This teaching is part of the Bible-based Christian writings by Robert Woeger, created to help readers know Jesus Christ, grow in faith, pray in agreement with Scripture, live with eternal purpose, and glorify God in ordinary life.

Sometimes God does not begin a new chapter with thunder. Sometimes He begins with an interruption.

A delay. A conversation. A closed door. A sudden conviction. A restless night. A need you did not plan for. A Scripture that will not leave your heart. A moment of quiet while the rest of the world keeps rushing. A small assignment you almost overlook. A holy pause in the middle of an ordinary day.

At first, it may feel inconvenient. It may interrupt your schedule, challenge your plans, disturb your comfort, or reveal something in your heart you did not realize had grown dull. But if you listen carefully, you may discover that what looked like an interruption was actually an invitation.

God may be calling you back to prayer. He may be asking you to slow down before you speak. He may be redirecting your attention toward someone who needs hope. He may be exposing a motive, healing a place of hidden weariness, or reminding you that ordinary life was never meant to be spiritually empty.

When God touches the ordinary, it becomes sacred.

When God interrupts your plans, He may be rescuing your purpose.

When God slows your steps, He may be protecting your soul.

When God gets your attention, He is not trying to ruin your day. He is trying to restore your direction.

"In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths." Proverbs 3:6

A sacred interruption is an ordinary moment God uses to realign your heart, awaken your obedience, restore worship, and turn daily life into something that glorifies Him.

Quick Answer: What Is A Sacred Interruption?

A sacred interruption is an ordinary moment God uses to get your attention, realign your heart, call you back to prayer, reveal eternal priorities, invite hidden obedience, or turn a daily situation into worship that glorifies Him.

It may not look dramatic. It may not feel spiritual at first. But when the interruption draws you closer to Jesus Christ, brings your life back into agreement with God's Word, or opens a door to love, obey, serve, forgive, pray, speak truth, or become a witness, it may be more than an inconvenience. It may be holy ground.

When Ordinary Life Becomes Holy Ground

Moses was not standing in a temple when God spoke from the burning bush. He was keeping sheep. He was doing ordinary work in an ordinary place, and yet the ground became holy because God was there.

"And he said, Draw not nigh hither: put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground." Exodus 3:5

That is one of the great surprises of walking with God. He can meet you in places you did not expect. He can speak in the middle of responsibility. He can interrupt routine with revelation. He can turn the ordinary into an altar.

Many Christians miss the sacredness of ordinary life because they are waiting for something more dramatic. They imagine that only church services, conferences, worship moments, public ministry, or obvious miracles are spiritual. But God is not limited to the places we label religious.

He sees your kitchen. He sees your car. He sees your workplace. He sees the late-night prayer you whispered when no one heard. He sees the email you chose not to send in anger. He sees the person you forgave when your flesh wanted revenge. He sees the private obedience that no one applauded. He sees the small yes that cost you something.

Ordinary life becomes holy ground when it is surrendered to God.

That is not boring. That is powerful. It means your life does not have to wait for a platform to matter. Your home can glorify God. Your words can glorify God. Your work can glorify God. Your patience can glorify God. Your hidden obedience can glorify God. Your online presence can glorify God. Your response to interruptions can glorify God.

The sacred interruption teaches you that God is not only interested in the public highlights of your life. He wants the whole life.

God Often Interrupts What Has Become Automatic

One reason God interrupts ordinary life is because ordinary life can become automatic.

You can wake up, work, eat, scroll, talk, react, plan, worry, repeat, and never stop long enough to ask, "Lord, am I still walking with You in this?"

You can keep Christian language while losing spiritual tenderness. You can stay active while becoming prayerless. You can serve publicly while drifting privately. You can quote truth while slowly agreeing with fear. You can do good things while forgetting the One who gives life to every good thing.

God loves you too much to let your life run on spiritual autopilot forever.

Sometimes He interrupts because your rhythm has become rushed. Sometimes He interrupts because your words have become careless. Sometimes He interrupts because your motives need cleansing. Sometimes He interrupts because your priorities have shifted. Sometimes He interrupts because the enemy has been quietly training your attention away from the Presence of God.

A sacred interruption may sound like this in the heart:

Slow down.

Pray before you answer.

Forgive before bitterness hardens.

