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The Habitually Peaceful Household

THComm Blog MAY 2021 Week3

“My sister Lilly woke up at 4:30 each morning, went to lead the daily Rosary at 6 a.m. at her parish, attended the 6:30 a.m. daily Mass, came back to prepare breakfast for her family, got them off to work and school, and at the end of the day, led the family Rosary.” And she did these things every day without fail and with such peace.
 
We were speechless. During a visit last week with Fr. Jose, a priest friend of ours from India, he shared about the life of his recently departed sister. He said he was so edified by her last days in hospice, which though extremely painful, were suffused with joy and peaceful anticipation of meeting the Lord. We were still busy thinking about her day-to-day virtues!  
 
While we never met Lilly, her selflessness struck us as the gold standard we’re aiming for when we speak of “heaven in your home.” The Catechism defines virtue as the “habitual and firm disposition to do good” (1833). Sometimes it feels like 80-90 percent of our lives as parents is spent working on level 3—Household Economy—of our Trinity House, laying down our lives, over and over again, in service to our families.  
 
Dishes. Laundry. Meals. Yardwork. Trash… It’s so easy to fall into the trap of thinking of our household economy as a monotonous and joyless grind. As we talked about Lilly and our own daily struggles building a “habitual and firm disposition to do good,” three attitudes we often bring to the daily work of our Household Economy stood out:

  1. Exasperated: We’ve all been there, especially in the sleepless days of welcoming a newborn. This is when, faced with the onslaught of tasks and needs, we feel like saying “woe is me” or “I’m sick of this!” In exasperation, we either avoid our daily work in the household or do it poorly.
  2. Robotic: This is the attitude of the parent who makes the meals, washes the dishes, and does the laundry, but who doesn’t infuse any of this work with love or cheer. While it’s great to get the work done, such an attitude can create a cold and sterile atmosphere in the home.
  3. Cheerful: Think “Lilly” or think about the most joyful parent you’ve ever known. This mother or father is dependent on God’s grace in keeping the family well-supported with good food, a clean house, a consistent prayer life, but especially with the love with which they accomplish it!

Can we exhibit all three attitudes in the same day—or even in the span of one hour? Absolutely!
 
But you get the idea—the goal is to beg the Lord that we might carry out the work of our household economy with peace and cheer. Or, as Paul exhorted the Colossians: And whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him” (Col 3:17).
 
Grace builds on nature, and we can’t flip a switch and change from “exasperated” to “cheerful” overnight. But with time, grace, and a lot of humility, we can allow the Lord to strengthen our “habitual and firm disposition to do good” in our homes. And we can gradually become that virtuous and cheerful parent.

Heaven In Your Home Toolkit

In Defense of Housework” (Institute for Family Studies) by Dr. John Cuddeback claims that “there is something new afoot” in how more families are recognizing that a “richer home life” is integral to “authentic human living.”

Back to the basics for Pentecost! Here is a compilation of Scripture passages on the Holy Spirit, key passages in the Catechism on the Holy Spirit, and the readings for Pentecost Sunday

Bishop Barron’s “On the Holy Spirit” (12-min. video) is a great overview of the gifts of the Holy Spirit.

In “What Pentecost Means for Daily Life” (8-min. Ascension Presents video), Jackie and Bobby Angel challenge us to have a “personal relationship with the Holy Spirit”. 

And don’t forget our compilation of other tools for building the Household Economy of your Trinity House. 

Please Join Us In Prayer

That as we near Pentecost Sunday, we would open ourselves to the transforming power of the Holy Spirit; 

That our families might develop the Fruits of the Spirit, and act with love, kindness, and peace, and work together for the good of all;  

For an end to the pandemic; for safety and healing for all those impacted by COVID-19, and for all medical personnel;

For the ministry of Trinity House Community, including the staff of Trinity House Café, and all individuals and families who are seeking to reflect the life of the Trinity in their homes.

In Christ,
Soren & Ever Johnson
Founders & Directors
Trinity House Community
Making Home a Little Taste of Heaven

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