Connect at Home

April 28, 2026

Ministry has a way of pulling your attention outward. All week long, you are thinking about needs, preparing for events, solving someone’s problems, and carrying heavy conversations. Even when you finally get home, your mind can often stay elsewhere. You may be physically present, but mentally you are still in a meeting, replaying a conversation, or thinking ahead to what is next.

That is why connecting at home must be intentional. No one drifts into being present. It is a choice.

Deuteronomy 6:6–7 gives a simple but powerful picture of life at home. God’s Word is not reserved for formal settings. It is woven into everyday moments (sitting at home, walking along the road, lying down, getting up). That kind of life assumes something foundational. You are actually engaged.

Connection begins with focused presence.

It is easy to convince yourself that being home is enough. It is not. Your family can feel the difference between your body being in the room and your attention being with them. When your mind is divided, your connection is shallow. Over time, that distance adds up.

This is where many leaders struggle. They give their best focus to ministry and offer what is left over at home. It is rarely intentional, but it is often the result. The same energy used to listen carefully, ask thoughtful questions, and engage meaningfully with others must be brought into the home.

Connection requires slowing down.

It looks like putting the phone away. It means asking questions and waiting for answers. It means listening without trying to fix everything immediately. It means noticing what is going on beneath the surface, not just what is obvious.

Our schedules can be so hectic. You can maintain shallow communication patterns in a rushed state, but to have a deeper connection, you must find a rhythm of slowing down. In that slowing down, you have to be able to unplug from the things that keep you stressed or else even these times can feel the same heightened sense.

Connection requires consistent efforts.

It also requires consistency. Connection is not built in one long conversation. It is formed through repeated, intentional moments over time.

  • A conversation at the table.
  • A few minutes before bed.
  • A shared moment in the middle of a busy day.

Those small interactions shape relationships more than occasional big efforts.

This does not mean you will always get it right. There will be days when you are tired, distracted, or preoccupied. But intentional connection creates a pattern that your family can rely on. It communicates that they are not competing with ministry for your attention. They are a priority within it.

Ministry leaders often remind others to invest in what matters most. We must apply that truth personally.

Connection at home does not happen by accident. It happens when you choose to be present, to listen, and to engage with the people God has already placed in your care.


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Travis Agnew

Travis Agnew serves as the Lead Pastor of Rocky Creek Church in Greenville, SC.