Return to My Word.

Do not ignore that person.

Do not say that.

Stop rehearsing fear.

Come back to the secret place.

Remember why I called you.

The interruption is not always comfortable, but it is often merciful.

"Search me, O God, and know my heart: try me, and know my thoughts." Psalm 139:23

When God interrupts what has become automatic, He is not trying to condemn you. He is inviting you to become awake, tender, responsive, and available again.

A Sacred Interruption Is Not Always Dramatic

Many people miss sacred interruptions because they expect them to look spectacular.

They expect an angel, a dream, a loud voice, or a visible sign. God can speak however He chooses, but many of His most life-changing invitations begin quietly.

A child asks a question that reveals what matters most.

A friend calls at an inconvenient time, but needs prayer.

A Scripture you have read many times suddenly cuts through your excuses.

A delay protects you from rushing into something unwise.

A disappointment reveals where your trust had moved from God to circumstances.

A closed door forces you to ask whether you wanted God's will or merely His approval for your plans.

A stranger's need interrupts your schedule and gives you a chance to carry the love of Christ.

A sentence in a sermon, article, book, video, or conversation opens a window of conviction.

A quiet grief causes you to return to prayer with honesty.

The sacred interruption is not measured by how dramatic it appears. It is measured by whether God uses it to draw your heart into truth, obedience, worship, and fruitfulness.

Elijah learned that God was not only in the wind, the earthquake, or the fire, but also in a still small voice.

"And after the earthquake a fire; but the LORD was not in the fire: and after the fire a still small voice." 1 Kings 19:12

If your soul is trained only for noise, you may miss the whisper. If your heart is always hurried, you may miss the gentle correction. If your life is always full of reaction, you may miss the invitation to respond by faith.

God does not need to shout to be Lord.

God Uses Ordinary Moments To Reveal Eternal Priorities

Ordinary moments reveal what you value.

They reveal what controls your attention. They reveal what you worship when no one is watching. They reveal whether your words are governed by faith or frustration. They reveal whether your calendar has room for obedience. They reveal whether your heart is still tender toward God.

That is why ordinary life matters so much. It is the place where your true priorities become visible.

Anyone can sound spiritual for a moment. But what happens when your plans change? What happens when you are overlooked? What happens when someone interrupts your comfort? What happens when God asks you to serve in a way no one will notice? What happens when obedience is inconvenient?

Those moments do not create your heart condition. They reveal it.

Jesus taught that the heart and treasure are connected.

"For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also." Matthew 6:21

A sacred interruption can reveal that your treasure has slowly moved. Maybe you have treasured comfort more than obedience. Maybe you have treasured being understood more than loving well. Maybe you have treasured productivity more than presence with God. Maybe you have treasured human approval more than the pleasure of the Father.

That revelation is not meant to shame you. It is meant to rescue you.

When God reveals misplaced priorities, He is inviting you to put the treasure back where it belongs.

Jesus Christ is worthy of first place, not leftover attention. His Word deserves more authority than your mood. His Presence deserves more room than your distractions. His will deserves more trust than your fear.

The ordinary moment becomes sacred when it brings eternal priorities back into focus.

When God Interrupts Your Plans, He May Be Realigning Your Heart

Not every interruption is from God. Some disruptions are attacks, distractions, consequences, delays, or simply part of living in a fallen world. But God is able to use even what He did not author to realign the heart that belongs to Him.

That is why the wise believer does not treat every interruption as meaningless.

Instead of only asking, "How do I get back to my plan?" learn to ask, "Lord, what do You want to show me in this moment?"

Maybe God is teaching patience.

Maybe He is redirecting your attention.

Maybe He is exposing self-reliance.

Maybe He is slowing you before you make an unwise decision.

Maybe He is giving you an opportunity to love someone.

Maybe He is calling you out of hurry and back into peace.

Maybe He is showing you that your identity cannot be built on control.

Maybe He is inviting you to surrender.

"O LORD, I know that the way of man is not in himself: it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps." Jeremiah 10:23

There is great peace in admitting that you are not wise enough to direct every step of your life without God.

That confession does not make you weak. It makes you safe.

A life surrendered to God does not need to panic every time the schedule changes. A life surrendered to God can pause, pray, listen, obey, and trust that the Father sees more than you see.

