After the Star, There Were Still Dishes to Do: What Epiphany leaves behind once the wise ones go home and real life resumes.

Dirty dishes over flowing in a kitchen sink Stock Photo | Adobe Stock
Sacred work — one plate or cup at a time.

The trouble with Epiphany is that it gives the distinct impression that once the star has shone, the gifts have been opened, and the visitors from the East have politely excused themselves, everything should now be clear, luminous, and permanently sorted.

And yet.

By January 22nd — or in my experience much sooner — the star has been carefully packed away in a labelled box (or shoved hastily into a cupboard marked Seasonal Things—Do Not Open Until Advent). The wise ones have gone home by another route, the camel parking lot is empty, and there is a suspicious smell of cold coffee lingering in the parish kitchen.

Epiphany, it turns out, does not cancel the ordinary. It hands it back to us.

The magi depart, but the dishes remain. There are crumbs on the parish hall floor. Someone has to put away the folding chairs. Someone has already misplaced the bulletin announcements for next Sunday. And someone — often the same someone — is wondering whether the star was meant to do a bit more heavy lifting than it appears to have done.

This, I think, is the great mercy of Epiphany.

The light comes not to rescue us from daily life, but to accompany us back into it. God does not say, “Now that you have seen something extraordinary, you may leave the ordinary behind.” Instead, God says, “Now that you have seen — go wash the cups, answer the emails, shovel the snow, show up again.”

One (who is given to often make observations in a rather Tongue-in-cheek manner might observe that the Church, having successfully hosted celestial visitors, immediately turns its attention to whether anyone remembered to turn off the lights and who is responsible for the broken casserole dish. This is not failure. This is faithfulness.

Epiphany does not mean we walk around glowing faintly for the rest of the winter, dispensing wisdom and smelling faintly of frankincense. It means we carry a quieter light into kitchens and offices, hospital corridors and parish committee meetings, Tuesday afternoons when nothing much seems to be happening.

The star does not stay overhead forever. It does its work and then trusts us with the rest.

Which is perhaps the deeper revelation: God is content to be known not only in radiant signs, but in the faithful, unremarkable continuation of love. In dishes washed without applause. In prayers said without fireworks. In showing up after the wise ones have gone home.

Epiphany leaves us not with answers, but with enough light to keep going.

And that, it seems, is quite enough.

A Prayer After Epiphany

Holy God, You gave us a star, and we followed as best we could. Now the sky is quieter, the visitors have gone, and the ordinary work waits for us again.

Bless the tasks that remain when the wonder has faded from view. Meet us in sinks and spreadsheets, in hallways and hard conversations, in the love that looks small but lasts a long time.

Keep your light alive in us when no one is watching, and teach us to trust that this, too, is holy ground.

Amen.

Why the Church Still Matters on a Tuesday Afternoon: When no one is watching — and everything still counts.

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A quiet Church on a weekday afternoon — no crowd, no program, just space where Grace keeps its regular hours.

There are many noble visions of the Church. Most of them involve packed pews, thundering hymns, stirring sermons, and a general sense that something Important is Happening.

A Tuesday afternoon, by contrast, rarely cooperates.

On a Tuesday afternoon the Church is usually quiet. Too quiet. The kind of quiet that makes the building sound mildly judgmental if you drop your keys. The candles are stubby, the bulletin board is out of date, and the coffee pot — tragically — was emptied hours ago. No one is live-streaming. No one is counting attendance. No one is applauding the faithfulness of the vacuum cleaner.

And yet.

It is precisely on a Tuesday afternoon that the Church shows what it is really for.

On Tuesdays, the Church is not performing. It is simply being.
Being open. Being ready. Being stubbornly present in a world that prefers productivity over faithfulness and results over relationship.

On a Tuesday afternoon, someone wanders in — not because the website told them to, but because the door was unlocked. They sit quietly. They say very little. Sometimes they cry. Sometimes they don’t. Sometimes they just need a place where nothing is demanded of them, least of all cheerfulness. And the Church, to its credit, does not rush them.

