Sanity is all relative!
I guess it depends on why you are backing up. If it's for hardware failure, then this won't work because the repository is in the same folder (/home/) so if the folder goes, the repo goes. Unless of course you are pushing it to a storage repo on another machine somewhere as the actual backup.
We do use git to store important things, especially research papers and PDF's, so we can easily share them.
You would write a cron job that runs a script every so often. Basically you would write a simple bash script that does a git commit -a -m "commit message" periodically in your folder. The tricky part is doing the git add on the new files that were created so they are tracked. You will likely need to do a git status and parse the output from it in your script to find the new files, then git add that list. Python may be the easiest way to do that. Then you register that with cron.
Google is your friend here, there are plenty of examples on how to register scripts with cron.