The ordinary day is one of the first places the soul is tested: by pressure, comparison, hurry, hidden resentment, the desire to be seen, and the fear that labor must prove our worth. These pages bring the working life back under the gaze of Christ. They move through the tasks, tools, decisions, interruptions, boundaries, corrections, rest, and unseen acts of service that fill a real day, asking what changes when labor is no longer treated as master, performance, or escape.
Here, faith is not removed from the desk, the kitchen, the workshop, the meeting, or the marketplace. It is brought there with honesty, reverence, and practical spiritual attention. For readers who want their daily labor to become more truthful before God, this book offers language for offering the day, receiving limits, guarding mercy, practicing excellence without pride, seeing the neighbor inside the task, and laying unfinished work down without despair.
It is a book for returning to ordinary duties with a steadier soul, cleaner hands, and a quieter trust that Christ meets His people among common things.
The ordinary day is one of the first places the soul is tested: by pressure, comparison, hurry, hidden resentment, the desire to be seen, and the fear that labor must prove our worth. These pages bring the working life back under the gaze of Christ. They move through the tasks, tools, decisions, interruptions, boundaries, corrections, rest, and unseen acts of service that fill a real day, asking what changes when labor is no longer treated as master, performance, or escape.
Here, faith is not removed from the desk, the kitchen, the workshop, the meeting, or the marketplace. It is brought there with honesty, reverence, and practical spiritual attention. For readers who want their daily labor to become more truthful before God, this book offers language for offering the day, receiving limits, guarding mercy, practicing excellence without pride, seeing the neighbor inside the task, and laying unfinished work down without despair.
It is a book for returning to ordinary duties with a steadier soul, cleaner hands, and a quieter trust that Christ meets His people among common things.