On a Tuesday afternoon, the Church hosts meetings that will never trend. Committees are formed. Tea is made. Decisions are postponed wisely. Small acts of care are planned with large amounts of paper. Nothing dramatic occurs, but somehow the Kingdom inches closer.

This is the scandal of grace: it refuses to be efficient.

We live in a culture that measures worth by visibility. If no one is watching, we assume it doesn’t count. But the Church insists — politely but firmly — that the opposite is true. What happens when no one is watching may, in fact, matter the most.

A Tuesday afternoon visit to a hospital.
A prayer said over a name scribbled on a scrap of paper.
A quiet conversation in an office with a chair that has heard everything and promises to tell no one.

None of this makes headlines. But it makes people.

The Church still matters on a Tuesday afternoon because God still shows up on Tuesday afternoons. Not in a hurry. Not with a clipboard. But with the unnerving patience of love that believes presence itself is an act of faith.

And if you ever doubt this, unlock a church on a Tuesday. Sit quietly. Listen.
You may discover that while nothing appears to be happening, everything important already is.

A Prayer for Tuesday Afternoons

Gracious God,
who is just as present when the building is quiet
as when the sanctuary is full,
meet us in the unremarkable hours of our lives.

Bless the unlocked doors,
the half-finished cups of tea,
the chairs that creak with remembered stories,
and the prayers spoken too softly to impress anyone.

Teach us to trust that faithfulness matters
even when no one applauds,
that love is doing its work
even when nothing appears to be happening.

Be with those who wander in unsure of what they need,
with those who serve without recognition,
and with those of us learning—slowly—
that presence itself is holy.

On Tuesdays, and every ordinary day,
remind us that your grace keeps faithful hours,
and that nothing done in love is ever wasted.

Amen.

Grace for the Days When You Feel Spiritually Under-Dressed

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Grace doesn’t care what we’re wearing — It only asks that we show up.

God meets us as we are — even in yesterday’s sweater.

There is something about the weeks following Christmas leading us ever closer to Lent that drives home important spiritual messages beyond those that the Christmas story underlined. Primarily, in our exhaustion and re3covery from the frenzied activity of the season we recently came out of, and our struggles with the days that are still so short and have such long dark nights, it is so spiritually helpful to realize that Grace is there, even when I am exhausted, and feel like I’m not doing anything particularly well.

There are days when faith feels crisp, coordinated, and properly accessorized. The prayers line up neatly. The hymns land in the right key. Even your theology has been pressed and lightly starched.

And then there are those other days.

Days when you arrive before God wearing whatever you grabbed in the dark. Days when your soul has mismatched socks. Days when you feel spiritually under-dressed — short on eloquence, low on energy, and running on the fumes of last week’s courage.

On those days, if we’re honest, we suspect God might be quietly disappointed. Surely the Holy One prefers us properly attired: hope freshly ironed, gratitude polished, confidence buttoned all the way up.

But Scripture — and lived faith — suggest otherwise.

God, it turns out, has an astonishing tolerance for yesterday’s sweater.

Grace does not require us to arrive looking impressive. Grace does not stand at the door with a clipboard, checking whether our prayers are articulate or our faith feelings suitably enthusiastic. Grace opens the door, pulls up a chair, and says, “Come in. Sit down. You’ll do just fine.”

This is deeply inconvenient for those of us who like to prepare our holiness. Who would prefer to show God the version of ourselves that has slept well, thought clearly, and remembered all the right words. Instead, God consistently meets us when we’re rumpled, distracted, and quietly hoping no one notices the coffee stain on our soul.

Think of the Psalms: they arrive breathless, cranky, and occasionally sulky. The disciples follow Jesus with enthusiasm that frequently collapses into confusion. Elijah meets God not in a dramatic wardrobe of thunder and lightning, but in a still, small voice — no dress code specified.

The good news is this: God is not impressed by spiritual finery, but God is endlessly faithful to real people.