God's interruption may not always explain itself immediately. Sometimes you only understand later. But faith does not require full explanation before obedience. Faith trusts the character of God while the details are still unfolding.

If God interrupts your plans, do not harden your heart. Ask Him to realign it.

Hidden Obedience Can Glorify God Before Anyone Sees

Some of the most important worship you will ever offer God will happen before anyone sees it.

Hidden obedience matters.

The prayer nobody heard matters.

The temptation you resisted when nobody knew matters.

The apology you made without defending yourself matters.

The forgiveness you chose when your emotions still hurt matters.

The generous act you kept private matters.

The bitter sentence you refused to speak matters.

The honest work you did without praise matters.

The Scripture you obeyed when nobody was watching matters.

The world often measures value by visibility. God measures faithfulness by the heart.

"But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret; and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly." Matthew 6:6

Before God uses a life publicly, He often forms it privately.

That is why hidden interruptions can be so sacred. They give you a chance to obey without applause. They give you a chance to choose God when no one is impressed. They give you a chance to become true when the only audience is Heaven.

If you only obey when people see it, your obedience is still entangled with image. But when you obey before anyone sees, you are learning to live before the face of God.

That kind of life glorifies Him.

Not because it is loud.

Not because it is famous.

Not because it is impressive to people.

But because it is real.

God is glorified by real faith, real surrender, real obedience, real worship, and real love.

Small Faithfulness Can Become Great Worship

Do not despise small obedience.

Many people miss the will of God because they are waiting for something large while ignoring the small thing God has already placed in front of them.

Speak kindly.

Keep your word.

Pray today.

Forgive again.

Read Scripture before scrolling.

Encourage one person.

Tell the truth.

Refuse gossip.

Be faithful in your work.

Honor God with your attention.

Turn your complaint into prayer.

Let your home hear words of faith.

Do the next right thing.

Small obedience becomes worship when it is offered to God with love.

"He that is faithful in that which is least is faithful also in much." Luke 16:10

The Lord is not waiting for you to become someone else before your life can glorify Him. He is asking you to surrender the life you have today.

Your ordinary day is full of altars. The question is not whether you will worship. The question is what your choices will worship.

Every moment of obedience says, "Jesus Christ is Lord here too."

Lord over my words.

Lord over my plans.

Lord over my work.

Lord over my home.

Lord over my phone.

Lord over my emotions.

Lord over my influence.

Lord over my interruptions.

Small faithfulness becomes great worship when it enthrones Jesus Christ in ordinary places.

Abiding In The True Vine Produces Fruit That Remains

Here is the beautiful secret: God does not call you to turn ordinary life into worship by human strength alone.

He calls you to abide in Jesus Christ.

Jesus is not merely an example to admire from a distance. He is The True Vine. Your life bears eternal fruit only as you remain connected to Him.

"I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without me ye can do nothing." John 15:5

This is where the sacred interruption becomes even more powerful. God often interrupts ordinary life to call you back to abiding.

Back to dependence.

Back to prayer.

Back to Scripture.

Back to humility.

Back to the secret place.

Back to Jesus Christ as the source, not merely the subject.

Fruit that remains is not produced by religious pressure. It is produced by living connection.

You can be busy and not fruitful. You can be visible and not fruitful. You can be talented and not fruitful. You can be active and still be disconnected in heart.

But when you abide in Jesus Christ, ordinary obedience begins to carry eternal life. Your words can carry grace. Your service can carry love. Your work can carry integrity. Your home can carry peace. Your testimony can carry hope. Your digital presence can carry light. Your hidden obedience can produce fruit that no algorithm can measure and no human applause can fully recognize.

Jesus connected fruitfulness with the Father's glory.

"Herein is my Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit; so shall ye be my disciples." John 15:8

That means your life glorifies God not only by avoiding evil, but by bearing fruit that reveals Christ.

Fruit of repentance.

Fruit of love.

Fruit of prayer.

Fruit of obedience.

Fruit of patience.

Fruit of witness.

Fruit of truth spoken in love.

Fruit that remains after the moment has passed.

God's interruptions are often invitations to stop producing noise and start producing fruit.

The branch does not strain to impress the Vine. The branch abides. Life flows. Fruit grows. God is glorified.

