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"Theology of Home" review by Barb Szyszkiewicz, OFS (CatholicMom.com) Copyright 2019 Barb Szyszkiewicz, OFS. All rights reserved.[/caption] I wanted this to be a lifestyle book. We're in the planning stages right now of updating our home's interior. Over the summer we replaced every door in the house. Now we're choosing flooring and paint covers and preparing for the removal of the 1970s paneling that covers nearly every interior wall. We've lived here for 21 years. After the first year, my husband primed and painted all that paneling, turning the house from a dark dungeon into a warmer, brighter space. But baby gates have come and gone, and the paint bears the battle scars of vacuum cleaners pushed by hands that were hurried or unskilled (or both), not to mention countless games of Nerf basketball. It's time. Only one of our kids still lives here, and he's 17. We're past the point of baby gates, outlet covers, and plastic light sabers. The last Nerf basketball hoop went when we replaced the closet door where it hung. 20 years ago, we made our decisions about wall color and floor covering in an entirely utilitarian fashion. We were in a hurry. We had two young children. But now, we have time. We'd love to get this done now, but it's going to be several weeks before the work begins, and the only thing we've chosen so far is the hard flooring that will replace most of the ancient wall-to-wall carpet in here. And that's OK, because now I have time to read Theology of Home: Finding the Eternal in the Everyday. Theology of Home (TAN Books) As I said right up front, this new book from TAN Books is not a lifestyle book. If you only look at the pictures (and Kim Baile's photography is beautiful), you might get that impression, and it's certainly fun to page through the book and enjoy the pictures. But this book is not going to help me choose the paint color that best complements my San Damiano cross. This book will help me daydream about what I want my home to be, what I want it to represent, what I want it to say to my family as well as to the friends and acquaintances who visit. My house is never going to look like something they'd feature in a lifestyle book. The coffee table in my living room is strewn with (unread) newspapers and a permanent collection of church hymnals and the portable music stand we use when our parish folk group rehearses there. The family room is littered with video-game controllers, and mismatched afghans spill out of the toy box I had as a child, which now holds blankets for visiting teenagers to use when they sleep over. And we certainly don't have the budget for high-end accessories. That's our lifestyle. We're good with that. Theology of Home invites us to celebrate what we love about our homes -- not the paint color, or the comfy couch, or the carefully curated light-switch plates. Instead, authors Carrie Gress, Noelle Mering, and Megan Schrieber muse on the meanings behind the spaces in our homes as they invite us into their own stories of home and share episodes from the lives of the saints in which home figures prominently. "Theology of Home" review by Barb Szyszkiewicz, OFS (CatholicMom.com) Copyright 2019 Barb Szyszkiewicz, OFS. All rights reserved.[/caption]

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Copyright 2019 Barb Szyszkiewicz, OFS This article contains Amazon affiliate links; your purchases through these links benefit the author.