Logo

 

Banner Image:   Baptist-Times-banner-2000x370-
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet

Ten practices to unclutter your soul

Recommended Bill Hybels book that highlights areas of life that can get out of focus – and offers practical insights for making changes to create a life with greater peace

SimplifySimplify: ten practices to unclutter your soul
By Bill Hybels
Hodder and Stoughton
ISBN No: 978-1-473-60483-4
Reviewed By: Jeannie Kendall

I have to confess to a bias: I like Bill Hybels a great deal. Our church leadership go every year to the Global Leadership Conference and have always benefited from it, and particularly from his wise and honest ministry. So I came to this book expectant, and I was not disappointed.

I was caught immediately by the beginning, where he explains with characteristic frankness that he knows far too much about being overwhelmed and exhausted – feelings all too familiar in ministry. With helpful anecdotes (even allowing for the American context), he addresses ten aspects which he believes will contribute to a simpler and less stressful life, and in this instance it is worth delineating the chapters:

  • From exhausted to energised: replenishing your energy reserves
  • From overscheduled to organised: harnessing your calendar’s power
  • From overwhelmed to in control: mastering your finances
  • From restless to fulfilled: refining your working world
  • From wounded to whole: making room for forgiveness
  • From anxious to peaceful: conquering your fears
  • From isolated to connected: deepening your relational circles
  • From drifting to focused: claiming God’s call on your life
  • From stuck to moving on: welcoming new seasons in your life
  • From meaningless to satisfied: the legacy of a simplified life


I have deliberately included this as I suspect at different stages of our lives there will be particular chapters that resonate. It is a book to take something from, and come back to another time. It might be equally overwhelming to tackle all ten areas at once!

At the end Bill talks about finding a “life verse” – a biblical word of encouragement and challenge as a rallying call, and focus, for our particular life and calling. This may be lifelong, or change over time. I’ve not settled on one myself, but it is certainly food for thought.

It would also work well as a thematic sermon series, and indeed there are additional resources available. I highly recommend this book.
 

Jeannie Kendall is co-minister of Carshalton Beeches Baptist Church


Baptist Times, 12/08/2016
    Post     Tweet
Archbishop Sarah Mullally, by Andrew Atherstone
Atherstone goes beyond these headlines to give us a greater sense of Mullally’s life - a helpful account of the new Archbishop
The Big C and Me, by Andy Robinson
A reminder that life in Christ is lived boldly, even in the shadow of difficulty and that the question “What now?” is far richer than “Why me?”
What is Wrong with the World? By Timothy Keller
​Posthumous book of Keller's sermons is 'a theologically and biblically literate proclamation of good news, which must always start with the bad news... no message of 'cheap grace', but one of radical repentance'
Coming to Faith Through Dawkins: 12 Essays on the Pathway from New Atheism to Christianity
These 12 essays shed light on why some people who have tried new atheism have found it wanting
When I am Among Friends I am Least Disabled, by Martin Hobgen
'A book to be read by those working in disability theology as a discipline, but also holds important insights for church congregations and pastors as a whole'
Becoming the pastor’s wife, by Beth Allison Barr
'Remarkable and accessible' book examining the connection between the decline of female ordination (present in late Roman times and in the medieval period) and the development of the role of the pastor’s wife in evangelical churches
    Posted: 24/10/2025
    Posted: 10/10/2025
    Posted: 18/07/2025
     
    Text Size:  
    Small (Default)
    Medium
    Large
    Contrast:  
    Normal
    High Contrast