137.Tuesday Stephen 'Into your hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit.'
✨ From Stiff-Necked to Surrendered
“Into your hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit.”
In Acts 7, Stephen speaks with clarity:
“You stiff-necked people, uncircumcised in heart and ears… you always oppose the Holy Spirit.”
A baptized Catholic is holding the treasure of grace—for peace, happiness, and a state of contentment. Yet many remain in a stiff-necked state, still uncircumcised in heart and ears—resisting grace, tangled in the vanities of life. Externally marked, but internally unformed.
The only solution is to recognize the call—the power we are holding. The call to become sons of God. Baptism is the great opportunity in the world; it initiates the process. It is part of a 2000-year legacy. Ignorance about grace is the only problem of a Catholic. That is the only true pain. We continue to chase vanity and anxiety until we realize the truth.
ChristusWay Reflections help a person recognize the truths and grace already present in day-to-day realities. They reflect what is happening within life, helping the mind see truth more clearly and the heart respond to it more freely. Knowing the truth becomes freedom. And from this freedom, the heart begins to seek truth more deeply and cry out for the real daily Bread. Joined with the Rosary, these reflections steady the heart in prayer and anchor the soul in Christ’s presence. Together, ChristusWay and the Rosary bring clarity to the mind, peace to the heart, and harmony to the inner life.
But when grace is recognized, something begins to loosen. The inner knots of fear, confusion, anxiety, guilt, resentment, attachment, compulsive habits, divided desires, pride, and resistance begin to untie. The heart becomes receptive. And, like Saint Stephen, the person begins to see beyond the visible.
“Behold, I see the heavens opened and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God.”
This is the shift—from resistance to vision. Once truth is revealed, a cry within us is born: “Lord, give us this bread.” This cry gradually grows into intimacy.
In John 6, the crowd says, “Sir, give us this bread always.” And Jesus responds, “I am the bread of life; whoever comes to me will never hunger, and whoever believes in me will never thirst.”
This realization changes desire itself. It moves the heart from seeking temporary satisfaction to seeking Christ. It awakens a deeper longing—not for things, but for Him.
From this, mutual affection grows—between the soul and Christ. Hunger and thirst begin to fade, replaced by interior peace.
And this journey reaches its fulfillment in surrender:
“Into your hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit.”
From stiffness to openness,
from hunger to fulfillment,
from resistance to surrender—
this is the movement of grace.