“Unless the Lord builds the house, its builders labor in vain. Unless the Lord watches over the city, the watchmen stand guard in vain. In vain you rise early and stay up late, toiling for food to eat– for he grants sleep to those he loves” (Psalm 127:1-2 NIV).
Summer is here. School is out. Now what?
What we feel like doing is getting away from everything.
We say to ourselves, “Perhaps if we just escaped for a week or two, we could refuel and be ready to return to work with a full tank.”
With the goal of escaping and refueling in our minds we head to the beach or mountains and exhaust ourselves further with driving, chasing the kids, spending money, and trying to uncoil that tight feeling in our souls. We often return from these so-called “vacations” feeling more exhausted and empty than before. Some of us have to get back to work just to get some rest!
We’re so used to living life in the fast lane with our gas pedals pressed to the floor that we don’t know how to let up. Even our vacations look like work!
Is there a better way? Is there a way of life that is more balanced between work and rest?
The Bible says there is. The Psalmist said that there is a certain “vanity” in rising early and staying up late to toil in your own strength. There is an emptiness and a futility that comes over us when we build a life without the Builder’s help.
A good diagnostic question is implied in Psalm 127. Do you feel so tired that you can’t even sleep? Do you feel like you’re working but nothing is being accomplished. Does life feel like a constant treadmill? Then, perhaps you’re doing all the work in your own strength. Perhaps you’re building a life that excludes the Builder… God.
When we work in the strength of the Builder, when we receive His supply and direction, we will experience the real rest that He gives to those He loves.
This doesn’t mean we stop building. It means that we learn to let the Builder lead us to work and rest according to His direction and power.
An annual vacation won’t be enough to “refuel” our tanks. We must learn to lean on the Builder or not only will all our work be in vain, but all our “vacations” will too.