When Resurrection Follows Us Into the Parking Lot

There is a moment every Sunday that deserves far more theological attention than it usually receives.

It is not the sermon — though I remain very fond of those.
It is not the hymns — though they do their very best.
It is not even the final blessing — noble and dignified as that moment may be.

It is…

…the parking lot.

Now, if you have ever observed a congregation after the dismissal, you will know that the parking lot is where real life resumes with impressive speed.

People greet one another warmly.
Announcements are clarified.
Plans are made.
Someone remembers something they meant to say.
Someone else remembers something they meant to bring.

And somewhere in the midst of all this, keys are located, conversations linger, and at least one person wonders whether they have locked the car.

It is a deeply human moment.

And it is precisely where Easter joy begins to do some of its most important work.

Because the question of Easter is not only, “Did Christ rise?”

The Church has already answered that — loudly, repeatedly, and with considerable musical enthusiasm.

The real question is this:

What difference does it make once we leave the building?

And the answer, it turns out, is:

Everything.

Easter does not remain neatly contained within the sanctuary.

It follows us out.

Into conversations in the parking lot.
Into errands on the way home.
Into the ordinary rhythm of the week that is already quietly waiting to begin.

The risen Christ, after all, is not confined to holy spaces.

He meets his disciples on roads.
In kitchens.
At tables.
In the middle of ordinary, slightly unstructured, entirely human life.

Which means that if you find yourself this Sunday standing in the parking lot — chatting, laughing, making plans, or simply pausing for a moment —

you are already standing in a place where resurrection is at work.

Now, this is very good news.

Because it means that the grace we encounter in worship is not something we leave behind.

It is something we carry.

Into the week.

Into our homes.
Into our work.
Into the countless small interactions that make up our days.

And here is where the joy begins to overflow.

Because once you begin to notice this…

…the whole world starts to feel a little more alive.

The ordinary becomes meaningful.
The routine becomes sacred.
The small moments become places where God is quietly present.

Even — and perhaps especially — in the parking lot.

Now, to be clear, this does not mean that every moment will be perfectly serene.

There may still be the occasional moment of confusion. The occasional logistical challenge. The occasional realization that someone has parked in a way that requires… creative interpretation.

But even there — yes, even there — Easter remains true.

The tomb is empty.

Christ is risen.

And that truth follows us wherever we go.

So as you leave the sanctuary today — as you step into the bright, ordinary world —

take a moment.

Look around.

Smile.

Because resurrection has not stayed behind.

It is already walking with you.

Right into the middle of your life.

And that…

…is where it intends to stay.

Alleluia.

Companion Prayer

Risen Lord,
You meet us
not only in worship
but in the life that follows.

Walk with us
beyond the sanctuary doors,
into our conversations,
our routines,
and our ordinary days.

Help us to carry your joy
into every place we go.

And remind us
that wherever we are,
you are already there —
alive, present, and full of grace.

Alleluia. Amen.

When Resurrection Teaches Us to Laugh at Ourselves

By Saturday, Easter has reached a most advanced and slightly dangerous stage.

It has begun to affect our sense of humour.

Now, this may not sound particularly theological at first.

But stay with me.

Because one of the most delightful — and frequently overlooked — consequences of the resurrection is this:

It gives us permission to laugh.

Not cynically.
Not dismissively.
But joyfully.

Because when death has been defeated…

…everything else becomes just a little less intimidating.

You may have noticed this already.

Things that would normally frustrate you now seem slightly less urgent. Situations that once demanded solemn seriousness now invite a gentler response.

And, most curiously of all, you may find yourself laughing at things that would previously have caused you to sigh heavily and reach for additional coffee.

This is not carelessness.

This is Easter.

Because the resurrection quietly rearranges our perspective.

The disciples, after all, did not become instantly composed, perfectly organized individuals following Easter morning.

They remained gloriously human.

They misunderstood things.
They asked questions.
They returned, at one point, to fishing — which suggests that even after encountering the risen Christ, they were still capable of saying, “Well… what shall we do now?”

And into all of that humanity, Jesus steps.

Not with exasperation.

But with grace.

Which is very good news.

Because it means that our own slightly imperfect, occasionally muddled, frequently amusing attempts at faithful living are not obstacles to Easter joy.

They are part of it.