Which means the days you feel least “put together” may be precisely the days grace is closest. Grace has a way of meeting us before we’ve had time to tidy up. Grace knows the truth: transformation begins not with looking holy, but with being honest.

So if today you show up tired, uncertain, and wrapped in yesterday’s sweater of doubt, fear, or plain old weariness — take heart. God is not waiting for you to change clothes.

God is already glad you came.

A Prayer

Gracious God,
On the days when we feel unprepared, unfinished, and under-dressed in faith,
remind us that your love is not earned by polish or performance.
Meet us as we are.
Wrap us in mercy.
And clothe us again in hope,
one quiet moment at a time.
Amen.

When the Best Pastoral Care Is Saying, “I Don’t Know Either”: Honesty as holy ground

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Holy ground isn’t always marked by answers — sometimes it’s marked by two people willing to sit together and not rush the mystery.

There is a moment in nearly every pastoral conversation when the air goes quiet, the coffee goes cold, and someone looks at me with the hopeful expression normally reserved for doctors, mechanics, and Google. It is the look that says, “Surely you have the answer.”

And sometimes — brace yourself — I don’t.

This is mildly shocking to everyone involved, including me. After all, clergy are issued stoles, degrees, and an unspoken expectation that somewhere between seminary and ordination we were handed The Book of Explanations. (If you missed yours, check behind the photocopier. That’s where all important things eventually end up.)

Yet there it is: grief that makes no sense, prayer that seems unanswered, a diagnosis that rearranges life overnight, a future that refuses to come into focus. And in those moments, the most truthful — and often the most pastoral — thing I can say is:
“I don’t know either.”

We are trained, of course, to help. We love Scripture, tradition, wise sayings from saints and grandmothers alike. We have pockets full of hope and a theological Swiss Army knife. But there are times when explanations feel less like balm and more like bandages slapped on too quickly. They cover the wound without acknowledging the pain.

Saying “I don’t know” is not a failure of faith. It is often an act of faith. It refuses to rush God. It makes room for mystery. It stands barefoot on holy ground and admits that the ground is uneven.

Jesus himself seems remarkably comfortable here. He weeps at Lazarus’ tomb rather than delivering a tidy lecture on resurrection. He asks questions. He stays. He does not always explain — He accompanies. And that, it turns out, is often what people need most.

There is something deeply human — and deeply Christian — about sitting beside someone in their not-knowing. No fixing. No platitudes. Just presence. Just truth. Just the quiet assurance that they are not alone in the wondering.

Ironically, this kind of honesty often opens the door to grace. When we stop pretending to have answers, we create space for God to be God. And for us to be what we actually are: companions on the road, not tour guides with laminated maps.

So if you find yourself at a loss for words, unsure what to say, or tempted to fill the silence with something that sounds vaguely theological but feels suspiciously hollow — take heart.

Sometimes the most faithful words are simply:
“I don’t know either. But I’m here.”

And that, more often than not, is enough.

A Companion Prayer

Gracious God,
You are not frightened by our questions
nor disappointed by our uncertainty.
When we stand before You without answers,
teach us to trust Your presence more than our explanations.

Give us the courage to be honest,
the humility to sit with mystery,
and the grace to accompany one another
when the way forward is unclear.

In the silence of not knowing,
meet us with Your peace,
and remind us that we are never alone.
Amen.

The Unofficial Liturgical Calendar According to the Parking Lot: Seasons defined by ice, puddles, pylons, and the Kingdom of God

Slush, Puddles and Melting Snow on a ...
Long before the sanctuary, the parking lot teaches us how to walk by faith—carefully, patiently, and together.

There are many ways to tell the seasons of the Church year. Some consult the Book of Common Prayer. Others look to the colour of the altar frontal. A few especially devout souls follow the lectionary so closely they can tell you the Gospel reading by the angle of the sun.

But the truest, most reliable calendar of all — the one that never lies, never transfers feasts, and never needs explaining — is the church parking lot.