Your Words Can Turn An Ordinary Moment Toward Heaven

Words can turn a moment toward Heaven or toward fear.

One sentence can encourage a weary person. One prayer can shift a home. One Scripture spoken in faith can interrupt despair. One apology can soften a hardened conversation. One blessing can replace an atmosphere of accusation.

Ordinary words become sacred when they agree with God.

"Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable in thy sight, O LORD, my strength, and my redeemer." Psalm 19:14

A sacred interruption may come when you are about to speak from frustration. The Holy Spirit may quietly check your heart: Do not say that. Bless instead. Pray instead. Speak truth with love. Wait before answering.

That pause can become worship.

Your mouth is not separate from your discipleship. Your speech reveals what your heart is agreeing with. If your words constantly rehearse fear, offense, accusation, defeat, and unbelief, they will shape the atmosphere around you. But if your words are surrendered to Jesus Christ, they can become instruments of life.

This does not mean pretending problems do not exist. It means refusing to give darkness the final word.

Speak Scripture.

Pray with faith.

Bless your home.

Encourage the weary.

Refuse slander.

Withdraw careless judgments.

Let your words point people to Jesus Christ.

An ordinary conversation can become sacred when the Holy Spirit governs your mouth.

For more help on this topic, read Balanced Biblical Confession and Guard Your Heart, Mouth, And Atmosphere.

Your Work Can Become Worship When It Pleases God

Work is one of the most overlooked places of worship.

Many people divide life into spiritual and non-spiritual categories. Prayer is spiritual. Church is spiritual. Worship music is spiritual. Bible reading is spiritual. But work, errands, tasks, responsibilities, and daily duties are treated as merely ordinary.

Scripture does not allow such a small view of life.

"And whatsoever ye do, do it heartily, as to the Lord, and not unto men." Colossians 3:23

Whatsoever ye do.

That includes the visible and the hidden. The exciting and the repetitive. The public assignment and the private task. The ministry work and the ordinary work. The task that feels meaningful and the task that feels small.

Work becomes worship when it is done unto the Lord.

That does not mean every task feels easy. It means every task can be offered.

You can answer with patience unto the Lord. You can write with excellence unto the Lord. You can clean with gratitude unto the Lord. You can serve a difficult person unto the Lord. You can keep integrity when cutting corners would be easier. You can refuse to let your work become an idol while still doing it faithfully.

A sacred interruption at work may look like an unexpected conversation, a delay that tests your patience, a mistake that humbles you, a person who needs kindness, or a moment when God asks you to choose integrity over convenience.

That moment matters.

Your work can preach quietly. It can reveal diligence, humility, honesty, patience, excellence, and trust. It can become a signpost to Jesus Christ when your attitude carries His fragrance.

God is glorified when ordinary work is surrendered to Him.

Your Home Can Become Holy Ground Through Obedience

Your home is not spiritually neutral.

It can become a place of peace, prayer, forgiveness, worship, instruction, blessing, and truth. It can also become a place of bitterness, strife, fear, accusation, distraction, and spiritual neglect.

A sacred interruption may happen when God asks you to change the atmosphere of your home.

Turn off what is feeding fear.

Pray before reacting.

Speak blessing instead of accusation.

Forgive quickly.

Read Scripture aloud.

Ask for forgiveness when you are wrong.

Refuse to let resentment become the climate of the house.

"But as for me and my house, we will serve the LORD." Joshua 24:15

Serving the Lord at home is not just a wall decoration. It is a daily decision.

It is how you speak when tired. It is how you respond when interrupted. It is how you treat family when no one else sees. It is what you allow into the atmosphere. It is whether prayer has a place. It is whether Jesus Christ is honored in ordinary routines.

Your home does not have to be perfect to become holy ground. It must be surrendered.

When God interrupts your home life, He may be inviting you to rebuild an altar there.

Your Digital Life Can Become A Witness Instead Of A Distraction

In this generation, many sacred interruptions happen through digital doors.

A message arrives. A search begins. A video appears. A testimony is shared. A prayer is needed. A person in crisis finds a Christian resource at the very moment they are looking for hope.

Digital tools can distract, but they can also be consecrated.

The issue is not whether technology exists. The issue is whether your use of it is surrendered to God.

