Have you ever felt tired?
I don’t mean the kind of tired that comes from a lack of sleep.
I mean the kind of tired that comes from working non-stop and feeling like you are never going to be able to finish the job?
In our house with two kids, three if you include me, which my wife does, there are never ending piles of dirty dishes and never ending piles of dirty laundry.
Just when you think you have washed the last plate or folded the last pair of underwear, someone needs a snack and then drops that snack all over their clean shirt.
Do you sometimes feel like the list of burdens of life—the to do list at your office, the to do list in your home, the to do list in your marriage, the to do list with your children, and the to do list at your church—are too much to handle?
Today, heavy, unimaginable, and overwhelming burdens are being felt because:
Our kids are rebelling against what is good and right for them.
Our marriages aren’t experiencing all that was promised in the vows at the altar. Instead, we are experiencing constant tension and the hardest of hearts — things we could never have imagined when getting married.
Today, heavy, unimaginable, and overwhelming burdens are being felt:
Because of worry about tomorrow.
Because of a faltering economy and shrinking 401Ks.
Because of personal failure in the past.
Because of the talk of war and nuclear weapons.
Because of injustice.
Because of addiction.
Because of guilt over what we have thought, said, or done.
Burden stinks.
When we are burdened, we can’t sleep, we find it hard to breath at moments, we can’t focus, we can’t move forward, and we can’t accomplish the simplest of goals — like taking a shower or getting dressed, just to name a few of the side effects of burden (sometimes compiled by clinically diagnosed anxiety and depression).
And, all of that to say that when we are burdened, we just can’t rest.
There is too much to do and not enough time to do it all.
If all of this sounds like the way you feel, and I am sure it does, there is good news for you this morning as we hear from our Biblical text.
Our text this morning comes from the Biblical book of Matthew, a book that gives us a biography of Jesus.
It is here that we are told about living at rest instead of living with burden.
Matthew 11:25–30, brings us the words of Jesus, assuring us that life with Him is a life of rest.
Let here what Jesus says about rest:
[25] At that time Jesus declared, “I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that you have hidden these things from the wise and understanding and revealed them to little children; [26] yes, Father, for such was your gracious will. [27] All things have been handed over to me by my Father, and no one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and anyone to whom the Son chooses to reveal him. [28] Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. [29] Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. [30] For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” (ESV)
In these words, Jesus speaks to both God and man.
In verses 25-27, Jesus prays words of thanksgiving to God the Father.
And, in verses 28-30, Jesus turns and speaks words of comfort to those around him (who have also just heard his prayer of thanksgiving to God the Father).
In both conversations, Jesus reveals who he is and what he does for humanity—that means me and you!
When listening in to these 2000 year old words, you find out that:
Jesus—God in the flesh—speaks to you.
Jesus prays to God the Father in Heaven for you.
Jesus thanks God for you.
Jesus who alone knows God the Father, because He is One with Him, reveals God the Father to you.
Jesus reveals God’s grace to you.
Jesus is in charge of all things for your good.
Jesus calls you to come and be with Him—resting eternally in God’s Kingdom of Heaven.
Jesus gives you rest because of who He is and what He does for you.
Jesus teaches you who God is and what God is like and what God’s standards are for life and love.
Jesus is gentle with you.
Jesus is humble with you.
Jesus’ yoke is easy for you.
And, Jesus’ burden is light for you.
In this short text, Jesus reveals a whole lot of good news for you.
Writing about this morning’s text, one author says,
“At the end of the day, the Christian life is not about what you and I can do in and for the kingdom in our own effort; that’s a recipe for failure. Following Christ is about Jesus the Christ living in and through and for us on a daily basis. He helps us in our struggles with sin, in our battles with temptation, and in our suffering in trials. Believers are in the yoke with Jesus, and the One who calls us to righteous living is the One who enables us to live a righteous life. The One who beckons you to trust the Father is the One who enables you to trust the Father. And the One who calls us to preach the gospel to the nations is the One who empowers us to preach the gospel to the nations.”
