Saturday, March 7, 2026

Hollywood Homemakers: What We Can Learn From Some
Of Television's Most Loved Wives and Mothers
- Margaret Anderson from Father Knows Best

As most of my readers know, I adore classic movies and television. With that in mind, I've decided upon a little four-part series: Hollywood Homemakers: What We Can Learn From Some of Television’s Most Beloved Wives and Mothers. Today we begin with Margaret Anderson, portrayed by actress Jane Wyatt in Father Knows Best.

When we think of classic television moms, Margaret Anderson from Father Knows Best immediately comes to mind. Played by Jane Wyatt, Margaret isn’t flashy or dramatic, yet she quietly exudes strength, wisdom, and unwavering love. In today’s world, where the concept of “homemaker” can feel outdated or undervalued, revisiting Margaret’s character offers rich lessons for modern wives and mothers — both in practical household management and in reflecting God’s design for family life.

❊ Margaret Anderson: The Quiet Strength of a Classic TV Mom
Margaret Anderson is the heart of the Anderson household. While her husband, Jim, often received the spotlight as the family authority, Margaret’s influence was undeniable. She was the steady, patient presence that grounded the family. Her strength lay not in loud commands or dramatic gestures, but in her calm, thoughtful guidance — a reminder that leadership in the home is often gentle and consistent rather than forceful.

❊ Strengths of Margaret Anderson
A Voice of Calm and Reason: Margaret provided perspective when life got messy. Teenage growing pains or household mishaps didn’t rattle her; instead, she modeled patience and thoughtful decision-making. Her calmness reminds us that the way we respond in moments of tension sets the tone for our homes.

Quiet Strength and Support: Margaret functioned as the family’s moral compass, offering wisdom and counsel even when it wasn’t spotlighted. Jane Wyatt described her character as “the power behind the throne,” which mirrors the biblical truth that God often calls wives to be quiet, steadfast pillars of love and guidance (Proverbs 31:26).


Kindness and Generosity: Margaret’s heart extended beyond her immediate family. She welcomed friends and neighbors, offered comfort, and consistently looked for the good in others. This generosity mirrors God’s call for wives to nurture, encourage, and love selflessly (Titus 2:4-5).

Personal Growth and Interests: While Margaret’s life centered on her family, she was not static. Storylines where she took up new skills — like learning fly fishing — demonstrate that homemakers can grow and pursue personal enrichment without diminishing their role in the home. God calls wives to cultivate their gifts and intellect as part of their stewardship of life and family (1 Peter 4:10).

❊ Weaknesses and Human Lessons
No character is perfect, and Margaret Anderson reflects that truth, too:

Sometimes Too Idealized: As a product of 1950s television, Margaret often appeared “too perfect.” Her patience and poise were admirable, but they weren’t always realistic. This reminds modern homemakers that striving for perfection is unnecessary; our real value lies in faithful love and service.

Internal Tension Around Identity: Behind the screen, Jane Wyatt acknowledged the subtle tension between Margaret’s homemaking role and the desires of a real woman seeking intellectual stimulation. Even in devotion to family, wives may wrestle with balancing personal growth with household responsibilities.

Occasionally Subsumes Her Own Needs: Margaret often prioritized her family over herself. This is a human reality for many women, and it encourages reflection on how God calls wives and mothers to care for themselves as part of caring for their families (1 Corinthians 6:19-20).

❊ How Margaret Anderson Mirrors God’s Design for Wives and Mothers
Even though Father Knows Best didn’t explicitly depict faith, Margaret’s character mirrors biblical principles for wives and mothers. Her quiet strength, consistent love, and thoughtful guidance reflect God’s design for nurturing the home. Like Proverbs 31:25-26 says, she is “clothed with strength and dignity” and speaks with wisdom. Her care, patience, and gentle influence show that the heart of homemaking is not just domestic work — it is ministry, shaping the family’s character and reflecting God’s love in tangible ways.

Margaret also models balance: she nurtures her family while quietly pursuing her own growth, reminding us that God’s design for wives includes flourishing personally and spiritually alongside serving others. Her generosity, calm authority, and moral guidance illuminate how a wife and mother can shepherd her household with love, patience, and wisdom.

❊ Lessons for Modern Homemakers
From Margaret Anderson, modern wives and mothers can take away several timeless truths:

Strength is often quiet, consistent, and patient.

