Faith When the Snowbanks are higher than your Expectaions

A seasonal meditation on resilience, humour, and grace in Canadian parish life

Appalachian mountains winter snow view
When the snowbanks are higher than our expectations — but grace still finds a way in .

There comes a moment every winter — usually in late January, sometimes disguised as early February — when a reasonable Canadian Christian looks out the window and says, with admirable theological restraint, “This is getting a bit much.”

The snowbanks have achieved architectural status. They have edges. They have shadows. They may soon require municipal zoning. And they are unquestionably higher than our expectations, which were already modest to begin with.

At church, this presents a number of familiar realities. The parking lot resembles an archaeological dig. The steps are technically present but only by faith. Attendance is “faithful” in the way that only the truly devoted — or the deeply confused — can manage. Someone will ask, “Are we cancelling?” Someone else will reply, “We never cancel,” with the quiet heroism of a people who have survived worse and kept minutes about it.

And yet — this is precisely where faith learns its winter vocabulary.

Because winter does not so much challenge faith as it reveals it. Not the heroic, Instagrammable faith with golden light and meaningful scarves. No, winter faith is the faith that shows up anyway. Faith that wears boots. Faith that arrives ten minutes late because the sidewalk was optimistic at best. Faith that knows where the extra salt is kept and brings a shovel without being asked.

There is a particular Canadian sacrament in this: the offering of one’s own discomfort for the sake of community. We worship together not because it is easy, but because it matters. The Gospel still needs proclaiming, even when the microphone cable is frozen into a question mark. The prayers of the people still rise, even if the people themselves rise slowly.

Winter also has a way of stripping away our illusions of control. Schedules bend. Plans are revised. Expectations are lowered to a height more in keeping with human frailty and municipal snow removal budgets. And in that lowering — grace has room to work.

Grace looks like laughter when the snowbank wins. Grace sounds like patience when the choir arrives in stages. Grace feels like relief when someone makes the coffee strong enough to qualify as pastoral care.

Most of all, grace teaches us that faith is not measured by ideal conditions. Faith is measured by persistence. By humour. By resilience. By the quiet decision to keep going when the path is unclear, the weather is uncooperative, and the snowbanks refuse to budge.

In a Canadian parish, winter faith does not ask, “Is this comfortable?”
It asks, “Who needs help?”
It asks, “Shall we keep walking?”
It asks, “Where is God meeting us here — in this cold, in this waiting, in this stubborn love?”

And the answer, as it turns out, is simple.

God is already there. Wearing boots. Holding a shovel. Smiling kindly at our expectations, which were never meant to be higher than the snowbanks anyway.

Companion Prayer

Gracious God,
when the days are cold and the paths are buried,
teach us the faith that knows how to wait,
how to laugh,
and how to keep showing up.

When our expectations are overtaken
by weather, fatigue, or discouragement,
lower our pride without lowering our hope.

Give us sturdy faith for slippery days,
kindness that carries one another,
and grace enough to trust
that You are with us—
even here,
especially here.

Amen.

The Gospel According to the Midweek Eucharist

Small congregations, familiar faces, and why Jesus seems particularly fond of Wednesdays at noon

Holy steeple! Tiny chapel on U.S. 2 a sacred stop since 1962 | HeraldNet.com
Where two or three gather… and it happens to be Wednesday at noon.

There is a particular kind of holiness that settles over a church on a Wednesday at noon.

It is quieter than Sunday holiness. Less ambitious. It does not require parking marshals, name tags, or an emergency search for the missing acolyte. It arrives gently, carrying a purse, a cane, a folded bulletin from three weeks ago, and a deep familiarity with where the light switches are.

The Midweek Eucharist is the Church at its most unpretentious. No one is trying to impress anyone. No one is livestreaming. No one is wondering whether the sermon will go viral. If the congregation numbers seven, that feels almost unbelieveable. Eight would be suspicious. Twelve would be cause for theological reflection and possibly coffee.