I have come to believe that if the early Church Fathers had spent more time in Canadian parking lots, much theology could have been settled sooner.

Advent, for instance, is clearly the season of ice and anticipation. The parking lot is dimly lit, cautiously navigated, and everyone walks with that peculiar posture of hope mixed with fear — hope that we will arrive safely, fear that we will not. Advent teaches us to slow down, watch our step, and trust that light will eventually appear. Preferably before we fall.

Christmas arrives suddenly, usually announced by the mysterious disappearance of ice and the equally mysterious appearance of puddles that are deeper than they look. This is the season of Incarnation, when water is everywhere and you cannot avoid it, no matter how carefully you step. Boots are damp, hems are soaked, and yet — somehow — joy persists. Emmanuel has come, and apparently brought slush.

Epiphany is marked not by stars in the sky, but by pylons in the parking lot. Orange, authoritative, and utterly immovable, they appear overnight without explanation. They reveal truths previously hidden: that the route you have taken for years is no longer available, and that God may be calling you to go another way. The wise still arrive, but not without circling twice and muttering quietly.

Lent is the season of potholes. They grow slowly, deepen daily, and test both suspension and sanctification. Lent reminds us that life is not smooth, that repentance requires attention, and that denial — especially of visible craters — is never wise. It is a season for careful navigation and honest self-examination, preferably at low speed.

Holy Week arrives when everything melts at once. Water rushes everywhere. Old cracks are exposed. You wonder if the lot will survive. It feels chaotic, fragile, and just a little alarming — which is exactly right.

Easter, of course, is the miraculous moment when the parking lot dries. Lines reappear. The surface holds. You step out of your car without fear. Resurrection has occurred, and you were not entirely sure it would.

And then there is Ordinary Time, the long green season when nothing dramatic happens at all. The parking lot simply is. No ice. No puddles. No pylons. Just space enough to park, walk, and enter the building where God is already waiting. Ordinary Time teaches us that grace does not always announce itself with hazard cones. Sometimes it looks like stability, predictability, and the quiet gift of things working as they should.

The parking lot, it turns out, is not just a prelude to worship. It is a catechism underfoot. It teaches patience, humility, vigilance, and the profound Christian virtue of walking carefully for the sake of others.

And perhaps that is the final lesson: before we sing a hymn, before we pray a prayer, before we hear a word of Scripture, we practice faith out there — navigating uncertain ground, trusting the journey, and helping one another arrive.

Which is, when you think about it, the Kingdom of God in asphalt form.

A Prayer

Gracious God,
who meets us before we ever reach the door,
be with us in icy seasons and puddled days,
in times of caution and moments of clear ground.
Teach us to walk gently,
to watch out for one another,
and to trust that even uneven paths
can lead us to grace.
May all our comings and goings
be shaped by love, patience, and hope,
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.

The Theology of Carrying Groceries for Someone Else: Small acts, heavy bags, and incarnational love

Two people carrying groceries hi-res ...
ncarnational love often arrives with heavy bags and no applause.

There is a particular kind of holiness reserved for carrying groceries that are not your own.

It usually begins with good intentions and ends with arms stretched two inches longer than nature intended. Somewhere between the parking lot and the front door, the bags begin to cut into your fingers, the milk tilts at a concerning angle, and the loaf of bread — despite being light as a theological abstraction — manages to slip under your arm and threaten escape.

And yet, this is where theology lives.

Carrying groceries for someone else is not glamorous. There is no ribbon cutting. No parish newsletter article (unless someone like me writes one). No one sings the Doxology as you negotiate the final step onto the porch. It is, however, deeply incarnational. God-with-us shows up most reliably when hands are full and backs are slightly bent.

In the Gospels, Jesus does not float six inches above the ground dispensing wisdom like a divine podcast. He walks dusty roads. He eats other people’s food. He notices who is tired, who is hungry, and who is standing alone near the shelves of life wondering how they’ll manage. Carrying groceries for someone else is theology with elbows. It is doctrine with sore wrists.

