This is day 24 in a series: 31 Letters from London. In October, I’m doing something a little different and writing to you about the realities of life as an expat; finding the nearness of God through random experiences with new culture. It’s important to begin here and find the collection of letters here. We’re breaking for Sabbath every Sunday.

Last year, in October I felt a deep disappointment about missing autumn in London. I’d assumed we would be living in England by the time the leaves turned golden but instead, we were in the midst of another delay.

As I walk around the city this week, I’m captivated by a chameleon landscape; leaves once verdant bleed crimson, pumpkin and yellow. Heels on my shoes crunch through a carpet of gold and sienna.

We have entered the season of harvest; the time of a pregnant pause between summer’s abundance and winter’s barrenness. Autumn asks if you are faithful. Will you trust resurrection is coming when hope isn’t yet evident?

Last night, H and I pulled on boots; we slipped coats over sweaters and tied scarves around our necks. We walked under starlit sky holding hands and remembered how it feels to be playful. Anonymous somebodies left us separate envelopes holding bills and warm wishes.

After seven months living in London, we finally enjoyed a date night! I couldn’t bring myself to write a blog post. I’ve officially broken a promise to myself about writing every day this month but I’m actually okay with that.

Winding our way through quiet streets lit by incandescence beaming through large bay windows, we rode the Central Line to Oxford Circus and clicked up the stairs like children opening doors into Narnia. Hints of Christmas cheer were hanging off buildings everywhere like I was standing in a snow globe waiting to be shaken.

I awakened on Saturday with an addiction to making the house feel cozy. And then I remembered the unopened box in the garage with “Thanksgiving Decorations” written in black ink. What grace!

All day, I donned an apron. I cooked, polished, decorated and lit candles while singing. Autumn is a pregnant pause for nesting; deep preparation that comes instinctively before giving birth to a new season.

As the sun goes down at 5pm and we gain an extra hour of sleep tonight, creation forces us to Sabbath just as God intended. Rest is the clarion call of autumn.

Happy Sabbath Friends!

Want to make rest a routine, not just something you fill in between the cracks of your busyness? Join the Sabbath Society. Follow Sabbath-keepers in community with the hashtag #sabbathsociety on Twitter and Instagram and our Pinterest board, Surrendering to Sabbath.