If it is your home and you are just about to move in - Start by walking into the house and speaking to it. Tell it who you are and that you want to move in and make it a home. if the feeling is negative or even just neutral it might be a good idea to smudge the building first. Once you have done that the "vibes should be better.
Once you have moved in a small ritual to bless the house and integrate the family into it would be a good idea. Light candles, call the elements and create a magical perimeter around the house (I use the exterior edges of the roof as my boundary), now invite your deities, state your purpose (to bless this house to your use) and take a moment to visualise your new home full of friends and family, happiness and health, prosperity and peace. Welcome the home to your life, acknowledge the deities, dismiss the elements, and ground the energies of the Ritual. Afterward share a bit of wine and bread with everyone or throw a house-warming party (do the blessing first, with just those who intend to love there, even if your friends are Pagan)
If the house is yours and you have been living in it a while it is best to do a thorough smudging then a blessing Ritual.
If the home belongs to someone else, on your first (or next visit) bring a small bag of sea salt, wrapped in a red pouch and tied with a green or gold string (for prosperity) a loaf of bread - homemade, or at least uncut (to ensure plenty), and a small gift (a living plant is a good bet) to the home owners.
(God) Bless this home: Dios bendiga este hogar
"Gott segne dieses Haus" or "Der Herr segne dieses Haus" 1st one means: May God bless this home. 2nd means: May the Lord bless this home.. :)
The Farmer's Daughter - 1963 Bless Our Happy Home 1-22 was released on: USA: 19 February 1964
In Irish Gaelic:'May God bless our home' would be Go mbeannaí Dia dár dteach. This means 'May God bless our house'."May God bless our household (family)' would be Go mbeannaí Dia dár dteaghlach.In Scottish Gaelic an old prayer was Gum beannaich Dia taigh an teine san fhardach.
It means "God bless you and your family always."
"Deus abencoa a nossa casa" is Portuguese for "God bless our house." It is a common expression used to seek blessings and protection for one's home.
Dio benedica la nostra casa
Bless is present tense. The past tense is blessed, and the future tense is will bless.
Better to say Bless You
There are different ways, one way is "Velsigne huset ditt". In the older days, many households in norway had signs saying "Gud signe heimen vår" which means "God Bless our Home". You could rewrite it to "Gud signe heimen din", which will mean "God Bless your home".
Anthony Bless goes by Bless.
god bless