
By this point in Eastertide, something rather delightful has begun to happen.
We are no longer startled by the Resurrection.
At Easter, we proclaim it loudly.
We sing it.
We decorate for it.
We may even bake for it — sometimes with results that are more enthusiastic than structurally sound.
But now…
Now we are learning to live with it.
And that, as it turns out, is where things become truly interesting.
Because living with resurrection is not nearly as dramatic as announcing it.
It is quieter.
More subtle.
More… woven into things.
By Friday, life has resumed its usual rhythm.
The emails continue.
The errands persist.
The coffee, thankfully, remains dependable.
And yet…
…something has changed.
Not in a way that would necessarily impress an outside observer.
But in a way that becomes unmistakable once you begin to notice it.
The ordinary has become… lighter.
Not easier, exactly.
But lighter.
There is a quiet sense that things matter — not because they are impressive, but because they are held within something larger.
Resurrection has not removed us from the world.
It has reintroduced us to it.
Now, this is where the joy becomes almost mischievous.
Because once you realize this…
…you begin to find celebration in unexpected places.
In a conversation that lingers a little longer than planned.
In a moment of laughter that arrives without warning.
In the quiet satisfaction of finishing something small but meaningful.
None of these things are dramatic.
None of them would make headlines.
And yet — taken together — they form a kind of quiet festival of grace.
Now, to be clear, this does not mean that everything becomes festive.
There may still be frustrations.
There may still be moments when you look at something and think, “Ah. Yes. That will require patience.”
But even there…
…even there…
…resurrection has the final word.
Because the risen Christ is not only present in what delights us.
He is present in what challenges us as well.
And that means that even the slightly complicated, slightly untidy parts of life are not beyond redemption.
Which is very good news.
Because life has a remarkable tendency to be slightly complicated and slightly untidy.
So today, as you move through your Friday…
pay attention to the small celebrations.
The quiet joys.
The unnoticed grace.
Because Easter is no longer something we simply announce.
It is something we inhabit.
And you may find — quite unexpectedly — that this ordinary day has become a kind of feast.
Not because everything is perfect.
But because everything is alive with the presence of the risen Christ.
And that…
…is reason enough to rejoice.
Alleluia.
Companion Prayer
Risen Lord,
You fill our ordinary days
with quiet joy.
Open our eyes
to the small celebrations
that surround us.
Help us to notice your presence
in what is simple,
in what is ordinary,
and in what brings us gentle delight.
And teach us to live
not just announcing your resurrection,
but dwelling within it.
Alleluia. Amen.