Now, if we are being honest, parish life provides no shortage of opportunities for this kind of grace-filled humour.

There are moments when things go beautifully.

And there are moments when things go… memorably.

The hymn that begins in one key and courageously explores several others.
The announcement that becomes a small speech.
The carefully planned event that takes an unexpected turn and somehow becomes better for it.

And somewhere in all of this, Easter is present.

Not in spite of the imperfections.

But within them.

Because resurrection joy is not about achieving perfection.

It is about living in the freedom of knowing that perfection is not required.

Christ is risen.

And therefore, we are free.

Free to try.
Free to fail.
Free to laugh.
Free to begin again.

And this freedom is deeply joyful.

It lightens the spirit. It softens the edges of our expectations. It allows us to hold our lives — and ourselves — a little more gently.

So today, if something goes slightly awry…

…if plans wobble, words tangle, or circumstances take a mildly unexpected turn…

take a moment.

Smile.

And perhaps even laugh.

Because the tomb is empty.

And if the tomb is empty…

…then even our small missteps are held within a much larger grace.

Which, when you think about it, is rather wonderful.

So go ahead.

Live lightly today.
Laugh freely.
Trust deeply.

Because Easter joy is not only for the grand moments.

It is for this moment.

And this one.

And even the slightly awkward one that is probably just around the corner.

Alleluia.

Companion Prayer

Risen Lord,
You meet us
in our humanity
with patience and grace.

Teach us to live lightly,
to laugh freely,
and to trust deeply in your love.

When we stumble,
remind us that we are held.
When we falter,
remind us that we are forgiven.

And fill our lives
with the joyful freedom
of your resurrection.

Alleluia. Amen.

When Resurrection Turns the Ordinary Into a Feast

By Friday, something quite extraordinary has happened.

Easter has not only survived the week…

…it has started setting the table.

Now, Fridays are not usually known for their festive qualities.

They tend to arrive with a certain seriousness. There are tasks to complete, loose ends to gather, and at least one moment in the day when you look at the clock and think, “Surely it must be later than this.”

And yet.

Christ is risen.

Which means that even Friday has been quietly transformed.

Because in the resurrection appearances, something curious keeps happening.

Jesus eats.

Not once. Not as a symbolic gesture. But repeatedly.

Fish by the lakeshore.
Bread in a house.
Meals shared with friends who are still trying to understand what on earth is going on.

Which tells us something deeply important about Easter:

Resurrection is not abstract.

It is lived.

It is shared.

It shows up at the table.

Now this is very good news for a Friday.

Because Fridays often feel like the day when we are simply trying to get through.

Get through the tasks.
Get through the meetings.
Get through that last conversation that has been waiting patiently since Wednesday.

But Easter gently reframes the day.

What if today is not something to get through…

…but something to receive?

What if even the ordinary moments — a cup of coffee, a shared meal, a brief conversation — are already part of something larger?

Because when Christ is risen, even the simplest things begin to carry a kind of quiet radiance.

The table becomes a place of grace.
The meal becomes an act of gratitude.
The conversation becomes a moment of connection.

Now, this does not require anything elaborate.

Let us not panic and attempt a five-course liturgical lunch.

It may be as simple as pausing long enough to notice.

To notice the gift of the moment.
To notice the presence of others.
To notice that even here — yes, even on a Friday — life is being offered.

This is resurrection at its most delightful.

Not overwhelming.

But generous.

Quietly turning the ordinary into something like a feast.

And here is where the joy begins to overflow.

Because once you begin to live this way…

…everything starts to feel a little more abundant.

Not because there is suddenly more of everything.

But because what is already there is seen differently.

As gift.

As grace.

As part of a world where the tomb is empty.

So today, take a moment.

Sit down.

Breathe.

Receive the day.

And perhaps — if you are feeling particularly adventurous — share something of it with someone else.

A conversation.
A kindness.
A moment of laughter.

Because Easter joy is meant to be shared.

And once it is…

…it multiplies.

Which, as it turns out, is exactly how feasts work.

Even on a Friday.

Alleluia.

Companion Prayer

Risen Lord,
You meet us
in the simple gifts of daily life.

Open our eyes
to the abundance around us.

Teach us to receive each moment
with gratitude,
to share what we have with joy,
and to recognize your presence
at every table.