And yet — this small, faithful gathering has a peculiar weight to it.

Jesus, it seems, is particularly fond of Wednesdays at noon.

Here the faces are known. Not “name-tag known,” but life known. These are people who have prayed each other through surgeries, widowhoods, moves to smaller apartments, and the slow letting go of what once was. They know where the creaks are in the floor and in one another. They know who will sit where. They know who needs the large-print bulletin without being asked.

This is not a crowd. It is a circle.

The prayers are not aspirational; they are practical. Knees, scans, grandsons, memory, patience. The General Confession is spoken without theatrical guilt but with seasoned honesty. The Peace is exchanged carefully, reverently, sometimes with instructions about balance.

The sermon, too, behaves differently on Wednesdays. It does not need to convince anyone of anything. It simply accompanies the readings, like a friend walking alongside, pointing out what is already there. There is space for silence. Space for the Spirit. Space for the priest to realize mid-sentence that this is not the place for cleverness.

And then there is the table.

Bread is broken. Wine is poured. The Body of Christ is received with hands that have done a lot of living. Some hands tremble. Some are strong. All are open.

This is not a rehearsal for the Kingdom of God. It is a quiet enactment of it.

The Midweek Eucharist teaches us that church does not have to be impressive to be faithful. That Christ does not measure success by attendance charts. That grace is not diminished by small numbers — indeed, it may be concentrated there.

If Sunday is the Church in full voice, Wednesday at noon is the Church whispering, “Still here, Lord.” And the Lord, faithful as ever, answers, “I know.”

A Companion Prayer

Gracious Christ,
you meet us not only in crowded sanctuaries
but in quiet rooms and ordinary hours.

Bless the small gatherings,
the familiar faces,
the faithful ones who come with little fanfare
and much love.

Be present in the prayers spoken aloud
and in those held silently in tired hearts.
Feed us at your table
with grace enough for today,
and send us out strengthened
for lives that keep unfolding.

We thank you for Wednesdays at noon,
for bread and wine,
for showing us once again
that you are always glad when we show up.

Amen.

When Jesus Stops Being a Baby but Hasn’t Started Flipping Tables Yet Life in the Gospel’s “middle chapters”—and why most of Christian living happens right there

The Bible's Greatest Vanishing Act - by Rabbi Evan Moffic
Between the cradle and the cross: The quiet light where faith learns how to walk.

There is a curious stretch of the Gospel story that doesn’t get nearly the attention it deserves.

At one end we have Baby Jesus — angels, stars, shepherds, choirs that appear unannounced and sing better than most parish choirs on Christmas Eve (and without rehearsal). At the other end we have Adult Jesus, overturning tables, challenging authorities, riding into Jerusalem on a donkey with revolutionary restraint, and generally keeping everyone on their theological toes.

But in between?

Between the crib and the confrontation lies a great, spacious, under-decorated territory: the middle chapters. Jesus is no longer a baby. He is not yet a headline. There are no fireworks. There are no riots. There is very little merchandising.

And this, inconveniently, is where most of Christian life actually happens.

The Gospels themselves are oddly economical here. Jesus grows. Jesus learns. Jesus asks questions. Jesus works with his hands. Jesus goes home for supper. He attends synagogue. He listens. He waits. He does not, as far as we know, flip a single table for years.

Which is both comforting and mildly disappointing.

Because many of us would prefer a faith that is either all Christmas magic or all holy disruption. We like our spirituality either warmly sentimental or thrillingly heroic. We want halos or hammers. We want moments we can frame.

What we get instead is the long obedience of ordinary days.

This middle chapter faith looks suspiciously like routine. It involves showing up. It involves learning slowly. It includes awkward silences, unanswered questions, and the gradual discovery that God seems far more interested in shaping our character than in accelerating our timeline.

This is the season where Jesus is faithful before he is famous. Where obedience comes before clarity. Where love is practiced long before it is tested publicly.

