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