And let our lives become
a quiet feast of grace
in a world made new by you.

Alleluia. Amen.

When Resurrection Shows Up in the Things That Didn’t Go as Planned

By Thursday, Easter has begun to display one of its most remarkable qualities.

It refuses to be limited by our plans.

Now, this is slightly inconvenient.

Because we are, by nature, planners.

We make schedules.
We prepare agendas.
We create tidy expectations about how the day is supposed to unfold.

And then the day unfolds… differently.

A meeting runs longer than expected.
A conversation takes an unexpected turn.
Something breaks, disappears, or refuses to cooperate with even the most earnest prayer.

And we find ourselves saying, with great theological depth:

“Well… this was not the plan.”

Enter Easter.

Because the resurrection of Jesus is, at its heart, the greatest “not the plan” moment in history.

No one — absolutely no one — arrived at the tomb on Easter morning expecting a triumph.

They came prepared for finality.

And instead, they encountered new life.

Which suggests something rather important for a Thursday:

God is not confined to our expectations.

In fact, God seems particularly fond of working through the unexpected.

The risen Christ appears in places no one anticipated.

On roads no one planned to walk.
In rooms where people had gathered for entirely different reasons.
At times when hope had already been politely set aside.

And each time, the same pattern emerges:

What seemed like disruption becomes revelation.

What looked like inconvenience becomes grace.

What felt like “not the plan” becomes, somehow, exactly where God is at work.

Now, this does not mean we should abandon planning altogether.

Let us not alarm the parish office.

Plans are good. Schedules are helpful. Agendas can be, at times, a sign of civilization.

But Easter invites us to hold them lightly.

Because resurrection has a way of slipping into the spaces we did not organize.

You may notice this today.

A delay that becomes an opportunity.
A change that leads to something unexpectedly good.
A moment that felt frustrating, but somehow opens into grace.

This is resurrection at work.

Quietly transforming interruptions into invitations.

And here is where the joy becomes unmistakable.

Because once you begin to trust that God is present even in the unplanned…

…life becomes lighter.

Not simpler.

But freer.

You begin to move through the day with a kind of gentle openness.

A willingness to be surprised.

A readiness to discover that God is already present in the very thing you were hoping to avoid.

Which is, admittedly, a slightly advanced spiritual skill.

But Easter is nothing if not ambitious.

So today, when things do not go according to plan — and they almost certainly will not — take a moment.

Pause.

Smile.

And remember:

The tomb was not part of the plan either.

And yet…

…here we are.

Living in a world where life has already won.

Which means that even the unexpected…

…can be filled with joy.

Alleluia.

Companion Prayer

Risen Lord,
You meet us
not only in what we expect
but in what surprises us.

Give us the grace
to trust your presence
in the unplanned moments of our day.

Turn our interruptions into invitations,
our frustrations into opportunities,
and our uncertainty into hope.

And teach us to live
with open hearts,
ready to discover your joy
in all things.

Alleluia. Amen.

When Resurrection Sneaks Into the Little Irritations

By Wednesday, Easter has reached a particularly advanced stage.

It has begun to interfere… with our irritations.

Now, this is where things become spiritually serious.

It is one thing for resurrection to inspire joy on a Sunday. It is quite another for it to insert itself into those small, entirely ordinary moments that test the limits of our sanctification.

You know the ones.

The email that could have been clearer.
The meeting that could have been shorter.
The conversation that begins with, “Just one quick thing…” and proceeds to unfold with liturgical length.

These are the moments in which we are most tempted to set aside our Easter Alleluias and return, briefly, to a more… pre-resurrection frame of mind.

And yet.

Christ is risen.

Which means — inconveniently — that even these moments now belong to Easter.

The risen Christ, you may recall, did not limit his appearances to carefully curated spiritual settings.

He appeared to disciples who were confused.
To followers who were tired.
To people who were still trying to figure out what had just happened.

In other words, to people who were not having a perfectly serene week.

And into that very human reality, he speaks:

“Peace be with you.”

Which, if we are honest, is not always our first instinct.

Our first instinct is often something more along the lines of:

“Well, this could have gone better.”

But Easter gently interrupts that instinct.

Because resurrection is not only about victory over death.

It is also about transformation in life.

It is about the slow, steady reshaping of how we respond — especially in those small, seemingly insignificant moments.

