Sunday, September 07, 2008

Do your best to rest

The past weekend has been full of events to attend to, things to serve, didn't even have time to lie down on the sofa to rest for an hour. boo hoo...

Sunday night went back to s'pore. after taking a bath, already 12 midnight, quite sad, really don't have time for myself. While waiting for hair to dry, read the bible while listening to some christian music. And amazingly God's comfort came over me like a warm blanket, took away my mental exhaustion. My soul felt so refreshed.

I am totally amazed at God and His word, i didn't know that it can be that refreshing, like streams of life flowing into my spiritual desert.
Though born into a christian family, still got so many things to learn about God.
Love it. =)


Do Your Best to Rest

by Jon Walker

There remains, then, a Sabbath-rest for the people of God; for anyone who enters God's rest also rests from his own work, just as God did from his. Let us, therefore, make every effort to enter that rest. Hebrews 4:9–11 (NIV)

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Today's guest devotional is provided by Jon Walker –

Most of us think of the Sabbath as a day of rest, originating from the day of rest God took after he created the universe, as recorded in Genesis. That view is correct; it's the reason we should take a Sabbath, a day of rest, each week.

Yet the Sabbath has a larger sense: an invitation to rest in God's healing grace, trusting in his power and his purpose for your life. We rest in our Father's arms, knowing he goes before and behind, knowing that his plans for us are good and not evil (Jeremiah 29:11).

God wants us to focus our efforts toward entering this Sabbath-trust in God, a restful, radiant certainty that God's got a handle on it all, and that he's got our best interests in mind.

Ian Thomas illustrates this point by telling the story of a man walking down a dusty, rural road on a hot and humid day. The man is loaded down with a heavy backpack and carries a duffle bag in each hand. A pick-up truck comes along, and the driver lets the man hop in the back.

The driver heads on down the road, but when he looks in the rearview mirror he sees that his passenger is standing in the bed of the truck still holding both duffle bags, still wearing the over-packed backpack on his back.

Truth is: We stand in the truck of faith, still carrying our burdens, thinking they're independent of our ride with God. We think God can carry us, but not our burdens. But God's truck of faith is big enough to carry us and to carry all our burdens.

Sit down and rest in the ride of God, our Father, carrying us home to him.

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