Ploductivity Matters
An Overview of Biblical and Practical Approaches to Being Productive Every Day
Every Day Matters (Brandon D. Crowe)
Part I: Perspectives
- Why You Need This Book (We can all make each day matter more than before.)
- Guiding Texts: Wisdom Literature (The Benefits and Limitations of Diligent Work)
- Guiding Texts: Focus and Diligence in the Life and Teaching of the Apostle Paul
Part II: Principles
- Priorities (Not everything in life is worth doing. Choose wisely, with eternity in mind.)
- Goals and Planning (Write long and short-term goals, and make plans to fulfill them.)
- Routines (Create regular routines that help reach goals and focus on the priorities.)
- Family (Prioritize the family in everything, by being both disciplined and flexible.)
- Rest, Refresh, Repent, Resolve (Don’t neglect sleep/vacation. Repent. Don’t give up.)
- Sustaining Energy (Do what it takes to stay consistent and work at a manageable pace.)
Part III: Practices
- Engaging Spiritual Disciplines (Prioritize prayer, Bible study, worship and Sabbath rest.)
- Getting Organized (You can’t “remember” everything. Make use of available resources.)
- Avoiding Pitfalls (Technology. Multitasking. Social Media. Entertainment. Stress.)
Conclusion: Now You Know (If every day matters, then today must be the day to get started.)
Appendix: How to Handle Email (Self-control. Show respect. Keep your inbox organized.)
Also, check out these helpful reviews and a fun interview with the author.
Seven Lessons for Productivity (John Piper)
1. Know why you are here.
2. Embrace your role as a sub-creator.
3. Discover the difference between sloth and rest.
4. Make peace with imperfection.
5. Act promptly.
6. Chop a little each day.
7. Get excited for what’s ahead.
Ploductivity (Douglas Wilson)
Foreword: Rebekah Merkle shares her father’s “secret”:
“Patience — with a bomb shot of ambition, or possibly ambition that is ruled and tempered by patience — is the surprisingly powerful combination that has made his work so…fruitful.”
Part I: A Theology of Productivity
Introduction to Technofulness: Technology is a form of wealth + deliberate faithfulness
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Work (Work is more difficult because of sin, but remains a gift from God. Time. We were created for work in an astoundingly fruitful world. Good works also include good work.)
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Wealth (Wealth is neutral. We are not. Don’t blame wealth. Do something fruitful with it.)
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Tools (Tools are unavoidable and help to greatly extend our radius of fruitfulness.)
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Media (Recognizing the inescapability of media helps us understand that when a man buys a tool belt and fills it up, he is doing something that in principle pleases God.)
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Missions and Media (Media are all the means through which Christians communicate. We cannot love others without media because love…doesn’t travel in a vacuum.)
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Markets (“Free Market Economics” = Respecting the free choices of others and using our freedom to investigate (and work in) the fruitful world God gave us.)
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Progress (Learning to harness and command the array of “servants” at our disposal.)
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Glad Suspicion (God gives us the wealth that we are tempted to put in place of Him.)
Part II: Learning Ploductivity
Introduction to Ploductivity: Genuinely productive work is only done coram Deo
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The Finitude of Work (In the cosmic scheme of things, the work God has given us is tiny. But this reality is a feature, not a bug. Those who are faithful in the little things…)
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Ambition is a Good Thing (There is nothing wrong with wanting your work to be significant, but you must place all your ambitions on His altar.)
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The Master Key (Develop genuine expertise. Craft competence is a virtue to cultivate.)
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The Power of Plodding (Rhythm. Pace. Predictable. Routine. Chip away. “Bite-sized”.)
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Work at a Pace You Can Maintain (Find a pace that works and plod. But don’t shuffle.)
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Progress and Depravity (Wealth is a gift from God, and pride comes from the devil. Progress, which is a type of wealth, is a good thing, but always tends to distract us.)
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Eschatology (In the collision between the sovereignty of Jesus and the influence of sin (incl. technological sin) in history, sin is the certain loser. Jesus is the Lord of history.)
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New Media (Christians should take our life-transforming message where the people are. And today people gather online. We proclaim a Gospel that encompasses all things.)
Afterword: The central labor you should want God to bless is your labor as a father. If that is blessed, your own productivity is multiplied. “…graveyards are full of indispensable men.”
