The gap between Sunday and Tuesday
There’s something I’ve been sitting with this week, and I suspect you might recognise it.
Sunday comes. There’s something genuinely holy about it - a song, a prayer, a moment where God feels close. And then Monday arrives. The alarm goes off. The commute begins. The inbox fills up. And somewhere in the middle of all that, God feels... far away.
I think a lot of us have absorbed a quiet lie: that God mostly lives in church, and the rest of the week we’re mostly on our own.
Today’s devotional takes that idea and gently turns it upside down.
We spend five minutes with a verse from Exodus that I think is one of the most underrated passages in Scripture. God’s Spirit fills a craftsman called Bezalel - not to preach, not to pray, but to cut stone, weave fabric, and shape wood. His workbench was holy ground.
And so, I’d suggest, is yours.
I want to share three simple things from that passage that might change the way you see your week - including one that’s about receiving rather than striving, and one tiny 30-second practice you can try before lunch today.
No mountain to climb. No list to complete. Just the quiet habit of noticing that God was already there before you arrived.
The full 5-minute video is up now on YouTube. I’d love you to watch it and - if it lands with you - leave a comment. It really does make a difference.
👉 Watch today’s devotional here:
Until tomorrow - take care of yourself today.
Rob
Read this week’s devotionals here - https://open.substack.com/pub/battledrilldevotional/p/what-if-ordinary-is-exactly-enough?r=643q6o&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=true

