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The City That Could Not Hide Its Hunger

 Before the first train sighed beneath the city and before the early traffic began gathering itself along Constitution Avenue, Jesus stood alone near the Lincoln Memorial while the sky over Washington, DC was still dark enough to hold the last of the night. The long steps behind him were quiet. The air carried that cool edge that belongs only to the hour before dawn, when even a city built on urgency has not yet put its face on. Across the Reflecting Pool, the Washington Monument stood pale and still, and the faint lights from distant buildings made the water look like it was keeping secrets. Jesus had come there before sunrise, not to be seen, not to make a moment of Himself, but to pray. He bowed His head and grew still in a way that made the whole space feel still with Him. Nothing around Him was dramatic. No wind rose. No sound interrupted the morning. He simply prayed with the kind of quiet that seemed deeper than silence, as if His heart had opened fully before the Father an...

Jesus in Baltimore: Where the Water Carries What People Don’t Say

 Before dawn had fully opened over Baltimore , the city was still holding that gray hour when shapes looked softer than they would an hour later and even hard places seemed willing to be quiet for a minute. The harbor lights still shimmered in broken lines across the water, and the air coming off the Patapsco carried a damp chill that settled into stone, metal, and skin. Along the edge near Harbor place, where the city would soon begin filling with footsteps, horns, buses, deliveries, and voices, Jesus stood alone facing the water with His hands loosely folded and His head bowed. He was not in a hurry. He did not pray as though trying to force heaven open. He prayed the way someone listens to a voice that never fails. Around Him the city rested between night and morning. A gull called once and then again. A maintenance truck rolled somewhere in the distance. Light touched the tops of buildings first and left the streets below in shadow. He remained there long enough for the silence...