Monday, January 26, 2026

National Bubble Wrap Day: When God Wraps Us in Grace.

It’s National Bubble Wrap Day! 

(Yep, it is a real thing!)

That may sound silly at first, one of those calendar oddities meant to make us smile and move on. But bubble wrap has a way of slowing us down. You can’t help it. You press one bubble. Then another. The sound is small, controlled, and oddly satisfying. For a moment, everything else quiets.


There’s something there worth noticing from a Godly point of view. Bubble wrap exists for one reason: protection. It cushions what’s fragile. It absorbs shock. It creates space between what could be damaged and what might damage it.

Scripture often speaks of God in similar terms, not as something that removes hardship but as One who surrounds, covers, and keeps.

“The Lord is my rock and my fortress and my deliverer… my shield, in whom I take refuge.”
— Psalm 18:2


Cushion, Not Control

Most of us would prefer God to remove the fall entirely. No impact. No pain. No uncertainty.

But more often than not, God allows the drop and provides the cushion. The drop is because He grants us free will. The cushion is because He loves us and allows us to learn. 

Grace doesn’t mean life won’t hit hard. It means the blow is not final. (Heaven is waiting for those who are saved.) It means we are not shattered by what we carry. It means there is space between us and despair, between us and destruction.


Paul describes it this way:

“We are afflicted in every way, but not crushed; perplexed, but not driven to despair.”
— 2 Corinthians 4:8

That part about not being crushed really matters!


The Quiet Mercy of Small Things

Bubble wrap is unassuming. Transparent. Easily overlooked. It doesn’t draw attention to itself; it simply does its work of protecting what it is wrapped around.

Much of God’s mercy arrives the same way.

Not always in dramatic rescue, but in:

  • strength that lasts one more day

  • a calm that doesn’t make sense (Shalom) 

  • a community that absorbs weight with us

  • a moment of stillness when anxiety wants to spiral

These are not flashy miracles. They are sustained through God's mercy and love. (God's bubble wrap) 


There’s also something childlike about bubble wrap: the permission to play, to laugh, to engage in something simple without justification. That, too, is spiritual work and given through God's love.


Joy is not a distraction from faith. It is evidence of it.

“Every good and perfect gift is from above.”
— James 1:17

Even the small ones. Even the silly ones.


So today, if you find yourself popping bubbles... literally or metaphorically, let it be a reminder:

You are held.
You are covered.
You are not as exposed as you sometimes feel.

You are wrapped in God's bubble wrap! And when life drops hard, God’s grace still absorbs more than we can see or ever understand.