
There is a moment — usually somewhere around the second or third week of Eastertide—when resurrection joy meets something far more formidable.
The parish calendar.
It is a quiet collision, but a significant one.
Easter morning arrives with trumpets, lilies, and a choir that sounds as though it has been practicing since the Council of Nicaea. Christ is risen! The tomb is empty! Death is defeated! Alleluia!
And then, by late April, one discovers that the annual ACW meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, the roof repair quote has arrived, and someone would like to know if we can “just quickly” reorganize the entire parish filing system.
It is at precisely this moment that the Christian is tempted to say, “Yes, yes, resurrection is wonderful… but have you seen the agenda for this week?”
And yet — this is where Easter becomes most interesting.
Because the resurrection is not merely a dramatic interruption to life. It is the quiet transformation of it.
The risen Christ does not remain in the garden in a permanent state of glowing serenity. He appears in locked rooms. He walks dusty roads. He cooks breakfast on the shore. He meets his disciples not only in moments of glory — but in the middle of their confusion, their work, and their rather ordinary lives.
Which is to say: he meets us in parish meetings.
Now, I will admit that it is sometimes difficult to locate resurrection joy in a discussion about budget lines or the mysterious disappearance of the good coffee urn. But Easter insists that even here — yes, even here — God is at work.
Resurrection does not wait for perfect conditions.
It does not require a well-organized binder or a particularly inspiring committee report.
It shows up in small moments:
A kind word offered when tensions rise.
A bit of laughter when the projector refuses to cooperate.
A gentle patience when someone tells the same story for the third time (with slight variations).
These are not grand miracles.
But they are signs of life.
And resurrection, as it turns out, is remarkably fond of small beginnings.
We often imagine Easter as a single, glorious event — one triumphant morning. But in truth, it is a season. A slow unfolding. A steady, persistent insistence that life is breaking in where we least expect it.
Even in the parish calendar.
Especially in the parish calendar.
So if, today, your joy feels slightly entangled with emails, meetings, and the general business of life — take heart.
This is not a failure of Easter.
This is Easter doing what Easter does best.
Not removing us from the ordinary…
…but quietly, steadily, transforming it.
And if you listen very carefully — somewhere between the agenda item about the photocopier and the closing prayer—you may just hear it:
A soft, persistent Alleluia.
Still echoing.
A Companion Prayer
Risen Lord Jesus,
you who walked out of the tomb
and then walked straight into ordinary rooms—
into kitchens, into conversations,
into the unfinished business of everyday life—
walk with us now.
When our days are filled with small tasks
and our hearts are pulled in many directions,
remind us that no moment is beneath your notice,
and no place is beyond your presence.
In the meetings and the minutes,
in the emails and the errands,
in the quiet duties no one applauds—
teach us to see the signs of your resurrection.
Give us patience when we are weary,
grace when we are tested,
and a sense of humour when things go just a little sideways.
Let your life rise gently within us,
so that even in the most ordinary moments,
we may become bearers of your extraordinary joy.
And when we are tempted to believe
that nothing much is happening,
open our eyes to the quiet miracles —
the kindness, the laughter, the perseverance—
through which your kingdom comes.
For you are alive,
not only in glory,
but in the midst of our daily lives.
And so we pray,
with grateful hearts and hopeful spirits:
Alleluia. Amen.








