Rest as Trust
Psalm 127:2 — “It’s useless to rise early and go to bed late, and work your worried fingers to the bone. Don’t you know he enjoys giving rest to those he loves?”
Since retiring from pastoral ministry last September, I’ve had to confront a surprising truth: rest does not come naturally to me. I’ve spent years encouraging others to slow down, breathe, and trust God—yet now I find myself needing to practice the same counsel. I’ve had to deliberately give myself permission to relax, to release the constant internal pressure to be productive, and to rediscover the spiritual space God intends for my soul.
Psalm 127 reminds us that frantic striving is not the hallmark of a faithful life. Rising early, staying up late, and wearing our “worried fingers to the bone” may look like dedication, but Scripture gently exposes the truth: restlessness is often a form of mistrust. God delights in giving rest—not as a reward for efficiency, but as a gift to His beloved.
Jesus echoed this invitation to trust when He taught His disciples to pray. In Eugene Peterson’s paraphrase of the Lord’s Prayer, we hear: “Keep us safe from ourselves and the Devil.” There is wisdom in that phrasing. Sometimes the greatest threat to our peace is not external opposition, but our own inner drivenness—the voice that insists we must keep going, keep working, keep proving ourselves.
Sacred rest is not laziness. It is a declaration of trust in the God who holds all things together, even when we are still.
Imagine a child learning to swim. At first, they splash frantically, arms and legs flailing in every direction. Their effort looks impressive, but it doesn’t keep them afloat for long. Then the instructor gently says, “Stop. Let the water hold you.”The moment the child stops struggling and spreads out their limbs, something surprising happens: the water lifts them. Their rest becomes the very thing that keeps them afloat.
So it is with us. Our frantic efforts exhaust us, but when we rest—truly rest—we discover that God has been holding us all along.
Prayer
Loving Father, You know how easily we slip into anxious striving. Teach us to rest as an act of trust. Remind us that we are Your beloved, not Your employees. Help us to release the pressures we place on ourselves and to enter the stillness You freely give. Keep us safe from the voice within that drives us beyond what You desire. May Your peace guard our hearts, and may Your rest restore our souls. Amen.
Practice: Do one restful thing without guilt.