It is also, rather inconveniently, where most parish life takes place.

The middle chapters are where you stack chairs without applause. Where prayers feel repetitive but still necessary. Where the Gospel sounds familiar enough to risk being ignored, yet deep enough to keep working on you when you’re not looking. It is where grace does its most subversive work—quietly, persistently, without asking for permission.

One might observe, dear reader, that if the Christian life were a novel, these chapters would be the ones many readers skim — right up until they realize that the plot depends entirely on them.

Because without the long faithfulness of the middle, the birth is sentiment and the cross is spectacle.

The truth is, Jesus does his deepest forming work before anyone thinks to write it down. And God seems perfectly content to do the same with us.

If you find yourself in a season where nothing dramatic is happening — no stars overhead, no tables overturned — take heart. You are likely standing precisely where God does some of God’s finest work.

The middle chapters are not a delay.
They are the way.

A Companion Prayer

Faithful God,
You meet us not only in beginnings and endings,
but in the long middle of becoming.

When our days feel ordinary,
our prayers repetitive,
and our faith less photogenic than we hoped,
remind us that this is where you are at work.

Teach us patience when nothing seems urgent,
trust when nothing feels dramatic,
and love that grows quietly,
like wisdom learned one day at a time.

Give us grace to live faithfully
when we are neither newborn nor heroic,
but simply your children,
learning to walk with you in the middle chapters.

Amen.

The Church Calendar’s Awkward Pause — and Why God Loves It

Quiet Quitting” Comes to Church — Congregational Consulting Group
Ordinary Time: when the banners are down, the pews are quiet, and God is still very much at work.

There is a peculiar stretch of time in the Church calendar that no one makes banners for.

No one buys vestments for it.
No one plans a potluck.
No one prints a bulletin insert explaining it carefully in italics.

It is the awkward pause.

Christmas is over. Epiphany has finished flashing its last sparkle. Lent has not yet cleared its throat meaningfully. There is no star, no ashes, no palm branch, no alleluia, no solemn introit announcing that something very important is about to happen.

Instead, the calendar says something like, “The th Sunday after ,” which is liturgical language for carry on.

This is the Church’s equivalent of standing in the kitchen wondering whether it’s too early for lunch but definitely too late for breakfast.

And it turns out, God loves this part.

We, on the other hand, are less enthusiastic. We like our faith marked with headings and bullet points. We enjoy a good theological highlighter moment. We want the spiritual life to move forward with a clear sense of progress, ideally accompanied by incense or at least a dramatic key change in the hymn tune.

But the Church calendar — wise, ancient, and occasionally passive-aggressive — insists on these weeks when nothing much happens.

No big reveal.
No new chapter.
No emotional crescendo.

Just… walking.

And it is here, precisely here, that most of our spiritual growth actually occurs.

Because these are the weeks when prayer becomes less interesting and more faithful. The prayers still happen, but without the emotional reinforcement. You pray not because it feels luminous, but because it is Tuesday, and Tuesday has prayers.

These are the weeks when worship is less thrilling and more honest. The hymns are sung. The sermon is preached. The Eucharist is shared. No one is transported bodily to heaven, but everyone is quietly fed.

These are the weeks when discipleship stops feeling like a special project and starts feeling like a way of life.

The Church calendar knows something we are slow to learn: growth does not usually arrive with fanfare. It arrives quietly, like muscle memory, or like wisdom you only recognize later when you realize you didn’t react the way you once would have.

Nothing much happened.
And yet something changed.

God seems remarkably content with this arrangement.

Scripture, after all, is full of long stretches where people walk, wait, repeat themselves, misunderstand God, try again, and keep going. The dramatic moments get the chapter headings, but most of the faithful life happens in the uncaptioned space between them.

The Church calendar refuses to rush us past these pauses. It will not manufacture urgency for our entertainment. It simply places us in ordinary time and says, gently but firmly, Stay here. This counts.

