‘Come
to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give
you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me; for I am gentle and humble
in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my
burden is light.’
Jesus
(Matthew 11.28-30)
In
England, today, when we use the word ‘evil’ we are making a moral judgement. A
nation of dog-lovers, we would consider someone who took pleasure in torturing
a dog to be evil. In most biblical contexts, such a person would not be called
evil but ‘wicked,’ a word we no longer use to describe moral wrongdoing; if we
use it at all, it has come to mean ‘exceptionally good’ (as in, ‘That was a
wicked sermon, vicar!’)
Often
in the Bible, evil is not a moral judgement, but a description of those
conditions of existence that are vexing, that burden the spirit, resulting in
weariness. So, growing old is evil. Not that being old is immoral; nor that
senior citizens are wicked, at least, not simply by virtue of their age: one is
wicked, regardless of age, on account of deliberate and repeated choices made.
The evil of growing old includes not being able to hold on to the vigour of
youth, or a zest for life; as well as the losses of cherished ways of life,
possessions, and people.
When
Jesus says, ‘Come to me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens,
and I will give you rest.’ he surely has in mind those burdened by evil, in
this sense (whatever else he might also have in mind). And if they come to him,
he will give them rest.
In
the beginning, God created the earth and all that is in it. An earth, and its
inhabitants, that would continually pass away. Things good, or even very good,
but fleeting. And on the seventh day, God rested; stepped back, to enjoy what
was, before it was no longer, before it gave way to something else.
To
rest is to step, temporarily, away from labour. The thing that might be
counter-intuitive for our culture is that rest actually honours labour, gives
it worth. To rest from the burden of the evil of aging creates space to look
back with gratitude for all that was good, but also, perhaps, space to discern
what is good in the present. To find gift and enjoyment in our life as it is
now, and so to be set free from the burdens of nostalgia or bitterness.
Growing
old is not the only evil in this sense. Every stage and season of life has its
vexations; every stage and season must give way to the next. Life, even a good
life, is hard work, at times; and rest is the antidote to evil (just as justice
is the antidote to wickedness).
Take
time to rest today, whatever rest looks like for you. And may you meet Jesus
there, waiting to bless you.