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.

When Joy Refuses to Be Reasonable

By Thursday of Easter Week, a most curious thing has begun to happen.

The resurrection is still true…
but it has stopped asking our permission to make sense.

On Sunday, everything felt gloriously obvious.
Trumpets! Lilies! Choirs bravely attempting notes usually reserved for celestial beings!

Christ is risen! Of course we rejoice!

But by Thursday, we are back in the ordinary world — emails have returned, dishes have reappeared, and someone, somewhere, has asked a question that begins with, “Just circling back…”

And yet.

Christ is still risen.

Which means joy has now entered a slightly more complicated environment.

Because Easter joy, as it turns out, is not particularly interested in being reasonable.

It shows up in the middle of ordinary days and behaves as though nothing has changed — except everything has.

You see it in the Gospels.

The risen Jesus appears, and the disciples react with a mixture of delight, confusion, and what can only be described as theological bewilderment.

They are overjoyed…
and also not entirely sure what to do next.

Which is, frankly, a very Anglican response.

Jesus stands among them and says, “Peace be with you.”

And they respond, in essence, “Yes, wonderful… but how?”

Because resurrection joy does not immediately tidy up the rest of life.

The Romans are still in charge.
The world is still complicated.
The future is still uncertain.

And yet Jesus is alive.

Which means that joy now has to coexist with unfinished business.

This is where Easter becomes truly powerful.

Because it is one thing to be joyful when everything is resolved.

It is quite another to be joyful when things are still unfolding.

Easter teaches us the second kind.

A joy that is not based on perfect circumstances.
A joy that does not wait for everything to be sorted out.
A joy that quietly insists, even on a Thursday morning, that hope has already won.

And this joy can feel a little… unreasonable.

It may cause you to smile when there is no obvious reason.
It may lead you to forgive sooner than expected.
It may even result in a certain lightness of spirit that others find mildly suspicious.

“You seem rather cheerful,” someone might say.

And you will be tempted to reply, quite truthfully:

“Well… the tomb is empty.”

Which, when you think about it, is a perfectly good explanation for almost anything.

Easter joy does not erase the complexities of life.

But it reframes them.

Because if Christ is risen, then no situation is beyond hope.

No story is finished too soon.

No darkness is final.

And suddenly, even Thursday — that most practical and slightly administrative of days — begins to glow with something unexpected.

Joy.

Not loud, perhaps.

Not overwhelming.

But steady. Persistent. Unreasonable.

The kind of joy that has seen the empty tomb and refuses to behave as though despair still has authority.

So go ahead.

Be cheerfully unreasonable today.

Laugh a little more freely.
Hope a little more boldly.
Carry your Alleluia into places where it may not seem entirely appropriate.

Because Easter has never been particularly concerned with what seems appropriate.

It is far more interested in what is true.

Christ is risen.

And that, it turns out, changes everything…

—even on a Thursday.

Companion Prayer

Risen Lord,
You bring a joy
that does not wait for perfect circumstances.

Teach us to live
with Easter confidence —
to hope boldly,
to love freely,
and to trust your victory
even when the world feels unfinished.

Fill our ordinary days
with your extraordinary life.

And give us the grace
to carry your joy
wherever we go.

Alleluia. Amen.

When Resurrection Starts Getting Into the Small Things

By Wednesday in Easter Week, something very important has happened.

We are still saying Alleluia
…but we are no longer shouting it quite as loudly as we did on Sunday morning.

The lilies are still standing — though a few are beginning to look like they have given everything they had for the glory of God and could now use a small nap.

The chocolate supply has been… reduced.

And the Church finds itself in that delightful and slightly bewildering place where resurrection is no longer brand new…

…but it is not yet entirely understood.

Which, if you think about it, is exactly where the disciples were.

Because Easter did not arrive for them as a tidy theological conclusion.

It arrived as a series of astonishing interruptions.

Jesus appears in a garden.
Jesus appears in a locked room.
Jesus appears while people are walking along a road having what they thought was a perfectly ordinary conversation.

Resurrection, it turns out, has a habit of showing up where it is least expected.

And by Wednesday, that is precisely the point.

Because Easter is not meant to remain safely contained within Sunday morning.

It is meant to start leaking.

Into kitchens.
Into conversations.
Into parish offices where someone is trying to remember where they put the bulletin draft.

Into the ordinary.

This is where Easter becomes particularly interesting.

Because dramatic moments are one thing. Trumpets, hymns, blazing candles — all very well and entirely appropriate.

