Habits of the Household: Practicing the Story of God in Everyday Family Rhythms
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About this ebook
Discover simple habits and easy-to-implement daily rhythms that will help you find meaning beyond the chaos of family life as you create a home where kids and parents alike practice how to love God and each other.
You long for tender moments with your children--but do you ever find yourself too busy to stop, make eye contact, and say something you really mean? Daily habits are powerful ways to shape the heart--but do you find yourself giving in to screen time just to get through the day? You want to parent with purpose--but do you know how to start?
Award-winning author and father of four Justin Whitmel Earley understands the tension between how you long to parent and what your daily life actually looks like. In Habits of the Household, Earley gives you the tools you need to create structure--from mealtimes to bedtimes--that free you to parent toddlers, kids, and teens with purpose. Learn how to:
- Develop a bedtime liturgy to settle your little ones and ground them in God's love
- Discover a new framework for discipline as discipleship
- Acquire simple practices for more regular and meaningful family mealtimes
- Open your eyes to the spirituality of parenting, seeing small moments as big opportunities for spiritual formation
- Develop a custom age chart for your family to more intentionally plan your shared years under the same roof
Each chapter in Habits of the Household ends with practical patterns, prayers, or liturgies that your family can put into practice right away. As you create liberating rhythms around your everyday routines, you will find your family has a greater sense of peace and purpose as your home becomes a place where, above all, you learn how to love.
Justin Whitmel Earley
Justin Whitmel Earley is a writer, speaker, and lawyer. He is the author of The Common Rule, Habits of the Household, and Made for People, though he spends most days running his business law practice. Through his writing and speaking, Justin empowers God’s people to thrive through life-giving habits that form them in the love of God and neighbor. He lives with his wife and four boys in Richmond, Virginia, and spends a lot of time around fires and porches with friends. You can follow him online at justinwhitmelearley.com.
Read more from Justin Whitmel Earley
Made for People: Why We Drift into Loneliness and How to Fight for a Life of Friendship Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsHabits of the Household Bible Study Guide plus Streaming Video: Simple Practices to Help You and Your Family Draw Closer to God Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Reviews for Habits of the Household
34 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Amazing book full of truth and practical lessons. An encouragement to every tired dad.
Book preview
Habits of the Household - Justin Whitmel Earley
This gem of a book is what I want to give to absolutely every family I know. Intentional, formational, biblical, with profound generational—and eternal—ramifications, Earley hands us transformational hope for every single family with these practical and gospel-saturated pages. I couldn’t put it down.
—ANN VOSKAMP, mother of seven, author of the New York Times bestsellers One Thousand Gifts and The Broken Way
If you’ve never considered how a liturgy could include children bouncing on their beds or cooling down after a meltdown or passing the pepper around the dinner table (and I never had), this book could help you change the habits of your home. It never nags, scolds, guilts, or mandates. Instead, Justin Earley suggests ways that people like you and me—people with piled-up dishes and maddening soccer schedules and too little confidence that we know what we’re doing—can build habits to equip our families for the lifelong pilgrimage toward Home.
—RUSSELL MOORE, Christianity Today
Parents need this book! Rhythms are paramount in our families, and Justin offers insights on how practicing them at home displays Jesus to our children in ways words alone cannot.
—REBEKAH LYONS, bestselling author, Rhythms of Renewal and You Are Free
The family is God’s primary discipleship plan. It is in our households that we are taught what is most important and least important and we begin to understand how we fit in this big and scary world. In Habits of the Household, Justin Whitmel Earley gives us a template for household habits that root our families in the deepest realities of the gospel of Jesus Christ and form all of us more into his image. There is no formation without repetition, so I pray this book encourages your heart and emboldens your desire to allow the Spirit to flow into and through these ten everyday occurrences with greater purpose and intentionality.
—MATT CHANDLER, lead pastor, The Village Church
If you are a parent, or about to be one, or a friend of one, or a parent of one, this is gold. Sheer, honest, hilarious, helpful family-shaping gold. There is nothing easy about this most vulnerable of human vocations, and the habits in this book will not make it easy. But they will make it so much better.
—ANDY CROUCH, author, The Tech-Wise Family
I got no farther than the introduction and was already implementing these practices with my kids! Such a thoughtful, practical, humble, yet hilarious look at pulling out the sacred in the everyday chaos of parenting. These practices will become staples in our home.
—JOSHUA STRAUB, PhD, Famous at Home
Through the last nineteen years of parenting, I’ve viewed parenting books with a mix of fear and loathing. It seems like experts
were quick to tell me what I was doing wrong and to offer quick-fix solutions that felt removed from my actual messy, relentless, inconsistent experience as a parent. That’s why reading Justin’s Habits of the Household was such a refreshing, inspiring experience. Justin has managed to boil down the complex world of parenting into a series of relevant, grace-filled, realistic habits that will change the formation of your family. I found myself creating a mental list of every young parent I couldn’t wait to gift this book. A must-read for every parent longing to bring more meaning to their daily life.
