
Our reflection verse today comes from the Second Letter to Timothy with the Apostle Paul’s simple but profound statement. In these few words, Paul identifies both the source of his mission and the purpose of his life. He is an apostle not because of his own accomplishments, intelligence, or holiness, but because of the will of God. His life has been caught up in a larger story—the promise of life revealed in Christ Jesus.
Paul understands that his life has become meaningful not because of what he has done for God, but because of what God has done for him. Once a persecutor of Christians, he was unexpectedly encountered by Christ and forever changed. The story of Paul is ultimately a story of grace. Many of us can relate to that experience more than we might realize.
Paul described himself as one “born abnormally,” someone whose journey to faith did not follow the expected path. In truth, few of us arrive at faith in a perfect or orderly way. We come carrying wounds, doubts, disappointments, and regrets. Some have known God from childhood; others discover Him later in life. Some have wandered far from the faith before finding their way home. Some struggle daily to believe. Yet God meets each of us exactly where we are.
Paul also reminds us that our lives are rooted in “the promise of life in Christ Jesus.” So many people today are searching for life—for peace, purpose, belonging, and hope. We often look for these things in success, possessions, achievements, or the approval of others, only to discover that they never fully satisfy the deepest longings of the human heart. The life that Christ promises is something far richer. It is the assurance that we are loved by God, accompanied by Him in every circumstance, and destined for communion with Him forever.
Perhaps the greatest lesson from this verse is that every Christian has a story of grace. We may not have experienced a dramatic conversion like Paul’s on the road to Damascus, but each of us has been sought out by God. Each of us has been called by name. Each of us has been invited into the promise of life that Christ offers. Our task is not to compare our journey with anyone else’s, but simply to trust that the God who began a good work in us will continue it.
Paul’s words encourage us to look at our lives with gratitude rather than regret. We may not have chosen the circumstances of our birth, our struggles, or the twists and turns of our journey. Yet God has been present through it all. The promise of Christ is that no life is too broken, no past too complicated, and no heart too wounded to become a place where God’s grace can dwell and flourish. And the good news of the Gospel is not that we have found God, but that God has found us.