There is also humility involved. You cannot carry someone else’s groceries with dignity. You must accept the awkward shuffle, the bag that suddenly tears, the banana that makes a break for freedom. Love, it turns out, is rarely tidy. It leaks milk.

What matters is not the weight of the bags but the direction you are walking. Toward someone. Toward their door. Toward their ordinary, everyday need. This is how the Church moves best — not always in grand processions, but in small, steady steps with reusable bags cutting into our palms.

And here’s the miracle: when you carry groceries for someone else, you almost always discover that you are the one fed. Fed with gratitude, yes — but also with the quiet knowledge that God still trusts us with one another’s needs.

The Kingdom of God, it seems, arrives not only in bread and wine at the altar, but in eggs, soup, and slightly bruised apples carried carefully up the steps.

If you’re looking for a place to practice theology this week, don’t start with a library. Start with the car. Look for someone whose hands are already full. Then pick up a bag.

That’s incarnational love. Heavy, holy, and entirely worth it.

A Companion Prayer

Gracious God,
who carried our humanity with patience and love,
give us eyes to notice the quiet needs around us
and hands willing to be inconvenienced for the sake of mercy.
Teach us to carry what is heavy for others,
knowing that in doing so,
we walk the same road your Son once walked.
Strengthen our arms, soften our hearts,
and make our small acts signs of your great love.
Amen.

What Parish Life Teaches Us About Living with Difference: Shared hymns, shared hope, shared patience

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Different voices, one song—learning grace the parish way.

If you ever want a practical education in living with difference, I recommend parish life. Not a workshop. Not a webinar. Just coffee hour.

In one parish you will find people who prefer hymns with four verses and people who believe anything past verse two is an act of unnecessary optimism. You will find those who arrive ten minutes early to secure their pew (which is, mysteriously, never written on the pew) and those who arrive halfway through the first hymn, surprised that worship has already begun.

And yet — somehow — we sing together.

Parish life teaches us that unity is not sameness. If it were, the parish bulletin would be printed in a single font, the parish meeting would end on time, and everyone would agree on the correct speed for the Lord’s Prayer. None of these things have ever happened, not even once, in the history of the Church.

Instead, parish life teaches us patience. Holy, hard-earned patience. The kind that learns to wait while the microphone is adjusted again. The kind that listens to an opinion we’ve heard before and will likely hear again. The kind that remembers that the person who irritates us most during vestry meetings is also the person who quietly folds bulletins every Saturday or prays faithfully every morning.

In the parish, we discover that difference is not a problem to be solved but a reality to be loved. We learn that God does not gather us because we are alike, but because we belong — to Christ, and therefore to one another. We are bound together not by taste or temperament, but by grace.

Shared hymns remind us of this. We breathe together, even if we breathe at slightly different tempos. Shared hope sustains us when change feels uncomfortable and conversations feel unfinished. And shared patience — well, shared patience is what keeps us coming back, Sunday after Sunday, trusting that the Spirit is still at work, even when the minutes of the last meeting suggest otherwise.

Parish life teaches us that love looks less like agreement and more like commitment. It looks like staying at the table. It looks like singing anyway. It looks like believing that God delights in doing something holy with people who would never have chosen one another — but have been chosen nonetheless.

And that, I suspect, is very good news indeed.

A Prayer

Gracious God,
you gather us from different paths,
with different voices, habits, and hopes.
Teach us to listen more than we speak,
to love more than we prefer,
and to trust that your Spirit is at work
in the very differences that test us.
Give us patience when harmony is hard,
hope when unity feels fragile,
and joy in the shared song you place upon our lips.
Through Jesus Christ, who calls us one.
Amen.

Ordinary Time and the Extraordinary Gift of Not Being in a Rush. OR… Why green seasons matter

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Green: the colour of growth, patience, and God’s unhurried grace at work.

