Emerging from the Gospel are three important spiritual matters:
After being sent out:
The Twelve rejoin Jesus and tell him all they have done and taught (Mark 6).
At the end of each day, our prayer life can take this shape: speaking to the Lord about what we have done and said.
The need for rest is then acknowledged:
Jesus said to them, ‘You must come away to some lonely place all by yourselves and rest for a while.’
We are spirit, soul and body (1 Thessalonians 5) and the connection between each of the composites is profound:
Failing to rest the body will affect spirit and soul.
Likewise, if the mind and will are hard at it ‘twenty-four seven,’ then we can expect bodily collapse.
Then again, inattentiveness to the need of the spirit – our capacity for God – will completely disorientate body and soul.
However, the crowd hijacks Jesus. Rest cannot be secured. Jesus magnanimously accepts the situation:
Jesus saw a large crowd and he took pity on them because they were like sheep without a shepherd.
Our goal is to see people the way Jesus sees them – and like Jesus to teach them with patience.
Amen.