Today we begin the season of Lent 2026. Jesus calls us to seek conversion, to turn away from our sins, to practice self-denial and charity, to pay attention to God. This “conversion” might seem impossible to us, especially when we begin to perceive how far our sins have taken us away from God, and how “settled” we have become with living lives of sin and selfishness, mediocrity of soul, boredom and distraction, smallness of love. We may feel like we are “stuck” in sin, or walled off by the limits of our own selfishness and pain.
In fact, we do not have any inherent self-initiating “power” to “convert ourselves,” but this is precisely why we must place our hope in God. He does not abandon us to the prisons of our own making. Rather, He offers us the grace of salvation. For God has so loved the world — each of us and all of us — that He has revealed Himself and sent His Only Son Jesus to save us from our sins and transform us into His children, so that we might share forever in His life.
Who is God? God is our Father who loves us with an infinite Love. He wants to forgive us, to change us, no matter how terrible our sins have been even to this very moment. He gives His inexhaustible love to us through the life, death, and resurrection of His Son, who “bears our sins” — who draws close to us in the very “places” in our lives that seem furthest from His love.
He is “already” with us, longing to forgive us and heal us. There is no sin that is so great that He will not forgive those who turn to Him. He has borne every sin in His Crucified Heart. The mystery of Jesus’s redemptive suffering accompanies us, surrounds us. Let us remember that He is here: and let us cry out to Him, beg that He will give us repentance for our sins (even if we can scarcely imagine what that means), implore Him to open our hearts, to let Him love us the way He so ardently wants to love us.
Ask, seek, knock. Don’t be afraid… or even just give Him that fear and ask Him to overcome it. This is why Jesus came to dwell with us, to die on the cross and rise from the dead, to remain with us in His Church by the power of the Holy Spirit. He loves us: he loves me, and you, and you, and you, and you…
Lent is a beautiful time for new beginnings, renewals, and growth. We need the “school” of this season of penance and preparation — of “prayer, fasting, and almsgiving” — so that by His grace we might learn and grow in obedience to God. To listen, to open up, to follow God and to give Him space, to recognize our emptiness and offer it to Him so that He can fill us.
Obedience to God really is the easy yoke (even though it often doesn't seem that way). The reality of "God's will" is the love of our Father giving us our very existence in this present moment, stirring our hearts by the grace of His Spirit, guiding us toward Him and protecting us from harm.
What do we achieve by escaping from His hands? Where are we going to go? We spend so many of our days evading Him, or “negotiating” with Him, or trying to forget Him, or just running away from Him. But the Lord is merciful. He doesn't want us to run forever and get nowhere. He wants us to “return to Him,” to trust in Him, to remain on the narrow path that He is opening up for us with tender care.
It is a narrow path, because it is the particular love that He has for each one of us, that corresponds to the unique personality that each of us possesses.
Each one of us is a person. Unrepeatable. Unique. Loved.
We are so precious and so profound: we do not know how dear and how deep we are, because we do not really know ourselves.
God knows us. His “will” is His wisdom and love for each one of us. He knows what is good for us, what will bring us joy. And so, each of us prays: “Have mercy on me, O God, in your goodness; in the greatness of your compassion wipe out my offense… Give me back the joy of of your salvation, and a willing spirit sustain in me” (Psalm 51:3, 14).






