The first thing we are going to briefly examine is the good news that Jesus speaks and reveals who God the Father in Heaven is and what God the Father in Heaven had done and is doing.
Ultimately, Jesus reveals himself as the Messiah, the Christ, the Anointed One, the Savior.
Therefore, through Jesus, God reveals salvation.
Jesus reveals the way to forgiveness of sins, righteousness, and eternal life.
In another biography of Jesus, John, a personal friend and follower of Jesus tells us that Jesus said:
[1] “Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me. [2] In my Father’s house are many rooms. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? [3] And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also. [4] And you know the way to where I am going.” “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. (John 14:1–4, 6, ESV)
This is good news because God did not have to make Himself known to us. But, in his great love for us, He chose to make Himself known to us.
Because of our ungodly thoughts, words, and behavior, we broke off our relationship with God. In effect, we sent God divorce papers. We told him, by our ungodly thoughts, words, and behavior that we thought our life would be better without him.
However, God refused to sign those divorce papers and instead did everything in his power to fix our relationship with him.
Because of God’s great love for me and for you, He chose to let us know that He would forgive us and forget our wrongdoing.
And, He would forgive our sin and forget our wrongdoing by paying off the debt that our sin incurred by trading the life of His Son, Jesus Christ, on the cross for ours.
The second thing that we are briefly going to look at this morning, flows directly out of the first.
We find rest in what Jesus reveals to us about God the Father and Himself.
We can rest in the truth that that God provides all we need to be accepted by Him today, tomorrow, and forever, through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus.
There is nothing left to do to gain God’s approval.
In the person and work of Jesus Christ, God has come alongside of us and rescued us from the burden to work hard to perfectly complete the over 600 commandments in the Bible.
Near the end of the text, Jesus mentions a yoke.
Now, Jesus was not talking about the creamy yellow center of an egg.
Here, Jesus is speaking to those in an agrarian society. So, Jesus uses one of their farming tools to help them understand how their relationship with him works—and how it works for their ultimate good.
The yoke would be used to help the oxen share the burden of plowing a field. Instead of one animal bearing the weight and physical exertion of pulling a plow all day long, the farmer would yoke two oxen together and then hook up the plow to the yoke so that the weight and physical exertion would be shared by the two animals.
When you are yoked to Jesus, you are yoked to someone whom has completed the job before you even came into the field. There is no more weight to bear and no more physical exertion needed. You are partnered with someone who has first finished the job that needed to be completed. You are connected with someone who has nothing left to do.
In the yoke, Jesus takes the full weight of your sin and Jesus gives you full pardon for your sin on the other side.
As a Christian, have you ever felt tired?
I mean the kind of tired that comes from working non-stop to prove that you are a good person or good Christian?
good enough for God and His Kingdom of Heaven;
good enough for the people in your church;
good enough so that you don’t feel like a hypocrite?
Do you feel like the burdens you read about in the Bible, learn about in Bible study, and hear about in sermons are too much to handle?
Well, if you feel that way, you are right.
The to-do list of what it takes to please God is too much for you to handle.
Because of the corruption of sin which makes you self-centered and self-righteous, the laws of God and His rules for life and love are actually impossible for you to live up to.
However the good news for you this morning in our text, is summed up by author Todd Brewer in his latest post for the culture meets theology blog Mockingbird, when he says:
“Christianity is not a road-map of rules to follow before gaining eternal life, or a set of general principles that govern God’s creation and our ethical decision-making. Christianity believes in a personal, benevolent, creative God who has already and is in the process of fundamentally altering the course of human history. Christianity posits itself as the one truth that changes everything.”
The good news for you this morning is that Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection has altered human history and changed everything for you!
He comes to work with you to help you catch up and finish the stack of claims piled up against you and in need of recording as being “finished” in God’s logbook.
Therefore, this morning, rest with peace before God in the completed work of Jesus Christ for you.
This is the Word of God for you today.
This is the Grace of God for you today.
Amen.
Pastor Fred Scragg.
July 9, 2023