There are places where the soul slows down withÂout being asked.
The porch step.
The creek crossÂing.
That narÂrow bend in the road where your foot lifts off the gas, even though you’ve driÂven it a hunÂdred times.
And the doorway.
In the hills where I was raised, doors were nevÂer just doors. They were watched. Tended. Respected. You didn’t barÂrel through a threshÂold. You paused — even if only in your body. Even if you couldn’t have told me why.
Long before I ever heard the word liturÂgy, peoÂple were already blessÂing their homes.
I didn’t grow up hearÂing anyÂone call it a ritÂuÂal. Nobody explained it. But I rememÂber the way my Great Gran moved through a house. The way her hand brushed the doorÂframe when she came in. The way she paused before stepÂping outÂside at night. The way cerÂtain things were placed just so, and nevÂer questioned.
Some knowÂing doesn’t come with instrucÂtions. It comes with watching.
Doors, she seemed to underÂstand, were tenÂder places. Places where the world pressed close. Where what was inside met whatÂevÂer waitÂed beyond the wood. You crossed them with care, because care was how you kept what matÂtered safe.
People in these hills didn’t need to read about threshÂolds to underÂstand them.
They knew there were places where harm could slip in if you weren’t payÂing attenÂtion. Places where grief linÂgered. Places where blessÂing needÂed renewÂing, the same way you patched a roof or saltÂed a walk. The house was alive. The peoÂple inside it were vulÂnerÂaÂble. And someÂthing always needÂed tending.
I’ve learned since then that this underÂstandÂing wasn’t unique to us.
Across oceans and cenÂturies, othÂer peoÂple marked their doors too.
In Ireland and Scotland, women whisÂpered blessÂings at seaÂsonÂal turnÂing points. Ash or chalk traced into wood. Iron tucked near a frame. Brigid — first godÂdess, then saint — invoked to guard both hearth and home. The lanÂguage shiftÂed, but the need stayed the same.
Further north, proÂtecÂtive symÂbols were carved into beams — not as decÂoÂraÂtion, but as conÂverÂsaÂtion. Agreements made quiÂetÂly with the unseen. When Christianity arrived, the symÂbols changed. The care did not.
And in the Hebrew Scriptures, long before church doors were ever built, there was anothÂer threshÂold marking.
In the book of Exodus, chapÂter 12, on the night of the first Passover, enslaved famÂiÂlies in Egypt were told to mark their doorÂposts and linÂtels with the blood of a lamb. It was not specÂtaÂcle. It was not perÂforÂmance. It was an act of proÂtecÂtion carÂried out inside ordiÂnary homes.
They were still enslaved when they marked those doors.
They had not yet walked free. Pharaoh had not relentÂed. The sea had not partÂed. Liberation had not become visible.
Yet they marked the threshÂold anyway.
The markÂing set apart the houseÂhold. It drew a line between what would be touched by death and what would be passed over. That doorÂway became the boundÂary between bondage and freeÂdom. Between fear and delivÂerÂance. Between what had been done to them and what God was about to do for them.
The first act of libÂerÂaÂtion in the Passover stoÂry was not marchÂing out.
It was markÂing the threshold.
There is someÂthing tenÂder in that detail. Freedom did not begin in the wilderÂness. It began at home. It began with a quiÂet act of courage at the doorÂway. It began when peoÂple who had lived too long under harm claimed their own space as worth protecting.
For those of us healÂing from church hurt, that matters.
Sometimes you are still inside the sysÂtem when you begin to reclaim yourÂself. Sometimes you are still sortÂing out what you believe, still disÂenÂtanÂgling fear from faith, still standÂing in a space that once felt holy and now feels complicated.
Liberation does not always start with leavÂing.
Sometimes it starts with drawÂing a boundary.
Sometimes it starts with markÂing the place where harm stops.
Even now, as Passover approachÂes and Jewish famÂiÂlies gathÂer to rememÂber that night of crossÂing, the stoÂry insists on this truth: before there was escape, there was intenÂtion. Before there was delivÂerÂance, there was a doorÂway claimed.
And on many doorÂposts, a mezuzah still rests — sacred words placed at the entryÂway, touched in passÂing, a quiÂet reminder that every comÂing and going matters.
Nobody needÂed to announce why.
Back home, in Appalachia, proÂtecÂtion was often quiÂeter still.
A horseÂshoe nailed just so.
A Bible tucked into a winÂdow frame.
A cross scratched where only the famÂiÂly would see it.
Salt scatÂtered at the sill like musÂcle memory.
No one called it magÂic. No one called it theÂolÂoÂgy either.
It was just what you did.
When Christianity setÂtled into the hills, it didn’t erase these habits—it wrapped itself around them. Doorways were chalked at Epiphany. Homes were blessed with water. Prayers were spoÂken where boots met floor.
The church kept the doorÂway ritÂuÂals because they met peoÂple where theÂolÂoÂgy nevÂer could—at the edge of the home, at the place where the world comes knockÂing. They honÂored the house as sacred space. The famÂiÂly as someÂthing worth guardÂing. Time as cycliÂcal and alive.
For many of us, these were the genÂtlest parts of faith.
And if you’ve been hurt by the church, genÂtleÂness matters.
If you’ve stepped away — quiÂetÂly or with a door slammed behind you — you might still feel the ache for rhythm. For markÂing time. For someÂthing that says, this seaÂson counts.
Threshold blessÂings don’t demand tidy belief.
There’s no serÂmon. No altar call. No one watchÂing to see if you get it right. Just you, your home, and the choice to tend what holds you.
You don’t have to believe the way you once did to bless a doorÂway. You don’t have to sort out God to pracÂtice care. You are allowed to tend sacred space withÂout reopenÂing doors that woundÂed you.
And if chalkÂing the door feels too church-shaped this seaÂson, change it.
Use what tells the truth for you.
A penÂcil mark.
A symÂbol you trust.
A word like Peace, Shelter, or Enough.
A quiÂet gesÂture made slowly.
Stand at the door. Feel the grain of the wood. Feel the weight of the house behind you — the lives it has held, the grief it has witÂnessed, the love it has sheltered.
You might say someÂthing like:
May this home be held.
May what harms stay out.
May what heals find its way in.
May all who cross this threshÂold be changed for the better.
That isn’t rebellion.
That’s rememÂberÂing.
Even if prayer feels tanÂgled now. Even if cerÂtainÂty is gone. Even if the church doors closed hard behind you.
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Your house still knows what blessÂing feels like.
Threshold ritÂuÂals don’t ask for alleÂgiance. They ask for presÂence. They don’t demand belief. They offer care.
You don’t have to return to old strucÂtures to reclaim sacred rhythm.
Sometimes the most faithÂful thing you can do, espeÂcialÂly in a seaÂson of rememÂberÂing delivÂerÂance, is stand in your own doorÂway and mark it with love.
May your comÂing and going be guardÂed.
May your home know peace.