Your digital life can become a distraction, a performance, a comparison trap, a battleground of opinion, or a tool of witness. The same screen that can waste hours can also carry Scripture, prayer, testimony, encouragement, and truth.

A sacred interruption may come when you are about to scroll mindlessly and the Holy Spirit nudges you to pray. It may come when someone posts a need and you feel prompted to encourage them. It may come when you realize your online words have not been representing Christ. It may come when God reminds you that someone searching in private may need a public witness of hope.

"Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on an hill cannot be hid." Matthew 5:14

Light is not meant to hide in church buildings only. Light must shine wherever darkness is searching.

Use your words wisely. Share truth humbly. Point people to Jesus Christ. Let your testimony encourage someone. Let your resources serve someone. Let your online presence carry hope instead of noise.

Your digital life can become part of your worship when it is governed by love, truth, humility, and obedience.

For more on witness and testimony, read Turn Your Testimony Into Evangelism.

Discern The Difference Between Disruption, Correction, And Divine Direction

Not every interruption means the same thing.

Some interruptions are distractions. Some are consequences. Some are attacks. Some are normal inconveniences. Some are corrections. Some are invitations. Some are divine directions.

The believer must learn discernment.

"Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." 1 Thessalonians 5:21

Ask these questions prayerfully:

Disruption often produces agitation without spiritual fruit. Correction produces conviction that leads to repentance and restoration. Divine direction brings alignment with Scripture, peace beneath obedience, and fruit that honors God.

Do not be superstitious. Do not call every inconvenience a sign. Do not chase mystery for its own sake. But also do not become so hardened by routine that you miss the Father's hand in an ordinary moment.

Discernment keeps you from exaggerating interruptions and from ignoring holy ones.

For more help, read How To Know If God Is Leading You.

How To Respond When God Interrupts Ordinary Life

When God interrupts ordinary life, do not rush past the moment. Respond with faith.

  1. Pause before reacting. Not every interruption deserves an immediate emotional response. Take a breath. Invite God into the moment.
  2. Pray for discernment. Ask, "Lord, what do You want me to see, learn, obey, or release in this?"
  3. Test it by Scripture. God will not lead you contrary to His Word.
  4. Return to Jesus Christ. Abide in The True Vine. Do not try to produce spiritual fruit in your own strength.
  5. Obey the next clear step. You may not know the whole path. Obey what is clear.
  6. Turn the moment into worship. Offer the interruption to God through patience, humility, prayer, forgiveness, truth, service, or thanksgiving.
  7. Let your life become a witness. Ask how your response can point someone to Jesus Christ.

This is how an ordinary interruption becomes sacred. It is not because the circumstance is easy. It is because your response belongs to God.

A 7-Day Sacred Ordinary Reset

Use this simple reset to practice turning ordinary life into worship.

Day 1: Surrender The Day Before It Starts

Before checking messages, pray: "Father, this day belongs to You. Interrupt what needs to be interrupted. Realign what needs to be realigned. Lead me in Your will."

Day 2: Watch Your First Reaction

When something interrupts your plan, pause before reacting. Ask whether God is inviting patience, prayer, humility, service, or trust.

Day 3: Turn One Task Into Worship

Choose one ordinary duty and do it unto the Lord. Work with excellence, gratitude, and faithfulness.

Day 4: Let Your Words Bless

Refuse complaint, gossip, accusation, or fear-filled speech for one day. Speak Scripture, encouragement, blessing, and prayer.

Day 5: Obey In Secret

Do one act of obedience, generosity, prayer, forgiveness, or service without needing recognition.

Day 6: Abide Before Producing

Spend time with Jesus Christ before trying to accomplish for Him. Read John 15 and ask Him to produce fruit that remains.

Day 7: Become A Signpost

Ask God to use one ordinary conversation, message, act of kindness, or testimony to point someone toward Jesus Christ.

This reset is not a formula. It is a way to practice awareness, surrender, and obedience in ordinary life.

Prayer For Recognizing God's Sacred Interruptions

Father God, I come to You in the name of Jesus Christ. Open my eyes to recognize the moments You are using to get my attention, realign my heart, and draw me into deeper obedience. Forgive me for treating sacred moments as inconveniences and for rushing past Your gentle correction, direction, and invitations.

