“Jesus is not
talking about the rest of a vacation or a quiet afternoon by the fire, but rest
in the centre of life, activity, work.”
— SHERIDAN VOYSEY (Author of Resurrection
Year)
Work and rest must operate
together,
Existing in tandem if
either is to serve,
Balance is found when we’re
light as a feather,
Even though we’ve worked with passionate
verve.
***
I often wonder whether the world has gotten a whole lot busier
or whether that’s just our excuse. Of course, we have a myriad of tools that
are supposed to make life easier, but the pace of life seems to be so frenetic
it’s almost like we need these tools just to keep up.
We can wonder if the above biblically-stated advice is never
more relevant.
I wrote an article on Making Time Work Through Margins, and I
guess this idea is much akin to that one – we somehow need to wrestle the
balance between becoming a manic workaholic and being a hermit. We need to
believe that God’s will for our lives is that we would be efficient and
effective workers who are skilfully able to manage the balance between work,
rest and play.
Surely this is where the heart of wisdom is involved –
discerning the way, then doing it.
An Image of Jesus’ True Yoke
Amidst the burdens of life, some of which
involve the struggles of work, or of balancing our time, or of wrestling with grief
or a mental illness, amongst many examples, there is this concept of rest.
The yoke of Jesus as portrayed in Matthew
11:28-30 perceivably involves two concepts coupled
together, as if a yoke of oxen – burden and rest. (I use the word ‘burden’
as the generic term encapsulating every idea that is the opposite of rest.)
It wouldn’t be much good if we had a Saviour
who had solutions that didn’t work in real life. We cannot continue to go
around and around and around the issues of work-life balance only to become
confused and exasperated, again and again. That makes no sense.
It is better, by far, to understand rest in the context of work, and even
allowing ourselves rest before work, so we are well prepared for the
work we do.
It is no good to venture into escapism, just
as it is no good to put off our rest indefinitely. Neither escaping nor burnout
achieve God’s will.
In our everyday we ought to find rest; we
are blessed to plan it in.
***
Jesus’ yoke for the burdened is a workable rest
right in the midst of the burden. Rest has to occur in the middle of a busy day
or it doesn’t work at all.
With awareness and the conviction of courage
in action we can plan in and accomplish our rest so our work is the best and most
enjoyable it can be. Rest supports work and work enables rest. Work and rest
must coexist – both of them, simultaneously, God blesses.
© 2013 S. J. Wickham.
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