KJV Sermon Outlines
REST FOR THE WEARY
Introduction
We are living in a day in which there seems to be no rest for the
weary. Most people have to work several jobs to be able to pay their
debts. There is something that is called “chronic fatigue syndrome.”
Everyone suffers from it from one degree or another. There is one who
can give us rest. His name is Jesus!
Text: Isaiah 40:27-31
Mat. 11:28-30 “Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden,
and I will give you rest. 29Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me;
for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your
souls. 30For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.
I. A Common Problem
A. We are all tired from something. Fatigue occasionally overtakes
even the strongest among us.
1. We are tired physically and mentally from the everyday struggle to
make ends meet.
2. We are tired emotionally from wrestling with dysfunctional
relationships, unrealized dreams, and heartbreaking loss.
3. Ironically, we are tired spiritually from trying to live up to our
faith.
B. Fatigue can do strange things to us.
1. Vince Lombardi, the great football coach, once said, “Fatigue makes
cowards of us all.”
2. It can even affect an entire generation, like Israel in the
wilderness, breaking our resolve to go on.
II. A Comforting Promise—“I will
give you rest.”
A. If just anyone made this promise, we might find it empty. If a
politician or even a physician made this promise, we would take it
with a grain of salt. There are some things other people just can’t do
for us.
B. But when Jesus makes a promise, we stop and listen.
1. His promises are anything but empty. He has both the integrity and
power to deliver on His word.
2. We stake our eternal destinies on the reliability of his promises.
We must take this one seriously as well.
III. A Challenging Prescription—“take
my yoke upon you and learn of me.”
A. Jesus’ next words are surprising.
1. We seek rest by escaping, getting away, relieving ourselves of
responsibility.
2. Instead Jesus calls us to a new task. While we are looking for a
hammock, Jesus calls us to a yoke! He calls us to find rest by
voluntarily placing ourselves under a new burden.
B. Jesus’ words teach us the real cause of fatigue and the nature of
true rest.
1. The problem with our lives is not that we must work, that we must
serve some master, perform some task. The problem is really what
“work” we choose to do and whom we choose to serve.
2. The kind of rest Jesus offers is not relief from the tasks
necessary to sustain us or even freedom from all of life’s trials.
Those early disciples who took Him up on this promise still had to
labor for bread and face life’s difficulties.
3. The kind of rest Jesus offers is a peace of mind, a calmness of
spirit that comes from knowing our lives are being lived within His
will. It is the kind of rest that accompanies a life that is rescued
from self-made anxieties and stresses. Even the unavoidable work of
meeting basic needs is made less tiring by the reassurance that the
Savior is looking after us.
Conclusion
People wear all kinds of “yokes.” Some are slaves to ambition, to
greed, to materialism, to lust, to alcohol, to pride and all of its
evils. These are the things that truly exhaust us. By placing
ourselves under the yoke of the gentle, humble Savior our lives are
liberated from the exhaustion of all these things and set free to work
purposefully unto true satisfaction and fulfillment.
Illustrations
Julia Ward Howe once said that she was “tired way down into the
future.”
The Italian poet Dante, exiled from Florence, wandered over Europe.
One night he knocked at the door of a Franciscan monastery. “What do
you want? asked the monk. “Rest,” replied Dante.
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