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Faithfulness in the Ordinary - Grace Around the Table

Photo by  Dane Deaner  on  Unsplash Meetings may not feel like holy ground. Sometimes they feel like interruptions to the “real work.” They can be long, unclear, tense, repetitive, or filled with more talking than action. We walk in carrying opinions, deadlines, expectations, frustrations, and sometimes a quiet hope that it will end quickly. But meetings are not just about agendas. They are about people. People with ideas. People with concerns. People with pressure. People who want to be heard. People who may be carrying more than they say out loud. And because meetings involve people, they can become places of faithfulness. Scripture Reference: James 1:19 Understand this, my dear brothers and sisters: You must all be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to get angry. Meetings have a way of revealing us. They reveal whether we are quick to listen or quick to defend. They reveal whether we want understanding or control. They reveal whether we can stay present when...
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Faithfulness in the Ordinary - Faithfulness in the Inbox

Photo by  Justin Morgan  on  Unsplash The inbox may not feel like holy ground. It often feels like pressure. Unread messages. Follow-ups. Questions. Requests. Reminders. Decisions. Things that need a response. Things that should have been answered yesterday. For many of us, email is one of the ordinary places where hurry gathers. We check it between tasks. We answer while distracted. We skim while tired. We avoid it when overwhelmed. And somewhere in the middle of it all, we can forget that many messages represent people. Behind the question is a person. Behind the request is a person. Behind the follow-up is a person. Behind the poorly worded message may be someone who is hurried, anxious, confused, or carrying more than we know. This does not mean every email is urgent. Boundaries are wise. Some messages can wait. Some need a shorter answer. Some do not need an answer at all. But even with boundaries, the inbox can still become a place of faithfulness. Script...

Faithfulness in the Ordinary - The Road Can Become a Chapel

Photo by  Sorin Gheorghita  on  Unsplash Most of us do not think of traffic as a place of spiritual formation. We think of it as something to survive. The commute can feel like wasted time. Brake lights. Delays. Crowded roads. Ferry lines. School zones. Construction. Weather. Detours. The same route, the same turns, the same waiting, day after day. It can become one of the most frustrating parts of ordinary life because it sits between responsibilities. We are not quite where we were, and we are not yet where we need to be. We are in between. And in-between places can make us restless. We want to arrive. We want to get home. We want to get through it. We want the road to clear, the clock to slow down, the person in front of us to move a little faster. But maybe the commute is not just wasted space. Maybe it is threshold space. A threshold is the place between one room and another. It is the crossing point. The transition. The moment when we move from one part of life into...

Faithfulness in the Ordinary - Holy Ground at the Sink

Photo by  Laura Ohlman  on  Unsplash We often look for God in the noticeable places. We look for Him in answered prayers, powerful worship moments, clear direction, open doors, sacred spaces, and seasons when life finally seems to make sense. And yes, God meets us there. But He also meets us in the ordinary. He meets us in the routines we repeat, the responsibilities we carry, the tasks we finish, and even the ones we leave undone. He meets us in the quiet places where no one claps, no one notices, and nothing feels especially spiritual. This series, Faithfulness in the Ordinary, is an invitation to notice holy ground in daily life. Not because every moment feels beautiful. Not because every task feels meaningful. Not because ordinary life is always easy to embrace. But because God is present in the lives we actually live. Before we talk about the sink full of dishes, we need to remember this: faithfulness is not only formed in big decisions. It is formed in small repeate...

Gentle Rhythms - Sabbath-lite and a Gentle Rule of Life

Photo by  Bailey Zindel  on  Unsplash By now, you’ve probably noticed something: the goal of these practices isn’t intensity. It’s  sustainability . Not a spiritual surge you can’t maintain, but a gentle rhythm you can return to again and again. Week 4 is about carrying that forward through two simple ideas:  Sabbath-lite  and  a gentle rule of life . Not rigid. Not legalistic. Not another “perfect plan.” Just a realistic way to make space for God and rest—on purpose. What Is Sabbath-lite? Sabbath-lite is a simple, doable version of Sabbath. It’s not an all-day production. It’s a  protected pocket of time —often 2–4 hours—where you practice rest and re-centering. Sabbath-lite is less about doing it “right” and more about doing it  repeatably . It’s built on three gentle anchors: 1) Stop Choose a few hours where you stop what drains you: work tasks emails errands that can wait constant scrolling This is not about guilt. It’s about permission. ...

Gentle Rhythms - Slow Scripture, Honest Prayer

Photo by  Kelly Sikkema  on  Unsplash Some weeks, we don’t need more answers—we need a place to bring our whole selves to God. That’s why Week 3 pairs two practices that fit real life:  Lectio Divina  (slow Scripture) and  Lament  (honest prayer). Together they form a sustainable rhythm:  we listen deeply, and we respond truthfully. Lectio Divina (A Simple Practice) Lectio Divina is a slow, prayerful way of reading Scripture. It’s less about covering a lot of verses and more about receiving a few—letting the Word meet you where you are. Use a short passage (2–6 verses) and move through four gentle steps: Read  — What stands out? Reflect  — Why might this be for me today? Respond  — What do I want to say to God? Rest  — Sit with God in quiet for a moment. That’s it. Slow down. Pay attention. Receive. Lament (Why It Belongs) Lament is not a lack of faith.  Lament is faith refusing to pretend. It’s the practice of bringing yo...

Special Post: When the Waters Rise

Some weeks, the news does not feel like information alone. It feels like weight. This has been one of those weeks. Across parts of the Midwest, severe storms, flooding, and tornado activity have left communities shaken. Families have faced damaged homes, road closures, power outages, and the long work of cleanup and recovery. Emergency declarations in parts of the region have reflected just how serious the impact has been. In moments like this, it is easy to rush toward explanation. We want answers. We want a resolution. We want life to return to normal as quickly as possible. But before the explanation, there is something else we need. Presence. One of the quiet lessons of chaplaincy is that not every hard moment needs immediate words. Not every loss can be neatly explained. Not every wound should be hurried past. Sometimes the most faithful response is simply to stay near what hurts. When the waters rise, presence matters. Behind every weather report is a person. Behind every flooded...