11/04/2026
The Joy After Midnight - A short fictional story on experiencing the Paschal Divine Liturgy:
Daniel stood outside the glowing doors of the parish of St Joachim and St Anna, checking his phone as he waited.
He came every year.
Not because he was particularly devout. Not because he fasted strictly, or attended the mid week services, or even fully understood the long hymns that seemed to stretch endlessly into the night.
He came because it was tradition. Because at midnight you held a candle, heard “Christ is Risen,” saw a few familiar faces, and went home to magiritsa.
That was the rhythm.
Inside, the church was full. The icons shimmered. The scent of beeswax lingered in the air. As midnight approached, the lights dimmed, and a hush fell. From the altar, a single flame appeared.
“Come, receive the Light…”
The flame moved from person to person. Daniel leaned forward and lit his thin white candle. The fire trembled at its tip, small but alive. They walked in a procession outside.
“Christ is Risen!”
“Truly He is Risen!”
The words burst from hundreds of voices. People smiled and embraced.
Daniel joined in, exchanging greetings, glancing at his watch.
12:07am.
He turned toward the gate, following the familiar flow of people beginning to leave. This was the moment he knew — the natural ending point of the Easter service.
But then he paused.
Through the open doors, he could see the priest re-entering the church, now vested in bright white. The chanting had begun again — no longer solemn, but full of life, almost radiant.
He hesitated. He wasn’t sure why.
Perhaps it was curiosity. Or simply the sense that something was continuing — something he had never really stayed to experience.
I suppose it wouldn't hurt to stay, he thought.
He walked inside.
Inside, the crowd was thinner now. The vastness of the church felt different — less crowded, more intimate. The priest’s voice rang clearly:
“It is the day of Resurrection! Let us be radiant, O people!”
Radiant.
Daniel looked around. The remaining faithful were not many, but they sang with a fullness he hadn’t noticed before. No one seemed rushed. No one was checking a watch.
That Liturgy was the most beautiful Daniel had experienced.
Then came the homily of John Chrysostom.
“If any be devout and love God, let him enjoy this fair and radiant triumph…”
The reading was steady, unhurried.
“If any have come at the eleventh hour…”
Daniel gave a faint, almost amused breath.
That’s me, he thought.
Not distant from faith — but not especially close either. Always somewhere in between.

“Let no one weep… for pardon has shone forth from the tomb.”
There was no pressure, no expectation. Just an open invitation, offered without condition.
When the final proclamation came again —
“Christ is Risen!”
— he answered more deliberately this time.
“Truly He is Risen.”
Daniel thought of how quickly he had been ready to leave. To take the flame home, let it trace a soot cross above the door, and move on unchanged.
But here, staying — simply staying — he felt something shift.
When he stepped outside later, the night had settled into stillness. The crowds were gone. The street was quiet.
Nothing around him had changed. But something within him had.
He realized that for years, he had experienced Pascha as a beautiful moment — something to witness, to celebrate briefly, and then carry home.
Tonight, he had stayed a little longer.
And in doing so, he had discovered something just as beautiful: that the joy of the Resurrection doesn’t end at midnight. It unfolds, waiting for anyone willing to remain and receive it.
As he walked to his car, the words stayed with him — not as an obligation, but as a quiet invitation.
Tonight, Daniel discovered that the Resurrection was an invitation.
And for the first time, he had stayed long enough to hear it.
Source: Lychnos
lychnos.org/current-lychnos