Christ, Our Only
Rest
by Edward
Manning
“Come unto me,
all you that labor and are heavy laden,
and I will give you rest. Take my yoke
upon you, and learn of me: for I am meek
and lowly in heart: and you shall find
rest unto your souls. For my yoke is
easy, and my burden is light.” Matthew
11:28-30.
With these gracious promises our blessed
Lord drew to Him the people who were
toiling and struggling with the burdens
of this saddened and sinful world. He
beheld not only sinners, but many a good
man wearying himself in vain. Among
those to whom He spoke, He saw, besides
those that were heavy laden with their
own sins, many who were burdened with
evil traditions and unmeaning customs,
who were fainting under the yoke which
had been laid upon them as a
schoolmaster to bring them unto Christ.
He promised them rest, if they would
come, and learn, and take on them His
yoke– that is, if they would obey and
follow Him, if they would believe and be
like Him. Many there were, as Andrew and
Levi, who gave up their former ways, and
all that they had, and made the trial,
and found the promise true. They found
rest in forgiveness and a quiet mind, in
a heart chastened to a holy calm, and in
the hope of their Master’s kingdom. Now
what He promised them when He was seen
by men on earth, He has both promised
and fulfilled, ever since from heaven.
By His unseen Spirit He has ever been in
the world—pleading, drawing, persuading
men to take His easy yoke. This He has
done by His Church in all the earth.
Among all nations He has gone, offering
rest to every weary soul. Who can tell
what has ever been the ineffable
yearning of the heathen world; what
tumultuous cries of spiritual sorrow
have been heard in the ears of God?
There has ever been among them the voice
of conscience, and the sting of guilt,
and the fears of defenseless purity, and
the remorse of conscious sin. Without a
doubt, among the myriads of eternal
beings who thronged the face of the
earth at Christ’s coming, there were
tens of thousands who felt higher and
purer aspirations, who sighed and strove
for light and truth in the dark and
stifling bondage of heathenism. And to
these, in due season, Christ in His
Church went preaching, as “to spirits in
prison,” bringing the balm of meekness,
and the peace of a lowly heart. When
they heard Him, they were drawn to Him
by an irresistible persuasion. They had
found what in darkness they longed
for—and all the needs and miseries of
their being clung to His healing touch.
They were “refreshed with the multitude
of peace.”
And not only so, but within the Church
itself, and to this day, Christ ever
calls, in these soft, persuasive words,
“Come unto me, all you that are weary
and heavy laden.” It is not only among
the unregenerate spirits of men, but
among those also who have been born
again by His gracious working, that He
finds toiling and burdened hearts. As He
stands in the midst of His Church, and
beholds our daily life, and all the
hurrying to and fro of weary and
restless spirits, He sees and pities our
blind infirmities: for many are His by
baptism, who have never deeply learned
of Him; many know him in word, who have
never borne His yoke; many have seemed
to draw near, who have found no rest
unto their souls.
For instance, He sees among us the very
same kinds of men as among the
Jews—sinners “laden with sins”—men
conscious of guilt, hating the sin for
its after-agonies, but yielding to its
momentary bait. The throes and torments
of Christian men are worse even than the
terrors of the heathen or the Jew. For
Christians know of life and immortality:
to them Tophet and Gehenna are no
parables, but well-known and horrible
realities. No tongue of man can tell the
scourge, and fear, and suffocating
burden of guilt seen in the light of an
illuminated conscience. And this is all
around us, among baptized men. It is the
cause of their stubbornness in sin,
because it is the root of their despair.
But, besides these, there are men of a
worldly heart, who weary themselves day
and night in the round of gain or
selfishness, “lading themselves with
thick clay;” early and late full of
care—with furrowed brows and withered
hearts; wearing a false cheerfulness,
being sick in their inmost soul.
This world fairly frets such a man’s
heart through and through; to him the
world is overgrown, and all its cares
are swollen to an unnatural greatness.
He has no sight of the unseen world, to
check and balance the visible world; and
therefore to him this world is all
things. Hence come foolish choices, and
inordinate cravings, and bitter
disappointments. I am not speaking of
men who are so greedy of gold as to pass
into a proverb; but of a common sample
of men, whose aim in life is to gain no
more than an ordinary measure of wealth,
or to rise, as they say, to fitting
places of dignity and power. If you
could read the inner life of such men,
you would, find their minds wound up to
an incessant and unrelieved stretch,
which is ever at the highest pitch. At
last it makes them weary of themselves,
and they break down in bitterness or
imbecility.
