Wednesday, April 01, 2026

Perceiving Jesus as Lord

April 1, 2026
Wednesday of Holy Week
Readings for Today

Bernard van Orley, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons

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“Amen, I say to you, one of you will betray me.” Deeply distressed at this, they began to say to him one after another, “Surely it is not I, Lord?” He said in reply, “He who has dipped his hand into the dish with me is the one who will betray me.” Matthew 26:21–23

The Last Supper was both a glorious moment of grace and a painful moment of betrayal. During that meal, Jesus instituted the Eucharist, the gift of His Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity that perpetuates His saving sacrifice until the end of time. It was also at that holy meal that one of Jesus’ closest companions lied to His face and resolved to betray Him for thirty pieces of silver.

According to the Torah, if an ox killed a slave, the owner was required to pay the slave’s master thirty pieces of silver. The holy irony is that Judas betrayed Jesus for the price of a slave, even though Jesus came to set all people free from the slavery of sin.

When Jesus informs the Twelve that one of them would betray Him, He does so without anger or self-pity. His words reflect holy sorrow, accompanied by resignation, clarity, and gentleness. This sorrow is not merely sadness over His impending suffering but a loving sorrow for the lost soul of His betrayer. Deeply distressed, the disciples respond one after another, “Surely it is not I, Lord?”

The Greek word Kyrios, used here for “Lord,” denotes authority, mastery, and divine lordship. It appears frequently in the New Testament, primarily in reference to Jesus. In the Greek Old Testament (the Septuagint), Kyrios replaces YHWH, the sacred and unspoken name of God, about 7,000 times. By addressing Jesus as Kyrios, the eleven recognize Him not only as their teacher but as the Messiah and Son of God. This title expresses a relationship of trust and reverence, acknowledging Jesus’ divine authority.

When Judas speaks, he replaces Kyrios with RabbĂ­—“Surely it is not I, Rabbi?”—a transliteration of the Hebrew and Aramaic term meaning “teacher.” While respectful, this address falls short of acknowledging Jesus as Kyrios, focusing on Him as a human teacher rather than as Lord, Messiah, and God. This distinction is subtle but significant, inviting us to reflect on how we approach Jesus during the Holy Mass, since this conversation took place at the Last Supper—the first Mass. Do we approach Him with the heart of Judas, recognizing Him only in an earthly sense, or with the faith of the other disciples, seeing Him as Lord?

Judas did not hate Jesus. Unlike the Pharisees who sought His death, Judas regretted his betrayal, tried to return the thirty pieces of silver, and tragically “went off and hanged himself” (Matthew 27:3–5). His greatest failure was that he could not look beyond Jesus’ humanity to perceive His divinity. His eyes were fixed on himself—particularly his greed and selfish desires. In a similar way, when we approach the Eucharist without faith, surrender, and adoration, we risk falling into Judas’ error: focusing more on ourselves than on Christ.

At Mass, we say, “Lord, have mercy,” not “Rabbi, have mercy.” This prayer must come from the depths of our hearts, recognizing our need for mercy with God as its source. When we kneel at the consecration, our hearts should cry out, “My Lord and my God!” Yet, how often are we distracted, thinking about our plans after Mass? When we neglect to approach Jesus in faith and reverence, we miss the opportunity to encounter Him as He truly is—our Lord and our God.

Reflect today on how you participate in the Holy Mass. See yourself at the Last Supper, uniting that moment with every Mass you attend. Pray that you may receive Jesus with love, devotion, and reverence, looking beyond the appearance of bread and wine to encounter your Lord.

My Lord and my God, I believe in You, I adore You, I hope in Your mercy, and I love You with all my heart. Please fill me with a deep faith in Your presence, especially every time I attend Mass. May I recognize my need for You and surrender completely to Your mercy and love. Jesus, I trust in You.