You may notice this today.

A pause before responding sharply.
A moment of grace where irritation had been preparing its speech.
A willingness to laugh — even at yourself.

This is resurrection at work.

Not dramatic.

But deeply powerful.

Because it is precisely in these small moments that the life of Christ begins to take root in us.

And here is where the joy comes in.

Because once you begin to see this…

…it becomes almost impossible not to smile.

Not because everything is perfect.

But because even your imperfections are now caught up in something larger.

Something patient.

Something forgiving.

Something alive.

Easter joy, you see, is not delicate.

It is resilient.

It can survive a long meeting.
It can endure a confusing email.
It can even persist through a conversation that could have been an email.

Which, if that is not a miracle, I am not entirely sure what is.

So today, when the small irritations of life begin to gather — as they so faithfully do — remember this:

The tomb is empty.

And if the tomb is empty…

…then even this moment can be filled with grace.

So take a breath.

Smile gently.

And allow resurrection to do its quiet work.

Because Easter is not only for the grand moments.

It is for this moment.

Right here.

Alleluia.


Companion Prayer

Risen Lord,
You meet us
in the small moments
as well as the great ones.

When we are tempted toward irritation,
give us patience.
When we are weary,
give us joy.

Let your resurrection
shape our responses,
soften our hearts,
and fill our lives with grace.

And in all things,
teach us to live
as people of the empty tomb.

Alleluia. Amen.

When Resurrection Shows Up in the Small Conversations

By Tuesday, Easter has done something quite remarkable.

It has slipped out of the sanctuary…
and wandered into the conversations.

Now, this is not always immediately noticeable.

At first glance, Tuesday looks perfectly ordinary. There are meetings. There are errands. There is that one conversation you meant to have yesterday but postponed in the hope that it might resolve itself by divine intervention.

(It rarely does.)

And yet.

Christ is risen.

Which means that even the most ordinary conversation is now taking place in a world where resurrection has already happened.

This is where things begin to get interesting.

Because we tend to think of Easter as something grand — something that belongs in hymns, in liturgies, in beautifully arranged flowers that behave impeccably for at least forty-eight hours.

But the risen Christ has a habit of appearing in far less formal settings.

On a road to Emmaus — mid-conversation.
On a shoreline — over breakfast.
In a room — in the middle of uncertainty.

In other words, right where people are talking.

Which suggests that Tuesday might be one of the most important days of an Easter Week.

Because Tuesday is full of conversations.

Some brief and cheerful.
Some necessary and slightly awkward.
Some that begin with, “Do you have a minute?” — which, as we all know, is a phrase that has never once meant a minute.

And into all of these, resurrection quietly steps.

Not with a trumpet.

But with presence.

And when resurrection enters a conversation, things begin to shift.

Listening becomes deeper.
Patience becomes possible.
Grace becomes… unexpectedly available.

You may notice yourself responding differently.

More kindly than you had planned.
More generously than seems strictly efficient.
With a lightness that feels, frankly, a little suspicious.

This is not because you have suddenly become a perfectly sanctified human being overnight.

Let us not get carried away.

It is because Easter is at work.

Because when Christ is risen, every interaction carries the possibility of life.

Even the small ones.

Even the ones that feel routine.

Even the ones that begin slightly awkwardly and end, somehow, with a sense that something good has happened.

This is resurrection in its most delightful form.

Not dramatic.

But transformative.

Quietly turning ordinary moments into places where grace takes root.

So today, pay attention to your conversations.

The quick ones.
The unexpected ones.
The ones you might otherwise rush through.

Because Easter has a way of showing up precisely there.

And when it does, it leaves behind something unmistakable:

A little more light.
A little more hope.
A little more joy than the situation strictly required.

Which is, after all, how you know it is from God.

So go ahead.

Speak kindly.
Listen deeply.
Laugh easily.

Because the risen Christ is already in the room…

…and Tuesday will never quite be the same.

Alleluia.

Companion Prayer

Risen Lord,
You meet us
in the words we share
and the conversations we carry.

Be present in our speaking
and in our listening.

Fill our words with kindness,
our hearts with patience,
and our lives with the quiet grace
of your resurrection.

And let every conversation today
be touched
by your living presence.

Alleluia. Amen.

