Take A Break! It's Snowmageddon!
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| Emma defending her "snow fort" long after her brother Scooter loses interest in occupying it. |
You
know it's coming. The weather app has been refreshed approximately 47 times in
the last hour. The meteorologist on TV is using words like "significant
accumulation" and "travel not advised," which in snow-speak
means "here it comes!" And suddenly, everyone in town has the same
brilliant idea: I better go to the grocery store. Right now.
As
if we're preparing to survive on French toast for the next three weeks. The grocery store looks like a Black Friday
sale. Grown adults are speed-walking toward the dairy aisle. Someone's cart has
five gallons of milk. Five! We are terrible at stopping. Absolutely
terrible. Even when we know rest is coming, we resist. We try to cram 47 tasks
into the final hours before the universe forces us to sit down. It's almost
like we're afraid of what might happen if we actually had to be still for a
moment.
Then
you wake up the next morning, and the world has transformed. Everything is
white and quiet—that particular kind of quiet that only comes with fresh snow. Well,
at least that’s true for people who don’t have corgis. They want to go out and play. And then come in. And then go out and play. And then come in. And then go out and play.
And
there it is: you have nowhere to go. Nothing you can do. You're stuck at home
with your family, your thoughts, and maybe 24 hours of rest and relaxation
ahead of you.
There's
this moment in Mark's Gospel, chapter 6, verse 31, where Jesus looks at his
disciples and says something remarkable: "Come with me by yourselves to a
quiet place and get some rest."
Context
matters here.
These
guys had been working nonstop. They'd just returned from a ministry trip where
they'd been teaching and healing and dealing with crowds. They were probably
exhausted, running on adrenaline and a sense of mission. And Jesus, who had
every reason to keep the momentum going, says "Stop. Come away.
Rest."
He
doesn’t say "rest when the work is done." The work is never done. He
doesn’t say "rest when you've earned it.”
Rest isn't something we earn, it’s something we need. He simply says"come
and rest." Period.
Jesus
modeled this throughout his ministry. He withdrew to quiet places. He stepped
away from the crowds. He prioritized time alone with the Father, even when
people were clamoring for his attention. Rest wasn't a sign of weakness or
laziness for Jesus—it was a spiritual practice. A discipline. A way of
acknowledging that he was human and needed to be refilled.
And
if Jesus needed rest, what makes us think we don't?
Here's
what I love about snow days: they're like God's way of sending us to our rooms.
"You won't rest on your own? Fine. I'm shutting down the roads. I'm
canceling your meetings. I'm giving you permission—no, I'm giving you a
mandate—to stop."
Rest
isn't just about physical recovery. It's about remembering who we are. It's
about reconnecting with the people we love. It's about creating space for God
to speak into the noise of our lives. It's about trusting that the world can
function without our constant effort.
Snow days are involuntary Sabbaths. And maybe that's exactly what we
need.
Don't
wait for God to send a blizzard. Don't wait until your body forces you to stop.
Don't wait until burnout makes the decision for you. Make that time in your life to rest. Put that phone away in the evenings
perhaps. Take an actual lunch break and
go outside and take a walk. If you’re
overwhelmed, learn to say no to additional commitments in your life.
Jesus'
invitation in Mark 6:31 isn't just for exhausted first-century disciples. It's
for you. Right now. "Come with me by yourselves to a quiet place and get
some rest." You don't need
permission. You already have it. You don't need to earn it. It's a gift.
The
next time it snows, don't panic. Don't fight it. Receive it as what it is: an
invitation to remember that you're human, that rest is holy, and that sometimes
the most spiritual thing you can do is absolutely nothing. Make the coffee. Read a book—or better yet
read “The Book.” Watch the snow fall. And thank God for the reminder that the
world keeps spinning just fine without your constant intervention.
~Pastor
Todd Creason



Nice Thoughts 👍👍😊
ReplyDeleteThank you. It's nice to be reminded we're human.
ReplyDelete