Walking the Rhythms of Grace Part 10 — An Invitation to the Journey
When I look back on this journey, I am grateful for many things. I am grateful for the Daily Office and the structure it provided when I needed a way to return to God more consistently. I am grateful for the Psalms that taught me how to pray with honesty. I am grateful for the wisdom of Scripture that helped shape my decisions and my perspective. I am grateful for the rhythms that strengthened me during difficult seasons and reminded me of God’s presence in ordinary moments. But perhaps most of all, I am grateful for what these practices revealed. They revealed that what I was searching for was not a better system. It was a deeper relationship. For a long time, I thought the greatest value of the practices was their structure. The structure certainly helped. It created space. It established consistency. It provided a framework for growth. But over time, I came to realize that the structure was never the destination. It was simply a doorway into something greater.
The true gift was the rhythm. A rhythm of returning. A rhythm of listening. A rhythm of remembering. A rhythm of living with an awareness of God’s presence throughout the day. That rhythm began to shape not only how I prayed, but how I lived. It influenced how I engaged Scripture, how I approached decisions, how I responded to challenges, and how I experienced God’s presence in the ordinary moments of life. It eventually gave rise to Daily Psalt Intake, Daily Sage Intake, and Daily Strength Practices, not because I was trying to create something new, but because I was learning to live within an ancient rhythm that Christians have practiced for centuries.
And yet, if there is one lesson I hope remains after everything else is forgotten, it is this: The practices are not the goal. Relationship is the goal. The practices matter because they help us pay attention. They help us slow down. They help us return. But they cannot replace the relationship they are designed to support. The purpose of every practice is to draw us closer to God and to help us become more attentive to His presence and work in our lives. That is why this journey is not really about mastering spiritual disciplines. It is about learning to walk with God. It is about discovering that formation happens slowly, through grace, over time. It is about realizing that God is often at work in the ordinary rhythms of our days. And it is about returning, again and again, to the One who has been inviting us all along.
If you have followed this series from the beginning, my hope is not that you will adopt every practice I have described. My hope is that you will find a rhythm that helps you remain attentive to God. A rhythm that helps you listen. A rhythm that helps you return. A rhythm that supports, rather than competes with, your relationship with Him. Wherever you are today, you do not need to have everything figured out. You simply need to take the next step. Pause. Listen. Return. And trust that God will meet you there. Because in the end, the journey is not really about the practices. It is about the grace that meets us within them. And that grace is available every day.
Steve Lawes serves as the lead pastor of Keys Vineyard Church, founder of the Online Bible Institute Network, and leads the Christian Practices initiative through Tower of Praise, Inc. His heart is to help people grow in a steady and authentic relationship with God through simple, accessible rhythms of Scripture, prayer, and spiritual formation.
