Thursday - September 25, 2025
READING
“The greatest spiritual practice isn't yoga, praying the hours, or living in intentional poverty, although these are beautiful in their own way. The greatest spiritual practice is just showing up, being present to what is real, to what is actually happening.”
Bishop Allan Bjornberg
WORDS OF HOPE
A recent sermon by Nadia Bolz-Weber posted on substack is titled “Another Expletive Deleted Day of Violence in America.” (except the expletive wasn’t deleted!) In it she centers Mary Magdalene as one who shows up—even when the institutional violence of empire tortures the one who had freed her from her inner “demons” and showed her a love beyond imagining. Though it must have been devastating, she is fully present at the foot of the cross and mirrors that love back to Jesus, her heart broken open. Days later, “when it was still dark,” she shows up in hope at the tomb and meets the resurrected Christ.
Showing up comes in many forms. It can be as simple as caring for your grandchildren when their parents are drooping with exhaustion. Or it could be participating in one of our meal programs, praying with others, traveling to Austin to be a voice against injustices to LGBTQ+ people, gathering with others for Life group meetings to grow our faith, and marching against the creeping authoritarianism of our times. A Sunday commitment to worship is yet another important practice.
Sometimes showing up can feel necessary to our survival and wellness—getting out of bed to go to an AA meeting, summoning the courage to open a dark door to face child abuse in therapy, speaking the truth in love at a time of conflict in a relationship. Showing up can even mean summoning the courage to face the future after your beloved has died.
One of the hardest parts of showing up is facing the painful reality of a loved one’s condition but being there anyway: sitting by the side of your partner in a chemo lab, again and again, standing by a young adult child whose judgment lapse has been costly, faithfully visiting a parent who is slipping into the shadows of dementia.
Sometimes showing up means sitting down, as indicated in a powerful eulogy turned prophetic message by Bishop William Barber for Maj. General Joseph O’Neil. O’Neil was one of the Greensboro Four whose lunch counter sit ins catalyzed the Southern Freedom movement in 1960. Barber issued the call for direct action, such as peacefully sitting in at legislators’ offices—and being arrested if needed, in these dire times.
How will you show up in this time which desperately needs you?
PRAYER
In times when we want to retreat into ourselves, O God, show us the way to show up in the name of Jesus, the one who healed, taught, loved, and spoke truth to power, even when it meant facing death on the cross. Amen.
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Dr. Pat Saxon
Need More Inspiration? Read our Daily Devotions





