December 5, 2025 // Friday of the First Week of Advent
Read the Word // Open your Bible to today’s First Reading: Isaiah 29:17-24
Reflect on the Word //
I put my phone down, stunned and grieved. Another violent attack, more bloodshed, more devastation, more senseless violence. It seemed like the news lately brought an endless stream of pain.
I groaned in the depths of my being, feeling very much lost in the “valley of death” (see Psalm 23:4). How long would we have to grope around in darkness? How long would the long shadow hang over us, cold and dank?
I moved on with my chores, heavy-limbed and clammy. Not much got done that afternoon.
That day, God didn’t take away my pain. He invited me into His own.
But in the evening, as I clutched my rosary, He also sent His Holy Spirit to remind me of the words of Saint Ignatius of Loyola in his eighth Rule for the Discernment of Spirits, encouraging those experiencing spiritual desolation: “Let him who is in desolation labor to be in patience [. . .] and let him think he will soon be consoled” (source).
In other words, this too shall pass.
The sun will rise again, the Lord reminded me, and you will feel warmth on your arms and your face. You will laugh, and dance, and feel joy. The heaviness will lift. Life is a litany of rising and falling, a sea of waves and seasons.
In the First Reading today, we see a similar promise: “Thus says the Lord GOD: But a very little while, and Lebanon shall be changed into an orchard, and the orchard be regarded as a forest!” (Isaiah 29:17, emphasis mine)
We tend to forget, in times of suffering, that it won’t always be this way. It’s a fallen human tendency to feel that things will always be the same. Moreover, we have an enemy with a vested interest in keeping us forgetful of the “rising again” part of the story. It’s his way of tempting us to despair.
But sister, God wants to remind us that this pain, in the grand scheme of things—and even in your life—is for “a very little while.” He, Who has given you a share in His suffering, will not give you a portion longer than you can bear.
And you will laugh again.
Relate to the Lord // Pick up and pray your Rosary today. As you meditate on the mysteries, remember that every detail of your story is held and revealed in His.
