As I continue reading The Call.....
I came to one of my favorite phrases in the entire book. Guinness describes Christians as "patches of Godlight," and the image has stayed with me ever since.
The older I get, the more I find myself thinking about ordinary days.
When I was younger, I was fascinated by big moments. Championships. Major decisions. Opportunities. Turning points. The events that seemed to define a life.
But most of life is not lived in those moments. Most of life is lived on ordinary Tuesdays.
You answer emails. You drive across town. You sit through meetings. More errands.
You solve small problems. I always laugh and say a big part of my job these last 15 years as a school administrator is defusing about 2 or 3 atomic bombs every day. Sometimes, I don't know if I should cut the green or red wire, but I just do it- and things die down... rinse, repeat.
And if we are not careful, we begin to think those moments do not matter. Especially things that are so easily forgotten.
That is where Guinness helped me.
One of the themes running throughout The Call is that calling transforms even the commonplace. The ordinary becomes significant because it is offered to God.
Paul captures this beautifully:
"Whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God."
I have always loved the comprehensiveness of that verse.
Years ago, I was asked to drive somewhere and pick up a person who needed a ride back to school. There was nothing particularly remarkable about the assignment. It was not a leadership opportunity. It was not a strategic initiative. Nobody was going to write an article about it.
It was just a ride.
As I drove, I found myself enjoying the day. I listened to part of a sermon. I prayed. I noticed the beauty around me. I even heard a good George Strait song on the radio.
When I picked up my passenger, I remembered something C. S. Lewis once wrote:
"You have never talked to a mere mortal."
That person was not an interruption, he was an image-bearer.
The ride back became one of those simple moments that quietly reminded me that life is full of opportunities to serve God that never feel particularly dramatic. The task itself had not changed- but my perspective had.
And perhaps that is what Guinness means by "patches of Godlight."
A Christian teacher becomes a patch of Godlight in a classroom. A parent becomes a patch of Godlight at home.
A coach becomes a patch of Godlight on a practice field. A businessperson becomes a patch of Godlight in the workplace.
Not because they are extraordinary, but because God shines through ordinary faithfulness.
Do you know the illustration of the three men working on a construction project? When asked what they were doing, the first said he was laying bricks. The second said he was earning a living. The third said he was building a cathedral. Even though all three were performing the same task.
What are you doing today? A seemingly mundane series of tasks? What about "spreading the light of Jesus Christ in a world choking in darkness"! Giving hope, being kind, modeling gratitude - being different enough that someone might ask you about the reason of the hope in you-
1 Peter 3:15- but in your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect,
"Calling" lifts our eyes beyond the immediate task and reminds us that even ordinary work can participate in something eternal.
Guinness also makes an observation that I found increasingly convicting as I grow older. He points out that drudgery is (unfortunately) part of discipleship. Yeah, I don't like that either.
We tend to think significance lives in extraordinary moments.
Oswald Chambers argued the opposite.
"We do not need the grace of God to withstand crises—human nature and pride are sufficient for us to face the stress and strain magnificently. But it does require the grace of God to live twenty-four hours of every day as a saint, going through drudgery, and living an ordinary, unnoticed, and ignored existence as a disciple of Jesus."
The older I get, the less interested I become in writing a grand mission statement and the more interested I become in glorifying God in whatever He places in front of me today.
The extraordinary Christian life is usually lived through ordinary acts of faithfulness repeated over a very long period of time.
And when those moments are offered to God, they become patches of Godlight.
Not a single one we’re given.
Every breath, every face,
Is a thread of grace we’re living.
From the hard-earned laughs to the tears we save,
These moments don’t come again—
There are no ordinary days,
When they’re spent with the ones we love.
Song Link: No Ordinary Days





