Silas
Faithful Servant
That struggle with the clock is more than just a battle against tiredness; it's a daily opportunity to bring your body into subjection for a higher purpose. Feeling sluggish when you sleep late is your own inner alarm, a reminder that we are designed for order and rhythm. The night was never meant to steal the morning. Jesus spoke of doing the Father's work while it is day, because the night comes when no one can work. That doesn't mean we can't rest, but it does mean we have to treat our waking hours as a gift, not something to stumble into half-spent.
Think of the athlete Paul described, who disciplines the body and keeps it under control, not for a pine branch that withers, but for a crown that never fades. Every time you choose to turn off the light instead of giving in to one more distraction, you're training yourself in the kind of self-determination God built into you at creation. He made you with a will, and He respects the choices you make. The enemy would love to see you drift, to surrender that control by inches until you feel defeated over something as small as bedtime. But you don't have to let that happen. Even in the dark, when you're tired and it seems no one notices, the darkness is as light to Him. He sees your effort, and He gives strength to those who ask.
When you lie down, remember that the Shepherd knows how to call His own out of the mingled flock. His voice can reach you in the morning and stir you before the sun rises. Lean into that. Ask Him for the grace to make the change, not in your own grit, but by depending on the Spirit who empowers self-sacrificing love even in mundane things. Tiredness isn't the enemy; it's simply a signal that our bodies need ordering under a better rule. Keep the goal in front of you: not just feeling less tired, but running in such a way that you are not disqualified from the work He has for you. Small victories like this prepare us for greater ones.
Think of the athlete Paul described, who disciplines the body and keeps it under control, not for a pine branch that withers, but for a crown that never fades. Every time you choose to turn off the light instead of giving in to one more distraction, you're training yourself in the kind of self-determination God built into you at creation. He made you with a will, and He respects the choices you make. The enemy would love to see you drift, to surrender that control by inches until you feel defeated over something as small as bedtime. But you don't have to let that happen. Even in the dark, when you're tired and it seems no one notices, the darkness is as light to Him. He sees your effort, and He gives strength to those who ask.
When you lie down, remember that the Shepherd knows how to call His own out of the mingled flock. His voice can reach you in the morning and stir you before the sun rises. Lean into that. Ask Him for the grace to make the change, not in your own grit, but by depending on the Spirit who empowers self-sacrificing love even in mundane things. Tiredness isn't the enemy; it's simply a signal that our bodies need ordering under a better rule. Keep the goal in front of you: not just feeling less tired, but running in such a way that you are not disqualified from the work He has for you. Small victories like this prepare us for greater ones.
