Christ the King Church, Hiawassee
Proper 9: Rest for Your Souls: Today is the Sixth Sunday after Pentecost and the opening of Movement II in our summer through Matthew. Movement I gave us the sending, the cost, and the cross. Movement II opens with the most tender words in the Gospel: Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. The context is rejection: the cities with the most exposure to Jesus have repented the least, and Jesus gives thanks that the Kingdom has been revealed not to the sophisticated but to the "nepioi" (NAY-pee-oy), the dependent and the childlike. The disciples are among the "nepioi", but the category is not closed to them alone: anyone who comes with empty hands rather than a prepared argument belongs there. Verse 27 stakes the Christological claim: the Old Testament reveals the Father, but the Son discloses him with a fullness the Law and prophets pointed toward but could not provide; the invitation is sovereign and free. The yoke Jesus offers is not effortless but good, kind, well-fitting, carried alongside the one who is gentle, "praus" (PRAH-oos), often described as strength expressed through gentleness, and lowly in heart. Zechariah 9 shows us who is speaking: the humble king on a donkey releasing prisoners of hope from the waterless pit. Psalm 145 gives us his character: gracious, merciful, good to all, and verse 14 his specific promise: the Lord upholds all who are falling and raises up all who are bowed down. What does coming to Jesus with a burden look like in practice? Showing up when staying home would be easier. Bringing the actual burden to prayer, not a tidied version. The King we longed for is the King who stoops low enough to lift us up. “Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.” (Matthew 11:29, ESV)
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