And perhaps that is the quiet mercy of it all.

Because in the awkward pause, we are freed from performing faith and invited instead to practice it. We learn to trust that God is at work even when the week feels spiritually unremarkable and the sanctuary smells faintly of leftover candle wax.

These “nothing much happens” weeks teach us that faithfulness does not need a headline to be holy.

Sometimes the most important thing you can do is show up, pray the prayer, sing the hymn, take the bread, and go home having been shaped in ways you will only understand later.

The Church calendar calls this ordinary.

God calls it beloved.

Companion Prayer

Faithful God,
you meet us not only in holy days and high moments,
but in the quiet stretches where nothing seems to change.

Teach us to trust your work in ordinary time,
to remain faithful when the calendar offers no spectacle,
and to believe that you are shaping us
even when we cannot see the progress.

Give us patience for the pause,
gratitude for the routine,
and hope that grows slowly and deeply.

We ask this in the name of Jesus,
who walked steadily, faithfully, and without hurry.
Amen.

After the Candles Are Put Away: Learning to Walk by Residual Light

Unlit Candles Stock Illustrations – 813 Unlit Candles Stock Illustrations,  Vectors & Clipart - Dreamstime
The candles get put away, but the light remains — enough for the next faithful step.

There is a very particular moment in parish life that rarely makes it into hymnody.

It happens after Candlemas.

The candles have been blessed, processed, and triumphantly deployed. Simeon has sung. Anna has prophesied. Someone has carefully tried not to drip wax on the carpet (and failed). The sanctuary glowed like a divine IKEA showroom for one glorious feast day.

And then — quietly, efficiently, and with great Anglican restraint — the candles are put away.

Not extinguished in drama. Not flung into the void. Simply returned to cupboards, drawers, and boxes labelled things like “Candles — various — do not discard.” The sanctuary smells faintly of wax and hymnals and something that might be lemon oil. The feast is over. The fireworks are done.

And faith, inconveniently, continues.

This is the season of residual light.

Residual light is what remains when God has stopped being obvious.

It is the glow that lingers when the liturgy has gone back to green, when the readings no longer come with angels, when prayer feels less like a revelation and more like a routine. It is faith practiced without fresh spectacles — no new visions, no sudden clarity, no booming voice from heaven saying, “Yes, yes, you’re doing it right.”

Which is deeply annoying, if we’re honest.

We prefer a God who provides regular confirmations. A steady stream of divine receipts. We would like our prayers answered promptly, our discernment accompanied by fireworks, and our faith illuminated like a well-lit chancel on Candlemas morning.

But God, it turns out, seems perfectly content to let us walk by the light already given.

Simeon, after all, doesn’t get a sequel. He sees the child once, blesses him, sings his song, and then — presumably — goes home to finish whatever elderly, faithful people do in the afternoon. Anna doesn’t start a podcast. Mary and Joseph don’t linger for a divine encore. The light is revealed, and then it is trusted.

Which suggests that much of the Christian life is not about receiving new light, but about learning to walk by remembered light.

By the glow that still warms the wax-scented air.

By the prayers once answered and not yet repeated.

By the moments when God felt near enough to touch, and now feels content to remain just close enough to trust.

This is not lesser faith. It is grown-up faith.

It is faith that shows up on ordinary Sundays, sings familiar hymns, prays familiar prayers, and keeps walking even when nothing particularly luminous is happening. It is faith that knows God does not need to perform continuously to remain present.

Residual light is the mercy that says: You have seen enough to keep going.

It is the gentle confidence that God is not absent simply because God is quiet.

It is the grace of a church that still smells faintly of candle wax long after the flames are gone.

And so we walk on — not dazzled, not abandoned, but lit just enough for the next step.

Which, as it turns out, is exactly how God seems to prefer it.

A Prayer for Walking by Residual Light

Gracious God,
when the candles are put away
and the sanctuary grows quieter,
teach us to trust the light that lingers.