—NICOLE UNICE, pastor, leadership consultant, and author of The Miracle Moment: How Tough Conversations Can Actually Transform Your Most Important Relationships
What a timely and helpful resource! I only wish I had read this when my children were still at home. In Habits of the Household, Justin helps us consider our normal and ordinary lives, and how powerfully formative simple practices can be. This is not a how-to book but rather a grace-filled approach to life at home that helps us see habituation as freeing and fruitful. I can’t wait to buy a box and give copies to parents.
—KEITH NIX, Veritas School, Richmond, VA; national leader in classical Christian education renewal movement
I met Justin Earley fifteen years ago; we were fresh out of college serving together as missionaries overseas. Even then, I could tell he had wisdom beyond his years. And ever since, I have been encouraged to watch him develop his voice for the benefit of Christ’s people. It’s no secret that home life can be chaotic—many of us are in its throes now, settling for survival mode as we simply try to make it through the day. We want to form our kids with Christian virtue, but sometimes the fight can feel futile. Habits of the Household will help you implement rhythms that will bring order to the mess and grace in the stress.
—MATT SMETHURST, planting pastor, River City Baptist Church, Richmond, VA; managing editor, The Gospel Coalition; author, Deacons and Before You Open Your Bible
ZONDERVAN BOOKS
Habits of the Household
Copyright © 2021 by Avodah, LLC
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To Whit, Asher, Coulter, and Shep
"Because it is easier to raise strong children
than to repair broken men and women"
CONTENTS
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Foreword by Ruth Chou Simons and Troy Simons
PART 1: INTRODUCTION
Reimagining Household Habits as Gospel Liturgies
How to Read This Book
PART 2: HABITS OF THE HOUSEHOLD
1. Waking
2. Mealtimes
3. Discipline
4. Screentime
5. Family Devotions
6. Marriage
7. Work
8. Play
9. Conversation
10. Bedtime
PART 3: EPILOGUE
Parenting between the Now and the Not Yet
Acknowledgments
FOREWORD
We all face a constant challenge to be present in the moment. At any given time, it’s easy for our thoughts to be all over the place—thinking about a pending task, mulling over an email we received, or even daydreaming about being somewhere other than where we are. Truly being present in the moment is important, but often elusive—even in our parenting. We often complete the tasks of family life on autopilot while our minds wander.
Have you ever gotten to the end of a busy day and realized that you were essentially dragged through it by the demands you live under? What about the challenge of organizing your family’s day around God’s Word? Or navigating technology with your kids? The electronic distractions that we grew up with pale in comparison with the leviathan of social media!
Whether it’s our divided attention, the chaotic pace of any given day, or the challenges of technology, the longer we live in unhealthy patterns, the more normal they can seem. But in our more sober reflective moments, we realize that something needs to change. The question is what? And how?
With nineteen years of parenting six boys under our belts, Ruth and I have learned many lessons about organizing home life. In all we do, we work to keep Christ and the gospel at the center of our focus. We’ve found that discipling our boys doesn’t happen at a specific time each day; rather it has become the framework we use throughout the entire day. Discipling happens in the context of the habits we form and the rhythms we keep.
So just like Moses commanded the Israelites in Deuteronomy 6, we try to talk about the Word of God all day long, encouraging one another to walk by it. If you share a meal with us, you’ll likely hear our boys pray, May all we say and do bring honor and glory to you.
Though my heart swells when I hear them pray those words, I also know it won’t be long before someone loses patience and speaks an unkind word—such is the way of every day in the Simons household.
In the midst of everyday challenges—big and small—Ruth and I are so thankful for the wisdom that Justin shares in this book. He reminds us that habits and rhythms have power, and helps tackle the questions surrounding intentional living and parenting. If you feel like life is moving at a frenetic pace and you’re struggling to keep your own heart centered, let alone your family’s, this book is strong medicine. In straightforward and candid fashion, Justin breaks down the activities of a day, giving wise instruction for how to reclaim the time we’re losing for maximum gospel impact in our homes.
Regardless of where you are when you start this book, be encouraged that it is possible to establish new rhythms, even today—because God isn’t through with us yet.
—RUTH CHOU SIMONS AND TROY SIMONS, bestselling authors of Foundations: Twelve Biblical Truths to Shape a Family
PART 1
INTRODUCTION
REIMAGINING HOUSEHOLD HABITS AS GOSPEL LITURGIES
It was 8:00 p.m. on a Wednesday evening, and bedtime with our boys was not going well. Nothing was particularly wrong, but nothing was particularly right, either.
It was more of what most nights were: two had fled the bath and begun a spontaneous wrestling match, Greco-Roman style (that is, naked), on the floor of their bedroom. The youngest had gotten involved by turning his board books into projectiles, apparently trying to break the match up by knocking one of the older two out.
