May 10
The Sacred Art of 'Micro-Discipleship': Finding the Divine in the Five-Minute Gaps
The turn signal clicked in the rain during the drive to school. I had five minutes. Five minutes to say something that mattered.
Spring · May
from a small garden south of Salt Lake
Family discipleship, honest motherhood, and the slow work of making a home, written at the kitchen table by Melissa Whitaker.
Lately on the kitchen table
read more →A note from Melissa
LDS Family Life is a publication about LDS family life, motherhood, marriage, homemaking, and practical gospel living for families who want faith at home to feel lived instead of staged. I write first-person essays on family discipleship, spiritual formation in ordinary routines, and the pressures families are trying to carry with steadiness and grace.
The sink full of mixing bowls. The garden row that finally came up. The child calling for one more glass of water. The prayer I whisper while scraping plates after dinner. Those are the things that hold a family, and they feel worth writing down before they slip past.
with love, Melissa
Essays
May 10
The turn signal clicked in the rain during the drive to school. I had five minutes. Five minutes to say something that mattered.
May 10
The scripture has been open on the same page for three days. The interrupted prayer. The abandoned lesson. The grace of the unfinished.
May 10
The toy crashed to the floor and the child was already crying. He was not defying me. He was struggling to cross a threshold he could not see.
May 10
I folded the last load of laundry on Saturday evening while the light turned from gold to grey. The week released its grip.
May 9
I walked into my living room and caught the faint smell of a candle I had lit for a visitor days ago. The pillows were still dented from where she sat.
May 9
The kitchen was dark except for the blue-grey light. The house was still. This is the part of the day I have learned to protect.
May 9
The vacuum went silent and the house was quiet. I lit a candle on the kitchen table. The transition into the Sabbath matters as much as the day itself.
May 9
The Cheerio between the sofa cushions is not an interruption. It is the altar. Finding God in the sticky, ordinary mess of motherhood.
May 8
I set the laundry basket down and looked around. Sunday shoes were lined up by the door. A candle was burning on the table. The Sabbath was approaching.
May 8
The problem was not the Sunday. It was the transition. We crashed from the chaos of Saturday into the expectations of Sunday without a bridge.
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