Divine Time ManagementНамуна
God's Goals for Our Time Management
As a time management coach since 2009, I’ve spent a great deal of my career teaching people the skills and mindsets needed to get things done. That includes everything from setting priorities to planning to managing tasks. But in 2015, God deeply convicted me that I needed to start integrating my Christian faith into my work. That led me on a journey to discover the path of “divine time management.” A concept summarized in Psalm 46:10a (NASB): “Cease striving and know that I am God.”
Divine time management is not only about including a Bible study time in your daily schedule but also about an entirely different approach to thinking about time.
God doesn’t want us to idolize our ability to control ourselves and manage our lives. Instead, God desires us to put trust in Him at the center of all we do.
As Psalm 127:1-2 (NIV) encourages us:
“Unless the Lord builds the house,
the builders labor in vain.
Unless the Lord watches over the city,
the guards stand watch in vain.
In vain you rise early
and stay up late,
toiling for food to eat—
for he grants sleep to those he loves.”
To experience this shift, we need to begin by letting go of the wrong goals for time management (that seem so right) and pursuing the right aims.
Here are a few of the wrong goals that we can easily slip into:
- Control: Thinking we have things handled and don’t need God’s help
- Pleasure: Looking to feel good as much as possible
- Achievement: Focusing exclusively on getting things done
- Being the Super ____: Being there for people to the extreme to gain self worth
Do any of these wrong goals sound familiar? I know that I’ve fallen into these worldly goals more often than I would like to admit. But the good news is that we can return to God, ask His forgiveness, and redirect our hearts toward His desires for our time management.
It’s as simple as this, just say, “God, I’m sorry for [wrong goal]. Please help me to understand your goals for my time and to put trust in you at the center of how I use my time.”
As James 4:13-16 (NASB) warns us, it’s critical as Christians we recognize that God is Lord of our time:
“Come now, you who say, ‘Today or tomorrow we will go to such and such a city, and spend a year there and engage in business and make a profit.’ Yet you do not know what your life will be like tomorrow. You are just a vapor that appears for a little while and then vanishes away. Instead you ought to say, ‘If the Lord wills, we will live and also do this or that.’ But as it is, you boast in your arrogance; all such boasting is evil.”
Let’s put our trust in God, not ourselves, with our time management today.
About this Plan
Traditional time management can cause stress when the goal is to get life "under control" by our own strength and self-discipline. But the Bible tells us we receive peace and rest when we trust God with our time. In this 6-day plan, you will learn how a God-centered approach to time management leads to receiving all the good He has for you, including His joy and peace.
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