When the feast is over
and our hearts long for fresh signs,
remind us that you have already given
what we need for this next step.

Help us to walk by remembered mercies,
by prayers once answered,
by love once revealed and never withdrawn—
even when you choose not to dazzle us again.

Give us faith enough for ordinary days,
for steady steps,
for trust without spectacle,
and obedience without applause.

May the faint scent of wax,
the echo of ancient hymns,
and the glow of past encounters
become courage for the road ahead.

Keep us walking, O God —
not in darkness,
but in the quiet confidence
that your light has not gone out,
only learned to travel with us.

Through Jesus Christ,
the light of the world,
who walks ahead of us
and beside us,
now and always.

Amen.

Still Carrying Candles Long After Christmas

What Candlemas teaches us about ordinary faith, patient hope, and showing up with what little light we have

A single candle burning in a darkened church | Premium AI-generated image
Not a blaze. Just enough light to keep going.

Just when we think the Church calendar has finally moved on — when the tree is composted, the last stray bit of tinsel has been discovered in a drawer, and we have emotionally committed to February — along comes Candlemas.

Candlemas is the Church politely clearing its throat and saying, “One more thing, if you don’t mind.”

Forty days after Christmas, we arrive at the Feast of the Presentation of Our Lord, a feast that feels a bit like Christmas’ thoughtful but slightly delayed thank-you note. Mary and Joseph bring the child Jesus to the Temple, offer the modest gift of ordinary people, and meet two saints — Simeon and Anna — who have been waiting so long that “patient” hardly seems to cover it.

They have not been waiting for fireworks.
They have not been waiting for efficiency.
They have been waiting for faithfulness.

And then, at long last, they recognize him.

The light of the world does not arrive in a blaze. He arrives small enough to be carried, named, blessed, and handed back to his parents. Candlemas insists that the light that saves the world is, at first, candle-sized.

Which is helpful, because February is not a month that feels especially luminous.

By now winter has settled in with confidence. The novelty is long gone. The excitement is gone. Even the snow looks tired. Candlemas arrives precisely when we might be tempted to think that nothing much is happening — spiritually or otherwise.

And that is exactly the point.

Candlemas reminds us that much of faithful living consists of showing up with what little light we have. Not the bonfire version of faith. Not the dramatic conversion story. Just the small, steady flame that says, “I’m still here.”

It is also, if we are honest, one of the Church’s more charmingly impractical feasts. We bless candles — often in buildings famous for unpredictable drafts. One candle burns beautifully. Another flickers, sputters, and goes out as if making a theological argument of its own. Someone will inevitably drip wax at precisely the wrong moment. Someone else will wonder aloud why this is the candle that won’t cooperate.

This, too, is theology.

Because Candlemas tells the truth about faith: some days it burns clean and steady; some days it needs to be relit. The important thing is not that the flame never falters, but that we keep returning to the light.

Simeon sings because he has seen salvation — not because the work is finished, but because the promise is real. Anna speaks to anyone who will listen, not because everything is resolved, but because hope has shown up at last, quietly, after a very long wait.

And perhaps that is Candlemas’ greatest gift: permission to believe that waiting itself is holy. That recognition can come late. That God does some of God’s best work when nothing looks especially dramatic.

You don’t need to be radiant in February.
You don’t need to be impressive.
You don’t need to be fully sorted out.

A candle will do.

Carry it a little longer.
Let it warm your hands.
Trust that it is enough light for the next step.

A Candlemas Prayer

Holy God,
you meet us not only in glory,
but in waiting, patience, and small signs of hope.

Bless the light we carry —
when it burns brightly,
and when it flickers in the cold.

Teach us to trust your presence
even when it comes quietly,
even when it fits in our hands.

Help us to recognize Christ
in ordinary moments,
and to keep showing up
with the faith we have.

