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 Daily Office Stained Glass

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.

Spiritual Formation Pathway

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 Beach

Walking the Rhythms of Grace Part 3 — The Gift and Limits of Structure

As I continued to walk in the rhythm of the Daily Office, I began to experience something that I had been longing for. There was a steadiness forming in my life with God. My days were no longer shaped only by urgency or responsibility. There were moments that invited me to pause, return, and remember. Scripture was becoming more familiar. Prayer was becoming more natural. My attention was slowly being redirected. The structure was doing something good in me.

It gave shape to my days. It created space for God in places where there had often been none. It helped me remain connected when I did not feel particularly focused or motivated. In many ways, it was a gift. It brought consistency where there had been inconsistency, and intention where there had been drift. And yet, over time, I began to notice something else. The same structure that was helping me could also begin to subtly shift my focus if I was not careful.

There were moments when I found myself thinking more about completing the pattern than encountering God. I could move through the readings, say the prayers, and check the box, all while my heart remained somewhat distant. What had begun as a means of connection could quietly become an end in itself. The rhythm was still present, but something deeper was missing. I began to realize that it is possible to be faithful to a practice and still miss the presence of God within it. It is possible to follow the structure and yet remain unchanged at the level of the heart.

This was not a failure of the practice. It was a misunderstanding of its purpose. The structure was never meant to carry the weight of transformation on its own. It was never meant to replace relationship. It was never meant to become the goal. It was meant to serve something greater. This realization did not cause me to step away from the practices. Instead, it began to change how I approached them. I started to slow down. I began to pay attention in a different way. I became less concerned with getting through the rhythm and more aware of being present within it. What I was beginning to discover was simple, but deeply important. The power was not in the structure. The structure was simply creating space for something else. And that something else was relationship. In the next part of this journey, that understanding would begin to deepen even further as I discovered that what I had been calling structure was actually pointing me toward something more living and more relational than I had first imagined. It was leading me toward rhythm.

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

A Journey into Christian Practices Part 2 — Why Practices Matter in the Christian Life

If we are honest, many of us have experienced a gap between what we believe and how we live. We know the truth of Scripture. We believe in God’s promises. We understand what it means to follow Jesus. And yet, in the everyday moments of life, we often find ourselves anxious, distracted, reactive, or spiritually dry. This is not because something is wrong with our faith. It is because information alone does not form us.

The Christian life was never meant to be lived only through knowledge. It was always meant to be lived through relationship. And like any relationship, it is shaped over time through consistent attention, intentional rhythms, and shared presence. Christian practices create space in our lives where we can be with God, not just think about Him. They are not about earning God’s favor or proving our spiritual maturity, but about placing ourselves before Him so that He can do His work in us in a world that constantly pulls our attention in a thousand different directions.

Think about how formation works in other areas of life. We do not become physically healthy by reading about exercise. We become healthy by practicing it over time. In the same way, we do not grow spiritually by only learning about prayer, Scripture, or silence. We grow as we begin to practice them in simple and consistent ways. That is why the Christian Practices website is built around rhythms rather than just content, offering pathways that can be lived, not just understood.

Over time, these small and faithful practices begin to shape us. They quiet our hearts, reorient our attention, and help us recognize God’s presence in everyday life. The change is often subtle, but it is real. As you continue, you may find your responses shifting, your awareness deepening, and your life becoming more rooted and less hurried. The invitation is simple. Do not approach these practices as tasks to complete, but as opportunities to be with God. Start small, stay consistent, and allow space for grace. Over time, what you practice will begin to shape who you are becoming.

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.