Photo by Bailey Zindel on Unsplash By now, you’ve probably noticed something: the goal of these practices isn’t intensity. It’s sustainability . Not a spiritual surge you can’t maintain, but a gentle rhythm you can return to again and again. Week 4 is about carrying that forward through two simple ideas: Sabbath-lite and a gentle rule of life . Not rigid. Not legalistic. Not another “perfect plan.” Just a realistic way to make space for God and rest—on purpose. What Is Sabbath-lite? Sabbath-lite is a simple, doable version of Sabbath. It’s not an all-day production. It’s a protected pocket of time —often 2–4 hours—where you practice rest and re-centering. Sabbath-lite is less about doing it “right” and more about doing it repeatably . It’s built on three gentle anchors: 1) Stop Choose a few hours where you stop what drains you: work tasks emails errands that can wait constant scrolling This is not about guilt. It’s about permission. ...
Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash Some weeks, we don’t need more answers—we need a place to bring our whole selves to God. That’s why Week 3 pairs two practices that fit real life: Lectio Divina (slow Scripture) and Lament (honest prayer). Together they form a sustainable rhythm: we listen deeply, and we respond truthfully. Lectio Divina (A Simple Practice) Lectio Divina is a slow, prayerful way of reading Scripture. It’s less about covering a lot of verses and more about receiving a few—letting the Word meet you where you are. Use a short passage (2–6 verses) and move through four gentle steps: Read — What stands out? Reflect — Why might this be for me today? Respond — What do I want to say to God? Rest — Sit with God in quiet for a moment. That’s it. Slow down. Pay attention. Receive. Lament (Why It Belongs) Lament is not a lack of faith. Lament is faith refusing to pretend. It’s the practice of bringing yo...