Monday - June 1, 2026
SCRIPTURE
Romans 8.9a
“You, however, are not in the realm of the flesh but are in the realm of the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God lives in you.
WORDS OF HOPE
Today’s weird holiday is Superman Day. (commemorating the superhero’s birthday in one of the comics) If my friends know anything about me at all, they know I’ve been a Superman fan nearly all my life. It started when I was two or three years old watching the old 1950s TV show starring George Reeves. The program felt magical because even though I didn’t understand much of the storyline, I loved watching Superman leap out of windows to fly or duck behind a boulder to change from Superman into Clark Kent.
It wasn’t until years later that I realized Superman had been created in the 1930s, long before television. Oddly enough, an early version of the character wasn’t even a hero, but a villain bent on world domination.
I also discovered Superman’s creators were Jewish, and that the character carried parallels to Moses being sent down the river in a basket to escape death — much like young Kal-El being sent away from the doomed planet Krypton in a rocket.
The metaphors don’t stop there.
Like Jesus, Superman was initially misunderstood — an outsider observing humanity while trying to guide and protect it. Even Jesus was careful about revealing His true nature to everyone around Him. That mirrors Superman’s earliest stories, where he guarded his identity from Lois Lane, Jimmy Olsen, and Perry White.
Of course, modern audiences can no longer pretend a pair of glasses would fool Lois Lane. Superman is the real identity, while mild-mannered Clark Kent is the disguise.
Both Jesus and Superman are described as possessing powers beyond mortal men. Yet even Superman cannot change water into wine or restore sight to the blind. Jesus changed the course of human history, though many interpretations religion itself still seems to divide humanity as much as unite it.
And despite all our wars, suffering, and confusion, often neither Superman nor Jesus appears able — or willing — to save us from ourselves.
That is the human conundrum.
Even if Superman were real, he couldn’t be everywhere at once. That kind of omniscience belongs only to the Almighty Creator.
So why do we sometimes act as though God selectively saves a chosen few while ignoring the rest? At times, that almost makes God seem like a supervillain Himself — strangely enough, much like Superman originally began. In one episode of I Love Lucy, George Reeves appears as Superman and asks the children, “Any of you kids want to wrestle?” On the surface that would make God the greatest Joker of them all.
In our frustrating and confusing world, sometimes it feels as if God asks us the same question every day. But remember the Jewish roots of our superhero’s origins. When Jacob wrestled with God, he was truly wrestling with his own self-created conflicts. The result? He not only saved his nation; he became the nation. Jacob discovered that his secret identity all along had been Israel.
How about you? Are you ready to take off those glasses and discover your Super Self?
PRAYER
Help us to understand that waiting for mythic heroes or gods to save the day is futile when we realize that the Spirit of God has been living inside us all along. Amen
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Charlie Rose
Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
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