January 15, 2026 // Thursday of the First Week in Ordinary Time
Read the Word // Open your Bible to today’s Gospel: Mark 1:40-45
Reflect on the Word //
I can still remember a season when I felt like I had to keep parts of myself hidden. I showed up to conversations smiling, doing fine on the outside, but inside I carried questions, grief, and doubts I wasn’t sure anyone could handle. What if I spoke honestly and people pulled away? What if my mess was too much? So I kept it in, and the silence grew heavier.
I felt both present and absent at the same time—surrounded by people, but unsure if anyone really saw me. It wasn’t that others had rejected me; it was that I had already decided my struggles weren’t worth bringing into the light.
In the Gospel of Mark today, a man with leprosy steps out of isolation and kneels before Jesus. With trembling honesty he says, “If you wish, you can make me clean” (Mark 1:40). He risks exposure, ridicule, even rejection—what he receives instead is compassion. Jesus doesn’t recoil or shame him. He reaches out His hand, touches the untouchable, and restores him to wholeness.
That moment reveals something vital about God’s Heart. We don’t have to hide our wounds or pretend we’re cleaner than we are. The leper’s prayer is so simple—neither polished nor lengthy—and yet Jesus moves toward him. Healing begins not with perfection, but with honesty and trust. The God we meet in Christ is not repelled by our brokenness; He is moved with pity and eager to draw near.
We may not carry leprosy, but we all carry burdens—questions, struggles, regrets—that tempt us to stay silent. This passage invites us to bring them into the open before God, believing that His willingness is greater than our fear.
As a people, may we resist the urge to hide behind masks of strength. Instead, I pray this is an invitation to be a community where vulnerability is met with compassion, where no wound is too deep and no person too far gone to be touched by the healing mercy of Christ.
Relate to the Lord // Are you tempted to hide parts of yourself from others or from the Lord? Tell Jesus about that tendency and consider sharing those parts with Him.
