July 7
The Sacredness of the Ordinary: Radical Welcome in the LDS Home
Hospitality is not about a clean house. It is about making someone feel seen and wanted.
Summer · July
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
July 7
Hospitality is not about a clean house. It is about making someone feel seen and wanted.
July 7
The best spiritual conversations happen in the mess, not the lesson plan. Here is what I learned from a Tuesday night at the kitchen sink.
July 7
Family prayer can feel like a chore. But when someone says something real, the circle becomes something more.
July 7
What do you do when the prayer you have been praying for years has not been answered yet? Melissa Whitaker writes about the quiet courage of waiting.
July 7
The Sabbath is a gift you open, not a test you pass or fail. And sometimes you open it with a crying toddler on your lap.
July 7
The best spiritual conversations with my kids do not happen during the lesson. They happen in the car on the way to practice.
July 7
The frantic Saturday night scramble is not about the laundry. It is about learning to let the Sabbath be a delight.
July 7
A holy home is not a perfect home. It is a place where the Spirit feels welcome, even when the laundry is piled up.
July 7
The hardest part of the day is not the morning. It is the moment when everyone comes home and the transition begins.
July 7
I stood in the kitchen staring at the family calendar and realized I couldn't remember the last Sunday we spent doing nothing.
FAQ