
There is something delightfully unremarkable about a Tuesday afternoon. It lacks the noble ambition of Monday, which always insists on “fresh starts” whether we want them or not, and it hasn’t yet acquired the hopeful aroma of Wednesday, which whispers that perhaps — just perhaps — we may actually survive the week. No, Tuesday afternoon is the quiet middle child of the calendar, sitting politely in the corner, stirring its tea, and hoping no one asks it to lead the meeting.
And yet, in God’s peculiar economy, Tuesday afternoon is often where holiness sneaks in through the side door.
It’s in the stack of emails that mysteriously regenerates every time you look away — an ecclesiastical version of loaves and fishes, except without the miracle or the satisfaction. It’s in the pastoral phone call you weren’t expecting, the parishioner who drops by “just for a minute” that turns into a tender half-hour of shared grief or laughter. It’s the moment you discover that the photocopier, like the human heart, works best when treated gently and occasionally forgiven.
These are the small sacraments of the everyday: quiet reminders that we are not meant to float from mountaintop to mountaintop. Most of life, and most of ministry, happens in the valley of the gloriously ordinary: brewing a cup of coffee, wiping down a counter at the church hall, or rescuing a bulletin from the recycling bin because someone printed the wrong version and now it must be saved like an endangered species.
But here is the grace of Tuesday afternoon: God is already there.
Christ meets us in the mundane long before we think to look. In the hum of fluorescent lights. In the shuffle of parish hall chairs. In the relentless — almost liturgical — rhythm of everyday tasks that seem to say, “Be faithful here. Just here. This is enough.”
It mirrors the truth of the Incarnation itself: God choosing not the spectacular, but the small. Not the extraordinary, but the everyday. Holiness goes undercover in the ordinary until it begins to look as familiar as our own hands. One need only think of the Incarnation that we will soon celebrate to see that this is true — All the power and wonder of God, set in a tiny poor human baby.
So the next time a Tuesday afternoon ambles into your life and you catch yourself sighing, take heart. You may be standing on the threshold of grace disguised as boredom. God may be whispering through the to-do list: This ordinary moment is beloved, too.
After all, if the Lord can transform water into wine, he can certainly make something beautiful out of a half-finished mug of lukewarm coffee and a calendar reminder you forgot to set.
Companion Prayer
Holy One,
You dwell not only in the shining moments but in the small, unnoticed hours of our lives.
Teach us to see you in the mundane —
in the emails, the errands, the conversations we didn’t plan.
Slow our steps, soften our hearts,
and let the quiet holiness of this ordinary moment
draw us into your extraordinary grace.
Amen.




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