Jean-François Millet's, The Angelus, captures a liminal moment when ordinary lives touch the divine—two peasants, bound by struggles of faith, loss, and hope, pause their earthly labors as evening light hallows their grief-worn faces. Resonating with quiet, solemn resilience and the harsh beauty of survival amid unyielding hardship, the image is a revelation of the emergence of meaning from life's darkest moments: a transformation of ordinary struggles into profound discoveries about what it means to be human.