Check out these reviews (including my own), and a short interview with Doug Wilson.
More Thoughts from Doug Wilson on Time Management:
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The point is fruitfulness, not efficiency. Be fruitful like a tree, not efficient like a machine.
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Build a fence around your life, and keep it tended. Most of life’s urgencies aren’t.
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Perfectionism paralyzes. “Anything worth doing is worth doing badly.” (Chesterton)
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Fill in the corners. And do not despise how much can be packed into small corners.
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Plod. Keep at it. Slow and steady wins the race. Work adds up, provided you do it.
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Take in more than you give out. If you give out more than you take in, you will..give out.
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Use and reuse. Learn and relearn. Develop what you know. Cultivate what you have.
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Strive for deep conviction more than superficial originality, and deep originality will come.
How I Don’t Get Everything Done: Doug Wilson’s Daily Routine (Condensed)
“Sometimes people ask how I get it all done, and the best answer is that I don’t.
If you imitate any of this, the guarantee is that you too will start not getting it all done also.”
Overview:
Monday to Wednesday- I go to the office around 8:30.
Thursday morning- the Christ Church session meets from 6 am to 7:30.
Friday morning- I have a men’s prayer meeting at 6:30 am followed by a breakfast together.
Saturday- My day off is actually a mash-up of Saturday and Sunday afternoon.
Sunday morning- I have time set aside for prayer and devotional reading prior to the services.
Morning Routines: (Monday through Wednesday, and sometimes on Saturday)
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I get up usually around 6, shower, and go to my study. There I have my prayer time and Bible reading…and follow it up by reading briefly through a small stack of Kindle books.
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Then I take coffee back to Nancy, and we have our reading time together. Then we pray for the day, for the grandkids, for particular needs, etc.
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Back in my study, I try to write something [helpful]. This is my blogging window, then off to work around 8:30 as mentioned aforetime.
Meetings and Appointments:
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Over a Monday through Friday week, I range between 5 and 13 appointment slots taken on my calendar. These are mostly counseling or pastoral visits…committee meetings.
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I am usually teaching at least one course for NSA, which means there is a seminar early in the week, and a recitation later in the week where I meet with the students.
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Wednesday is sermon outline day, and is largely kept free of appointments. The outline is prepared then, so that there is time to put it into the bulletin by Thursday.
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My father will be 89 this fall. He has a fruitful daily ministry counseling people who come by to meet with him. But he does need help to get going in the morning, a responsibility I share with my brothers. I take Thu and Fri mornings, after my early morning meetings.
Most Evenings:
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When I get home, Nancy and I usually visit for a while, catching up on the day. After that, I toddle off to watch the news. We have dinner around 6. During the school year, we have some boarders downstairs, and they join us.
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Our kids and grandkids all live here in Moscow, and so we frequently have someone dropping by. That happens at least a couple times a week, usually more.
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The evening is when I do my regular reading. I have at least four books that I try to read from daily. I have the “book I am currently reading,” a book of poetry from which I read a poem or two, a work of fiction, and a “bucket book,” a book I really should have read by this stage in my life. Except for the poetry, I read ten pages at a go.
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After that, I take a short time to work on some “chip away” projects, a few books I am writing at a pace of 100 words a day. This doesn’t take very long — I open the file and close it when it is 100 words longer than it was.
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Once in a blue moon, when we want to live on the edge, Nancy and I will rent a movie.
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Then off to bed. (Doug doesn’t say, but I am assuming sometime between 10-11pm.)
Sabbath Dinner:
[My wife] is amazing. Every week we launch the Lord’s Day at 6 pm Saturday night. We have the two of us, three kids, their spouses, and seventeen grandkids. We bring my dad over, which makes us a cool 26. In the school year we have four boarders who usually join us, and we have a standing invitation to our well-beloved shirt-tail relatives, which can add another 7. Behind it all is the fact that Nancy cooks fabulous meals for 30, 40, or more on a weekly basis. I do my little widow’s mite by setting up tables and chairs, but Nancy is the one who produces hot delicious food for the masses. Unless we are BBQing, in which case I produce hot food for the masses.
Don’t Forget Time in the Truck:
Ours is not that big a town, and I can get from home to work in about three or four minutes. A long haul, from one end of town to the other, might take ten minutes. But this is the time I redeem listening to books on Audible. I am currently listening to Letters to Malcolm by Lewis.