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Saint Vitalis of Gaza

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For years, they called him a hypocrite and spat when he walked past — this holy man who spent every night in the brothels.
When he died, the women he’d been visiting finally spoke.
And the entire city wept at what they’d done.
Gaza, Palestine. Early 600s AD.
An elderly man arrived in the city after decades living as a desert hermit. His name was Vitalis. He was sixty years old — ancient by the standards of the time. Most men his age were preparing for death, seeking comfort and rest.
Vitalis did the opposite.
He sought the hardest physical labor he could find. Every day, despite his age and frail body, he hauled heavy stones at construction sites. The work destroyed his back, left his hands bleeding, made every step agony. But he kept working, earning a few coins each day.
Then, every single night, he went to the brothels.
Gaza was a deeply religious city — Christian, Jewish, and pagan communities all living side by side, all agreeing on one thing: prostitution was shameful. A moral stain. A sin.
And this old holy man — who’d spent decades in prayer and fasting in the desert — was visiting brothels every single night.
The whispers started immediately.
“Did you see him go in there again?”
“A hermit? A man of God? In those places?”
“He’s a fraud. A hypocrite. Preaching holiness while indulging in sin.”
People began to spit when Vitalis walked past. Former admirers turned away in disgust. Religious leaders denounced him. Parents used him as a warning: “See what happens when you pretend to be holy but your heart is corrupt?”
Vitalis heard every word. He saw the contempt in their eyes. He felt the shame they tried to heap on him.
He never defended himself. He never explained. He just kept going to the brothels, night after night after night.
Here’s what they didn’t know:
Vitalis never touched those women.
Every night, he would arrive at a brothel with the coins he’d earned that day from backbreaking labor. He would pay for a woman’s time — the same amount a client would pay.
But then he would sit down and talk to her.
“You don’t have to do this,” he would say quietly. “This isn’t all you are. This isn’t all you can be.”
Some women laughed at him. Some thought he was insane. Some told him to leave.
But some listened.
Vitalis would tell them: “I can help you get out. I can find you work. I can help you start over.”
To the women who wanted to leave but saw no way out, Vitalis offered something revolutionary: a plan.
He used his daily wages to provide dowries — the money that would make a woman marriageable in a culture where former prostitutes were considered unmarriageable. He arranged safe houses. He found them work as seamstresses, bakers, servants in respectable households. He connected them with families who would accept them.
He saved them. One by one. Night after night.
But here’s the crucial part: he made them promise not to tell anyone.
“Let them think what they want of me,” he would say. “But you — you get to start fresh. No one needs to know where you came from. Go. Build a new life. Be free.”
Vitalis understood something profound: if people knew he was helping prostitutes, they would watch which women he helped. Those women would be marked, identified, shamed. Their fresh start would be poisoned by the knowledge of their past.
So Vitalis chose to be misunderstood. He chose contempt. He chose to let Gaza believe him a hypocrite so that the women he saved could walk freely into new lives without suspicion following them.
For years, this went on. Vitalis hauling stones until his body screamed, then spending his wages to buy freedom for women no one else saw as worth saving. All while Gaza despised him for it.
Then one night, a man attacked him.
The attacker was never clearly identified — some say it was a jealous client, some say a pimp who’d noticed his girls kept leaving, some say it was a random act of violence in the dark streets. What matters is this: Vitalis was beaten severely.
He managed to drag himself back to his small room. But at sixty years old, after years of punishing physical labor, his body couldn’t recover. He had no money for a doctor — every coin went to the women. He had no family to care for him — he’d given up everything decades ago.
He died alone. In pain. In a bare room. While outside, Gaza talked about how fitting it was that the hypocrite had died in disgrace.
“Good riddance,” they said. “One less fraud pretending to be holy.”
The funeral would have been tiny — just a few obligatory attendants, maybe some curious onlookers hoping to gloat.
But then something happened.
A woman showed up. Then another. Then another.
