9 âProductiveâ Things I Refuse to Do
The world says that productivity is about speed, hacks, and just cramming more things into each day. But from God’s perspective, that’s a lie. Real productivity is about wisdom. It’s about stewardship. It’s about doing the things that matter most with an attitude that most honors God.
As I have sought to filter my concept of personal productivity through a biblical lens, here are nine so-called âproductiveâ things Iâve stopped doing.
1. I Donât Own a Smart PhoneThis month marks one year since I stopped using a smartphone. And it was one of the best decisions I’ve ever made.
The irony is that these amazing gadgets promise to make us more productive, but I found that for me, it was mostly just a distraction machine. Sure, I could answer emails anywhere, but thatâs rarely the most effective thing I should be doing.
Now, I use an Apple Watch with its own cellular plan. I can call, text, and do basic things with it, but I canât scroll mindlessly. And as a result, Iâm less distracted and more focused. I read more books, spend more time in the Word and in prayer, I think more deeply, and I’m more present in the relationships I value.
I’d call that a net positive.
2. I Donât Hustle All the TimeGod calls us to faithfulness, not frenzy. Constant busyness isnât sustainable, and it’s not actually all that productive in the long run.
Yes, there are seasons when I work fast and long hours, but I have learned to avoid letting that become the norm. When I slow down and move deliberately, I produce better work and live with more peace.
Slow and steady faithfulness is what I’m aiming at.
3. I Donât Work on WeekendsIâm not a strict Sabbatarian, but I take Jesus seriously when He said,
âThe Sabbath was made for man.â (Mark 2:27)
Rest is a gift. When I stop working for the week, Iâm acknowledging that itâs Godânot meâwho keeps the world running.
This is never easy. I work for myself, so there’s always more work I could be doing. But the Lord has shown me (often through some hard seasons of burnout) that I am only human.
Not working on the weekend shouldn’t be a revolutionary thing, but in today’s hyperactive work culture, it feels like some kind of luxuriant indulgence.
But time and again I’ve found that when I shut my laptop on Friday afternoon and put it in a drawer until Monday morning, the world keeps spinning without me.
I’ve come to see that refusing to work all the time is an act of faith.
4. I Donât Fill My Calendar to the BrimI believe in structure. I even teach people to create an ideal weekly scheduleâa plan for their work, rest, and responsibilities. But I also believe in margin.
Leaving space allows me to focus on higher-leverage activities instead of reacting to whatever feels urgent.
Busy â Productive.
The Domains of StewardshipFurthermore, productivity isnât just about work; itâs about every domain of stewardship God has given you. You canât steward those well if your calendar is packed to the edge, or at least I can’t.
5. I Donât Get Everything DoneAnd that’s because… that’s impossible. But we like to tell ourselves that if we just grind hard enough, we will eventually reach that mythical day in which every task is finally checked off the list and we can rest.
But the truth is that âdoneâ isnât when you cross the last item off your list, itâs when God calls you home. Done is when you die. Until then, there will always be more work to do.
So what do we aim at? Faithfulness (noticing a theme here?).
Unless the Lord builds the house, those who build it labor in vain. Unless the Lord watches over the city, the watchman stays awake in vain. â Psalm 127:1
Every day is a new opportunity to serve the Lord. I do what I can with the day, then I rest. And tomorrow we do it again. But this attitude is only workable when we recognize that it’s God who is ultimately accomplishing the work; we just enjoy the privilege of being used by Him.
6. I Donât Do Side ProjectsThis one was hard for me to learn. But dividing your attention doesnât make you twice as productive. It makes you half as effective.
I talked about this more in The Power and Pitfalls of Side Gigs, but the headline is that every additional âside thingâ comes with hidden costs: mental overhead, context switching, and stress.

Focus is a superpower. Iâve learned to keep my attention on the one thing Godâs called me to do right now. And this, in turn, creates leverage to do that one thing with excellence (Lord willing).
7. I Donât Sacrifice My Family on the Altar of ProductivityâLet your eyes look directly forward, and your gaze be straight before you.â â Proverbs 4:25
If you think productivity is only about your job, youâll neglect everything else God has entrusted to you.
Your work is just one domain of stewardship. True productivity means being faithful in all of them.
âIf someone does not know how to manage his own household, how will he care for Godâs church?â â 1 Timothy 3:5
Your family is not a distraction from your productivity. Theyâre part of it. And that often means I have to make an effort of the will to not just limit my working hours, but also to be fully present with them mentally.
8. I Donât MultitaskMultitasking is a myth. What we really do is rapid task-switching. And it makes us slower and less focused.
It feels productive when we jump between email, messages, and spreadsheets because you are busy and your mind is fully engaged. But it’s actually less efficient than working on one thing at a time.
A few ways I’ve employed a “no multi-tasking” rule in my work:
Only open email during scheduled times.Close unused windows or browser tabs.Define the task before I start.Utilize an egg timer to force myself to stick to one thing until the clock runs out.Keep a pen and paper nearby to jot down ideas or other work that needs to be done instead of letting them interrupt what I’m doing.God gave us one mind. We glorify Him best when we bring it fully to one thing at a time.
9. I Donât Neglect SleepProductivity culture often glorifies the person who gets up at 3 a.m. and works late into the night.
But Psalm 127:2 says:
âIt is in vain that you rise up early and go late to rest,
eating the bread of anxious toil,
for He gives to His beloved sleep.â
Sleep is an act of faith. You canât get anything done while youâre sleeping, and thatâs just the reminder we need.
I’m an early riser, but that’s only because I go to bed early. Sacrificing sleep for the sake of “productivity” is not a sustainable strategy.
The thing to remember is that when you close your eyes at night, youâre declaring, âGodâs got this.â
He never sleeps. So you can.
The Bottom LineThe world measures productivity by output and speed. God measures it by stewardship and faithfulness.
I donât do these nine âproductiveâ things because I believe God is sovereign. My role is to be faithful with the little Heâs given me each day, to seek first His kingdom, and to rest in His care.


