#jesus

Reflections

Two reflections per week on Jesus, faith, and life today.

RSS

What He Wouldn’t Click

Jesus stood on the dry edge of the city with a phone that looked dead on purpose. No posts. No food. Just wind, hunger, and the silence most people run from. In 2026, the pressure hit him with the logic of a perfect algorithm: turn pain into instant relief, turn faith into a public stunt, turn worship into influence. A loaf. A rooftop moment. A world-sized audience if he bowed to the wrong thing. He did not answer like a man losing control. He answered like someone who knew that hunger is real, but it does not get to rule him. What keeps a person alive when cravings, applause, and power all promise quick results? Not the shortcut. Truth matters more than speed, and success is never worth giving your soul to the wrong thing. When the noise finally cracked, the city was still loud and his stomach was still empty, but the easy way out had lost its shine. The next urge was no longer steering him.

#jesus

Read →

Before She Hit Send

Ava sat on the edge of her bed, lit by the cold glow of her phone, scrolling through strangers tearing a girl apart for her voice, her clothes, and her cheap ring light. In 2026, the comment box made cruelty feel easy, and Ava had already typed hers. Then Jesus met her there, not arguing about the video, but turning the light back on her own week: the lie at home, the screenshot she had shared, the apology she kept delaying. What right does anyone have to zoom in on someone else’s mess while hiding their own? He made the lesson plain: people cannot see clearly enough to help until they are honest about themselves first. Ava deleted the comment, sent the apology, and turned her phone face down. The video stayed imperfect, and so did she, but she was no longer standing above another person. The room was the same; her eyes were not.

#jesus

Read →

When Panic Loses the Wheel

Maya was on the first train with her laptop open before sunrise, watching Slack light up with talk of another AI restructuring while her chest tightened again. In 2026, she kept counting deadlines, bills, and backup plans, as if enough worry could make her safe. At the station, Jesus stood beside her while pigeons pecked at a fallen pastry and the city kept moving. He looked at her screen, then at her, and said she was worth more than what she could secure for herself. If worry cannot give her one good hour, why keep letting it act like her boss? He told her to put God first in the next thing she did and choose what was right, kind, and true today. That was the point: panic is not control, and tomorrow does not get to rule today. When the train doors opened, the job risk was still real, but it was no longer on the throne. The fear of the next quarter had lost the steering wheel.

#jesus

Read →

Mercy Wasn't Losing

Lena sat on the train home with her thumb stalled over the comment that had started it. All afternoon her friends had turned a classmate into a joke, and she had written one calm line telling them to stop. In 2026, that was enough to make her phone explode with laughing emojis, screenshots, and strangers telling her to disappear. Jesus sat across from her under the flicker of the carriage lights, hoodie up, looking at the screen and then at her face. He said God does not call cruel people blessed just because they win the room. He stays close to people who know they need him, who hurt without going hard, who choose mercy and make peace. If doing what is right costs her the crowd, does that make kindness weak, or does it show the crowd has forgotten what strength is? The train kept rattling on. When her stop came, the comments were still there, but they no longer sounded like a verdict; the need to be approved had lost the wheel, and mercy no longer looked small.

#jesus

Read →