I dare you to rest.
It strikes me that it requires a certain amount of faith to stop “doing stuff,” and to simply rest.
Of course, I’m not talking about the type of “rest” that overtakes you due to sheer exhaustion, flattening you out on the kitchen floor or wherever else you happen to be when your body just quits. That’s simply collapsing.
Resting, however, requires a measure of faith. It is utterly impossible for the one who thinks too highly of herself, who insists on being the grown-up all the time, and who has forgotten how to live like a child.
How is it possible to rest, for the one who believes any of the following:
I am the glue that holds the world together.I will never feel better/refreshed/caught up until my to-do list is empty.I don’t “deserve” a nap when I could be doing something productive.My body is a machine. Rest is for wimps.The world cannot sustain itself without me actively employing my skills in it, not even for an hour.
When I think too highly of myself, and too little of God, I cannot rest, cannot stop, cannot nap. To the soul who cannot stop, God speaks:
In vain you rise early and stay up late, toiling for food to eat— for he grants sleep to those he loves. Psalm 127: 2
This verse is not all comfort to me, as it reminds me that my work— my well-done, eager, sweaty work— may actually be done in vain.
In vain you organize drawers and wipe the floor by the toilet, for they shall return, destroying. In vain do you wash and cook those veggies, for they shall not eat them, and complaints shall pound your ears.
The repeated chores in my vocation may indeed be done in vain. Scarier still, the whole project— carrying, birthing, and caring for these bodies, the tucking and praying and singing and disciplining— could perhaps be in vain, should a child forsake Him who loves them.
How can I rest when the enemy seeks to devour?
To the soul who cannot stop, God speaks:
Unless the Lord builds the house, the builders labor in vain. Unless the Lord watches over the city, the guards stand watch in vain. In vain you rise early and stay up late, toiling for food to eat— for he grants sleep to those he loves. Psalm 127-1-2
Unless the Lord builds. Unless He watches. Unless He cares.
The child who realizes the future is entirely dependant on the Lord’s provision runs scared into the Father’s arms. Do you care? Are you building, watching, providing?

Do I care? Of course, child.
Come. Be loved.
Rest.
And the child hears this invitation to fear, love, and trust in God above all things. And this God is worthy of this whole-hearted, full-bodied, deeply-resting love.
And the overworked muscles unclench in the gentle warmth, and God, in His grace, gives rest.
It is finished— everything that matters, really, is already finished.

I shall lie down, and sleep, In peace.(Psalm 4)
This is the second post in this month's series:
Grow Backward with Me
Will you (re)learn how to be a child with me?I double-dog dare you.
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You may also enjoy my published works:
Weak and Loved (A Mother-Daughter Love Story) an inspirational story of God’s grace
Tend to Me (Devotions for Mothers)
and for Mothers who tend to everyone else— May Jesus Himself Tend to YOU.
Published on January 13, 2014 02:30
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