We ask this in the name of Jesus,
the light of the world.
Amen.

What the Church Teaches Us About Patience (Whether We Asked or Not): Slow prayers, slow change, faithful persistence.

With folded hands… we pray in stillness | Liturgical Encounters
Patience learned one pew, one prayer, and one slow Sunday at a time.

The Church, it must be said, is not particularly concerned with our preferred timelines.

This becomes apparent sometime between your first Vestry meeting and your fifth attempt to introduce a modest, entirely reasonable change that everyone agrees is a good idea — just not yet. Or perhaps ever. Or possibly after further consultation, prayer, discernment, sub-committee review, and a brief pause for tea.

The Church teaches patience not by offering a helpful seminar on the subject, but by arranging our lives so that impatience simply has nowhere to sit.

Prayers are slow.
Processes are slower.
Change moves at a pace best described as “biblical.”

We learn patience while waiting for the meeting to start because someone is still looking for the minutes from last month. We learn patience while the coffee brews — again — because the first pot was “a little weak.” We learn patience in liturgy itself: prayers repeated year after year, words worn smooth by faithful mouths, doing their quiet work long after novelty has given up and gone home.

The Church is very good at this sort of thing.

We pray for transformation, but the Church insists on formation. And formation, like bread dough and souls, refuses to be rushed. You cannot microwave holiness. You can only wait with it.

There is something profoundly countercultural about a community that believes God is not in a hurry. The Church teaches us — sometimes gently, sometimes with the subtlety of a folding chair — that faithfulness matters more than efficiency, and depth matters more than speed.

The Church also teaches patience by requiring us to love one another over time. Not in theory. In practice. With the same people. Again. And again. People who sing too loudly, speak too long, vote unexpectedly, and somehow always take your seat. There is no spiritual growth quite like staying put long enough for irritation to become affection and annoyance to become grace.

And here is the quiet miracle: patience, once learned, begins to change us. Not suddenly. Not dramatically. But steadily. Like water shaping stone. Like prayer shaping the heart.

The Church does not promise quick results. It promises deep ones.

So if you find yourself frustrated by slow prayers, slow decisions, slow change — take heart. You are being taught something holy. Whether you asked for it or not.

And God, who has all the time in the world, is very patiently at work.

A Companion Prayer

Gracious God,
you are never rushed, never flustered,
never anxious about the future.

Teach us patience when we would prefer progress,
faithfulness when we would prefer results,
and trust when we cannot yet see the outcome.

Slow our prayers until they sink deep.
Slow our hearts until they learn to listen.
Slow our lives until we notice what you are quietly growing.

Give us grace to stay,
courage to wait,
and love enough to endure one another
until your work in us is complete.

Amen.

The Holiness of Showing Up When You’d Rather Stay Home: Faith practiced in weather, weariness, and weekly routines

Heavy rain floods Grade I listed Northumberland church - BBC News
Holiness sometimes looks like just opening the door anyway.

There is a particular moment — usually involving weather — when holiness feels wildly overrated.

It happens on a grey morning when the rain has perfected its sideways technique, or when the temperature has sunk to the sort of cold that makes your bones file a formal complaint. It happens when the kettle has just boiled, the slippers are doing excellent pastoral work, and the couch is offering something that looks suspiciously like spiritual direction. And then comes the thought: Surely God will understand if I stay home.

God does understand. Which, irritatingly, is why God keeps inviting us out the door anyway.

Much of the Christian life is not lived in moments of blazing insight or thunderous revelation. It is lived in coats zipped against the wind, in cars scraping ice off windshields, in the slow walk up church steps while negotiating with oneself about how long one is morally required to stay. Holiness, it turns out, often looks like showing up — again — without enthusiasm, without energy, and without having ironed one’s best intentions.

Parish life is built almost entirely on this quiet courage. The courage of the choir member who comes despite a head cold and a hymn they do not like. The courage of the parishioner who arrives late because getting out the door was a minor miracle. The courage of the volunteer who sighs deeply, mutters something about commitment, and then shows up anyway.

