Beginning now through the end of the year, I will be reading one book each month related to homemaking or the heart of the homemaker, starting with Keeping Place: Reflections on the Meaning of Home by Jen Pollack Michel. You can see the full list of books I’ll be reading, here
Home. The word hums softly, carrying a gift older than memory. In the Preface, Jen writes:
"Home was one of humanity’s first gifts" (p. 18).
Even as I read it, I feel the weight of that first gift. Home is more than walls and a roof. It is light and life, safety and presence, a place where hearts are nurtured and belong. And in the ordinary rhythm of my days—folding linens, setting a table, stirring a pot—this sacred gift whispers back.
because we are made in the image of a homemaking God" (p. 19).
These words settle over me like gentle rain. They remind me that the care I offer in the small corners of my life is not small at all. Each gesture of attention, each patient act, mirrors the God who arranges, who tends, who restores. To live faithfully in our homes, to tend them with love, is to reflect the divine character itself.
Michel continues:
— Sinners take leave. — The Father bids our return" (pp. 18–19).
The story of the world, I realize, is a story of homecoming. God sets the rooms, fills them with light, offers a dwelling. Humanity wanders. And yet the Father’s call is never silenced. He bids us return, restoring the home, making space once more for love and belonging. Every quiet act of care, every attentive moment, is part of that eternal story.
Read the three quotes above slowly, pausing after each one to consider the following:
❊ How can I recognize and receive the gift of my home today—not just as a space, but as a place of presence, nurture, and welcome?
❊ In what ways can the work I do—whether folding, stirring, writing, or listening—reflect God’s care and attention, bringing a piece of heaven into my ordinary day?
❊ How might my daily rhythms, my small acts of hospitality and care, participate in God’s story of welcome and restoration, inviting others to dwell and return?
As we pause with these questions, the quiet truth settles in: holiness is woven into the ordinary. Each act of care, each moment of attention, each patient gesture is part of God’s work of restoring home—our first gift, our vocation, our story, and always, our welcome back.
If you’d like to read along, you can purchase a paperback copy of the book here, or, if you prefer, it’s also available instantly on Kindle. If your local library offers Hoopla, you can access it there as an audiobook. If you do decide to read along, I’d love to hear your thoughts—just leave them in the comments!
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