There is a quiet that comes at the end of tending.
Not the kind that feels empty, but the kind that settles in gently—like the last light at the end of the day, soft and sufficient. This is where we find ourselves now. After moving room by room, after noticing and releasing, after choosing presence again and again, we arrive here—in a home that has been touched with intention, and in a heart that has, slowly, been reordered.
Holy Week invites us into that same quiet.
Not a hurried preparation. Not a final push toward perfection. But a sacred pause.
As I walked through my home this morning, I noticed something different. The rooms themselves have not changed drastically. There are still dishes to wash, blankets slightly out of place, the ordinary rhythms continuing as they always do. But the atmosphere has shifted. The spaces feel… settled. Not because everything is done, but because I am no longer striving within them.
And I think that is the work Lent has been doing in us all along.
We did not set out to create perfect homes. We set out to create space—space to breathe, to notice, to welcome. And somewhere in the quiet clearing of surfaces, in the folding and releasing and rearranging, the deeper work was happening. Our hearts were being softened. Our attention was being gently redirected. We were learning to live inside our homes, rather than performing within them.
This week, as we walk toward the Resurrection, I find myself moving more slowly again.
Not to accomplish anything new, but to simply be present within what has already been tended.
I run my hand along a table that has been cleared. I open a window and let the light fall where it may. I sit in a chair that was once crowded by distraction and now feels like an invitation. And in these small moments, there is a quiet awareness: this space has been prepared, yes—but so have I.
“Do everything in love.”
It has followed us through each room, and it meets us here again.
Because this is what remains when the organizing is finished. Love in the way we move through our homes. Love in the way we receive the people within them. Love in the way we hold even the unfinished corners with grace.
There is no need to rush ahead to Easter morning.
Holy Week is meant to be walked slowly.
So today, I am simply walking through the rooms once more. Not to fix or change, but to remember. The kitchen where provision became gratitude. The bedroom where rest was reclaimed. The living spaces where presence replaced pressure. Each room holding a quiet testimony of what God has been doing—both in the home and in the heart.
And as I move, there is a gentle prayer forming, not out of obligation, but out of something deeper:
In the ordinary, in the undone, in the quiet tending.
Let this home be a place where Your peace rests.
Let my heart remain soft to Your presence.
Prepare me now—not just for Easter,
but for a life that continues to walk in resurrection.
This is the invitation now.
To rest in what has been cultivated.
To receive the stillness.
To let the home simply be held, rather than managed.
Easter will come.
And when it does, it will not arrive in a space striving to be ready, but in one that has already been gently prepared—with reverence, with care, and with a quiet, steady love.
Room by room.
Heart first.

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