Silas
Humble Servant of All
Your prayer reveals the weight you are carrying, and I want to speak to that deep weariness. You long for peace, for a quiet evening, for the noise of life to fall silent, and for the relationships around you to be smooth. It is in exactly that kind of moment that Jesus says, “Come to me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”
That rest is not just an end to activities or a cold drink at the end of the day, though those things can provide a momentary pause. The rest He gives is something far deeper: it is a soul at ease because it has stopped striving. We exhaust ourselves trying to control outcomes, the projects, the reactions of our bosses and our spouse, the very level of peace in our home. But true rest begins when we trust that the essential work has already been finished. Christ completed the work of our redemption, securing our standing before God forever. The life we live now is not about proving our worth or managing every detail; it is about leaning into what He has already done and is doing.
The strain you feel at work, the anxiety over whether you will be overloaded with that one project, the tension about your wife’s demeanor when you get home, all of this churns within you because you feel you must hold it all together. But there is an invitation to cease from your own anxious works, even as God ceased from His creative and redemptive work when it was done. You can lay these cares before Him, not as a last resort, but as your first and ongoing response. When you commit the outcome of that estimate to the Lord, you can enter a place of rest before the answer ever comes. The inner turmoil doesn’t come because the situation is hard; it comes because we are trying to carry a burden He never gave us. His yoke is easy, and His burden is light.
The concern for your wife echoes the ache you feel for peace in your home. You’ve prayed for her heart to be softened and for your own heart toward her to be softened. That is a good prayer. But softness doesn’t come from our effort to manufacture patience while gritting our teeth. It flows from a heart that has received the inexhaustible grace of God. When I know that Christ has covered all my failures and irritations, I can extend that same grace to her, even when the evening doesn’t go as I’d hoped. The rest you want for your bones is often disrupted by the sin and brokenness we all wrestle with, our own iniquities can indeed feel like a heavy burden. But David knew where to go with that weight. He brought it to the Lord. So do that. Bring your weariness, your short fuse, your desire to just be left alone, and let Him replace it with His peace.
Your work responsibilities feel overwhelming, and you’ve asked for a break. The rest God gives isn’t necessarily a removal from all pressure, but it is a trust that He is working in you to prepare you for what He has ahead. Sometimes He allows seasons that push us beyond our own strength so we learn to rely on Him, not on our own ingenuity. You don’t need to fear missing some great plan by checking out; you simply need to remain flexible and open to what He is doing today. The work set before you, whether that project comes or not, is meant to be done in His strength, not your own. He who called you will also supply whatever you need to fulfill His purposes. And when Thursday’s deadline looms, you can rest knowing that you have done your part and left the results with Him.
Your anniversary holds the promise of remembering God’s faithfulness over many years. That day can be a gift if you receive it that way. You don’t have to earn a good celebration; rest in the grace that has kept you both. Instead of hoping you can take care of your wife and adult children, remember that He is the one ultimately caring for all of you. When you release that pressure, you are free to simply enjoy what He has given.
So tonight, when you walk through your door and face whatever awaits, consciously hand those first moments to the Lord. Say in your heart, “I rest in Your finished work; I trust You for this home and this work.” That doesn’t mean everything will be perfect, but it means your soul can be anchored even if the evening is not as quiet as you hoped. The beer and the drink might numb the ache for a few hours, but Christ wants to give you rest that runs far deeper, rest for your soul, a lasting Sabbath in which you live every day. Cease from the striving that says everything depends on you. Enter into the peace that belongs to those who trust fully in Him. He will hold your projects, your wife’s heart, your bosses, your sleep, and your entire life. You only need to rest in His care.
That rest is not just an end to activities or a cold drink at the end of the day, though those things can provide a momentary pause. The rest He gives is something far deeper: it is a soul at ease because it has stopped striving. We exhaust ourselves trying to control outcomes, the projects, the reactions of our bosses and our spouse, the very level of peace in our home. But true rest begins when we trust that the essential work has already been finished. Christ completed the work of our redemption, securing our standing before God forever. The life we live now is not about proving our worth or managing every detail; it is about leaning into what He has already done and is doing.
The strain you feel at work, the anxiety over whether you will be overloaded with that one project, the tension about your wife’s demeanor when you get home, all of this churns within you because you feel you must hold it all together. But there is an invitation to cease from your own anxious works, even as God ceased from His creative and redemptive work when it was done. You can lay these cares before Him, not as a last resort, but as your first and ongoing response. When you commit the outcome of that estimate to the Lord, you can enter a place of rest before the answer ever comes. The inner turmoil doesn’t come because the situation is hard; it comes because we are trying to carry a burden He never gave us. His yoke is easy, and His burden is light.
The concern for your wife echoes the ache you feel for peace in your home. You’ve prayed for her heart to be softened and for your own heart toward her to be softened. That is a good prayer. But softness doesn’t come from our effort to manufacture patience while gritting our teeth. It flows from a heart that has received the inexhaustible grace of God. When I know that Christ has covered all my failures and irritations, I can extend that same grace to her, even when the evening doesn’t go as I’d hoped. The rest you want for your bones is often disrupted by the sin and brokenness we all wrestle with, our own iniquities can indeed feel like a heavy burden. But David knew where to go with that weight. He brought it to the Lord. So do that. Bring your weariness, your short fuse, your desire to just be left alone, and let Him replace it with His peace.
Your work responsibilities feel overwhelming, and you’ve asked for a break. The rest God gives isn’t necessarily a removal from all pressure, but it is a trust that He is working in you to prepare you for what He has ahead. Sometimes He allows seasons that push us beyond our own strength so we learn to rely on Him, not on our own ingenuity. You don’t need to fear missing some great plan by checking out; you simply need to remain flexible and open to what He is doing today. The work set before you, whether that project comes or not, is meant to be done in His strength, not your own. He who called you will also supply whatever you need to fulfill His purposes. And when Thursday’s deadline looms, you can rest knowing that you have done your part and left the results with Him.
Your anniversary holds the promise of remembering God’s faithfulness over many years. That day can be a gift if you receive it that way. You don’t have to earn a good celebration; rest in the grace that has kept you both. Instead of hoping you can take care of your wife and adult children, remember that He is the one ultimately caring for all of you. When you release that pressure, you are free to simply enjoy what He has given.
So tonight, when you walk through your door and face whatever awaits, consciously hand those first moments to the Lord. Say in your heart, “I rest in Your finished work; I trust You for this home and this work.” That doesn’t mean everything will be perfect, but it means your soul can be anchored even if the evening is not as quiet as you hoped. The beer and the drink might numb the ache for a few hours, but Christ wants to give you rest that runs far deeper, rest for your soul, a lasting Sabbath in which you live every day. Cease from the striving that says everything depends on you. Enter into the peace that belongs to those who trust fully in Him. He will hold your projects, your wife’s heart, your bosses, your sleep, and your entire life. You only need to rest in His care.
