
By Saturday in Easter Week, something rather wonderful has happened.
Easter has stopped being an event…
…and has started becoming a way of life.
Now, this is not immediately obvious.
On the surface, things look quite ordinary. The lilies are still present but beginning to lean slightly in a manner that suggests they have given everything for liturgical excellence. The chocolate situation has reached what experts refer to as “selective scarcity.” The calendar, with remarkable boldness, has continued moving forward.
And yet.
Christ is still risen.
Which means that the most extraordinary truth in the universe is now quietly sitting in the middle of an otherwise ordinary Saturday.
And it is making itself comfortable.
This is where Easter becomes deeply joyful — and slightly mischievous.
Because resurrection does not simply arrive with a flourish and then politely withdraw.
It lingers.
It settles in.
It begins rearranging things without asking permission.
You may notice this in small ways.
A lightness in your spirit that wasn’t there before.
A willingness to hope where you had previously decided not to bother.
A strange and delightful suspicion that perhaps grace is more active than you had given it credit for.
This is resurrection at work.
Not always dramatic.
But persistent.
The disciples experienced this as well.
After the astonishment of Easter morning, Jesus keeps appearing. Not always with grand announcements, but in quiet, ordinary settings.
By a lakeshore.
In a room.
Along a road.
And each time, the same message unfolds:
“This is real.
This is lasting.
This is for you.”
Which is, if we are being honest, almost too much joy for one week to contain.
And so the Church, in its considerable wisdom, stretches Easter out over fifty days — because it takes time for this kind of joy to settle into the bones.
Time for it to move from excitement… to confidence.
From celebration… to transformation.
From “Christ is risen!” to “Christ is risen… and now I live differently because of it.”
Saturday is where that shift begins to take root.
Because by now, we are no longer simply reacting to Easter.
We are beginning to live it.
Which may explain why even very ordinary moments start to feel quietly radiant.
Making coffee becomes an act of gratitude.
Conversations carry a little more kindness.
Even the most routine tasks seem to take place in a world that has been gently, irreversibly changed.
Because it has.
The tomb is empty.
And once a tomb is empty, nothing is ever quite the same again.
So if today feels calm — if the great explosion of Easter joy has softened into something steadier — do not mistake that for a loss of energy.
It is something better.
Joy that has decided to stay.
Joy that has unpacked its bags, arranged the furniture, and intends to remain indefinitely.
Joy that no longer needs to shout…
because it knows it is true.
So go ahead.
Live this Saturday lightly.
Laugh easily.
Hope boldly.
Because Easter has not gone anywhere.
It has simply moved in.
Alleluia.
Companion Prayer
Risen Lord,
Your joy does not fade —
it settles into our lives.
Let your resurrection
take root in us.
Shape our days with hope,
our hearts with gratitude,
and our lives with quiet confidence.
Teach us to live
as people in whom Easter has made a home.
And let your joy remain with us,
today and always.
Alleluia. Amen.








