
There are weeks in the Christian life when nothing appears to be happening at all.
No epiphanies. No burning bushes. No thunderous revelations. Just laundry, emails, meetings, leftovers, and a prayer life that feels suspiciously like it’s running on polite small talk.
These are the weeks that worry us.
We begin to suspect that we’ve misplaced God somewhere between Tuesday and Thursday. Surely if God were really at work, there would be at least a mild sensation of uplift — perhaps a glow, a chord change, or a goosebump. Instead, there is only the steady hum of the furnace and the alarming realization that it’s already Wednesday again.
But here is the inconvenient theological truth: when nothing special is happening, God is often at work most deeply.
Scripture, inconveniently, is full of long stretches where nothing dramatic occurs. Israel wanders. The disciples fish. Paul makes tents. Jesus spends thirty years being astonishingly unremarkable. If this were a streaming series, someone would complain about the pacing.
And yet, this is precisely where formation happens.
God, it turns out, does not seem especially interested in our need for constant spiritual fireworks. God is far more committed to shaping patience, fidelity, kindness, courage, and love — virtues which, regrettably, develop best in conditions of repetition and mild boredom.
Uneventful weeks are where faith learns to walk without applause.
Unremarkable prayers — those honest, weary offerings of “Well, here I am again, Lord” — are not failures of devotion. They are signs of trust. They say, I will show up even when I have nothing impressive to report.
If we’re honest, many of our most dramatic prayers are really just cries for divine intervention into situations we would rather not endure. God answers those prayers too — but God also works quietly in the long obedience of ordinary days, reshaping us while we are distracted by groceries and calendars.
Stephen Leacock once suggested that life is mostly made up of things that happen while we’re waiting for something else to happen. Theology would add: this is not a problem to be solved, but a grace to be received.
God is not idle in uneventful weeks. God is building trust, deepening roots, and teaching us how to remain present without needing proof of progress. The Kingdom of God advances at a pace best measured by yeast, not fireworks.
So if this week feels spiritually unremarkable, take heart.
God is still very busy.
You may simply be doing holy work in plain clothes.
A Companion Prayer
Faithful God,
when the days blur together
and nothing seems especially holy,
remind us that you are still at work.
Meet us in ordinary prayers,
in faithful routines,
in the quiet courage of showing up again.
Save us from believing that you only move
when we feel inspired or impressed.
Teach us to trust your hidden labour,
your patient shaping,
your steady presence in the unspectacular.
Bless the weeks without headlines,
the prayers without eloquence,
and the faith that keeps walking
even when nothing special is happening.
Amen.