This is not flashy faith. No one is handing out medals. There are no heavenly fireworks for “Attendance Despite Mild Exhaustion.” And yet — this is precisely where faith takes root. Not in our best moments, but in our most ordinary ones. Not when we are eager, but when we are faithful.

Jesus, after all, does not say, “Blessed are those who feel like it.” He simply keeps showing up — on roads, at tables, in boats, in towns that have already made up their minds. And then he invites us to do the same. Week after week. Season after season. In sunshine and snowbanks alike.

The holiness of showing up is not about grit or guilt. It is about love practiced in small, unspectacular ways. It is about trusting that God does good work even when we arrive tired, distracted, or secretly hoping the service will be short. It is about believing that grace has a habit of meeting us precisely where we would rather not have gone.

And so we come. With weathered patience. With lukewarm enthusiasm. With faith that sometimes arrives five minutes behind us.

And God, unfailingly, shows up too.

A Companion Prayer

Faithful God,
you meet us not only in moments of joy,
but in mornings when we are weary,
in days when the weather conspires against us,
and in routines that feel more dutiful than devout.

Bless our showing up—
when our hearts lag behind our feet,
when our faith feels thin,
and when staying home seems the wiser spiritual option.

Teach us that love is often practiced quietly,
that holiness grows in repetition,
and that your grace is already waiting
on the other side of the door.

Strengthen us for the long obedience of ordinary days,
and meet us again and again
as we come—just as we are.
Amen.

What Parish Life Teaches Us About Long Obedience in the Same Direction : Chairs stacked, minutes approved, grace slowly learned.

Stacking Classroom Chair ( Set of 6 )
THE QUIET SACRAMENT OF SETTING THINGS RIGHT FOR THE NEXT TIME.

Parish life, I have discovered, is not so much a sprint as it is a gentle, determined shuffle — often sideways — toward the Kingdom of God. It is a life measured less by dramatic conversions and more by the faithful reappearance of the same people, in the same chairs, arguing lovingly about the same budget lines, and then praying together as though none of that had happened.

We like spiritual stories with a clear arc: a beginning, a crisis, a breakthrough, and a triumphant conclusion by page three. Parish life, on the other hand, specializes in Chapter Seventeen: “Nothing Much Happens, Except Faithfulness.” It is the spirituality of coffee pots refilled, bulletins folded, and meetings that end with the hopeful sentence, “Let’s carry this forward to next month.”

And yet — this is precisely where long obedience is learned.

Parish life teaches us that discipleship is not about novelty. It is about showing up again. And again. And again. It is about discovering that sanctification often looks suspiciously like setting up chairs for people who may not thank you, or approving minutes that no one will ever read again, or singing the same hymn with the same slightly off-key enthusiasm you have offered for years.

There is a quiet heroism here. No headlines. No halos. Just a deepening patience with one another — and with ourselves.

Parish life also has a way of curing us of spiritual romanticism. If you stay long enough, you will be disappointed by the Church. You will also disappoint it in return. This mutual disillusionment, when handled with grace, turns out to be a gift. It teaches us to love real people instead of imaginary ones. It teaches us that faithfulness does not mean perpetual agreement, but persistent commitment.

You don’t learn long obedience in a single retreat or a particularly moving sermon. You learn it by sitting beside the same person whose opinions you do not share, praying the Lord’s Prayer together anyway, and discovering — slowly — that God is at work in both of you, often in ways neither of you can see yet.

And then there are the chairs.

Stacking chairs after coffee hour is one of the Church’s underrated spiritual disciplines. It is repetitive, unglamorous, and oddly satisfying. You can see progress, one stack at a time. You know when you’re finished. There is a beginning and an end, which is more than can be said for most ecclesiastical endeavours. Chairs remind us that the work of the Church is not to be impressive, but to be ready — ready for the next gathering, the next conversation, the next small unfolding of grace.