But what does resurrection look like on a Wednesday?

It looks like hope showing up in small ways.

A conversation that goes better than expected.
A moment of patience where irritation had previously made itself quite comfortable.
A quiet sense that perhaps things are not as stuck as they once seemed.

Resurrection rarely begins by rearranging everything at once.

It begins by changing how we see.

And once you begin to see resurrection…

…you start to notice it everywhere.

In forgiveness that arrives unexpectedly.
In courage that seems to come from nowhere.
In joy that feels slightly disproportionate to the circumstances — the sort of joy that makes people say, “You seem unusually cheerful for a Wednesday.”

Which is, of course, entirely the point.

Because if Christ is risen — truly risen — then Wednesday is no longer just Wednesday.

It is Wednesday in a resurrected world.

And that changes things.

Not always dramatically. Not always all at once.

But steadily. Quietly. Joyfully.

The early Church did not spend fifty days celebrating Easter because they enjoyed extended liturgical enthusiasm — though they did seem to have a certain talent for it.

They did it because resurrection takes time to sink in.

Time to move from astonishment to understanding.

Time to discover that Easter joy is not fragile.

It is persistent.

It keeps showing up.

Even on Wednesdays.

So if today feels ordinary — if the grand celebration of Sunday has softened into the steady rhythm of daily life — take heart.

This is exactly where Easter wants to be.

Right here.

In the middle of things.

Quietly turning the world inside out.

Alleluia.

Companion Prayer

Risen Christ,
You meet us
not only in celebration
but in the ordinary days that follow.

Open our eyes
to the small signs of your life among us.

Let your resurrection
take root in our habits,
our conversations,
and our quiet moments.

And fill even our Wednesdays
with the steady joy
of your living presence.

Alleluia. Amen.

The Astonishing Quiet of Easter Tuesday

(Or: The Resurrection Is Magnificent… but the Recycling Still Needs to Go Out)

Easter morning arrives with great enthusiasm.

Trumpets sound.
Flowers bloom.
Alleluia returns with the enthusiasm of a long-lost friend who has finally been released from liturgical quarantine.

Churches fill with light and music.
The sanctuary smells faintly of lilies and triumph.

Christ is risen.
Death is defeated.
The stone is rolled away.

It is, by all accounts, a magnificent moment.

And then… something curious happens.

By Easter Tuesday, the world has quietly gone back to work.

The lilies are still standing proudly in the church, but the choir robes have been hung up again. The chocolate eggs are disappearing at an alarming rate. The parish office is open. Emails begin to accumulate. Bulletins must be prepared.

Laundry happens.

Coffee refills occur.

And somewhere in the quiet dignity of an ordinary Tuesday morning, one discovers that the recycling bin must be taken out.

It is at this point that the thoughtful Christian may pause and observe:

The Resurrection is magnificent… but the recycling still needs to go out.

The Quiet Days After the Miracle

The Gospels, interestingly enough, understand this rhythm quite well.

After the earthquake of Easter morning, life does not simply remain in a constant state of trumpet blasts and shining angels.

Instead, the risen Christ appears in very ordinary places.

On a dusty road to Emmaus.

In a quiet room where frightened disciples are gathered.

On a lakeshore where fishermen have returned to their nets.

And perhaps most delightfully of all, beside a charcoal fire where Jesus is cooking breakfast.

The resurrection does not remove the disciples from ordinary life.

Instead, it meets them right in the middle of it.

Which is both comforting and slightly inconvenient.

Because while we might prefer the resurrection to remain permanently surrounded by lilies and choirs, it seems Jesus is quite content to meet us among grocery lists, kitchen tables, and the occasional overfull recycling bin.

The Holiness of Ordinary Tuesdays

The Church gives us fifty days of Easter, and I suspect one of the reasons for this is that it takes a little time for resurrection joy to settle into our everyday lives.

Easter Sunday is glorious.

But Easter Tuesday is where resurrection begins to take root.

It is where we begin to discover that the risen Christ walks quietly beside us through the ordinary rhythms of life.

Through commutes.

Through meetings.

Through small conversations.

Through the preparation of parish bulletins that stubbornly refuse to format correctly.

Through the slow, sacred ritual of the morning coffee refill.

If we are paying attention, we may even discover that the resurrection has quietly followed us home.

Resurrection in the Everyday

One of the most beautiful truths of the Christian faith is this:

The resurrection does not belong only to churches.

It belongs to kitchens.

To sidewalks.

To offices.

To gardens.

To long walks along river trails.

