meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Next Right Thing

BONUS: For Anyone Waiting for Home

The Next Right Thing

Emily P. Freeman

Society & Culture, Personal Journals, Religion & Spirituality, Christianity

4.85.3K Ratings

🗓️ 24 December 2019

⏱️ 7 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today’s episode is a bit different than our usual format so I’m offering a brief introduction to welcome you to it and give a bit of background.

Every year my church here in Greensboro creates one of my favorite offerings called Lessons and Carols. It’s a service of music, both original compositions and familiar favorites, as well as a collection of readings from scripture that tell the story of Jesus, this year it was told through the lens of home, both the one we have here and the one we continue to long for.

Advent is a season of waiting and this night of lessons and carols is a time to remember how God’s people waited many years for the Messiah, how he chose to make his home among us, and how we wait still for him to come again.

This year, my friend and pastor Michael Van Patter asked if I would be willing to write a short piece to end the night, a reflection to close our time together. It was an honor, as a writer, to hold space for this idea of home, to listen for the ways my own longing mixes with my current reality and how joy and sorrow coexist for all of us. That can be especially true at Christmas.

I wish I had the rights to broadcast the entire night right here on the podcast so you could hear how the creative image of God is so beautifully reflected in the music of some of my dearest friends at Hope Chapel. That would be my first choice.

Instead, I’ll settle for my second choice which is to simply share with you that piece I wrote to close Lessons and Carols service.

Whether you’re surrounded today by friends and family who know you well or if you find yourself in an unknown place this Christmas, I hope these words will bring a bit of comfort and clarity as you continue to honor the tension you may feel between being where you are and longing for a home you miss.

And Merry Christmas to you.

Links + Resources From This Episode:

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Every heart carries a narrative of the home we once knew.

0:14.3

It's a story of comfort, heartache, or a nuanced mix of both.

0:18.8

When we're small, we don't think that narrative will ever change.

0:22.4

Grandma's will always host Christmas.

0:24.9

Sisters will always share bedrooms.

0:27.1

Saturdays will always mean cartoons.

0:30.1

Home will always smell like towels straight from the dryer.

0:33.6

Or feel like the worn out quilt with squares of story spread out across the bed.

0:38.9

Home will always be some version of white bread and lemon fresh dawn.

0:44.7

We know home is more than all of this, but it all counts for better or for worse.

0:49.5

We grow up thinking home will always be the way it's always been until one day we realize

0:54.6

everything is different.

0:58.5

Maybe now home is the squeaky door you keep meaning to fix.

1:01.9

The stairs you keep meaning to sweep.

1:04.0

In the porch light that stays on while you're gone, welcoming you back inside from the

1:08.2

dark night.

1:10.0

But even when home is the best it's ever been, the remains a longing for something we

1:15.1

can't quite touch.

1:19.7

While we sit by fires singing joy to the world, toasting to the good times and holding

1:24.2

hands around the table, there's a thin place hovering over the hearth.

1:29.0

A whisper of the invisible kingdom we see only through a glass dimly.

1:38.7

We know there's more than this because even its best all is not quite right.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Emily P. Freeman, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Emily P. Freeman and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.