There is also all the aching of
disappointment, and the irritation of
rivalry, and the fear of discontentment,
and the foresight of unpitied falls; and
well is it if there is not also the
hidden smouldering of an angry jealousy,
and the wincing soreness, which
ambitious and envious minds feel at the
very name of a successful neighbor. What
burden heavier than this dead world
bound about the heart of man? what yoke
more galling than a restless, craving
spirit?
And, once more; there are others who are
not less truly laboring in vain, though
they know it not: I mean, those that are
making personal happiness their aim in
life. There are many who ply this
unprofitable, disappointing trade. I am
not speaking of sensualists, or
empty-hearted followers of this
vain-glorious world; but of grave and
thoughtful people, whose theory of life
is the pursuit of individual happiness.
They look forward, as a matter of
course, to certain great acts and stages
of life, as to things predetermined by a
customary law. Oftentimes, indeed, their
aims and desires are very reasonable;
sometimes sadly commonplace. They choose
out, for instance, some of life’s purer
fountains, running through a broken
cistern, at which to slake their thirst
to be happy. There is something
lacking—something without which their
being is not full. They take, it may be,
many ways of meeting this craving of
their hearts; but diverse as are their
schemes, their aim is all one—they have
a predominant desire to be happy, and to
choose their own happiness; and
therefore they are full of
disappointments, perpetually wounded on
some side, which they have laid bare to
the arrows of life. The treacherous reed
is ever running up into the hand that
leans on it. They are ever giving
hostages, as it were, to this changeful
world, and ever losing their dearest
pledges; and so they toil on, trying to
rear up a happiness around them, which
is ever dropping piecemeal, and, at
last, is swept away by some chastening
stroke; and then, no wiser than before,
they set themselves, with a bruised and
chafing heart, to weave the same
entanglements again.
From what has been said, it follows
plainly: First, that all our unrest and
weariness is in and of ourselves. It is
either the slavery of some tyrannous
sin, or the scourge of an impenitent
memory, or the indulgence of some
fretful, implacable temper, or some
self-flattering and sensitive vanity,
some repining discontent at what we are,
or some impotent straining after what
God has not willed us to be, or some
hungering for an earthly happiness, with
all the chill and faintness of heart
which arises from the ever-present
consciousness that what we crave for,
even though we had it, would fail to
satisfy.
Besides all these, the weary recurrence
of night and day, laboriously spent in
toiling on towards an end they never
reach—these, I say, and only these, or
such like, make men weary and desolate.
If they would only burst through this
thraldom of indulged faults, or break
the spell of this cheating, benumbing
world, they would soon find rest to
their souls. But so long as they run on
in the ring of evil or vain desires, God
will not give them rest; no, if He would
give it, they would soon barter it away
for some exciting pleasure.
Once more; we may learn that it is only
in Jesus that we can find rest; that is,
it is only by learning of Him, yielding
ourselves up to Him, and living for Him,
that we can find release from the causes
of our disquiet, or rest for the deep
cravings of an immortal being.
The main and original fault in all our
toiling after rest is this: we forget
that peace with God, and the
purification of our own nature, is the
absolute condition to our ever reaching
it. Here men stumble on the very
threshold; and, here it is that Christ
will have us make the first step. “Take
my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I
am meek and lowly in heart.”
The first step to rest is, to have
forgiveness in the blood-shedding of
Christ, and to have His mind renewed in
us. It is thus that we are delivered
from ourselves. Even though men should
gain all they labor after, yet without
this, happiness would be as far off as
ever; it would fly before them as the
horizon, which they are ever following
after, but never reach. In the very
midst of success, the bitterness of the
fallen nature would rise to the surface,
and taint all the joy.
How uneasily does a cheerful look sit
upon the face of the happiest worldly
man! how soon it fades, and the settled
aspect of uncertainty return and
overcast his brow! There is a worm that
dies not, at the root of all—a “sorrow
of the world,” which “works death.” It
is only the virtue that goes out from
Christ that can disinfect us of our
natural sadness. Nothing but a devout
life of repentance and self-discipline
at the foot of His cross can avail to
free us from ourselves.
Seek, then, forgiveness, and the gift of
a broken heart. Ask of Him the words of
peace—“Your sins be forgiven you;” and
the words of purity—“I will; be clean.”
