Here I am! • Fri.05.15.26

God doesn’t just call people who are ready—He makes us ready when we say yes.

When we feel a push to help someone, we often worry if we are good enough. But we believe that when we say “yes,” God gives us the help we need to do the job.

Every time we say “Here I am,” we get the strength we need for that task. Our work doesn’t depend on being perfect; it depends on being willing to help.

Today, when we see a chance to help, we won’t make excuses. We will just say, “I’m here,” and trust that we will find a way to do it.

Based on the Word of Life, February 2004, by Chiara Lubich, Servant of God.

✝️ Prayer for Readiness

Lord, here we are. Send us where we are needed today. Help us say “yes” to Your plans, trusting You will give us what we need. Amen.

A prayer a day, keeps the soul from drifting away

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

Look Up in the Sky • Darem Placer

Free Will

We are free to choose—but every choice quietly shapes who we are becoming.

Catherine of wasn’t a distant thinker writing from comfort. We see someone who lived in the middle of real life—noise, sickness, conflict—and still learned to listen deeply. Born in Siena in 1347, she chose a life of prayer within the Dominican Order, but her voice reached far beyond her home. She wrote to leaders, challenged decisions, and spoke with a clarity that felt grounded, not borrowed. Her work, The Dialogue of Divine Providence, reads like a conversation because for her, it was. Not theory, not abstraction, but something lived.

In that conversation, one idea keeps returning: free will. We are free. Not partly, not occasionally, but truly free. We are not built to be controlled or forced into goodness. If love is real, we have to choose it. That is the dignity and the risk placed in our hands.

Saint Catherine helps us see this in a very concrete way. We are not carried through life. We walk. Every small decision—how we respond, how we speak, what we hold on to or let go—these are movements of our will. We can move toward truth or away from it, toward love or toward ourselves. And she does not soften the reality that God allows this, even when we choose wrongly. That freedom is real, but it is not empty. Every choice has direction, and every direction forms something in us.

But we are not left alone with it. Free will can drift if it stands by itself, so she speaks about grace. Not control, not something that cancels our choices, but help. It is what steadies us when truth is harder to choose, what strengthens us when walking away would be easier. We still choose, but we are not choosing without light.

Her message lands in a quiet but firm way. We often wait for big moments to define who we are, but she points us to something closer. The small choices, the hidden ones, the ones no one notices—this is where our direction is shaped. This is where our life is being formed.

And if we take it seriously, we realize this is not just her story. We are already in that same conversation. Every ordinary day, every simple decision, we are answering with our lives.

Let’s keep learning the saints’ way—day by day.

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

Praying Without Words • Darem Placer