“God opposes the proud but shows favor to the humble.” ~ James 4:6
He slipped through the church
doors sixteen minutes late, his breath still catching from the hurried walk.
Heads turned. Eyebrows lifted. A few people sighed. One woman shook her head
with a disappointed look that felt heavier than any shouted rebuke. The usher
hesitated as if deciding whether he even belonged, then he pointed him to an
empty pew.
Luke sank into it, heat creeping
up his neck. He’d already missed almost half the sermon. He tried to pray, to
listen, to be present… but all he could feel was the weight of being noticed,
judged, and quietly dismissed.
After the service, no one spoke
to him. They brushed past with polite smiles. He walked back out into the gray
morning feeling smaller than when he arrived.
Luke almost didn’t go to his next stop. He knew he'd be thirty
minutes late if he did.
He sat in his car for almost ten
minutes staring at the brick building. There were no stained glass windows or
statues here, only a hand-lettered sign and a tired coffee maker that hadn't brewed any hope for years.
He thought about driving away; about stopping at a bar instead. He fought the urge to surrender to the storm tearing him apart inside.
But when he opened the door, the room fell silent. Chairs
scraped back. People stood. A friend said his name, relief thick in his voice. “Luke!
Welcome brother… we’re glad you made it.”
They didn’t glare. They smiled. They didn’t pull away. They
leaned in. They didn’t judge his lateness. They celebrated his arrival. One by
one, arms embraced Luke. A few eyes betrayed the emotion they tried to hide.
They didn’t need to ask why… they knew.
Here, being late wasn’t failure. It was survival. It meant
he’d nearly lost… but showed up anyway, fighting for life over alcohol.
Quivering, Luke lowered himself
into a seat and felt a quiet peace seep into his chest. The leader nodded
gently. “Let’s pick up where we left off.” And the meeting continued -
not because they had paused for a problem. But because they’d just witnessed a
small miracle.
We never know what battles
people fight just to show up. Some arrive late to church, to life, to hope… not
from indifference, but because they almost didn’t make it at all.
What if instead of measuring
worth by punctuality, polish, or perfection, we measured it by courage? What if
we paused, opened our arms, and welcomed people as if their very presence might
be a victory? Because sometimes, the greatest miracle isn’t who arrived on
time… it’s who arrived at all.
Lord, thank You for places where grace beats
judgment, and love is stronger than shame. Teach us to welcome one another as
You welcome us - patiently, gently, and with open arms. Give us hearts that
rejoice when the broken come seeking hope. Amen







