
There are times in the Christian life when the fire that once burned brightly begins to flicker. Late-night prayer and early-morning devotions start to lose their warmth, replaced with only routine and duty. It usually happens slowly—a little less excitement and a little more effort to press on. Before you know it, you are running on fumes.
Martyn Lloyd Jones, in his book Spiritual Depression, suggests that we are most vulnerable to weariness in the period of life between youth and old age because “there are compensations in youth and compensations in old age that do not exist in the middle years.”
When we were young and entered the Christian life and work, there was an excitement, a freshness, that permeated all we did, but as we age, it all begins to grow familiar. The work can also start to feel repetitive as we do the same thing day after day. Along with this, the earlier excitements that brought us up to this level of work and energy begin to fade away, and we are left with toil but no enthusiasm. Lloyd Jones says, “There we are on that level [of work], and the difficulty is to keep going on that level while lacking the stimulus that took us there.”
This exertion without exuberance leads us to a point where we are not “so much tired of the work as tired in it.” If you find yourself in this situation, Lloyd Jones lays out three distinct temptations we must resist when we grow weary.
You’ve done enough—why keep going?
When you grow weary, you will hear the cry from within that this is too much. These voices will tell you it is time for you to give up. They will tell you that your labor is in vain, and perhaps it is time for you to rest from well-doing and let others take the reins.
Though a sabbatical or a vacation may be appropriate if you have not had one in a while, this is not the time to give up laboring for the Lord. You must resist this temptation to give up. You will reap in due season, so do not let the temptation to quit take that blessing away from you (Gal. 6:9).
Just keep going—even if there’s no joy left.
The second temptation is even more sinister. That is the temptation to press on while assuming that weariness is all we should expect going forward. Do not resign yourself to the exhaustion. God has not called us to lifeless drudgery.
Lloyd Jones puts it this way, ” The danger at this point is to say something like this: Well, I have lost that something which I had, and obviously I shall not get it back again. But I am going on, and out of loyalty I will go on, as a sheer duty. I have lost the enjoyment I once had, that is gone and undoubtedly gone forever.” People who do this go on in a “dragging condition.”
Do not give into the spirit of resignation. This resignation is a temptation to sinfulness. Joyless Christian service is not what the Lord has called us to. There is hope, and the Lord can provide the strength we need, just like he did for Caleb (Joshua 14:10-11). Don’t settle for weary endurance—seek the joy of the Lord as your strength.
Turn to quick fixes—anything that promises to ease the burden.
The third temptation that comes to us is to try to help God in supplying us with the needed energy and relief. We see this regularly in the working world when people turn to alcohol and drugs to provide strength and to relieve the weight of the burden they are carrying.
This temptation to use artificial stimulants happens spiritually as well. If we are weary in the work of the church or our Christian life, what we often think we need is some new program or attraction to liven things up. The thought goes like this, “Let’s bring in new entertainment. If our worship is worn and routine, we can add lights, a fog machine, or a host of other amusements.” All of this is artificial hype. It is a substitution for what we really need: the strength and joy of the Lord.
Among other things, many weary Christians will begin to seek rest by spending hours watching Netflix; others make social media their default retreat whenever the burden of work seems too much. Since none of these substitutes can provide what is truly needed, much like alcohol and drugs, all we are doing is exhausting ourselves further.
Lloyd Jones puts it this way, ”As he becomes more exhausted, so he will need to have still more drink and still more drugs; and so the process goes on in a cumulative manner. And it is exactly the same in the spiritual realm.” Do not give in to this temptation; it is a cistern that cannot hold water, and it will only make conditions worse. Don’t fall for substitutes—go to the only source that truly satisfies.
Three Sources of Encouragement to Fill Your Sails
Provided that we are not overworking and we are taking care of our bodies by giving them proper rest, to fight all three of these temptations, we must do what we are called to do with any temptation. We must resist the devil, and he will flee. The first gust of wind we need in our sails is to preach the gospel to ourselves and remember what we were saved from and were called to. “You are set in the midst of the most glorious campaign into which man could ever enter, and you are on the noblest road that the world has ever known.” Do not let that truth slip from your mind.
The second blast of wind we need to move our ships forward is remembering that this life is not our place of rest. Our rest is coming, and it will be glorious. Set your eye on the prize promised by the gospel. Jesus is coming again, and his reward is with him. He will give to each person according to what he has done (Rev. 22:12). Cheer your heart with thoughts of the return of your Savior, and let that joy drive you heavenward.
Finally, the third and most consistent wind we need in our sails is the presence of God. God is the gospel, and he is our ultimate reward. Since you have been justified in Christ, he is with you and available to you now. Draw near to God and he will draw near to you. They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength. So take heart, weary Christian. The battle is not in vain, and your reward is nearer than you think.
-D. Eaton
And let us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not give up. – Galatians 6:9
-D. Eaton

Agree with this!
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