Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The good news of your God-given limits
The good news of your God-given limits
Nov 2, 2025 1:36 PM

Instead of finding ways to do more and more, we should view our limitations as God’s gift so we know always to rely on him. Faithfulness is more important than great success by worldly standards.

Read More…

I love productivity books. I’ve read all the big classics on the subject, from Stephen Covey’s Seven Habits of Highly Effective People to Cal Newport’s Deep Work. I am a devotee of David Allen’s productivity ur-text, Getting Things Done. That book, in a this-worldly sense, changed my life. Almost every day I find myself employing principles like Allen’s “two-minute rule”: If a task or “next step” is on my mind and it’ll take me less than two minutes plete, do it now! I need to get it out of my brain so I can focus mostly on creative, long-term writing projects. One of my life’s great joys is to hold a bound copy of my latest book. But then I immediately want to start on the next one.

There is a growing, notable subgenre of books questioning the productivity mindset, too. These books don’t so much advocate nonproductivity as suggest that productivity literature leads to frustration. Popular books such as Oliver Burkeman’s Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals tell us that the productivity genre masks our finitude. The productivity gurus badger us to keep producing things that ultimately will not satisfy. Burkeman’s book is undergirded with pop Buddhism and existentialism—philosophical grounding I find somewhat trite. Nevertheless, Burkeman puts his finger on essential questions about productivity. What is productivity for? From a philosophical perspective, how does productivity sync with our limitations and decaying bodies? One day we’ll all stop worldly production, in a very final way, at our deaths. What then?

Yet Burkeman has few answers to such questions. He just says we should accept our limits and be mindful of a certain pointlessness in much of our striving. That’s a good start, but I found better answers than Burkeman’s in Sean McGever’s book The Good News of Our Limits. I would mend The Good News of Our Limits to any Christian reader interested in productivity. McGever argues that the basic problem with the productivity genre is not that it doesn’t adequately account for our limits. It’s that productivity authors “fail to account for theological anthropology—or to put it simply, they don’t consider what it means for human beings to be created by a Creator.” Some of our limits, like failing bodily health and bad motivations, have to do with the debilitating effects of sin. But we’re also designed as limited beings in other marvelous ways. Unlike God, we cannot possess omniscience, omnipresence, or omnipotence. Yet we are created in God’s image, which gives great dignity to our lives and vocations, whether religious or secular.

Any accurate gauge of productivity will have to account for both our God-given value and God-given limits. McGever goes so far as to call our created inadequacy a “gift,” connected to our very design by God. Christian understandings of productivity will also have to account for the fundamentally different economies of God’s Kingdom and the kingdoms of this world. Saintly figures who devote years of their lives ministering to suffering and marginal people may have little to show in their bank accounts or résumé entries, but they’re rich beyond measure in God’s estimation of a “good and faithful servant” (Matthew 25:23). Yet others who by their life circumstances engage in little this-worldly production, such as infants, the aged, or the profoundly disabled, are of infinite value in God’s eyes, too.

McGever has no quick solutions for manifesting a God-honoring, limitations-acknowledging approach to Christian productivity. But he does offer biblical guidelines and intentional limiting practices. (Readers should note that McGever is an evangelical Christian, and his thinking on such matters is shaped accordingly. But Christians of almost any confession would resonate with his approach.) One limit is “faithful practices,” particularly prayer. Some readers might think, “Well of course a Christian book mends prayer.” But McGever particularly advises prayer as a practical way to acknowledge our measly power pared to God’s omnipotence. Always pray first, not just when our temporal plans have failed due to our foolishness or insufficient resources. Recognize that anything we do, if it is to be of eternal significance, is going to require God’s animating power anyway. Prayer shapes our desire for real godly productivity, not for cutting corners to succeed in this life. Is our idea of “getting things done” writing a book that uses toxic rhetoric and bad-faith arguments to cause a sensation and generate cash? Or executing a business deal that munities and makes the poor poorer? If so, we may have grand earthly plishments but little of value on our enduring résumé. “Have I been faithful?” is a question of more eternal importance than “Have I been productive?” Faithfulness hardly excludes productivity. It just puts realistic, God-honoring boundaries around productivity. Faithfulness gives productivity a transcendent purpose.

McGever ministers to young people via the parachurch organization Young Life, so he naturally thinks about productivity in terms of relationships and mentoring. This is often a blind spot for people like me who are consumed with productivity. We often see people as obstacles to the “real” work of productivity, such as writing a book. Yet how many of us can think of a parent, pastor, or other mentor who may not have been that successful in worldly terms but who nevertheless made an indelible impact on the person we are today? I can personally think of one such mentor, who struggled with a lack of numbers in his work, but his personal impact on me has been vast and enduring. How do you count productivity like that in an annual performance review? Jesus made a direct relational impact only on a small group of disciples. But was he not preeminently, eternally, productive in the divine economy?

