“Let all the earth cry out to God with joy.” - Psalms 66

As I was driving home from work last week, I passed two young boys riding their bikes on the sidewalk. As I drove by them, one boy was enthusiastically moving his arm up and down signaling that he wanted me to honk my horn. I instantly flashed back to a middle school field trip when my classmates and I were signaling big rigs on the freeway in the same fashion to honk for us. Mile after mile no trucks did until, right before our exit, one trucker obliged and the entire school bus of middle schoolers erupted into cries of joy and victory. As I smiled at the joy of that memory, I honked my horn. Sure enough, the boys reacted the same way: they thrusted their arms in the air and shouted cries of joy and victory. All that joy for a horn.

When did finding joy become so difficult?

When we were young, the smallest things could bring us joy. I see it in my children. My son loves when I bring home magazines I get sent that would normally go straight in the recycling bin. He gets so excited to thumb through the pages, draw in them, and acts as if they are the greatest gift he has ever received.

When did we lose that sense of joy, excitement and wonder?

I once heard it said that when God creates us, He reveals to us all the mysteries, secrets, wonders, and knowledge of the universe. Then we are born, and we begin to forget.

Have you forgotten what it is like to feel joy?

What is getting in the way?

Jesus tells us in Mark 10:15: “Amen, I say to you, whoever does not accept the kingdom of God like a child will not enter it.” The world wants to steal our innocence, rob us of our joy, and pressure us to grow up quickly to act like adults long before we become them. Once we are adults, we realize what we lost or left behind and we become nostalgic for simpler times and then do all we can to try and stay young. We are so set on maturing and taking ourselves seriously that we brush past or leave behind all the beautiful things that make up our childhood.

How can we regain what we have lost?

Jesus is not asking us to act like children by being helpless or immature. He is asking us to emulate the qualities children have that make them more receptive to God’s love: 

Joy.

Trust.

Laughter.

Authenticity.

Obedience.

Imagination.

Fun.

These are not lost to us. These things are available to us every day if we stop and allow ourselves to be present to God, to be present to who we really are, and to let go of who we think everyone else wants us to be. 

We can find joy by noticing the small honk-your-horn-just-for-the-fun-of-it moments and acting on them. 

We can find joy by not taking ourselves so seriously.

We can find joy by focusing less on our own happiness and more on bringing others joy.

Small acts of kindness and presence can bring a person joy and change the course of their day, perhaps even their entire life.

What small thing is the Lord inviting you to do for someone today that will bring them joy?

Think about the $5 you might spend every day on a cup of coffee or a snack. Could you go without that luxury and use that $5 or some other small amount of money to be a game-changer in someone else’s day today? 

What could you do to make an impact, put a smile on someone’s face, or bring joy into the world with only $5?

Pay for someone’s small item in the express lane at the grocery store.

Buy some flowers and give them to a stranger.

Put some money in someone’s gas tank.

Buy some scratchers and wish a few people luck.

Buy some donuts or a small pizza and surprise your coworkers.

Whatever it is, try and put that idea into action this week. Not only will you be bringing the joy of this Psalm to life for someone else, you will feel that childlike joy from helping someone else remember the joy they may have lost.

What small thing made you genuinely happy as a child that you have stopped noticing as an adult? Can you do it again this week without irony or self-consciousness?

Which childlike qualities do you most need to recover right now, and what is stopping you?

When you are most caught up in what you think others want from you, what would it look like to step out of that for a day?

Who around me looks like they have forgotten how to find joy? What would genuinely surprise them?

What ordinary moment is God inviting you into this week that you might ordinarily dismiss as too small to matter?

I am praying for you. Please pray for me and my family, and I will see you in the Eucharist.

Matt

This reflection is based on the Responsorial Psalm for this Sunday, May 10th, 2026, the Sixth Sunday of Easter: Psalms 66:1-3, 4-5, 6-7, 16, 20.

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Psalm Reflection: The Fifth Sunday of Easter - Cycle A