This season, I’m working through the habits from my new book 8 Habits for Growth. And the second habit is one that’s easily overlooked: rest and refresh.
We’re told that freedom and opportunity are our ticket to the good life. Get out there and follow your dreams! Be the hero of your own story! Find your happiness! Live your best life! It seems that limitless possibilities await anyone with vision and willingness to hustle their way through life.
Rather than feeling accomplished, being limitless makes us do more and try harder, which leaves us feeling drained and unsatisfied with life and faith.
There is a better way, a more spacious life. Contrary to our previous belief, having numerous options and constantly rushing is not the key to a fulfilling life. The life we crave is found within the confines of God’s loving limits. Ashley reminds us that by living within boundaries, we find a purposeful, joyful, and restful life.
This is the spacious life — finding true freedom within the good limits given to us by our good God.
That’s what Ashley Hales writes about in her new book A Spacious Life. It’s an invitation to a different way of living.
You can listen to my interview with Hales below.
Key Ideas
- A lot of our busyness comes from the lie that what we do is who we are.
- Culture sends us the message that we must hustle and perform to make our lives count.
- We lose out on God’s gifts when we try to earn what we’ve already been given.
- Limits are good. Part of sin is trying to go past our God-given limits.
- Our limited are like dashboard warning lights. They are warnings that something is going on underneath, and invitations to knowing God.
- In God’s kingdom, we can recover our smallness and creatureliness as a gift.
- Technology is a gift, but it can tempt us to elevate ourselves to a godlike position. Embodiment in real community is an even greater gift.
- Rest orients us to our work.
- Rest is a way of reminding us that we are cared for and seen, and that we don’t have to prove ourselves.
Quotes
“A lot of our exhaustion isn’t simply about how full our calendars are, but this sort of sense that what we do is who we are.”
“We really lose out on the gifts that God has for us and for our communities when we choose instead to try to earn for ourselves the things that we’ve already been given by God.”
“Maybe my limit is like the light on my car that tells me that there’s something going on underneath … I think our limits ultimately are invitations to knowing God.”
“it’s only in the Kingdom of God that we know that our smallness is a gift.”
“Rest is a gift from a good God and Sabbath shows me that I am really incapable of providing all that I need.”
“We didn’t need more arguments, we really needed an invitation.”
Episode Links
Books mentioned:
- A Spacious Life: Trading Hustle and Hurry for the Goodness of Limits
- The Tech-Wise Family: Everyday Steps for Putting Technology in Its Proper Place
- Subversive Sabbath: The Surprising Power of Rest in a Nonstop World
Transcript
Download a PDF transcript of this episode.