Women Gaza hadn’t seen in years. Women who now had respectable lives — wives, mothers, shopkeepers, servants in good homes. Women who had escaped the brothels and built new lives that no one questioned because no one knew their pasts.
They came to Vitalis’s funeral. And they started talking.
“He saved me,” one said.
“He gave me money for a dowry when I had nothing,” said another.
“He found me work. He helped me escape,” said a third.
“He never touched me. He only talked to me like I was a human being. He told me I deserved better. He made me believe it.”
One by one, dozens of women revealed the truth.
Vitalis had never been a client. He’d been a rescuer. Every night Gaza saw him entering brothels in shame, he’d actually been entering in purpose — to offer hope to women everyone else had abandoned.
He’d spent years of hard labor, earning coins just to give them away. He’d endured public contempt, let his reputation be destroyed, accepted being called a hypocrite and a fraud — all so these women could have clean starts that no one would question.
He had died despised. And he’d chosen that. Deliberately. To protect them.
The realization hit Gaza like a tsunami.
The holy man they’d mocked was actually a saint. The hypocrite they’d scorned had been practicing a kind of love most of them couldn’t even imagine. The fraud they’d condemned had saved dozens of lives while they’d been condemning him.
The funeral procession grew. Hundreds of people came, weeping. The women he’d saved — now respectable wives and mothers — carried his body through the streets, openly mourning the man who’d given them futures.
Gaza wept. Not just for Vitalis. For what they’d done to him. For every moment they’d judged him. For every time they’d spat hatred at a man who was quietly revolutionizing lives through sacrificial love.
The Church later canonized him: Saint Vitalis of Gaza.
But here’s what makes this story cut so deep:
How many Vitalises are walking around right now? How many people are doing beautiful, hidden work while the world judges them? How many saints are we calling sinners because we can’t see past surfaces?
That person everyone gossips about — what if there’s a story you don’t know?
That neighbor everyone judges — what if they’re carrying a secret that would break your heart with its beauty?
Vitalis didn’t just save prostitutes. He proved something about human judgment: we’re almost always wrong when we’re certain we’re right.
He proved something about love: real love doesn’t care about reputation. It cares about results.
He proved something about holiness: sometimes the holiest act is letting people think you’re unholy so someone else can be free.
Think about that. He chose — chose — to be despised. He could have done his charity publicly. He could have been celebrated. He could have been honored while he lived.
Instead, he decided those women’s freedom mattered more than his reputation. Their fresh starts mattered more than his honor. Their futures mattered more than his present.
He died thinking Gaza hated him. And he was fine with that. Because the women he’d saved were free.
That’s not just sacrifice. That’s a kind of love most of us will never approach.
The next time you’re absolutely certain someone is a hypocrite, a fraud, a sinner — remember Vitalis.
Remember that while Gaza was spitting contempt at an old man entering brothels, that old man was quietly dismantling an industry of exploitation one rescued life at a time.
Remember that the person you’re judging might be carrying a burden you can’t see, doing work you can’t imagine, sacrificing in ways you’ll never know.
Vitalis kept his secret for an entire lifetime. He died with it. Only the women he’d saved knew the truth, and they kept it because he’d asked them to.
That’s the most beautiful secret in history: love so selfless it accepts hatred as the price of someone else’s freedom.
Gaza eventually understood. But too late to thank him. Too late to apologize. Too late to tell him he was seen, appreciated, honored.
All they could do was weep.
And maybe that’s the lesson. Maybe we should look at the people we judge — really look — and ask ourselves: what if I’m wrong? What if there’s a story I don’t know? What if this person I’m condemning is actually doing something beautiful that I’m too blind to see?
Vitalis didn’t need Gaza’s approval. He’d already found something better: purpose that transcended reputation.
But Gaza needed Vitalis. They just didn’t know it until he was gone.
In honor of Saint Vitalis of Gaza (died c. 625 AD), who spent years being despised so that women discarded by society could be saved. Who chose contempt over credit. Who died alone so others could live free.
The world called you a hypocrite. The women you saved knew the truth. And history remembers.