McGever reminds us of our relational limits, too. There are only so many real “friends” (flesh-and-blood friends, not “Facebook friends”) with whom we can sustain edifying relationships. For introverts like me, the capacity for such connections is probably even lower. Studies are showing that American adults today find it more and more difficult to make and keep close friends, pared to earlier generations. The COVID shutdowns and disruptions of recent years surely did not make it any easier to maintain consistent friendships. Thus, we should make good choices in light of our essential need for friendships, as well as our limited time and energy for them. McGever also reminds us of the value of a stable marriage and family. For most adults, there’s only one person—your spouse—about whom you can say with any reasonable confidence that you’ll mitted friends “for better or worse” and “’til death do us part.” This is part of what’s so alarming about the rampant devaluing of marriage in western societies. Undercutting marriage breaks down the most essential structure of friendship that most adults will ever enjoy. It has a unique covenantal quality that no other friendship has. Marriage also represents the God-designed structure for procreation, which ideally leads to a new level of intergenerational friendship and support with a couple’s grown children.

McGever’s final limitation is an obvious but much-needed one today: the limitation of online and streaming inputs. As McGever notes, we can’t manage time, but we can manage ourselves. We all have the same 24 hours in a day. As we seek best to employ those hours, we are fighting against a massive, insidious entertainment industry, represented by the likes of Facebook and Netflix. We should do whatever it takes to fill our days with edifying friendships, important work, and wise inputs (the Bible foremost), rather than the grievance mongering, cat videos, and salacious images accessible at all hours through the swipe of the finger. Disciplining our intake is easier said than done, however, and mere human effort usually doesn’t work. For the Christian, an active, prayerful dependence on the Holy Spirit and a vital connection with a church or munity are essential to escape the trashy, ephemeral, and isolating media culture in which we’re all submerged.

Some readers may find McGever’s approach too breezy and practical—he is a minister to youths, after all—but he’s drawing from a deep well of work and family experience. He also possesses intellectual grounding (a Ph.D. from the University of Aberdeen) befitting his interests in religious history and theological anthropology. (Would that more academics could be so practical!) Ultimately, McGever is calling us to live, work, and worship in fuller accord with our identity as men and women created in God’s image. I can’t imagine anything more fundamentally productive than that.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Todays Verse   Commentary on Proverbs 15:4   Read Proverbs 15:4   A good tongue is healing to wounded consciences, by comforting them to sin-sick souls, by convincing them and it reconciles parties at variance.   Proverbs 15:4 In-Context   2 The tongue of the wise adorns knowledge, but the mouth of the fool gushes folly.   3 The eyes of the Lord are...
Verse of the Day
  Hebrews 11:6 In-Context   4 By faith Abel brought God a better offering than Cain did. By faith he was commended as righteous, when God spoke well of his offerings. And by faith Abel still speaks, even though he is dead.   5 By faith Enoch was taken from this life, so that he did not experience death: He could not be...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Todays Verse   Commentary on Psalm 37:1-6   Read Psalm 37:1-6   When we look abroad we see the world full of evil-doers, that flourish and live in ease. So it was seen of old, therefore let us not marvel at the matter. We are tempted to fret at this, to think them the only happy people, and so we are...
Verse of the Day
  Isaiah 61:7 In-Context   5 Strangers will shepherd your flocks foreigners will work your fields and vineyards.   6 And you will be called priests of the Lord, you will be named ministers of our God. You will feed on the wealth of nations, and in their riches you will boast.   7 Instead of your shame you will receive a double portion,...
Verse of the Day
  1 John 4:20 In-Context   18 There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear, because fear has to do with punishment. The one who fears is not made perfect in love.   19 We love because he first loved us.   20 Whoever claims to love God yet hates a brother or sister is a liar. For whoever does...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Todays Verse   Complete Concise   Chapter Contents   Exhortations to obedience and faith. 1-6 To piety, and to improve afflictions. 7-12 To gain wisdom. 13-20 Guidance of Wisdom. 21-26 The wicked and the upright. 27-35   Commentary on Proverbs 3:1-6   Read Proverbs 3:1-6   In the way of believing obedience to God#39s commandments health and peace may commonly be enjoyed and though...
Verse of the Day
  1 Corinthians 3:18-20 In-Context   16 Don't you know that you yourselves are God's temple and that God's Spirit dwells in your midst?   17 If anyone destroys God's temple, God will destroy that person; for God's temple is sacred, and you together are that temple.   18 Do not deceive yourselves. If any of you think you are wise by the standards...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Todays Verse   Commentary on Psalm 90:12-17   Read Psalm 90:12-17   Those who would learn true wisdom, must pray for Divine instruction, must beg to be taught by the Holy Spirit and for comfort and joy in the returns of God#39s favour. They pray for the mercy of God, for they pretend not to plead any merit of their own....
Verse of the Day
  Galatians 2:20 In-Context   18 If I rebuild what I destroyed, then I really would be a lawbreaker.   19 For through the law I died to the law so that I might live for God.   20 I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I...
Verse of the Day
  Commentary on Todays Verse   Commentary on Proverbs 22:4   Read Proverbs 22:4   Where the fear of God is, there will be humility. And much is to be enjoyed by it spiritual riches, and eternal life at last.   Proverbs 22:4 In-Context   2 Rich and poor have this in common: The Lord is the Maker of them all.   3 The prudent see danger...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved