Sunday Is For Returning To God (And The Capitalist Lie It’s Selfish To Rest)

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Emerging Christian writer, Rebecca Simon reminds us that we can take it slow, especially on Sunday. Rest is critical to God’s plan for us. Read more of Rebecca’s writing in her new book here.

We live in a world that often measures value by productivity and praises those who pour out endlessly without pause. Somewhere along the way, you may have learned that rest was indulgent, that it was a luxury reserved for those who had first earned it. Slowly, you were taught to compare your worth within your capacity to give, and so, even in your exhaustion, you kept showing up. You kept overextending. You kept carrying what was never yours to hold alone.

Help me to unlearn the pressure to earn what you freely give. I’ve carried the weight of believing I had to be constantly available, constantly achieving, constantly holding everything together — even when I was tired, even when I had nothing left to give.

Rebecca Simon

But God never designed rest as a reward. From the beginning of creation, rest was not an afterthought, but rather, an integral part of how the world was shaped. It was a declaration — that being is just as sacred as doing. That presence, not performance, is where we meet God most intimately.

The lie that says rest is selfish often stems from a deeper fear. The kind of fear that convinces you that if you stop moving, if you stop giving, if you stop producing, you might lose your place in the world, you might get forgotten. But your identity was never rooted in your output, it was always rooted in grace. And grace doesn’t demand burnout. It invites you to breathe.

To rest is not to withdraw from purpose — it is to return to it with clarity. It is wisdom. The kind of wisdom that trusts God enough to let go of control. The kind of wisdom that knows it is not your effort that sustains your life, but his goodness, instead. Rest is not a pause in your becoming, it is part of the becoming itself.

You are allowed to stop. You are allowed to honor your humanity. You are allowed to step back — not because you’re failing, but because you’re finally listening to the voice of God over the noise of the world.