Photo de l'auteur

David Murray (10) (1966–)

Auteur de Reset: Living a Grace-Paced Life in a Burnout Culture

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent David Murray, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

David Murray (10) a été combiné avec David P Murray.

11 oeuvres 1,298 utilisateurs 5 critiques

Œuvres de David Murray

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Murray, David Philip
Date de naissance
1966-05-28
Sexe
male
Nationalité
UK
Lieu de naissance
Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Lieux de résidence
Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA
Professions
Professor of Old Testament and Practical Theology

Membres

Critiques

9/10 (excellent): A very helpful book that deals with the frequent need to slow down in order (perhaps) to achieve more, or certainly to live a more sustainable pace. It will be helpful for any Christian men, and particularly those in ministry, who feel there aren’t enough hours in the day. The book is aimed at men — there’s a significant emphasis on the work place, and most of the illustrations are on traditionally masculine themes. A companion volume is aimed more at women.
 
Signalé
mark_read | 2 autres critiques | Aug 13, 2020 |
A very practical book for middle aged pastors and Christian men. We don’t have to live on the fringes of burn out. The grace paced life is doable, but we need these reminders. I highly recommend this book to my pastor friends.
 
Signalé
jonlands | 2 autres critiques | Apr 11, 2018 |
Reset: Living a Grace-Paced Life in a Burnout Culture is one of the most helpful Christian living books I’ve read in a long time. David Murray has experienced burnout in his pastoral life to the point of affecting his health. He brings a wealth of wisdom to the subject. This book isn’t just for pastors. It’s valuable for all Christians who feel worn down and exhausted by life.

Murray structures the book around the concept of taking your car to the garage. Each chapter is a “repair bay.” Murray quotes Brady Boyd from Addicted to Busy , “Ultimately, every problem I see in every person I know is a problem of moving too fast for too long in too many aspects of life.” Murray is not calling for Christians to drop out of service and kick their feet up. He is calling for them to take care of themselves, so that they can serve well.

Murray says that many people’s fundamental and foundational error is we forget a fundamental and foundational truth—God is our Creator. He writes:

Lots of people call God Creator, but live like evolutionists. It’s as if life is about the survival of the fittest rather than about living like a dependent creature—trusting or Creator rather than ourselves—and according to our Maker’s instructions.

Reset: Living a Grace-Paced Life in a Burnout Culture is well researched. Murray pulls valuable insight from a variety of sources, but frames it all with scripture and God’s instruction for how we are to take care of ourselves. I highly recommend this book and look forward to follow-up he is writing with his wife.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
wilsonknut | 2 autres critiques | Jun 4, 2017 |
It's tough to be happy, even in a time and place where a lot of people have relatively more peace, more wealth, and more freedom than ever. We live in a world where, thanks to the 24 hour news cycle, we can be bombarded by bad news literally all the time. Time or distance no longer separate us from the pain of the world at large, which is great if we can pray and even physically lend a hand, but can also lead to sense of hopelessness as images of catastrophe and injustice come to us from all over the world. Even without that, there's our own brains that start to work against us, trained from a young age to critique and pick out the bad and set about the project of correcting it, it's not always easy for us to zoom in on the good in any situation. In our daily race against the clock to accomplish all the things on our to do list before another day is lost, it's all too easy to get down and depressed about all the things we're not doing and all the less than ideal situations we can't fix until pessimism is always the order of the day. Murray observes all this in The Happy Christian and then gets down to applying gospel truths and modern positive psychology in a series of "formulas" meant to help us escape from the downward spiral of hopelessness it's too easy to get trapped in.

Murray's decision to marry up psychology with biblical teaching is an interesting and effective one. Murray's chapters are filled with the scientific value of optimism, prescriptions for how much negativity can be mixed with positivity to still live a hopeful, happy life, and scientific evidence for the daily practice of more positive habits that can be exercised by Christians in conjunction with their faith. In the course of it all, Murray makes a good case for how modern positive psychology is is right in line with God's will and promise for our lives.

Though I appreciated the psychology aspect, I was much more in tune with the chapters that leaned more on biblical teaching. The chapter about our daily duel with our to-do lists that always ends in disappointment was cast in a different light when Murray reminds readers that Jesus's work, the hardest and most important, is already done. Additionally, the chapter about taking more joy in our work by doing everything with passion and honesty to the glory of God, and how that can give meaning and purpose to even the most insignificant of jobs, really hit home. Murray even closes with a very prescient topic for this day and age: diversity. In this chapter he makes a great case for God's desire to reach all nations and for how diversifying our communities and our churches is key in future joy as we each stand to reap the benefits of plugging in every race and culture's strengths into a united church.

On the whole, I was impressed and encouraged by Murray's book and came away with some great insights. Additionally, I was impressed that Murray, in addition to providing solid reasoning and theology, took the next step and provided readers of The Happy Christian with practical and often biblical ways to start introducing more hope and positivity into our lives, a practical aspect missing from too many Christian books. I'd encourage anybody who is wondering why happiness seems to be a little too hard to hold onto, to give Murray's book a read and hope that it changes your perspective the way it changed mine.

Whatever you will complete or not today, rest in the only work that will never need to be done again. Rest in the fact that Jesus has done the most impossible job in the world, done it perfectly, and made it available. Take it. Enjoy it. Build your life on it. Let it change your whole view of your life and work. Use His work to put your work in perspective. Believe His work is counted as yours. Despite all that you fear and dread about the next ten hours - a critical boss, a vicious competitor, a looming deadline, a complaining customer, an impossible sales target, unrelenting children, monotonous drudge - you have Christ's perfect work credited to your account. Yes, it is counted as yours, as if you did it. Are you humble enough to receive it?
… (plus d'informations)
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Signalé
yourotherleft | 1 autre critique | Sep 2, 2015 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
11
Membres
1,298
Popularité
#19,787
Évaluation
4.2
Critiques
5
ISBN
115
Langues
10

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