Finding Rest
When we think about our burdens, we often focus entirely on what we are carrying—the heavy weight of family anxieties, packed schedules, broken desires, or daily responsibilities. But a powerful truth we find in Scripture is that the way we carry things matters just as much as what we are carrying.
In the Old Testament, King David set out with good intentions to bring
the Ark of the Covenant to Jerusalem. However, instead of following God’s
specific instructions for the Levites to carry it carefully on their shoulders
using poles, it was placed on a new, oxen-driven cart. It seemed efficient,
modern, and practical. But when the oxen stumbled, tragedy followed because
God’s presence was handled in a human way rather than God’s way.
We often do the exact same thing with our problems. When difficulties
arise, our natural instinct is to build a "cart" of our own
making—trying to muscle through, manage the outcomes, and fix everything
through sheer willpower and self-reliance. We try to handle supernatural or
overwhelming heavy weights with human effort alone, and eventually, the cart
stumbles and the weight threatens to crush us like a falling boulder.
Just as God provided an exact, reverent pattern for carrying His presence
in the Old Testament, Jesus provides us with a clear pattern for how to walk
through difficult times. He does not ask us to be strong, fiercely independent
problem-solvers. Instead, He invites us to do something that feels entirely
counterintuitive to the world: become like a trusting child.
A young child doesn't wake up worried about how the household bills will
be paid, how a family crisis will be resolved, or how the schedule will work
out. They simply trust that their father has it under control. Jesus looks at
our heavy hearts and extends a beautiful invitation to exchange our exhausting
self-sufficiency for His perfect care:
"Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you
rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in
heart, and you will find rest for your souls." — Matthew 11:28-29
When we try to save our own lives—clinging tightly to control, trying to
secure our own world—we end up losing the very peace and freedom we are
searching for. Jesus reminds us in Matthew 16 that true life is found when we
deny our old, self-reliant ways, take up our cross, and follow Him. Taking up
our cross isn't about carrying an unbearable misery; it is an act of total
surrender, choosing to die to the old habit of fixing everything ourselves so
we can find real life in Him.
If you feel uncomfortably weighed down today, consider changing how
you are carrying that load.
- Let go of the
"cart": Stop trying to engineer the
solutions in your own strength.
- Approach as a
child: Come to your Good Father with humility. Lay down the
responsibilities, the fears for your loved ones, and the troubles of today
at His feet.
- Let Him do the
heavy lifting: Yield to His yoke, which fits perfectly and never chafes.
In Gods kingdom, the only thing truly heavy is the weight of His
magnificent glory. Everything else is meant to be held by His strong shoulders.
Step out of the exhausting cycle of self-reliance today, hand the weight over
to Him, and let Him give you rest.
-Pastor Patti

Beautiful
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