Addicted To Busy: Recovery For The Rushed SoulSample
The Jesus Pace is Resolute
I’m reading in the book of Mark, chapter 4. After a full day of teaching, Jesus, along with his disciples, is on a boat crossing the Sea of Galilee toward the eastern shore. Evidently, without warning, a huge storm erupts, causing waves to pour into the boat and causing the disciples to think they will sink. This happens to make sense to me: if I was on a flight that was going down, I would pray, and if I was on a boat that started to pitch and roll, I would start planning my own funeral too.
So, the storm is surging all around, the disciples are scared out of their minds, and there is Jesus, asleep in the stern. His otherwise happy followers are infuriated. “Is it nothing to you that we’re going down?” (v. 38) they scream as Jesus snoozes away.
Finally, he wakes up and surmises the situation and, without any pomp and circumstance, shouts, “Quiet! Settle down!” (v. 39).
He was talking not to the disciples but, astonishingly, to the wind and the waves. More astonishing still: the wind and the waves complied. Mark 4:39 says, “The wind ran out of breath; the sea became smooth as glass.”
Wow.
Such confidence. Such resoluteness. Such an awareness of “kingdom come.”
Here’s the thing we tend to miss: When Jesus declared peace and quiet, he wasn’t declaring it over a single storm; he was declaring it over an entire kingdom. He was saying, in effect, “Peace and quiet will one day reign—everywhere, at all times. At some point, the lion will lie down with the lamb; predator and prey will live at peace.”
What Jesus was saying is that, yes, this is normal and natural for now, but a new normal is on its way in. When my kingdom settles in, all things will be at rest.
What’s more, by accusing the disciples of being cowards, he was indicating to them that an unyielding, unwavering confidence could be theirs instead—that they could enjoy that state of rest whenever they chose. This is something they didn’t know, and something we have a hard time believing still today. Peace is ours for the taking! It’s always knocking on the door; we simply have to open the door and invite it in. We have to be open for business, remember? This is such a fantastic goal. I was starting to understand why Jesus chose to live the way he did. Pace matters. The right pace matters. Perhaps there is hope for me yet.
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About this Plan
For those moving too fast through life, a guide to help you slow down and discover rest. In Addicted to Busy, Brady Boyd shows us how to live a life that embraces stillness and solitude, finding the peace that God wants for us.
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We would like to thank David C Cook for providing this plan. For more information, please visit: www.dccpromo.com/addicted_to_busy