To neighbours greeting one another across the fence.

The risen Christ seems remarkably fond of appearing in places where people are simply living their lives.

Perhaps that is because the resurrection is not meant to remove us from the world.

It is meant to renew the world from within.

And that renewal often begins in very small ways.

A kindness offered.

A moment of patience.

A word of encouragement.

A shared meal.

A quiet prayer in the middle of an ordinary afternoon.

The Joy That Continues

Easter joy does not vanish when the trumpets fade.

It simply becomes quieter.

Deeper.

More woven into the fabric of daily life.

It becomes the quiet confidence that love is stronger than death.

That hope is stronger than despair.

That grace is stronger than our mistakes.

And that somewhere, even on an unremarkable Tuesday morning, the risen Christ is still walking beside us.

A Small Easter Prayer

Risen Christ,
you meet us not only in moments of glory
but in the quiet rhythms of ordinary life.

Walk beside us in our work and rest,
in our conversations and our silences,
in our joys and in our small frustrations.

Teach us to recognize your presence
in kitchens and offices,
in sidewalks and gardens,
in every ordinary Tuesday we are given.

And when the recycling needs to go out,
remind us that even there
your resurrection light still shines.

Alleluia.

Amen.

The Theology of Easter Leftovers

(Or: Why the Ham Lasts Until Pentecost)

There is a curious and largely undocumented miracle that occurs every year shortly after Easter Sunday.

It is not recorded in the Gospels.
It is not listed in the Book of Alternative Services.
It is not discussed in the writings of the Church Fathers, although I suspect they may have quietly experienced it.

It is this:

The Easter Ham Never Ends.

You begin with a perfectly reasonable ham. A modest ham. A ham that any responsible household might reasonably expect to consume over the course of perhaps two or three meals.

But something happens.

You carve it at Easter dinner. Everyone enjoys it. It is delicious. Resurrection joy fills the room.

And yet when the meal is finished and the plates are cleared, the ham remains.

You wrap it carefully and place it in the refrigerator.

The next day it appears again.

Not as a ham, exactly, but as ham sandwiches.

Then comes ham with eggs.

Then ham in soup.

Then ham in pasta.

Then, in a moment of great culinary creativity — or desperation — ham in absolutely everything.

Weeks pass.

The Easter lilies begin to wilt.
The chocolate eggs disappear.
The alleluias settle comfortably into parish life again.

But the ham remains.

If carefully managed, it will last well into the season of Easter, occasionally appearing again just when one thought it had been safely concluded.

I have long suspected that this is not merely a culinary phenomenon.

It is, in fact, a theological one.

Resurrection Is an Abundance Problem

One of the most striking features of the resurrection stories in the Gospels is the sheer abundance of life that follows.

The tomb is empty.

Angels appear.

Jesus walks through locked doors.

He meets the disciples on the road.

He cooks breakfast on the beach.

Life begins to overflow everywhere.

The resurrection is not tidy or contained.
It spills out in every direction.

Grace multiplies.

Hope multiplies.

Joy multiplies.

And sometimes, apparently, ham multiplies.

The resurrection of Jesus is not a small victory.
It is not a quiet adjustment to the world.

It is an overflow of life.

And when life overflows, things begin to multiply in surprising ways.

Bread multiplies.
Fish multiply.
And occasionally leftovers multiply.

Easter Leftovers and Holy Hospitality

The real beauty of leftovers is not simply that they last.

It is that they invite hospitality.

Leftovers mean there is enough.

Enough to share.

Enough to welcome someone unexpectedly.

Enough to say to a neighbour or friend:

“Stay a while. There is still food.”

The resurrection of Jesus creates exactly this kind of world.

A world where there is always enough grace.

Enough forgiveness for another beginning.

Enough hope for another tomorrow.

Enough love to share again.

The early Church understood this instinctively. They gathered at table, shared their food, welcomed strangers, and discovered that grace multiplies when it is shared.

The table becomes a place where resurrection continues.

Sometimes through Eucharist.

Sometimes through soup.

And occasionally through ham that simply refuses to run out.

Resurrection Generosity

The resurrection teaches us something very important about God.

God is not careful with grace.

God is extravagant with it.

God does not measure mercy in tidy portions.

God pours it out.

Again and again.

And the Church, when it is at its best, reflects this same spirit.

Open doors.

Open tables.

Open hearts.

Resurrection people are not stingy people.

We are people who believe that there is always more life to be shared.

More kindness to give.

More grace to offer.

More hope to pass along.

