Recovering Sacred Rhythms
Christian Practices
Embrace timeless spiritual disciplines to nurture modern discipleship.
Ancient Practices for a Modern Church
The Christian Practices initiative invites pastors, ministry leaders, and believers to rediscover the historic rhythms of Christian spiritual life. Through practices like the Daily Office, scripture meditation, contemplative prayer, and faithful stewardship, we emphasize spiritual formation, leadership development, and accessible theological learning.
The Christian Practices initiative is a developing effort to help the church rediscover the spiritual practices that have formed disciples for generations. Through prayer, scripture, community, and faithful stewardship, we seek to cultivate spiritually attentive leaders for the renewal of the church. Our mission is to guide individuals and communities in cultivating a deeper connection with God, fostering a transformative journey of faith that is rooted in tradition yet relevant for today’s church.

The Prayers of the Daily Office
Throughout the history of the Church, followers of Jesus have returned again and again to simple rhythms of prayer and Scripture, allowing their lives to be shaped by God’s presence from beginning to end. The Daily Office gathers these rhythms into a steady pattern of Morning Prayer, Noonday Prayer, Evening Prayer, and Compline.
There is something deeply grounding about knowing that you are not alone in prayer. At any given minute, tens of thousands of believers across the world are praying the Daily Office. As morning unfolds across different regions, the Church continues its quiet, steady conversation with God. When you open the Scriptures, when you pause in silence, when you offer your prayers, you are joining a rhythm that is already underway. You are stepping into a global and historic movement of prayer that has never ceased.
The Spiritual Formation Pathway
The Spiritual Formation Pathway is a simple visual framework that draws from historic Christian teaching about prayer, spiritual practices, and the transformation of the heart. It brings together biblical imagery, the rhythms of prayer taught by Jesus, and the classic Christian understanding of spiritual growth found in early Christian writers.

For centuries Christians have understood spiritual growth as a journey shaped by intentional rhythms of prayer and devotion. The Spiritual Formation Pathway illustrates how historic Christian practices help believers grow in their life with God.The image of a tree provides a helpful way to visualize this process.
The Roots: The Rhythms of Christian Life
At the foundation of the spiritual life are three rhythms taught by Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount.
Prayer • Fasting • Giving
These practices anchor the believer’s life in God.
Prayer cultivates communion with God.
Fasting trains the heart in humility and dependence.
Giving expresses love for others and trust in God’s provision.
Together these rhythms nourish the entire life of faith.
The Trunk: A Rule of Life
The trunk of the tree represents a Rule of Life.
A rule of life is simply a pattern of spiritual practices that helps believers remain rooted in Christ. It provides structure for daily rhythms such as prayer, Scripture reading, worship, and acts of generosity.
Rather than being rigid or legalistic, a rule of life creates space for a consistent and sustainable life with God.
The Growth Path: The Journey of Spiritual Formation
As the tree grows upward it reflects the historic path of spiritual growth described by early Christian teachers.
Purification
This stage focuses on turning the heart toward God and allowing Him to reshape our desires and habits.
Illumination
In this stage believers grow in awareness of God’s presence through Scripture, prayer, and reflection.
Union
The final movement describes a life increasingly rooted in communion with God and expressed through love for others.
These movements are not rigid stages but describe the gradual transformation that occurs as believers walk faithfully with God.
The Goal: A Life Formed in Christ
The purpose of spiritual practices is not the practices themselves. Rather, they are means through which God shapes the life of the believer.
As Christians remain rooted in prayer, guided by Scripture, and attentive to God’s presence, their lives are gradually transformed to reflect the character of Christ.
Christian Practices Initiatives
The Christian Practices Initiative is rooted in the formation pattern Jesus teaches in the Sermon on the Mount. Through rhythms of prayer, fasting, generosity, and Scripture, believers grow in humility, love, wisdom, and union with God.
Online Bible Institute
Offering accessible biblical education, the Online Bible Institute provides courses that deepen theological understanding and scriptural knowledge for believers worldwide.
Church Encourager Initiative
Focused on leadership formation, the Church Encourager Initiative mentors ministry leaders through collaborative learning and support networks.
Kingdom Influence Project
Dedicated to contemplative leadership development, the Kingdom Influence Project equips leaders to integrate spiritual practices into their leadership roles.
Daily Spiritual Practice
Engage in daily prayer, scripture reading, and reflection to nurture a consistent spiritual rhythm.
Certificate in Christian Practices
The Certificate in Christian Practices is designed to guide believers into a deeper and more intentional life with God through the historic rhythms of the Christian life.
Virtual Church Spark
Support for pastors and churches seeking renewal through leadership coaching, digital ministry strategies, and practical guidance.
Kingdom Stewardship Initiative
Explore stewardship and discipleship initiatives that encourage living out your faith in everyday life.
Kingdom Encouragers Platform
Connect with others through shared spiritual practices and community support.