Human Trials and God’s Grace

March 31, 2026
Tuesday of Holy Week
Readings for Today

Metropolitan Museum of Art, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons

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Reclining at table with his disciples, Jesus was deeply troubled and testified, “Amen, amen, I say to you, one of you will betray me.” John 13:21

Love, betrayal, divine glory, and human weakness permeate today’s Gospel, offering us a contrast of emotions and experiences to ponder. All forms of joys and trials affect our lives. Life is not “a bed of roses,” as the old saying goes. Besides joy, love, and excitement, we are touched by hurt, anger, fear, and anxiety. The same was true of Jesus’ human experience with His disciples and all those who encountered Him. Through no fault of His own, Jesus was a polarizing figure. Some people loved Him deeply—such as His Blessed Mother, John, Mary of Bethany, and Mary of Magdala—while others despised Him, such as the scribes and Pharisees. Today’s Gospel presents us with another figure whose life added great drama to the Gospel story—not because he loved or hated Jesus with passion—but because he was greedy and spiritually misguided.

Today we read Saint John’s account of the Last Supper. Jesus and His disciples were gathered in the Upper Room to celebrate the Passover meal. He began by washing the disciples’ feet, a profound act of humble service. After this, Jesus prophesied that one of the Twelve would betray Him. When John, the Beloved Disciple, asked who the traitor was, Jesus identified Judas by handing him a morsel of food—an act of intimate friendship and trust. At that moment, “Satan entered him.” With both meekness and authority, Jesus told Judas: “What you are going to do, do quickly.” And immediately, “Judas took the morsel and left at once. And it was night” (John 13:27, 30). The night’s unfolding drama did not end with Judas’s betrayal. Jesus also revealed to Peter, “Amen, amen, I say to you, the cock will not crow before you deny me three times” (John 13:38).

Though Jesus was God, He was also fully human, capable of feeling every human emotion to a much greater degree than we are, due to the perfection of His humanity. Therefore, within Jesus’ human soul we discover a profound contrast of emotions to the full range of human experience. One of the Twelve will hand Him over to death later that evening, while another, the one He would entrust with the leadership of His Church, would deny he even knew Jesus. On top of that, Jesus was fully aware that later that night He would be arrested, tortured, falsely accused, imprisoned, and await the sentence of death in the morning. He not only felt the effects of these events within His humanity, but His empathy enabled Him to perceive the experiences of the Twelve, His mother, and all who hated Him. He felt their pain, confusion, and anger far before they did, and He felt those emotions much deeper than they ever would. Only His mother, who would stand by Him faithfully at the Cross, would experience the depth of human suffering that Jesus felt within His soul.

Why would God take on human nature and permit Himself to experience such pain? Because all human emotions—even pain—-needed to be intermingled with divine love. Because of the hypostatic union, all of Christ’s human experiences—whether joyful or sorrowful—were perfectly united with divine love and transformed into sources of grace for those whom He loves. His courageous entrance into His Passion makes it possible for us to endure our own human trials with His strength, hope, and peace.

Reflect today on your life and the experiences you endure and enjoy. If some experiences are overwhelming, know that Jesus perfectly understands, deeply empathizes, and offers a remedy. He invites you into His own trials, promising you His divine strength to untangle confusion and flood you with peace. Unite the blessings you enjoy with Jesus’ Passion as well. Among Jesus’ greatest earthly delights was the love His mother lavished upon Him, especially as she stood faithfully at the foot of the Cross. With our Lord, receive your blessings with gratitude and allow them to strengthen you so that you may endure your own daily trials, guided by His meekness and authority, leading you to a share in His Resurrection.

My empathetic and understanding Lord, by taking on our human nature, You permitted Yourself to experience everything we experience. Though sinless, You endured the effects of sin with suffering and love. Please draw me into Your human joys and trials so that I can live my life in You, by You, and through You, receiving grace through Your humanity so as to share in Your glory and divinity. Jesus, I trust in You.