Just like Easter leftovers.

The Quiet Joy of the Season

The season of Easter lasts fifty days, and perhaps that is no accident.

It takes time for resurrection joy to settle into our bones.

At first we celebrate with trumpets and lilies and magnificent alleluias.

But gradually Easter becomes quieter.

It appears in small moments.

In laughter.

In shared meals.

In kindness.

In generosity.

And yes, sometimes in leftovers.

Because resurrection joy is not only something we celebrate once.

It is something we live with day by day.

A Small Easter Prayer

Gracious God,
you are generous beyond measure.
Your love overflows the boundaries we expect,
and your grace multiplies where we least imagine it.

Teach us to live as resurrection people —
generous in spirit,
open in hospitality,
and joyful in sharing the abundance you give.

And if, in your wisdom,
the Easter ham happens to last a little longer than expected,

help us to remember
that your mercy lasts even longer.

Alleluia.

Amen.

The Morning the Universe Burst into Alleluia

There are mornings that arrive politely.

They ease their way into the world with soft light, a quiet kettle, and perhaps the mild optimism of toast.

Easter morning is not one of those mornings.

Easter morning bursts into the world like a brass band that has been patiently waiting forty days for permission to play.

The stone is rolled away.
The tomb is empty.
Angels appear with the calm confidence of people who already know the ending of the story.

And somewhere, very early in the morning, the first bewildered human beings begin to realize that death — that most stubborn and immovable of problems — has just been defeated.

Which, if you think about it, is a rather large development for a Sunday morning.

The women arrive at the tomb expecting sorrow. They are carrying spices — the ancient equivalent of the quiet, respectful tasks that accompany grief.

They are not expecting resurrection.

No one arrives at a cemetery thinking, “Perhaps today will involve a cosmic miracle.”

But the stone is already rolled away.

Now this is the moment when the Gospel becomes wonderfully chaotic.

Mary Magdalene runs.
Peter runs.
The other disciple runs slightly faster, which the Gospel writer mentions with a level of competitive enthusiasm that suggests this was still being discussed years later.

The angels calmly explain what has happened. The disciples struggle to process it. And the universe itself seems to pause as the first words of Easter begin to echo through the garden.

“He is not here.”

Which may be the most joyful sentence ever spoken in human history.

Because everything that seemed final on Friday is suddenly… not final.

The cross remains real. The wounds remain visible. The sorrow of the week has not been erased like chalk from a blackboard.

But death no longer gets the last word.

And that changes everything.

Easter is not merely a happy ending to a sad story. It is the moment when God reveals that love is stronger than the worst the world can do.

The grave cannot hold him.
Darkness cannot silence him.
Fear cannot contain him.

Christ is risen.

Which means that hope is not wishful thinking.

Hope is now a person walking out of a tomb.

Of course, Easter joy can feel slightly overwhelming after forty days of Lent. We have spent weeks practicing reflection, repentance, patience, and the occasional heroic attempt to avoid chocolate.

Now the Church throws open the doors and shouts Alleluia with the kind of enthusiasm that suggests someone has finally released the theological pressure valve.

Candles blaze. Bells ring. Choirs sing with visible relief.

And the people of God rediscover something that Lent has been preparing us to hear:

Life wins.

Not easily. Not cheaply. Not without wounds.

But truly.

Which means the small resurrections we long for — the healing of hearts, the renewal of hope, the courage to begin again — are not foolish dreams.

They are echoes of Easter.

This morning the Church announces what the angels already knew:

The stone is rolled away.

Christ is risen.

And the world will never be the same.

So if you find yourself smiling a little wider today — if the hymns sound louder, the light brighter, the coffee slightly more celebratory than usual — you are in very good company.

After all, when the Son of God walks out of a tomb…

…it is entirely appropriate for the universe to explode with joy.

Alleluia. Christ is risen.
The Lord is risen indeed. Alleluia!

Αλληλούια! Χριστός Ανέστη!
Αληθώς Ανέστη! Αλληλούια!

Companion Prayer

Risen Lord,
this morning the world awakens
to joy beyond imagining.

Where fear once lived,
plant hope.

Where sorrow lingered,
breathe life.

Fill our hearts with Easter laughter,
our voices with Alleluia,
and our lives with the courage
of resurrection.

May the joy of this day
echo in us
long after the lilies fade.

Amen.

The Quiet Day Between the Cross and the Alleluia

Holy Saturday is the most peculiar day in the Christian year.