There is a particular shade of green that appears in church after Epiphany and Pentecost. It is not the dramatic purple of Lent, nor the festive white of Christmas and Easter. It is not even the fiery red that makes us sit up straighter on Pentecost. It is… green. Calm. Dependable. Almost aggressively ordinary.

Liturgically speaking, this is Ordinary Time. Which sounds suspiciously like the season when nothing much happens and everyone takes a deep breath — except the church, which insists that this is precisely when everything happens.

Ordinary Time is the church’s way of saying, “Now we grow.”
Not sprint. Not perform miracles on demand. Not cram all spiritual development into a six-week program with a workbook and a colour-coded calendar. Just… grow.

This is deeply countercultural.

We live in a world that believes holiness should be efficient. Prayer should be productive. Faith should show measurable results by the end of the quarter. Even rest is now optimized. We rush to relax. We hurry to slow down. We schedule serenity between emails.

And then the church rolls out green and says, “Settle in.”

Green is the colour of photosynthesis, not fireworks. Of roots spreading quietly underground. Of leaves doing their work without applause. Green seasons remind us that most of life with God happens at walking pace — or slower. Often while nothing particularly Instagram-worthy is going on.

In Ordinary Time, no one gasps at the font or cranes their neck toward the manger. The altar is not draped in drama. The readings don’t shout; they murmur. Jesus teaches, eats, walks, tells stories, and waits for people to catch up. Which they rarely do on the first try.

And neither do we.

This is the extraordinary gift of not being in a rush: we discover that God isn’t either.

God seems remarkably content to work through repetition, routine, and the slow accumulation of grace. Through prayers that feel familiar. Through Sundays that blur together. Through faithful showing up. Through green.

Ordinary Time reminds us that holiness is not built only in moments of crisis or celebration, but in the long obedience of ordinary days. In returning again and again. In letting the Word sink in. In trusting that what looks like stillness is often growth.

Or, as any gardener will tell you, if you keep digging up the plant to check whether it’s growing, it probably won’t.

Green seasons teach us to leave well enough alone — and well enough watered.

So if your spiritual life feels unremarkable just now, if nothing seems to be catching fire, if faith feels more like tending than triumph — good news. You are exactly where the church expects you to be. You are precisely where God expects you to be.

Take your time.
God already has.

A Prayer

Gracious God,
you meet us not only in holy days
but in holy habits.
Teach us to trust the slow work of grace,
to rest in the green seasons,
and to believe that growth is happening
even when we cannot see it.
Free us from the tyranny of hurry,
and root us deeply in your love,
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Amen.

What the Baptismal Font Teaches Us About Boundaries Holy interruptions and why identity always comes first.

Baptismal Font Stock Illustrations ...
You can’t enter without remembering who you are.

There are many things in a church that quietly teach theology without ever once consulting a textbook. Stained glass does it with colour. Pews do it with posture. The thermostat does it with conflict.

And then there is the baptismal font.

The baptismal font, for reasons known only to God and the building committee of 1897, is almost always in the way. It stands just inside the door in many churches, minding its own business, quietly daring you to trip over it while carrying a casserole, a bulletin, or a small child dressed in alarming amounts of white.

On the Feast of the Baptism of our Lord, this is not an accident. It is a lesson.

Because the font exists to interrupt us.

You cannot get very far into the church without passing it. You cannot enter worship without brushing past the water. You cannot pretend that faith is merely something you think about privately while sipping coffee later. The font insists — politely but firmly — that identity comes before activity.

Before you sing, before you serve, before you sit, before you sort out where your committee meets, you are reminded who you are.

“You are baptized,” the font says, without ever raising its voice.
“You belong,” it adds, with a splash of holy restraint.

Boundaries, we are often told, are about keeping things out. But baptism teaches us that holy boundaries are first about knowing what we are already in. We are in Christ. In grace. In mercy. In a love that has already claimed us long before we got our act together or found our name tag.

Jesus himself submits to this interruption at the Jordan. He steps into the water not because he needs to be corrected, but because identity is declared there. “You are my beloved,” says the voice from heaven — before a sermon is preached, before a miracle is performed, before the cross is even imagined.