He will lay on you that sweet yoke, of
which He spoke in the mountain: Blessed
are the poor in spirit, the mourners,
the meek, the hungry and thirsty for
righteousness, the merciful, the poor,
the peacemakers, the persecuted. He will
change your inward soul by His purifying
breath. As you fall down before Him, He
will lift upon you the light of His
countenance, which transfigures all on
whom it falls into the likeness of
Himself. Be sure that in Him only can
the deep cravings of our immortal being
find enough to really satisfy them. He
has so made man’s heart for Himself,
that it is ever restless until it finds
rest in Him.
This is the master-key to all earthly
disappointments. Men choose a false,
cheating happiness, instead of a true
one. They choose things which have
nothing akin to their immortal nature.
All earthly things are too lifeless and
dull for the heart of spiritual beings.
Something higher and purer, more
intimate and searching, is needed for a
regenerate man: for only a part, and
that the lower, of his reasonable being
is affected by the fullest earthly
happiness; and when men have chosen even
the best of earthly things, the purest
and highest—such as intellectual
employments, or domestic happiness—they
find it variable and fleeting. It wears
dull, or soon changes to a cloyed
satiety. There is an ever-springing
care, and a chilling anxiety, which
pierces through all such happiness at
its best. Even when God is not
forgotten, it is not enough; and without
Him it is all an exciting and empty
dream.
Oh that men would learn of the Psalmist!
“Delight yourself in the Lord; and He
shall give you the desires of your
heart.” It is not for man to choose
happiness as the end of life—but God: to
delight in God, and then none of his
desires shall fail. As they are all laid
up in God, so he has them all fulfilled.
If it be good for him to be happy, he
shall have happiness; if not, it is
happiness to him to lack what God in
love withholds.
But God would have all men happy. As He
has no pleasure in the death of a
sinner, so He has none in people's
sadness. He would have you to be happy,
but not in your way. The time and the
manner He reserves in His own power.
Happiness is not a thing inherited by
the rich alone—the poorest may have it
better; nor is it only for those who
have many and dear friends about
them—the loneliest may have it in a
deeper, though a severer measure; for
happiness is an inward boon; it is shed
abroad secretly in the heart by the love
of Christ. Those who have chosen Him,
above all others have chosen well. He is
enough, though they hardly feel it:
though their affections crave about,
like a flickering flame, for nearer and
palpable things.
Therefore let us choose boldly. Some
choice you must have. Even the most
wavering have a preference, which to
them is equal to a choice. A thousand
other forms beckon to us with promises
of rest; but only He can give it. Choose
rather to sit at His feet than to be at
ease, or rich, or high, or prosperous,
or full of bright earthly hopes. Yes,
choose rather to sit in loneliness
before Him, than to dwell in the
happiest throng where He holds the
second place.
Life is very short; and the world to
come already dawns upon us. Brethren,
choose boldly a life devoted to Christ.
Be His above all; be His only. Hear the
Church saying, “My Beloved is mine, and
I am His.” The world holds you but by a
thread; you may snap it in twain, and in
the settled though hidden purpose of
your soul take on you His yoke forever.
And having chosen boldly, make good your
choice with perseverance. Many a time
your heart will hanker for what it once
promised itself to possess. Many a time
you will almost fear to walk alone in
the way “which is desert.” It will seem
strange, singular, and solitary. It may
be, you will have seasons of a faint
will—at times all but consent to revoke
your choice, and unbind your resolution.
But this is not your trial only. It is
common to all who devote themselves
greatly. Only be steadfast, and you
shall breathe more freely, and poise
yourselves more steadily on the heaving
flood of this unstable world. The more
devoted you are to Him, the more
absolutely free shall you be from all
agitations and irritations—the safer,
the stronger, the happier.
True, a devoted life is a demanding one.
But there is a severity in the
perfection of bliss. It is severe
because perfect, as God is awesome in
His perfection. Fear not to give up what
the world counts dearest, that you may
wear His yoke in secret. Live in lowly
well-doing; in works of alms and prayer,
of charity and spiritual mercy. Better
to be so under a vow to Him, than to be
free to choose this world’s alluring
hopes.
Brethren, are you happy now? If not, why
not? Why, but because you are hankering
after something on a lower level of
devotion. Something below Christ is your
aim in life. You are restless because
you have not reached it; or now that you
have it in your hands, you find it
cannot satisfy your heart.
"Martha, Martha, you are careful and
cumbered about many things. But one
thing is needful; and Mary has chosen
that good part, which shall not be taken
away from her."