Sen. Marco Rubio tweeted a pair of Bible verses early on Tuesday morning, and boy were people sent into a tizzy as to just what it could possibly mean.

"Peace I leave with you;my peace I give you.Not as the world gives do I give to you.Do not let your hearts be troubled or afraid."John 14:27 — Marco Rubio (@marcorubio) May 16, 2017

"Commit to the Lord whatever you do & your plans will succeed.The Lord works out everything for his own ends....." — Marco Rubio (@marcorubio) May 16, 2017

Like this person, a senior writer at Shareblue, who said they were "unsettling" and then said that these verses are one someone turns to during a "darkest hour."

GOP Senator @marcorubio is tweeting out Bible verses this morning, and it's...unsettling: pic.twitter.com/vaYpWmVJHg — leah mcelrath ?? (@leahmcelrath) May 16, 2017

@marcorubio My understanding – and the input from those in my mentions – is these are the Bible verses to which one turns in one's darkest hour. — leah mcelrath ?? (@leahmcelrath) May 16, 2017

A WaPo columnist suggested he was hacked:

And still others expressed concern for his mental state:

@leahmcelrath @marcorubio eek! can someone do a welfare check on Marco? I'm...concerned. — Alyssa Hertzig (@alyssahertzig) May 16, 2017

Anyhow, if someone had taken the 15 seconds to Google "today's readings" like I did prior to writing this piece, they'd spot something familiar in today's (May 16, 2017) Gospel reading, which was John 14:27-31.

My goodness. It looks as though Rubio went to daily Mass and then tweeted about it. He's clearly lost his mind. Send help.

Sometimes a Bible verse is just a Bible verse, and Rubio has tweeted them before. Not everything has to have a deeper meaning--especially if it's a quote from the same Gospel reading Catholics around the globe are are hearing this morning. Everybody needs to relax just a little bit.