Beloved first. Everything else follows.

The font teaches us boundaries by reminding us that not everything is demanded of us all at once. We do not earn our place. We do not negotiate our belonging. We are named before we are tasked. Marked before we are managed.

And yes, occasionally we stub our toe on it. That too is instructive.

Because faith that never interrupts us is probably too well tucked away to be of much use. The font stands where it does to say: Slow down. Remember. This is not just a building you’re entering — it’s a life you’re living.

On this feast day, may we allow the water to do its quiet work again. May it interrupt our rushing, redraw our priorities, and gently remind us that the most important boundary we ever cross is the one into grace.

And it’s already been crossed — for us.

A Companion Prayer

Gracious God,
who met your Son in the waters of the Jordan
and named him Beloved,
meet us again at the edge of your grace.

When we forget who we are,
interrupt us with holy water and holy memory.
When we rush past what matters,
slow us down with love that will not be ignored.

Teach us the boundaries that give life —
where identity comes before effort,
belonging before busyness,
and grace before everything else.

We ask this in the name of Jesus,
who stepped into the water for us all.
Amen.

What I’ve Learned About God from Hospital Elevators: Short journeys, deep prayers.

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A hospital elevator: where journeys are short, prayers are honest, and God is closer than the floor numbers suggest.

There are few places on earth where time behaves quite so strangely as it does in a hospital elevator.

You step in, press a button — usually the one with the most syllables and the least reassurance — and suddenly you are suspended between floors, between outcomes, between what you know and what you fear might be waiting when the doors open.

Hospital elevators are not long journeys. In fact, they are often over far too quickly. And yet, in those few seconds between Ground and Fourth, I have witnessed more theology than in many a well-attended committee meeting.

People do not waste time in hospital elevators.

No one chats about the weather. No one says, “Busy day?” unless they are immediately ashamed of themselves and stare very hard at the floor numbers to atone. Instead, there is silence — holy, heavy, expectant silence — broken only by the gentle ding that announces either mercy or more waiting.

I have learned that elevators are places of prayer, even when no one is praying out loud.

A hand grips a coffee cup like a flotation device.
A shoulder sags under news not yet fully understood.
Someone exhales in a way that says, God, if you’re anywhere near, now would be a good time.

Hospital elevators teach me that God often meets us between things. Between diagnosis and treatment. Between hope and dread. Between “we’ll see” and “I’m sorry.”

There is no altar in the elevator. No stained glass. No hymn number helpfully printed on the wall. And yet — God is there. Not as an explanation. Not as a solution neatly wrapped in pastoral language. But as presence.

Elevators also teach brevity.

These are not long, eloquent prayers. They are elevator-sized prayers:

Please.
Help.
Be with us.
Hold them.
Hold me.

There is something deeply faithful about prayers that fit between floors.

And perhaps that is the lesson: God does not require a sanctuary or a carefully worded collect. God meets us in vertical boxes with flickering lights and slightly unsettling floor mats. God listens just as attentively to prayers whispered while staring at a panel of buttons as to those spoken beneath vaulted ceilings.

I have also learned that when the doors open, we are rarely finished praying.

We carry those prayers with us — down hallways, into rooms, past curtains, toward bedsides. The elevator prayer becomes the courage we need to take the next step.

So if you ever find yourself in a hospital elevator, unsure of what to say or do, take heart. You are already in a thin place. God is already there. And the shortest prayers are often the truest.

A Companion Prayer

Holy and Present God,
You meet us in places we did not plan to linger.
In the pauses, the silences, the in-between moments,
You draw near without explanation or demand.

Hear the prayers we barely know how to name,
The ones spoken with a sigh, a tear, or a trembling breath.
Ride with us through these short journeys
And stay with us when the doors open
And the road ahead feels longer than we hoped.

Hold us, and all whom we love,
In your steady, faithful care.
Amen.