What is Simplicity?
Simplicity is the embrace of intentional limitations for the sake of what matters most: the love of, and from, God and others. Here we have provided resources for you and your community to know how to embrace less to have more capacity for what matters most. Our prayer is that you will experience contentment through simplicity as you intentionally shape your life around Jesus and others.
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The practice of simplicity is the embrace of intentional limitations for the sake of what matters most: the love of, and from, God and others.
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The temptation and lie from the enemy has been consistent: you can be like God. The temptation has currently displayed itself in the cultural confession that we do not have limits. Limits on time, identity, sexuality, commitments, love, money, possessions, etc. are not acknowledged or accepted as good. Our lack of limits can be summarized in one word that is elevated and lives in the DNA of the current moment: More. We can be convinced that happiness, joy, love, peace, etc. are all found on the other side of more. When we come to Jesus we gain the freedom of contentment, and the freedom to live in simplicity. Simplicity can be summarized as “less but better”.
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Simplicity teaches us that contentment and peace come more from dependence on God than it does from the possession of things. The practice does not demonize possessions or money but puts them in their right place. It also reminds us that we cannot serve two masters and exposes where we have attempted to do so. It gives us the freedom to live within our limits and to worship a God who is limitless within his own will.
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Live with Less - Less stuff, less clothes, less hobbies, less commitments, less options, less things we don’t need. Begin to rid of things for the sole purpose of creating more capacity for the things that matter most: God and people.
Curate Media + Phone Usage - In a world of endless streaming, scrolling, and stories, we must set limits that force curation. Example: “4 hours of media a week” or “an hour with phone turned off daily”.
Audit Yourself - Create intentional audits to reveal the truth of our current condition. Audit time, possessions, clothes, money spent, media intake, phone use, hobbies, experiences, kids sports, travel, etc. We do this for awareness of reality, and to take steps to live within our limits. We all have limited time, money, relational and emotional capacity, etc. We audit our lives to take steps towards living within our God-given limits.
Embrace God’s Gifts - As we implement limitations, we open ourselves up to spend more on what matters most. We limit money spent to open ourselves to more money given. We limit relationships to dive deeper into a few people’s lives. We limit media intake to spend more time around the dinner table. We limit our distractions to live within our reality.
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Everything in and around us will tell us to not embrace these limits. The difficulty of this practice is the intentionality and patience that it requires. The heart will not change overnight, and neither will the number of our possessions, distractions, and commitments. Be patient, start somewhere, and allow God to lead you into a life counter to the world and filled with contentment through him.
“Fear not, little flock, for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom. Sell your possessions, and give to the needy. Provide yourselves with moneybags that do not grow old, with a treasure in the heavens that does not fail, where no thief approaches and no moth destroys. For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.” (Luke 12:32-34)
prayer Practice
This serves to give ideas on how to practice prayer in correlation with the simplicity practice. If you want to practice prayer but do not know where to start, simply choose one of these and apply it to your daily schedule.
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We live in a world of noise. There is endless noise around us and there is often endless noise within us. God invites us into moments of silence to simply be in his presence. Set a period of time (start small, like 5 or 10 min, and work your way up) and pick a location in which you do not speak but can isolate yourself from sound. Allow this time to not be intercession for yourself or others or a time to seek a word from God, but a time to simply be silent. After your time of silence take time to reflect.
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At times we need intentional moments away from others to be alone with God. Set a time and pick a location to be alone. Plan this time out for intentionality. Bring a book to read. Get your favorite coffee. Ride your bike. Walk in a park.
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A key element of contentment is gratitude. A form of prayer that leads to contentment is thankfulness for your current reality. Thankfulness for the people, possessions, and life that you have. Spend time writing, speaking, or sharing your gratitude.
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One of the main distractions from what is in front of us is our phones. A way to fight this is to simply turn your phone off to give attention to the present.
simplicity worksheet
We created a Simplicity Worksheet to help you work through how to practically practice Simplicity in your life.
additional resources
If you want to know more about the practice of Simplicity, here is a compiled list of helpful resources. Because this list has many options, it can feel intimidating on where to start. Our encouragement is just to start somewhere. Pick one that seems appealing and start there.
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Abundant Simplicity: Discovering the Unhurried by Jan Johnson
The More of Less: Finding the Life You Want Under Everything You Own by Joshua Becker
Free: Spending Your Time and Money on What Matters Most by Mark Scandrette
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Paterson
A movie about a Bus driver and his poem book.
(Note: rated R for language)
Columbus
A movie about simple aspirations.
(Note: some explicit language)
WALL-E
A movie about consumerism.
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What is Simplicity? by John Mark Comer
10 Signs You Own Too Much Stuff by Joshua Becker
John Mark Comer Teaching Podcast
The Propaganda of More | Simplicity E1
Simplicity of Heart | Simplicity E2