Good Friday was full of drama — dark skies, torn curtains, solemn prayers, and a cross standing against the horizon like a question mark written across history.

Tomorrow will be full of trumpets — or at least enthusiastic hymns, fresh lilies, and parishioners greeting one another with the unmistakable relief of people who have been patiently waiting forty days to say Alleluia again.

But today?

Today is quiet.

Very quiet.

In fact, if you were following the story in real time, you might wonder if anything at all was happening.

Jesus lies in the tomb. The disciples are scattered. The authorities have sealed the stone with admirable bureaucratic efficiency. The women who had followed Jesus are resting, because even grief must pause for the Sabbath.

Holy Saturday is the day when the world appears to hold its breath.

Now, this is not a spiritual condition most of us enjoy.

We prefer momentum. Resolution. Clear progress. We like our stories moving briskly from problem to solution.

Holy Saturday refuses to cooperate with that schedule.

It is a day of waiting.

And waiting, as every parish committee knows, is rarely anyone’s favorite spiritual discipline.

But Holy Saturday has an important role in the story of redemption.

It reminds us that God’s work often unfolds in ways we cannot see.

To the disciples, the story appeared finished. The Messiah had been crucified. The hopes they had carried into Jerusalem were now buried behind a stone.

If you had asked them on that Saturday afternoon how things were going, the answer would likely have been discouraging.

And yet.

The Church has always believed that Holy Saturday is not empty time. Beneath the quiet surface, something profound is unfolding. Christ is not absent. The work of redemption continues even in the silence of the tomb.

Which may explain why this evening the Church gathers for the most dramatic liturgy of the year: the Great Vigil of Easter.

We begin in darkness.

A new fire is kindled. A single candle breaks the night. The ancient stories of salvation are read again — creation, the flood, the Red Sea, the promises of prophets.

And then, slowly, the light spreads.

Candles pass from hand to hand. Darkness retreats. The church fills with the glow of hope.

At last the priest lifts their voice and declares the word that Lent has patiently held back:

Alleluia.

The transition from Passiontide to Eastertide is not sudden. It grows like dawn. Quiet at first. Then unmistakable.

Holy Saturday prepares our hearts for that moment.

Because resurrection is always more astonishing when we have truly sat with the silence that came before it.

So if today feels still — if it feels like the long pause between sorrow and joy — take comfort.

You are standing precisely where the Church has stood for centuries.

Between the cross and the empty tomb.

Between grief and glory.

Between the quiet of Passiontide and the bursting joy of Eastertide.

And tonight, in the light of a single candle, the story begins to turn.

Companion Prayer

Faithful God,
In the quiet of this Holy Saturday
we wait with hope.

When the world feels silent
and the future uncertain,
teach us to trust your hidden work.

Prepare our hearts
for the light that is coming.

And as we move from darkness into dawn,
lead us from the sorrow of the cross
into the joy of resurrection.

Amen.

The Day Love Refused to Quit

Good Friday is the most strangely named day in the Christian calendar.

If one were assembling a marketing committee — which, thankfully, the early Church did not — it is unlikely anyone would have proposed the word good.

After all, this is the day of betrayal, arrest, trial, injustice, nails, and a cross on a hill outside the city. The disciples scatter. The crowds turn restless. The sky itself seems to darken in sympathy.

If you were writing the story, you might reasonably call it Tragic Friday, Terrible Friday, or possibly The Day Everything Went Wrong.

And yet the Church calls it Good.

Which tells us immediately that something deeper is happening.

Good Friday is not good because suffering is good. Christianity has never suggested that cruelty, injustice, or pain are somehow admirable.

Good Friday is good because love refuses to abandon us even there.

The cross stands at the center of the Christian faith precisely because it reveals the lengths to which God is willing to go in order to reach us.

Now, if you have ever tried to explain this to someone — or perhaps to yourself — you will know that the cross is not easily reduced to tidy formulas.

Theologians have been discussing it for centuries with remarkable enthusiasm and very long footnotes.

But the heart of it is surprisingly simple.

When humanity does its worst, God does not walk away.

Jesus does not descend from the cross with a well-timed miracle and a dramatic speech. He does not summon heavenly reinforcements. He does not reorganize the situation into something more comfortable.

He stays.

That is the shocking thing about Good Friday.

Love stays.

The soldiers mock. The crowd jeers. The authorities congratulate themselves on a job efficiently completed.

And still, Jesus remains.

“Father, forgive them.”

Which is not the sort of thing one usually hears from a man being executed.