Leadership in the home is relational, not forceful.

Selflessness should be balanced with personal growth and care.

Godly influence is expressed through love, guidance, and moral steadiness.

Even decades later, Margaret Anderson stands as a model of timeless homemaking virtues. She reminds us that the influence of a wife and mother is often quiet but far-reaching — shaping not just children, but the soul of the entire household. For those seeking to honor God in their roles, Margaret’s character provides a blueprint of love, wisdom, and grace.

As we reflect on Margaret Anderson, we see that the values she embodied — patience, wisdom, nurturing, and personal growth — are just as relevant today as they were in the 1950s. Over the next few weeks, we’ll be visiting other classic television homes, exploring the lives and lessons of Mary Stone from The Donna Reed Show (portrayed by Donna Reed), June Cleaver from Leave It To Beaver (portrayed by Barbara Billingsly), and Aunt Bee from The Andy Griffith Show (portrayed by Frances Bavier).

Each of these beloved characters offers a unique window into the heart of homemaking and what it means to live with intentional love, faithfulness, and grace. I can’t wait to explore their homes and hearts with you.


Friday, March 6, 2026

Lent For Homemakers - Week Three - Hospitality of Heart

A welcoming home begins long before a guest ever crosses the threshold. It begins in the quiet interior rooms of the soul — the places where we choose whether our hearts will be tight with hurry or open with grace.

During the third week of Lent, our focus gently shifts toward hospitality of heart: creating emotional and spiritual space where God and others can dwell. The work is subtle but sacred. In the rhythm of homemaking, we discover that clearing a table, lighting a candle, or preparing a cup of tea can become a form of prayer — an outward expression of an inward posture.

Henri Nouwen beautifully described hospitality as the creation of free space where another can enter and become a friend rather than a stranger. That kind of spaciousness cannot be manufactured through perfection or performance. It grows slowly through humility, attentiveness, and a willingness to let God soften the places within us that feel crowded.

This coming week we pray a simple prayer each day:

“Lord, make my heart spacious.”

On Sunday evening we light the third candle, a small flame reminding us that Christ Himself is the true light of the home. As the wick catches and the glow spreads across the room, we pause and consider what it means to welcome Him — not only into our houses, but into our schedules, our attitudes, and our relationships.

A vase of flowers on a table.
A chair cleared beside a window.
A quiet corner prepared with care.

These gestures may appear small, but they carry spiritual weight. They whisper something deeper than decoration:

You are welcome here.

❊ Sunday — Lighting the Third Candle
Scripture : Romans 12:13

“Contribute to the needs of the saints and seek to show hospitality.”

Tonight we light the third candle and prepare a welcoming space in our home. It may be as simple as tidying a small corner, placing flowers in a jar, or clearing the entryway.

As our hands move through the work, we pray that God would cultivate openness in our hearts — a willingness to receive and to give love freely this week.

Journal Reflection:

How can my home reflect the hospitality of Christ?

❊ Monday — Simple Offerings
Scripture: Hebrews 13:2

“Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers, for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.”

Hospitality often arrives quietly through ordinary kindness.

Today we prepare a small refreshment or treat for someone — a family member, neighbor, or friend. As we offer it, we hold a silent prayer in our hearts, imagining God’s presence traveling through this simple act.

Even the smallest gesture can become a doorway for grace.

Journal Reflection:

Who is God inviting me to serve with simple acts of love today?

❊ Tuesday — Making Space
Scripture: Matthew 10:40

“Whoever receives you receives me.”

A home can hold spaces that invite rest and belonging.

Today we prepare a cozy corner for those who live with us — perhaps with a blanket, a stack of books, or a quiet place to sit. Before anyone uses it, we take a few moments to sit there ourselves, praying for the people who will gather there.

Walls absorb more prayer than we often realize.

Journal Reflection:

Where do I feel invited to receive others with grace?

❊ Wednesday — The Heart Behind Service
Scripture: 1 Peter 4:9

“Show hospitality to one another without grumbling.”

Service within the home is often unseen.

Today we offer help without being asked — setting the table, carrying something heavy, tidying a space someone else left behind. While doing so, we pay attention to our inner posture.

Lent gently reveals the attitudes we carry beneath our actions. When impatience or pride appears, we simply place it before God and ask Him to transform it.