Walking the Rhythms of Grace Part 4 — From Structure to Rhythm
As I continued to engage the practices, something began to shift in a way I did not expect. Up to this point, I had been focused on the structure. The set times. The readings. The order. These had been helpful, and they had given shape to my days. But slowly, almost quietly, I began to realize that what was shaping me was not the structure itself. It was the rhythm underneath it. The Daily Office was never just about stopping at certain times of the day. It was about returning. Returning again and again to the presence of God. Returning in the morning before the day began to take over. Returning in the middle of the day when distractions had pulled my attention away. Returning in the evening as everything began to settle. What mattered was not simply that I followed the pattern. What mattered was that I was learning to return.
This began to change how I experienced the practices. They were no longer something I needed to complete. They became something I could enter. Instead of feeling like I was moving through a structure, I began to sense that I was being carried by a rhythm. A rhythm does not demand perfection. It invites participation. There were days when the structure was clear and easy to follow, and there were days when life was full and unpredictable. But even when the structure was interrupted, the rhythm remained. I could still return. I could still pause. I could still become aware of God’s presence in the middle of whatever was happening. That was a new kind of freedom.
I no longer felt like I had failed when I could not follow everything exactly. Instead, I began to see that the goal was never precision. The goal was presence. The practices were not there to measure my faithfulness. They were there to help me live in a steady awareness of God. And that awareness began to extend beyond the set times of prayer. I started to notice God in moments I would have previously rushed past. In conversations. In quiet pauses. In the middle of ordinary responsibilities. The rhythm was no longer confined to specific moments. It was beginning to shape the whole of my day.
This is when I began to understand something that has stayed with me ever since. Structure can guide us, but rhythm forms us. Structure gives us a place to begin. Rhythm gives us a way to live. And as this understanding took hold, it began to influence everything else. It shaped how I approached Scripture. It shaped how I listened. It shaped how I responded. Over time, it even began to give rise to new expressions of these rhythms, ways of engaging Scripture and reflection that would eventually become what I now call Daily Psalt Intake, Daily Sage Intake, and Daily Strength Practices. But at the center of it all was not a method. It was a relationship. The rhythm was simply helping me return to it, again and again.
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.

A Journey into Christian Practices Part 3 — From Knowing to Becoming
There is an important shift that takes place in the Christian life when we begin to move from knowing to becoming. For many of us, faith has been shaped primarily by what we understand. We learn Scripture, we grow in knowledge, and we develop a clearer picture of who God is. But over time, we begin to realize that knowing the truth and living it are not always the same thing.
This is where many people feel stuck. We know we are called to love, but we struggle to be patient. We believe God is present, but we often feel distracted or distant. We understand the importance of peace, but we find ourselves anxious in the pressures of everyday life. The gap is not a lack of sincerity. It is a lack of formation. Becoming more like Christ requires more than information. It requires intentional participation in a life with God.
Christian practices help bridge that gap. They are not about adding more spiritual tasks to an already full life. Instead, they are ways of creating space for God to shape us from the inside out. As we engage practices like prayer, Scripture meditation, silence, and daily rhythms of devotion, we begin to notice a gradual shift. What once felt like effort begins to take root in our lives. Over time, these practices move from something we do to something that becomes part of who we are.
This is the journey of formation. It is not immediate, and it is not forced. It unfolds slowly as we remain faithful in small, consistent steps. As you continue engaging with these practices, the goal is not simply to know more about God, but to become more like Christ in the way you live, respond, and relate to others. This is the invitation before you. Not just to learn the way of Jesus, but to live it.
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.