When Resurrection Meets the Parish To-Do List

By Monday morning, Easter has encountered its first real test.

Not heresy.
Not persecution.
Not even theological confusion.

No — something far more formidable.

The parish to-do list.

Because however glorious Easter Sunday may be — however radiant the lilies, however triumphant the hymns, however heroic the choir — Monday arrives with a clipboard.

Emails have appeared overnight with remarkable enthusiasm. Bulletins must be prepared. Someone has a question about the flower rota. Someone else has a question about a question.

And somewhere in the midst of all this, a quiet voice says:

“Christ is risen.”

To which the Monday morning mind replies:

“Yes, absolutely… but also, where did I put that file?”

This, you see, is where Easter becomes truly interesting.

Because it is one thing to proclaim resurrection in a church filled with light and music.

It is quite another to carry resurrection into a day that includes paperwork.

And yet — this is precisely where Easter insists on going.

Right into the middle of ordinary life.

The risen Christ does not remain politely in the garden.

He shows up in kitchens.
He appears on roads.
He stands among disciples who are trying to figure out what comes next.

And, one suspects, he would not be entirely surprised to find himself present in a parish office with a slightly overfull inbox.

“Peace be with you,” he says.

Which is a remarkable thing to hear when your schedule is looking mildly ambitious.

Because Easter peace is not the absence of activity.

It is the presence of Christ in the middle of it.

And once you begin to notice that…

…even the most ordinary tasks begin to change.

Answering an email becomes an act of kindness.
Preparing a bulletin becomes a quiet offering.
A conversation becomes an opportunity for grace.

Now, this does not mean that Monday suddenly becomes effortless.

Let us remain realistic.

The emails will still be there. The coffee will still be necessary. The printer will still behave in ways that require prayer.

But beneath all of it, something has shifted.

Because the tomb is empty.

And if the tomb is empty…

…then even the parish to-do list is taking place in a resurrected world.

Which means that nothing you do today is entirely ordinary.

It is all caught up in something larger.

Something alive.

Something joyful.

Something that quietly transforms even the smallest moments.

So go ahead.

Open the emails.
Make the coffee.
Attend to the tasks before you.

But do it with a certain lightness.

Because Easter has already happened.

And it is not going anywhere.

Which means that even Monday…

— even this Monday…

…is filled with resurrection.

Alleluia.

Companion Prayer

Risen Lord,
You meet us
not only in celebration
but in the work of ordinary days.

Be present in our tasks,
our conversations,
and even in our busyness.

Give us patience in small things,
grace in every interaction,
and joy that quietly endures.

And remind us, again and again,
that all we do
is held within your risen life.

Alleluia. Amen.

When Joy Learns to Laugh at Locked Doors

There are few things more impressive than a locked door.

A locked door says, “This is secure.”
It says, “Nothing is getting in.”
It says, “We have taken reasonable precautions.”

And the disciples, on that first week after Easter, were very fond of locked doors.

Which is understandable.

Everything had happened very quickly. There had been a triumphal entry, a last supper, a betrayal, a trial, a cross, and then — most confusingly of all — an empty tomb.

It had been, in short, a very full week.

So the disciples did what any sensible group of people might do under the circumstances.

They locked the doors.

And then Jesus walked in.

Not knocked.

Not politely waited.

Walked in.

Which is, if we are being honest, not how doors are generally supposed to work.

“Peace be with you,” he says — as though appearing in a locked room were the most natural thing in the world.

Now, at this point, the disciples could be forgiven for reacting with a certain mixture of joy and mild alarm.

Because resurrection joy has this curious habit of ignoring the boundaries we carefully construct.

Locked doors.
Closed hearts.
Firm conclusions about how things are going to be.

Jesus simply… enters.

This is the Sunday often associated with Thomas — who, for reasons that are entirely unfair, has been labeled “Doubting Thomas” for two thousand years, when in fact he was simply asking the sort of practical questions most of us would ask if someone announced that a crucified man had reappeared.

“Unless I see… unless I touch…”

Which is another way of saying, “This seems unlikely.”

And then, a week later — because Jesus is remarkably patient — he appears again.

“Peace be with you.”

And to Thomas: “Come and see.”

No scolding. No lecture. Just an invitation.

And Thomas responds with one of the most beautiful declarations in all of Scripture:

“My Lord and my God.”

