Most days my schedule doesn’t go as planned. Interruptions are normal, but I’m learning to embrace them rather than resent the disruption.
God takes great delight in ordinary people like me who live normal, everyday lives. He loves to participate with us in our routine activities. He enjoys dialoguing with us about our daily life. Often the Spirit Holy will interrupt our day to use us to bring his love to other ordinary people.
Knowing that the Lord is attracted to our daily routines can set the stage for ministry to flow out of us and to the people we encounter on a daily basis. Most of the miracles Jesus performed happened as interruptions as He was going about the daily activities of His life:
Attending a wedding—Jesus turns water into wine.
Waiting by a well for lunch—he speaks a word of knowledge to a Samaritan woman and a whole village gathers to hear him teach.
Fishing—Jesus interrupts an unproductive fishing trip to fill an empty boat with fish.
Lunch break at a meeting—Jesus multiplies some bread and fish to feed thousands of hungry people.
Traveling from one place to another—Jesus heals a demoniac, heals 10 lepers, raises a widow’s son from the dead, and calms a storm.
During a home meeting—Jesus heals a man when the man’s friends lower him through the ceiling and into the meeting.
During a meal—Jesus forgives a woman who has committed a great wrong, heals a woman’s child, teaches, and dialogues with Zacchaeus who is so changed by the conversation that he gives his money to the poor.
We are simply ordinary people living everyday lives who impact our commonplace world because we know an extraordinary God.
How have you been alert to the interruptions of God in your daily routine?
In Him together, Susan Gaddis



May the Three who created,
The Father who thought it,
The Word who spoke it,
The Spirit who danced over it,
Move in and through me this day,
To think as He thinks,
To speak as He speaks,
To dance as He dances,
Throughout my chores and business,
In the duties that are so ordinary—revealing the Faithful One.
In the demands of those I serve—mirroring the Servant.
In my cleaning and my cooking—echoing the Song.
This day and everyday,
May I be a reflection of the Three-One,
Who created all and sustains all.
Praying the hours, or fixed-hour prayer, is a corporate melody of prayer from believers to the Holy. This shared dialogue of worship is offered to God and for God as a type of communal prayer presented to the One who calls us by His name. In an
Finding the Holy in the daily isn’t always inspirational. Sometimes it is just what we do.






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