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Week 4 of Making the most of your time.
Hopefully it has helped.
We are told to make the best use of our time so that we can do the Will of the Lord.
How do we make the best use of out time?
We have been learning from the lIfe of Jesus … looking at his life and to how his example will help us to Make the best use of our time.
Even though life in the 1st century was drastically different from today, Jesus did have to deal with human limitations of time and place.
He had people pulling him in hundreds of different directions so he had to figure out what was most important to his mission just like we do.
So far we have looked at three different principles from Jesus life for managing our time.
1. Begin with the Word of God.
2. Keep Your Commitments
3. Silence the Kingdom of noise.
4. Prioritize your yeses…
When thinking about time management and to-do lists, it is so easy to get overwhelmed.
We have so much to do, so many things coming at us from all directions, so many responsibilities.
It can seem like an impossible task.
Today, we want to look at something most folks don’t associate with making the most of their time… Rest
Here is the 6th principle of managing time like Jesus did.
Principle #6.
Get some rest
To make the most of your time, you have to embrace God given rhythms of rest which actually add to your productivity and improve you as a child of God.
The world says work harder
We live in a hustle culture.
If you want to get more done, the world says to work harder… to work longer… and rest when you are dead.
But the bible shows us and science has backed up that rest is the key to being wildly productive.
In order to do more, most of us need to do less and rest more.
People who have taken a nap time can finally be vindicated.
So what does this look like.
What do the God designed rhythms look like?
1.
Take daily breaks
The disciples had been working hard, teaching and ministering to the people.
While our culture would say, preach one more sermon… do one more event… reach one more person, Jesus saw something different.
Jesus recognized that what they needed was rest.
Most of us treat our days like they are a sprint… we go as hard and fast as we can until we collapse from exhaustion in the afternoon.
This is not how God designed you and I to operate.
God designed us not for a sprint or even a marathon but for a workout.
Research has shown that God wired us to “pulse” about every 90 minutes.
These cycles are called “Ultradian Cycles.”
What it means is that about every hour and a half, our brains need a break for a few minutes.
Maybe that’s why our watches will tell us it’s time to stand several times per day.
It may seem like a waste of time, but you will get more work done taking breaks than if you don’t.
2. Make sure to get enough sleep at night.
Although we see Jesus getting up early to go pray, we also see him prioritizing sleep.
Remember the passage where Jesus calmed the storm?
What was he doing before the disciples called them?
Sleeping.
If you read the beginning of the chapter you will see that Jesus and the disciples had a long day teaching so when they got in the boat, Jesus was getting some much deserved rest.
You may be thinking that you don’t remember the Bible ever saying how much sleep we need in a day… it doesn’t.
The National Sleep Foundation says most adults need 7-9 hours of sleep per day.
That sounds good but what happens if we don’t get enough?
… which happens often.
What happens when that occurs?
According to sleep experts failure to get adequate sleep is worse for your performance than showing up drunk for work.
In addition, sleeping less than 6 or 7 hours per night demolishes your immune system, more than doubling your risk of various diseases like cancer and heart disease … including psychiatric conditions, including depression, anxiety, and suicidality.
OK… now that I have your attention, here are some of the many benefits of getting enough sleep.
Benifits of the fight amount of sleep
1.
You can concentrate better at work and at home
2.
You perfect skills you learned throughout the day while you are asleep.
According to studies,
3.
More sleep = more potential income
4.
Your creative problem-solving skills are enhanced
These are great benefits, and ones that you have probably experienced in your own life after a great nights sleep.
But ultimately, why does this matter?
If you remember, when we began the series, that Paul told us to make the best use of our time
Getting enough sleep at night makes us more productive for the Lord.
Someone once said, Sometimes the godliest thing you can do is to get a good nights sleep… not pray but sleep.
3. We need to observe a Sabbath
We’ve talked about taking breaks and getting enough sleep.
And now we come to this rhythm that you have all heard about but don’t understand… the Sabbath.
Many people see the Sabbath as boring or legalistic… a life sucking chore.
Something that used to cause the stores to be closed on Sundays.
Jesus even agreed that many had abused the Sabbath and turned it into something God did not intend for it to be.
This was life-sucking legalism.
The pharisees were criticizing Jesus for doing something life-giving… healing the man’s hand.
They didn’t care because Jesus didn’t adhere to the Sabbath rules.
Jesus didn’t say that the law was irrelevant, he said that the Pharisees were missing the point of the Sabbath.
Jesus told them the
The Sabbath was made to meet the needs of the people
Why did Jesus say that?
Look at the Sabbath.
The first Sabbath was 7th day of creation.
It’s interesting that this is the first thing God called holy.
On previous days God either said it was good or very good.
But the Sabbath he called holy.
On that first Sabbath, God rested.
On Mount Sinai God commanded the Israelites to imitate him and his rhythm for working 6 days and resting 1 day.
The Sabbath is actually about imitating God’s pattern or Rhythm of work and rest, taking a break to enjoy the Lord and the good things He has given us through our work.
But there is something else.
Think about the context of when God gave Moses the 10 commandments.
The Israelites had just come out of 400 years of slavery in Egypt where they had been engaged in back breaking work every day.
That’s 400 years of ruthless masters telling them to get back to work…
and not only that but
So the Sabbath is about stepping back from our work and loves and saying, this is very good, but it’s also about saying no to the tyranny of more.
The Sabbath is about saying no to the tyranny of more.
It’s about declaring freedom from slavery… it’s an invitation to stop, which is the literal meaning of the Hebrew word Shabbat.
Stop working… stop striving… stop hustling… STOP.
Sounds pretty good in our culture of hustle to the next…
So God took a break… a rest and told us to do the same.
Now this is where we get ourselves into trouble.
Over time, the religious leaders in Israel regulated it more than the federal government adding over 1500 rules of what you could and could not do on God’s holy day.
With all of these man-made rules the Sabbath which God created to be life giving became life draining.
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