Good Friday reveals something essential about the character of God. The power that rules the universe is not domination. It is self-giving love.

Of course, this makes Good Friday somewhat inconvenient for our usual understanding of power.

We prefer strength that wins arguments, secures victories, and arranges circumstances to our advantage. We admire success. We applaud triumph.

The cross does none of those things.

Instead, it shows a love so stubborn that it absorbs violence without returning it.

A love that forgives in the middle of cruelty.

A love that remains faithful even when everyone else has gone home.

Which may be why the Church returns to this story every year.

Because Good Friday exposes the truth we most need to remember: God’s love is not fragile.

It does not collapse under pressure.
It does not retreat in the face of failure.
It does not disappear when things become dark.

It endures.

And somewhere in that endurance — in the strange quiet of the cross — the deepest work of redemption is unfolding.

The disciples cannot see it yet.

But the Church dares to call this day Good.

Because love has gone all the way.

Companion Prayer

Crucified Lord,
On this solemn day
we stand before the mystery of the cross.

When suffering feels overwhelming,
remind us that your love has already entered it.

When the world seems broken,
help us trust the quiet power of your mercy.

Teach us to remain faithful
where love is difficult
and hope feels fragile.

And keep us near the cross
until the dawn of resurrection.

Amen.

The Night the King Did the Dishes

If Holy Week were a play — and in many ways it is — Maundy Thursday would be the quiet scene that somehow contains the entire story.

The parade is over.
The arguments in the temple have settled.
The city hums with Passover preparations.

And Jesus gathers his friends for supper.

Now, supper may not sound especially dramatic, but anyone who has attended enough church dinners knows that important things often happen around tables. Conversations deepen. Stories emerge. Occasionally someone discovers that the coffee urn has been unplugged, which can produce a minor ecclesiastical crisis.

But this meal is different.

Jesus knows the cross is coming. He knows betrayal has already begun its slow march through the city. The disciples, meanwhile, are still trying to determine who among them deserves the most prominent seating arrangement in the coming kingdom.

In other words, it is a fairly typical human gathering.

And then Jesus stands up.

He takes off his outer robe.
He wraps a towel around his waist.
He kneels down.

At this point the disciples should probably have realized that something unusual was happening.

Because the person they have been calling Lord is now performing the task normally assigned to the lowest servant in the household.

He begins washing their feet.

Now, in the modern world, feet are treated with a certain polite distance. But in the dusty roads of first-century Judea, foot washing was not symbolic — it was necessary, practical, and distinctly unglamorous.

It was the sort of job no one volunteered for.

Which makes it precisely the job Jesus chooses.

Peter, always the enthusiastic spokesperson for confused humanity, objects immediately. “Lord, you will never wash my feet!”

Peter understands what most of us instinctively understand: this is backwards.

Leaders are not supposed to kneel. Teachers are not supposed to scrub dust off fishermen’s toes. Kings are not supposed to pick up towels.

But Jesus gently insists.

“If I do not wash you, you have no share with me.”

The kingdom of God, it turns out, is built on a very different understanding of greatness.

In the world we know, authority rises upward.

In the kingdom Jesus reveals, love kneels down.

Maundy Thursday carries its name from the Latin mandatum — commandment. “A new commandment I give you: love one another.”

And just in case the disciples are tempted to interpret that commandment in a purely theoretical manner, Jesus demonstrates exactly what he means.

He washes their feet.

Including Judas’s.

Which may be the most astonishing detail of the entire evening.

Jesus serves the one who will betray him, the one who will deny him, the ones who will scatter in fear before sunrise.

Love kneels anyway.

Then, as if that were not enough for one night, Jesus takes bread.

“This is my body.”

He takes the cup.

“This is my blood.”

The ordinary meal becomes something holy — a sacrament that will be repeated around tables and altars for centuries to come.

And the message is unmistakable.

The heart of the Christian life is not prestige.

It is not success.

It is not even religious expertise.

It is love expressed in humble service.

The King does the washing.
The Teacher pours the wine.
The Lord gives himself away.

Which means that if we want to understand Maundy Thursday properly, we should probably keep an eye on the towel.

Because in the kingdom of God, greatness is measured not by how many people serve you…

…but by how willingly you serve them.

Companion Prayer

Servant Lord,
You kneel before your friends
with towel and basin.

Teach us the humility
that does not seek applause,
the love that serves quietly,
and the courage to care for others
even when it costs us.

Wash our hearts
of pride and fear.

And send us into the world
ready to love one another
as you have loved us.

Amen.