Thursday July 9, 2026
Scripture
Matthew 11:30
“For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”
Reflection
Summer should be a season of slowing—longer days, warmer evenings, moments that invite rest. Yet many of us carry the same frantic pace into July and August that we had in February. We hurry from task to task, place to place, expectation to expectation. And hurry rarely brings out the best in us.
When we rush, we often lose the fruit of the Spirit. Love becomes irritation. Joy becomes exhaustion. Peace becomes anxiety. Patience becomes frustration.
Hurry squeezes out compassion, grace, and attentiveness. It creates what some call “hurry sickness”—a life marked by:
Lack of time
Lack of meaning
Lack of compassion
Lack of grace
That is not the life Jesus intends for us.
Into our busyness, Jesus speaks a gentle invitation: “My yoke is easy and my burden is light.” He invites us to live at His pace—unhurried, grounded, present, restful.
Dallas Willard once said, “You must ruthlessly eliminate hurry from your life.” That is not a suggestion; it is a spiritual practice. And it is a choice we can make.
Many of us feel like life controls us instead of us controlling our lives. But Jesus offers a different way: to “yoke” ourselves to Him—to align our pace, our priorities, and our rhythms with His. When we walk with Jesus, we learn to live lightly, freely, and without the crushing weight of hurry.
Summer is a perfect time to practice this. To take inventory of how we spend our days. To notice the tempo at which we run. To choose rest over rush, presence over pressure, peace over pace.
Jesus invites us into a life where rest is not a luxury—it is a way of being.
Prayer
Jesus, teach me Your unhurried way. Help me recognize the places where hurry steals my peace and dulls my compassion. Slow my steps, quiet my heart, and align my life with Your gentle pace. May this season be one where I experience the rest You promise and the freedom You offer. Amen.
Application
After taking inventory of your weekly pace, try one or more of these practices to eliminate hurry:
Practice slowing — Choose one daily activity to do intentionally slower.
Use waiting as worship — When you’re stuck in a line or traffic, breathe deeply and invite God into the moment.
Schedule solitude — Set aside time this week to be alone, without noise or distraction.
Say “no” wisely — Decline one unnecessary commitment to create space for rest.
Take a weekly Sabbath — Set apart one day for rest, worship, and delight.












