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We Could Use Some Rest

Busyness and Angst



It’s a rat race out there, isn’t it? But why are we Christians so busy running it? I have some thoughts for you next on BreakPoint.

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Eric Metaxas

For the past few months, the New York Times has been running a series on anxiety at its “Opinionator” blog. According to the Times, “for many,” anxiety “is not a disorder, but a part of the human condition.” The series’ stated goal is to explore “how we navigate the worried mind, through essay, art and memoir.”

Reading the contributions, I’m struck by two things: first, the worries and anxieties being discussed are, for the most part, the epitome of what has been dubbed “first world problems.” What’s being explored isn’t the struggle to make ends meet, much less the hand-to-mouth existence that billions around the planet struggle with.

Nor is it the stuff of mood disorders that require medical help. Instead, it’s the stuff of “angst,” a kind of dread that comes from the suspicion that life, as we presently live it, doesn’t make sense.

Well, it doesn’t, which makes the conspicuous absence of faith in the discussion — my second observation — all the more, well, conspicuous.

A telling example is a recent entry entitled “The Busyness Trap” by Tim Kreider. Kreider points out that when most people say that they’re “busy,” they aren’t talking about working multiple jobs to put food on the table or “pulling back-to-back shifts in the ICU.”

No, the busyness being complained about is “almost always...self-imposed: work and obligations they’ve taken on voluntarily, classes and activities they’ve ‘encouraged’ their kids to participate in.” It’s the busyness of people who “feel anxious and guilty when they aren’t either working or doing something to promote their work.”

According to Kreider, what lies behind this busyness isn’t simply ambition and drive; it’s also a “dread [of] what they might have to face in its absence.” That’s because “busyness serves as a kind of existential reassurance, [and] a hedge against emptiness.”

It’s our way of telling ourselves that our lives “cannot possibly be silly or trivial or meaningless” if we are “in demand every hour of the day.”

Reading Kreider’s words, Jesus’ invitation to the crowd in Matthew 11 came to mind, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” One of the reasons the Gospel is good news is that it says something we desperately need to hear: “You don’t have to try so hard. You are loved and valued beyond imagination. Nothing you do can possibly make that more true.”

The flipside of the good news is that the rejection of Jesus’ invitation to put on His yoke makes us vulnerable to the kind of ceaseless and pointless striving that Kreider describes. As St. Augustine famously wrote, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you.”

While it’s easy to find examples of this restlessness here in New York and in Washington where my BreakPoint colleagues live, it’s by no means limited to these places, and if we’re honest, not limited to non-Christians.

That raises the disturbing possibility that one of the reasons faith is conspicuously absent from the Times’ discussion of anxiety is that there aren’t enough examples of faith making a difference, that we Christians are as busy as everybody else. And that should leave all of us, if not anxious, at least a tad bit concerned.

Come to BreakPoint.org and click on this commentary. We’ll have some articles — and even a free, downloadable study by one of Chuck Colson’s favorite theologians, T. M. Moore — that will give you some food for thought and help you fight the busyness trap.

Further Reading and Information

The Garden of the Lord: Cultivating the Life of Faith
T. M. Moore | Wilberforce Press| Colsoncenter.org

Known by the Lord? They shall all know me (1)
T. M. Moore | The Christian Worldview Journal| Colsoncenter.org | March 5, 2012

Keep the Faith!
T. M. Moore | The Christian Worldview Journal| Colsoncenter.org | December 26, 2011

Time for a Break
T. M. Moore | The Christian Worldview Journal| Colsoncenter.org | June 6, 2010

Not So Fast: The Busy American Family
Mark Earley | BreakPoint.org| October 7, 2009

The Importance of Play: A Theology of Humankind from Hollywood, Part 3
Robert K. Johnston | The Christian Worldview Journal| Colsoncenter.org | November 28, 2011


Comments:

craving and hedging and fixing
you can read that post in it's entirety here, and I pray that you do- http://winterispast.blogspot.com/2008/02/finding-right-place.html
busy busy
One can, with remarkable success, string together a bunch of new things like a talisman against ever asking one's soul a single honest question.
-A. Qiunn
http://winterispast.blogspot.com/2008/02/finding-right-place.html
Sometimes it is hard to rest . . .
Your column comes during a very busy week for our family. I have a child with autism, and this week I am taking him to a camp where he will learn how to ride a bike. But since we only have one car, I am getting up at 5 am to take my husband to work. While this sounds like a "first world problem", it's complicated by the fact that I have health problems and don't always sleep well. And it's also complicated by the fact that I live in an area of the country (Atlanta, GA) that is a sprawling metropolis AND that has serious traffic problems.

While other parents worry about getting their kids to t-ball and soccer, we special needs parents worry about getting our kids to doctors, specialists, and therapy. And we desperately worry about what is going to happen to our children when we are gone.
John Piper
Brother Eric,
Last week your article on the issue of homosexual marriage referendum in Minn.was not entirely correct. After reading the sermon of Rev Piper, his stance was very clear about marriage as one woman and one man. I feel that by using the newspaper quote without the entire message was a bit disingenuous, and misleading.
Charles Miller