Teach me to abide in Jesus Christ The True Vine. I do not want to produce religious activity without lasting fruit. Let my ordinary life become worship. Let my words, work, home, relationships, private choices, online presence, and daily obedience glorify You.

Interrupt what needs to be interrupted. Heal what needs to be healed. Correct what needs to be corrected. Redirect what needs to be redirected. Awaken what has grown dull. Restore prayer where I have become distracted. Restore obedience where I have delayed. Restore worship where life has become automatic.

Let my hidden obedience please You. Let my small faithfulness become great worship. Let my life point people to Jesus Christ. Produce fruit that remains, and let all the glory belong to You.

In The Name Of Jesus Christ.

Decree Of Obedience, Worship, Fruitfulness, And Witness

I belong to Jesus Christ.

My ordinary life is not wasted when it is surrendered to God.

I will not treat every interruption as an inconvenience.

I will pause, pray, discern, and obey.

I will acknowledge the Lord in all my ways, and He shall direct my paths.

I will abide in Jesus Christ The True Vine.

I will not try to produce eternal fruit in my own strength.

My words, work, home, private life, digital life, and daily decisions will come into agreement with God's Word.

Small obedience will become worship.

Hidden faithfulness will glorify God.

My life will point people to Jesus Christ.

I will produce fruit that remains by abiding in Him.

The sacred interruptions of God will not be wasted in my life.

Jesus Christ will be glorified in me.

In The Name Of Jesus Christ.

Frequently Asked Questions About Sacred Interruptions And Glorifying God In Ordinary Life

What Is A Sacred Interruption?

A sacred interruption is an ordinary moment God uses to get your attention, realign your heart, call you back to prayer, reveal eternal priorities, or invite you into obedience that glorifies Him.

How Do I Know If God Is Trying To Get My Attention?

God may be getting your attention when an interruption produces conviction, draws you back to Scripture and prayer, exposes misplaced priorities, opens a door to serve someone, or calls you to obey something He has already made clear in His Word.

Can Ordinary Life Really Become Worship?

Yes. Ordinary life becomes worship when your words, work, relationships, decisions, stewardship, and hidden obedience are offered to God in faith, love, humility, and agreement with Scripture.

Why Does God Interrupt My Plans?

God may interrupt your plans to protect you, correct you, redirect you, awaken you, humble you, prepare you, or place you where your obedience can bless someone else and glorify Jesus Christ.

How Does Abiding In Jesus Christ Produce Fruit That Remains?

When a believer stays connected to Jesus Christ The True Vine, ordinary obedience is no longer dependent on human strength alone. Christ's life flows through the believer, producing lasting fruit that glorifies God.

How Should I Respond When God Interrupts Ordinary Life?

Pause, pray, test the moment by Scripture, return to Jesus Christ, obey the next clear step, turn the moment into worship, and let your response become a witness to others.

How Can My Life Point People To Jesus Christ?

Your life points people to Jesus Christ when your words, actions, work, forgiveness, testimony, online presence, and daily obedience consistently direct attention away from self and toward the goodness, truth, mercy, and Lordship of Jesus Christ.

Continue Growing In God's Word

If this teaching has stirred your heart, do not rush away from the moment. Ask God what sacred interruption you may have been ignoring. Ask Him where ordinary life has become automatic. Ask Him where your words, work, home, private obedience, or digital life need to become worship again.

Then respond.

Return to prayer. Abide in Jesus Christ. Obey the next clear step. Let small faithfulness become worship. Let your life produce fruit that remains. Let Jesus Christ receive the glory.

For related Bible-based teachings, continue with Awake, Aligned, And Sent, The Daily Agreement With God Routine, Prayer, How To Know If God Is Leading You, Not My Will But God's Will Be Done, Guard Your Heart, Mouth, And Atmosphere, Turn Your Testimony Into Evangelism, Devoted To God, and Glory Life.

Take Action Today: Let Ordinary Life Become Worship

If God is getting your attention, do not ignore Him. Pause, pray, return to Jesus Christ, and ask The Holy Spirit to show you the next clear step of obedience.

Begin today by surrendering one ordinary part of your life to God: your words, work, home, schedule, online presence, hidden obedience, or response to interruptions.

Then ask Him to turn that ordinary place into worship that glorifies Jesus Christ.

May your ordinary life become holy ground, and may Jesus Christ be glorified through fruit that remains.