
Every parish has one.
You know the one I mean.
A bulletin board that began its life with noble intentions—order, clarity, perhaps even a touch of aesthetic dignity—and has since become… something else entirely.
Layers upon layers of notices.
Events that have long since passed.
Sign-up sheets curling at the corners.
A poster for a pancake supper that, judging by the date, may now be part of church history.
It is less a bulletin board and more an archaeological dig.
And yet… it tells a story.
Because every piece of paper pinned there represents something that mattered.
A gathering.
A need.
A moment when people came together.
Somewhere in those overlapping announcements is a quiet record of resurrection life at work.
Which is, of course, exactly how Easter tends to operate.
Not always in grand, sweeping gestures (though we do enjoy those).
But in the accumulation of small things.
A conversation after coffee hour.
A casserole quietly delivered.
A meeting that somehow turned into laughter.
A moment when someone felt seen, known, and welcomed.
The early Church didn’t have bulletin boards, but they did have something very much like them.
Acts tells us they “devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers.”
In other words, they were constantly gathering, constantly sharing, constantly showing up for one another.
If they had owned a cork board, I suspect it would have been absolutely covered.
Because resurrection life is busy.
Not frantic.
Not anxious.
But alive.
Full of people finding their way into community, again and again.
Now, to the untrained eye, a slightly overfilled bulletin board may look like disorganization.
But to the eye of faith, it looks a great deal like abundance.
Too much happening.
Too many ways to belong.
Too many invitations to grace.
And perhaps that is the point.
Because the risen Christ does not build tidy, minimalist communities where everything fits neatly into place.
He builds living ones.
Communities that grow, stretch, overlap, and occasionally forget to take down last month’s announcement.
Communities where life spills over the edges.
Which means that the next time you pass by that bulletin board — and perhaps feel the gentle urge to straighten it all out — pause for a moment.
Look again.
And give thanks.
For the evidence of life.
For the signs of connection.
For the quiet, persistent work of the resurrection unfolding in ordinary ways.
Because somewhere between the curling edges and the overlapping notices…
The Church is alive.
Alleluia.
Companion Prayer
Risen Lord,
You fill our lives with more grace
than we know how to organize.
In the busyness of community,
help us to see your presence.
In the ordinary gatherings of life,
help us to recognize your joy.
Teach us to give thanks
for every small sign of love,
every quiet act of care,
every moment of shared life.
And remind us that your resurrection
is always at work among us—
overflowing, abundant, and alive.
Amen.