Journal Reflection:

Where do I need to surrender pride to serve joyfully?

❊ Thursday — The Quiet Portion
Scripture:

Luke 10:38–42

“One thing is necessary; Mary has chosen the good portion.”

A hospitable heart also knows how to make room for stillness.

Today we remove a distraction from our environment or schedule and spend ten minutes in quiet reflection with Scripture. Like Mary sitting at Jesus’ feet, we choose the portion that nourishes the soul.

Stillness prepares our hearts to recognize God’s presence throughout the day.

Journal Reflection:

What distractions do I need to remove to welcome God fully?

❊ Friday — Hidden Humility
Scripture: Philippians 2:3–4

“Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than yourselves.”

The deepest acts of hospitality often remain hidden.

Today we serve someone else’s need before our own — completing a task, offering comfort, or meeting a practical need within the home. These quiet choices reflect the humility of Christ, who served others with gentle love.

Heaven notices the small sacrifices that shape the spirit of a household.

Journal Reflection:

How can I cultivate humility in the hidden corners of my home today?

❊ Saturday — Honoring One Another
Scripture: Romans 12:10

“Love one another with brotherly affection. Outdo one another in showing honor.”

Words of encouragement carry powerful influence within a home.

Today we write a short note of affirmation for someone we love. It may be simple — a sentence of gratitude, appreciation, or blessing. Leave it where they will discover it unexpectedly.

Honor creates warmth that lingers long after the note is found.

Journal Reflection:

How does showing honor and love to others shape the atmosphere of my home?

By the end of this week, hospitality may look different than we once imagined.

It is not primarily about entertaining guests or preparing elaborate meals. Instead, it grows through small, faithful acts — a quiet prayer while washing dishes, a gentle word spoken in patience, a room cleared so someone else can rest.

These daily choices slowly widen the heart.

When our hearts become spacious, our homes naturally follow. Peace settles into the atmosphere, relationships soften, and ordinary moments begin to feel sacred.

The candle we lit at the beginning of the week continues to glow softly, reminding us that Christ is the true host of every Christian home. We simply prepare the space where His love can dwell.

As we move forward in Lent, may this prayer remain steady in our spirits:

"Lord, make my heart spacious."

And through that spaciousness, may every room of our homes quietly reflect His welcome.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Our Story of Home: A Preface Reflection on Keeping Place
Exploring how our hands and hearts mirror God’s homemaking.

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.

"Every vocation is an act of homemaking and housekeeping 
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:

"What happens from Genesis to Revelation can be told as a home story. — God makes a home. 
— 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.

❊ Reflection Prompts:
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!

❊ 

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Wrapped in Words: Writing as a Gift

I’ve always appreciated the beauty of a perfectly wrapped gift. Growing up, Christmas morning was always exciting, not only because I knew Santa had left me gifts, but because of the care he had taken in wrapping them. I was shocked to learn that, for many of my friends, their gifts were unwrapped — simply placed beneath the tree, without thought or attention. But for me, the wrapping, the hiddenness, the quiet anticipation was all part of the gift itself.

Like a beautifully wrapped gift, this is the way I envision every post I write. The meaning is folded carefully, tucked into layers that ask the reader to linger, to notice, to unfold slowly. Each phrase, each turn of sentence, is an invitation to discover the subtlety beneath the surface. The delight comes not from being handed everything at once, but from the quiet reveal — the treasure that is held just long enough to be savored.

This is why I don’t care about SEO. Keywords, algorithms, optimized headlines — they are like gifts placed beneath the tree without care: no wrapping, no pause, no anticipation. They may bring numbers, but they cannot teach the heart to slow down, to notice, to savor.

Like unwrapping a gift on Christmas morning, the gift of this space is the slow discovery — in the quiet attention we give to words, to moments, to the hidden beauty that asks to be noticed. Here, meaning is not rushed or delivered at once; it arrives gently, lingering in the heart, leaving a sense of quiet delight long after the page is closed.

If you are here, reading these words, that tells me something: you notice. You linger. You understand that beauty, like contentment, cannot be rushed. You are someone special.

So, thank you for being here — for slowing down, for noticing, for taking the time to seek and value writing that reflects thoughtful care, for wanting more than catchy phrases or bullet-pointed lists, for lingering with words that invite reflection and presence. Your attention turns this space into a shared gift, one that is richer because you are part of it.