3:00 AM Marginalia: The Flickering Lamp and the Variable Light | Theology of Everyday Life 3:00 AM Marginalia: The Flickering Lamp and the Variable Light The dark feels correct at 3 a.m. I sit here wondering what kind of light I'm supposed to be when even the sun doesn't stay noon-bright. Three a.m. The quiet is thick. My thoughts drift to light—waves, not steady beams. Even the most constant source has phases: dawn faint, noon blaze, sunset gentle, midnight sometimes sharpest. My life moves the same. Seasons minute-to-minute, day-to-day, month-to-month, year-to-year. Some only once in a lifetime. I shine brightly in one moment, private warmth in another, barely a flicker the next. God says put the lamp on a stand, don't hide it under a bushel. He fills me with inner light that glows out. But why the variability? Why dawn dim when I want noon s...