Practices for Life

Most of us want more than we have — in a good way: more depth, more presence, more of whatever it is that makes life feel like it's actually being lived. We reach for that more in the usual places: a new routine, a better habit, a book that promises to help. And sometimes those things help, for a while.

But followers of Jesus have always believed that the life we're hungry for isn't something we produce. It's something we receive. And receiving it, it turns out, requires becoming the kind of person who can.

That's what practices are for. Not to earn God's attention — we already have it. Not to become impressively spiritual. But to gradually become people whose hands are open, whose pace is slow enough to notice, whose lives have enough space in them for something other than the urgent.

Dallas Willard used to say that grace is not opposed to effort — it's opposed to earning. Spiritual practices are the effort that doesn't try to earn anything. They're the ancient forms that human beings have used, across centuries and cultures, to journey in the way of God.

The practices here aren't a curriculum — and they’re certainly not an exhaustive list. They're an invitation. Try one. Try it imperfectly. Start where you are and see what happens.

How to use this page

The practices are organized into three movements, each with its own character and set of practices. You don't have to follow the order. Each card has a brief reflection and one thing to try. Start wherever something catches you, and come back when you're ready for more.

Movement I — Drawn In
Core Practice: Worship

Before we can be formed together or sent into the world, something has to happen in us — a reorientation, a slowing, a willingness to be met. These practices create interior space.

Movement 2 — Held Together
Core Practice: Community

We were not made to practice faith alone. These practices happen in the spaces between us — at tables, in the telling of stories, in grief and joy shared with people who know us.

Movement 3 — Sent Out
Core Practice: Mission

A faith that stays only inward isn't the faith Jesus described. These practices ask what we owe to the world — and what it looks like to live with genuinely open hands.

These resources are free to use and share. If something meaningful opens up for you, we'd love to hear about it.

Previous
Previous

The Lord's Prayer