someone who is struggling
1 - Tiered and Weary
2 - What does the ‘rest’ of Jesus look like?
3 - How do I find ‘rest’ in Jesus?
2 - What does the ‘rest’ of Jesus look like?
3 - How do I find ‘rest’ in Jesus?
“Little children” refers to those who respond to God by acknowledging their dependence on him (cf. comments under 18:4). The “wise and learned,” as the opposite category of persons, must therefore represent those who feel they have no need for God
Jesus equates the Christian life with spiritual rest.
Christ offers work that is refreshing and good (more literal than NIV “easy”) because it brings salvation.
Jesus did not escape the hard life, but he could experience rest and refreshment in its midst. Christians are not promised freedom from illness or calamity, but they may experience God’s sustaining grace so that they are not crushed or driven to despair (2 Cor 4:8–9).
The rest Jesus offers his disciples enables them to overcome a certain measure of “fear, anxiety, uncertainty, and meaninglessness in the joy and peace of God’s very presence in Jesus Christ.”
The invitation to come to Christ remains for all today, but now as then it requires the recognition that persons cannot come by exalting themselves (recall v. 23) but only by completely depending on and trusting in Christ.
Jesus is calling anyone who is wearied with life’s burdens
“I will refresh you
It was not that he demanded less from his followers, for the Sermon on the Mount shows that he looked for more. But it was of a different kind and in a different spirit so that it was kindly, not a burden.
Because of what he is in his innermost being, meek and lowly, those who come to him find rest. This does not mean that they are excused henceforth from hard work. On the contrary, to be a follower of Jesus is to enter a way of life that necessarily involves hard work. But there is nothing of the hopelessness about it that characterizes life for far too many of the world’s afflicted. The calling must be fulfilled, but there is rest for your souls (see Jer. 6:16, and for souls on 10:28). That is to say, those who bear Christ’s yoke know rest at the center of their being. They do not worry and fuss about what they are doing, for their commitment to their Savior means that they recognize his sovereignty over all and the fact that he will never call them to something that is beyond their strength. Paradoxically those who take Christ’s yoke on them have rest, rest now and eternal rest in the hereafter.
It adds up to an invitation to service indeed; Jesus is not calling people to lives of careless ease. But it is service for which they will be glad. It will be a delight, not a painful drudgery.