This morning it was 36 degrees and everything felt wet and soft, like the snow had turned to sponge. The yard squished under my boots. Mini didn’t mind at all—she tested every puddle like it was her job.
Robert picked us up as usual and right on time. The roads were muddy but we made it. Sister Mary Claire reminded me to step carefully so I wouldn’t bring half the farm into St. Mary’s.
Inside church it was warm and quiet, and the sanctuary lamp glowed red. Father LeRoy’s homily followed today’s meditation from The Circling Year: loving Jesus isn’t something we do only when it feels sweet and easy. He said we can’t wait for “warm feelings” to prove our love is real. Real love stays steady even when the heart feels ordinary.
I kept thinking of the little St. Thérèse recipe card with the felt backing—her prayer and that line:
“I do not desire sensible love. If it is sensible to love Jesus, that is enough for me.”
It made me realize I sometimes want prayer to feel like sunshine. But maybe loving Jesus quietly—especially when I feel plain and distracted—is still love, and maybe it even pleases Him more.
On the ride home, Sister Mary Claire said St. Thérèse teaches us to do small things for Jesus without measuring our feelings. Robert said the best farm work is often the unnoticed kind. Mini fell asleep as soon as we got home, muddy paws and all, like she’d been on an important mission.
Tonight I set St. Thérèse’s card on my desk and tried to be glad for quiet love.
Evening Prayer
Sweet Jesus,
Teach me to love You whether I feel it or not.
Let my love be steady like the sanctuary lamp.
Help me do small things with great love,
and be faithful to You in the quiet.
If it is sensible to love You,
that is enough for me.
Amen.
Love,
Kathy