Long obedience in the same direction does not feel heroic while you are doing it. It feels ordinary. It feels like parish life. And that, I suspect, is exactly the point.

God does not seem to be in a hurry. The Church, at its best, learns to walk at the same pace.

Companion Prayer for the Host

Gracious God,
you meet us not only in great moments
but in folding tables, approved minutes,
and conversations that circle back again and again.

Bless those who host your people week by week:
those who unlock doors, brew coffee,
stack chairs, and keep showing up
long after the novelty has worn off.

Give us patience with one another,
humility in disagreement,
and joy in small faithfulness.

Teach us the grace of long obedience —
to walk steadily in love,
to trust slow growth,
and to believe that you are at work
even when progress is hard to see.

We ask this in the name of Jesus,
who stayed, loved, and walked with us all the way.
Amen.

Ordinary Time: God’s Favourite Colour Might Be Green: Growth you don’t notice until you suddenly do

Seed or a Weed? Identifying Garden Sprouts – Budding Homestead
Most growth happens underground — long before anything is viusiuble, or anyone is around to applaud.

If the Church calendar were a wardrobe, Ordinary Time would be the sensible green cardigan hanging quietly at the back of the closet. It doesn’t sparkle. It doesn’t shout. It doesn’t even get its own special playlist. And yet, it turns out to be the thing we wear most often.

Green is the colour of Ordinary Time, which already tells us something important: God seems remarkably fond of growth that happens slowly, politely, and without anyone stopping to take notes. Green is not the colour of epiphanies or revelations or divine fireworks. Green is the colour of things that just keep going when no one is watching.

This is good news, because most of life is green.

Ordinary Time is when there are no angels interrupting our sleep, no stars rearranging the sky, no voices booming from clouds. Instead, there are grocery lists, parish emails, dog walks, laundry that somehow reproduces overnight, and prayers that sound suspiciously like, “Well, here we are again, Lord.”

And God says, “Exactly.”

If we’re honest, we tend to assume God does God’s best work during purple seasons of penitence or white seasons of glory. But green suggests something else entirely. Green says God is deeply invested in repetition, in showing up, in faithfulness that looks boring from the outside and heroic only in retrospect.

It’s not flashy to water the same plant every day. It’s not thrilling to keep loving the same people, praying the same prayers, or doing the next small right thing when nothing much seems to be happening. But green reminds us that roots are forming underground long before anyone sees leaves.

Spiritual growth is like that. You don’t notice it on Tuesday afternoon. You don’t feel especially holy while unloading the dishwasher. You don’t suddenly glow during Morning Prayer because you remembered all the responses without peeking. And yet, one day you realize you’re a little more patient than you used to be. A little less afraid. A little quicker to forgive. A little slower to assume the worst.

And you think, “Huh. When did that happen?”

Green happened.

Ordinary Time is God’s long game. It’s where the Spirit quietly practices resurrection by means of habits, communities, and grace that arrives in work boots rather than wings. It’s where holiness looks suspiciously like consistency. It’s where love keeps its promises even when no one claps.

Which may be why green might just be God’s favourite colour. Not because it’s dramatic—but because it works.

So if your faith feels unremarkable right now, if your prayers feel plain, if nothing special seems to be happening — take heart. You may be standing in the middle of a field God is very carefully growing.

And one day, quite suddenly, you’ll notice.

A Companion Prayer

Gracious God,
you meet us not only in holy moments,
but in holy habits.
Teach us to trust the slow work of your Spirit,
the growth we cannot measure,
the faithfulness that feels ordinary until it bears fruit.

When we are tempted to rush,
remind us that you delight in patience.
When we doubt that anything is happening,
root us more deeply in your love.

Bless our green days, O God —
the days of steady walking, quiet praying,
and showing up again.
May we grow in ways we do not notice
until we suddenly do.

Amen.