I had recently left my job at an international law firm and started my own business-law practice. Lauren was pregnant with our fourth boy, because clearly our house needed more Greco-Roman wrestlers. Life was then, as it still is now, fairly high paced.
On the way to the bathroom, I was debating whether I should get back to one of my clients, who was in the middle of an investment round, or first clean the kitchen. I was also wracking my brain trying to remember whose toothbrush was the Superman one and whose was the T. rex one, because if I got this wrong, there was going to be more gnashing of teeth than brushing.
This was all interrupted when I almost slipped on some bathwater they had trailed onto the creaking floorboards of our hundred-year-old house in Richmond, Virginia. I barely avoided a wipeout by catching myself on a doorknob that almost shook loose, and that’s when the switch flips. I don’t run out
of patience nearly so much as I decide that I’m out of patience.
The next ten minutes are a blur. I’m barking orders and moving bodies from one place to another. But it doesn’t actually speed anything up; it just makes us all tense. In such moments, I begin to feel like an impotent general shouting commands that, despite their volume, seem to have little effect on anything. Things like, I don’t care, you are using this toothbrush!
And, I pulled the book out of your hands because you weren’t listening to me.
Or, No more drinks of water! We’re done with water.
Finally, I reach the moment I’ve been waiting for. I turn the lights out and shut the door. But as I stood in the upstairs hallway, still damp with bathwater, I didn’t feel the usual relief of bedtime being over. I felt conflicted and embarrassed.
I was thinking about how this was a normal night, which means their last image of me most days is of this wild taskmaster raging about how if they don’t get pj’s on this instant there will be dramatic physical consequences. I wondered if they sensed the irony when, before turning out the lights, I gave them a short bedtime prayer and told them that God loves them and I do too. I wondered what they think love means.
I’m not sure why this night was the occasion for my epiphany, because it certainly wasn’t an unusual evening. In fact, it was typical, which is exactly what led to my epiphany: This is our normal,
I murmured to myself. And that wasn’t a good thing.
The Significance of What’s Normal
One of the most significant things about any household is what is considered to be normal. Moments aggregate, and they become memories and tradition. Our routines become who we are, become the story and culture of our families.
Standing in the hallway that night, I wasn’t disappointed with my evening nearly so much as I was disappointed with my ordinary. One night is one thing. A norm is another.
Some weeks later, I was discussing our nightly chaos with one of my pastors, Derek, and he suggested I try a bedtime liturgy. What’s that?
I said. He shared with me one he does with his boys, and I was intrigued.
The idea of a bedtime liturgy sounded strange at first, but the more I thought about it the more it made sense. A liturgy, in the formal sense, is a pattern of worship we repeat over and over, hoping that the pattern draws us into worship and forms us in the image of the one we worship. This wasn’t totally new to me. In fact, I had been using time outside of my law practice to write about how habits of work and technology are really patterns of worship that deeply form us.¹ I had thought a lot about the spiritual significance of daily habits functioning as liturgies; but honestly, I just hadn’t really applied this insight to parenting and children.
But when Derek mentioned a bedtime liturgy, the realization clicked—my parenting was already filled with liturgies, just not ones that I had chosen carefully. These small patterns I had with Lauren and the boys—our waking, our meals, our car rides, our bedtimes—were all moments of worship too, guided by habits that could accurately be seen as liturgies. Liturgies of what? Now that I thought about it, probably liturgies of efficiency, impatience, rush, or frustration. These rhythms were certainly not ones I would choose, but they were the ones we had, and that needed to change.
It was in this mix of both frustration and inspiration that I wrote my first nighttime blessing for the boys. I hoped it could be a little liturgy for sending them off to sleep and perhaps interrupt the liturgy of impatience I was defaulting to.
Here’s what I wrote:
A BEDTIME BLESSING OF GOSPEL LOVE
Said perhaps with a hand on your child’s face or head.
Parent: Do you see my eyes?
Child: Yes.
Parent: Can you see that I see your eyes?
Child: Yes.
Parent: Do you know that I love you?
Child: Yes.
Parent: Do you know that I love you no matter what bad things you do?
Child: Yes.
Parent: Do you know that I love you no matter what good things you do?
Child: Yes.
Parent: Who else loves you like that?
Child: God does.
Parent: Even more than me?
Child: Yes.
Parent: Rest in that love.
You can imagine how well this went the first time.
It didn’t. Not at all.
They were confused. They were suddenly very interested in what it meant that I could see their eyes. They took it as an invitation to poke my eyes. Suddenly eye contact was hilarious, and so on. Fortunately, by this time in my parenting career I was used to the humor, nonsense, and skirmishes that inevitably punctuate attempts at serious and spiritual moments with children. So I kept on.
Often, I forgot what I had planned to say. Sometimes I brought notes. And even after a couple of nights of practice, there was still general confusion about what was happening. But I knew from my research and writing on habits that this is exactly what it looks like every time you start