"God is much in the difficult home problems as in the times of quiet and prayer"
About this Quote
Underhill’s line refuses the comforting division between “spiritual life” and “real life,” a split that modernity quietly trains us to accept. By putting “difficult home problems” on the same plane as “quiet and prayer,” she drags holiness out of the chapel and into the kitchen, the sickroom, the unpaid bill, the argument that won’t resolve neatly. The phrasing is blunt on purpose: “much in” suggests presence that is not diluted by noise, fatigue, or resentment. God is not a mood you can manufacture with silence; God is a claim on your attention when silence is impossible.
The subtext is a critique of piety-as-escape. Underhill, a major voice in early 20th-century Christian mysticism, wrote at a moment when “religion” was increasingly professionalized (clergy, institutions, set devotions) and daily life was being reorganized by industrial schedules and private domestic pressure. In that environment, prayer can become a curated retreat, and “home problems” become the messy remainder you endure until you can get back to the sacred. Underhill flips the hierarchy: the home is not a distraction from God, it is one of God’s primary addresses.
Intent-wise, she’s offering both comfort and a stern standard. Comfort, because the overwhelmed aren’t disqualified from the divine; the divine is already there. Standard, because it makes the ordinary ethically charged: patience, truth-telling, and care aren’t warm feelings, they’re spiritual practice under load. The holiness she’s pointing to is less incense than endurance.
The subtext is a critique of piety-as-escape. Underhill, a major voice in early 20th-century Christian mysticism, wrote at a moment when “religion” was increasingly professionalized (clergy, institutions, set devotions) and daily life was being reorganized by industrial schedules and private domestic pressure. In that environment, prayer can become a curated retreat, and “home problems” become the messy remainder you endure until you can get back to the sacred. Underhill flips the hierarchy: the home is not a distraction from God, it is one of God’s primary addresses.
Intent-wise, she’s offering both comfort and a stern standard. Comfort, because the overwhelmed aren’t disqualified from the divine; the divine is already there. Standard, because it makes the ordinary ethically charged: patience, truth-telling, and care aren’t warm feelings, they’re spiritual practice under load. The holiness she’s pointing to is less incense than endurance.
Quote Details
| Topic | God |
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