

You are Safe in Love:

 


The Twelfth Sunday of Ordinary Time2026 

June 21, 2026

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Jeremiah 20:10-13; Psalm 69; Romans 5:12-15; Matthew 10:26-33

 

The prophet Jeremiah writes about a hostile environment that makes it challenging to practice one’s faith and to speak rightly. We hear this reading during Holy Week to emphasize the difficulty of the Suffering Servant. We know from experience that the human heart can be terrorizing, and we suffer at the expense of verbal bullies who impose their thoughts upon others. It takes courage, fortitude, and safety to speak from one’s faith. Most times, we keep our thoughts inside until we feel safe. 

 

In Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus tells his Disciples that they do not have to be silenced by the fear that others impose upon them. Those who are bullies do not see that they take away the freedom of others. They do not even perceive that they are bullies. Those who speak authoritatively and excessively do not realize that they silence others. Those who are aggressive think they are acting rightly for others. Someone recently told me in absolute terms that he disagreed with someone who spoke in absolute terms. Why can we not see that what we find critical in others represents what we do ourselves. The fault we see if others is the fault we need to own.

 

Jesus continues to offer hope though. He says, ‘be patient.’ The bully will find herself isolated and lonely, perhaps misunderstood. She will continue to blame others because life did not go as she planned. The know-it-all will have an epiphany. The aggressive person will have a day of reckoning when he recognizes his vulnerability. Jesus reminds us that whatever harm a person intends or is unaware of doing will cause us harm, but it will not erode our soul or our conscience. No one can touch that. It is off limits to the bully, and we are reminded that control is an illusion. When someone thinks they can control the behavior or thoughts of another person, they are living an illusion that will crumble. Those are focused on their own ego needs says, “My will be done,” and so they focus on getting attention, admiration, comfort, security, pleasure, and one’s very self. For an evolving Christian, we pray, “Not my will be done, but God’s will be done.” 

 

Jesus tells us that as we are his friends, we enter into the Cosmic Christ, a human-divine being that is higher and greater that ourselves. We are elevated. Consciousness of God is the deepest part of us, and that cannot be harmed. There is a fire within our souls that keeps us moving towards God, and it moves us to increased transcendence. The very center of God is love and the center of our soul is love. This is foundational and the heart can only move towards a more understanding, magnanimous love. Jesus rightly reminds us that we have no worries. Though we may be near people who are trying to fill their ego needs, your Christian heart is evolving towards the freedom of a larger life in Christ.

 

Our faith is an energy that allows us to create and bring love to loveless places. Our faith is a fire that transforms the souls of others who seek the divine. Faith allows us to look at suffering and endure it. We can look at a world that may be unresponsive to human suffering, and we have the courage and fire to amorize the world, that is, to fill the world with love, to transform the world with love. This is a love that has no fear. This is a love that holds you preciously in admiration. Please accept this love. We need this love to permeate the world.

 

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