
There is a moment — often discovered rather than planned — when one realizes that the world has become… slightly unclear.
Not dramatically so.
Not enough to cause alarm.
Just enough that the print looks a little softer than it used to.
The edges a touch less defined.
The fine detail — particularly on parish bulletins printed in ambitious fonts — somewhat… negotiable.
And then it dawns on you.
It is not the world.
It is your glasses.
Now, this discovery is usually followed by a brief and highly intentional polishing ritual.
A handkerchief is located (or, more realistically, a sleeve is pressed into service).
The lenses are wiped with great care.
There is a moment of anticipation.
And then —
Clarity.
Suddenly everything sharpens.
The words come into focus.
The room regains its definition.
The world, it seems, has been restored to its proper condition.
Though, to be fair, it was never the world that needed adjusting.
Now, as it happens, this is precisely the sort of moment where Easter joy quietly slips in.
Because resurrection is not only about new life.
It is about new sight.
The disciples spend a remarkable amount of time in the Gospels not quite seeing clearly.
Mary mistakes Jesus for the gardener.
The travellers to Emmaus walk alongside him for miles without recognition.
Even the gathered disciples struggle to comprehend what is unfolding before them.
It is not that Christ is absent.
It is that their vision needs adjusting.
And when it does — when their eyes are opened — everything changes.
The same world.
The same people.
The same circumstances.
But now, seen through the light of resurrection.
Which suggests that perhaps our own slightly smudged moments are not failures of perception so much as invitations to grace.
Because we, too, go through our days not always seeing clearly.
We miss things.
We misread situations.
We overlook the quiet ways God is already at work.
And then, sometimes quite unexpectedly, clarity comes.
In a conversation.
In a moment of prayer.
In a simple act of attention.
And we see.
Not perfectly.
Not all at once.
But enough.
Enough to recognize that Christ has been present all along.
Enough to glimpse the life of resurrection moving quietly through the ordinary.
Now, I will admit that cleaning one’s glasses is not, in itself, a sacrament.
But it is not entirely unlike one.
A small, tangible act that opens our eyes again to what has always been there.
Which means that the next time the world looks just a little unclear —
Do not be too quick to assume that something has gone wrong.
Pause.
Take a moment.
Wipe the lenses.
And look again.
Because Christ is risen.
And the world — smudged though it sometimes seems — is already filled with His light.
Alleluia.
Companion Prayer
Risen Lord,
You open our eyes
to see your presence among us.
When our vision is clouded,
bring clarity.
When we miss what matters,
draw our attention back to you.
Help us to see with grace,
to notice with love,
and to recognize your life
in the ordinary moments of our day.
And in all that we behold,
let us glimpse your resurrection light.
Amen.








