We live in a world obsessed with rest.
Self-care. Slow living. Soft life. Early retirement. “I’m just tired.” We hear it everywhere. And while I absolutely believe rest is sacred, I also believe we’ve confused Godly rest with comfort without contribution.
Recently, I had a conversation with my daughter, Emilie, that put words to something I’ve been feeling for a long time.
Emilie works hard.
Spring, summer, and fall in her home are not lazy seasons. They are full. She preserves vegetables, cans fruit, bakes bread, prepares meals, freezes food, and stocks her pantry. She plans ahead. She thinks long-term. She equips her household with intention.
Why?
So that when winter comes, she can rest.
Not scramble. Not panic. Not strive.
Rest.
That is Godly rest.
God Worked Before He Rested
In the opening chapter of Genesis, we see the original pattern for life. God created the heavens and the earth in six days. He spoke light into existence. He separated land and sea. He formed plants, stars, animals, and mankind.
Six full days of work.
Then — and only then — He rested.
Scripture tells us in Genesis 2:2 that on the seventh day, God finished His work and rested from all He had done.
He did not rest instead of working.
He rested after working.
There is a divine order there.
It’s Not Just Spiritual — It’s Mathematical
When you look at the creation pattern, it’s almost like a math equation:
6 days of work
1 day of rest
That’s a 6:1 ratio. Roughly 85% work, 15% rest.
Emilie unintentionally mirrors this rhythm in her own life. She works three quarters of the year preparing her home. Then she rests in the winter, enjoying the fruit of her labor.
It’s simple math.
Work + Preparation = Rest
No Work + No Preparation = Stress
Yet so many people today want the winter rest without the spring planting.
They want the harvest without the sowing.
The provision without the preparation.
The peace without the discipline.
The Danger of Wanting Rest Without Work
Wanting rest without work doesn’t produce peace. It produces anxiety.
Because rest without preparation is fragile. It depends on luck, others’ labor, or constant scrambling.
Godly rest, on the other hand, is stable.
It’s the feeling of opening your freezer in January and knowing it’s full because you filled it in July.
It’s sitting down at the end of the week knowing you gave your best.
It’s Sabbath that feels sweet because you poured yourself out Monday through Saturday.
Real rest feels good because something was accomplished.
Godly Rest Is Rhythmic, Not Lazy
God did not design us for burnout. But He also did not design us for idleness.
Work came before the fall. Purpose was part of Eden. Tending the garden was a gift, not a punishment.
Rest is not an escape from responsibility.
It is a reward of faithfulness.
When Emilie rests in the winter, it isn’t laziness. It’s wisdom. It’s the natural outcome of diligence. She isn’t exhausted and resentful — she is satisfied.
That’s the difference.
The Easy Life Is a Mirage
Our culture sells the idea of an easy life right now. Immediate comfort. Immediate reward. Immediate rest.
But Scripture paints a different picture.
There is sowing and reaping.
There is planting and harvesting.
There is working and resting.
If we bypass the working season, we rob ourselves of the deep satisfaction that makes rest meaningful.
Godly rest isn’t about doing nothing all the time. It’s about honoring the rhythm God established from the beginning.
The Invitation
Maybe the question isn’t, “Why am I so tired?”
Maybe the better question is, “Have I honored the rhythm?”
Have I worked faithfully?
Have I prepared wisely?
Have I embraced my season?
Because when work is done with purpose, rest becomes holy.
Emilie understands something simple but profound: you can’t rest well in winter if you wasted the summer.
God showed us the formula in the very first pages of Scripture. Six days He worked. One day He rested.
It’s not just theology.
It’s design.
It’s math.
It’s wisdom.
And it still works.