Which is what happens when resurrection moves from theory… to encounter.

Now here is the joyful part.

Easter does not wait for us to have perfect faith.

It meets us where we are.

Behind locked doors.
With half-formed questions.
With doubts that are still working themselves out.

And it brings peace anyway.

Which means that if you find yourself this Sunday with a mixture of belief and uncertainty — with joy and questions living side by side — you are in excellent company.

Because the risen Christ is not put off by locked doors.

In fact, he seems rather fond of walking straight through them.

And once he does, everything begins to change.

Fear softens.
Hope rises.
Joy — real, deep, slightly irrepressible joy — begins to take hold.

Not because everything is suddenly simple…

…but because Jesus is present.

So today, if you have any locked doors in your life — anything you have carefully sealed off, anything you have decided is too complicated, too uncertain, or too far gone —

take heart.

Easter has a way of getting in anyway.

And when it does, it does not come with accusation.

It comes with peace.

“Peace be with you.”

Which, it turns out, is exactly what we need.

Even — perhaps especially — when the doors are locked.

Alleluia.

Companion Prayer

Risen Lord,
You come to us
even when we hide behind closed doors.

Bring your peace
into our fear,
your presence
into our uncertainty.

Meet us in our questions,
and lead us gently into faith.

Open what we have closed,
and fill our lives
with the quiet joy
of your living presence.

Alleluia. Amen.

When Joy Settles In and Makes Itself at Home

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.

When Even Fridays Start Smiling

Fridays, as a rule, have a reputation.

Even outside the Church, Fridays tend to carry a certain emotional weight. Deadlines gather. Energy dips. Coffee consumption rises to levels that would concern a responsible physician.

And within the Church, Fridays have long had a more serious tone — a quiet remembrance of the cross, a day when we slow down, reflect, perhaps sigh slightly more theologically than usual.

But then Easter happens.

And suddenly… even Friday doesn’t quite know how to behave anymore.

Because this Friday comes with a rather inconvenient truth attached to it:

Christ is risen.

Which makes it extremely difficult for Friday to maintain its usual level of solemn dignity.

You can almost imagine the day trying its best.

“Yes,” Friday says, “let us be reflective, perhaps a little subdued, possibly even penitential…”

And Easter quietly replies,
“The tomb is empty.”

“Well, yes,” Friday says, “but surely we can maintain a proper seriousness —”

“Empty.”

“And perhaps just a modest —”

“Completely empty.”

At which point Friday has no choice but to sit down, accept a cup of coffee, and reconsider its entire identity.

Because Easter does not erase the cross.

But it does change how we see it.

The wounds of Christ remain. The memory of Good Friday is not undone or dismissed. The suffering of the world is still very real.

But now — and this is everything — suffering is no longer the final word.

Resurrection has entered the conversation.

And once resurrection is part of the conversation, even Fridays begin to soften.

Even the difficult days.

Even the days when things feel heavy, unfinished, or uncertain.

Because Easter joy is not fragile.

It does not disappear at the first sign of inconvenience. It does not pack up politely and wait for Sunday.

It stays.

It lingers.

It quietly insists, even on a Friday afternoon, that hope is still in charge.

And this creates a rather delightful tension in the Christian life.

We can be honest about what is hard…
and joyful at the same time.

We can acknowledge struggle…
and still laugh.

We can carry responsibility…
and still live lightly.

Because the resurrection of Jesus has not removed us from the world.

It has transformed how we live in it.

Which means that today — yes, even today — you are invited into a slightly unreasonable way of being.

A Friday shaped by Easter.

A day where patience comes a little easier.
Where kindness feels a little more natural.
Where joy slips in quietly and refuses to leave.

You may still have a long list of things to do.

You may still have moments of fatigue, frustration, or the occasional desire to hide from your email inbox.

But beneath all of that, something deeper is true.

The stone is rolled away.

And if the stone is rolled away…

…then even Friday can smile.

Alleluia.

Companion Prayer

Risen Lord,
You meet us
in every day —
even the ones that feel heavy.

Let your resurrection
reshape our ordinary moments.

Give us joy that endures,
hope that persists,
and faith that sees beyond the surface.

Teach us to live
as people of the empty tomb,
even on Fridays.

Alleluia. Amen.