Have a Good Holiday
Now that Covid is not so rampant, people are beginning to expect to beable to have a holiday again, but it was not always so.
You often hear the phrase ‘Have a good holiday!’ being said at this time of year. When I hear it, it raises in my mind the intriguing question ‘Did Jesus ever take a holiday?’
I know He sometimes took His disciples off to lonely places so He could talk to them and teach them (Mark 6.31-32), though the crowds often followed them (v.33) and it was difficult to get away. But did He ever get a real holiday? Did He ever go to the sea-side and enjoy a swim in the Mediterranean?
There is one occasion when it might have happened. Mark records a time when Jesus made a visit to ‘foreign parts’. It was not all that far away from His home area of Galilee but Tyre, a city on the Mediterranean, was in another Roman province, Syro-Phoenicia, and, as it was Gentile land, many Jews avoided it. Perhaps it was because He wanted to get away from the pressure of His work for a while (Mark 7.24), to somewhere He would not be recognised and He could relax, that Jesus chose to go to the district of Tyre.
One of E.H.Bickersteth’s hymns takes the words of Jesus (Mark 6.31) and reflects on the need to ‘get away from it all’ for a while, a need which Jesus understood and knew.
Come ye yourselves apart and rest awhile,
Weary I know it of the press and throng;
Wipe from your brow the sweat and dust of toil,
And in My quiet strength again be strong .
It is interesting that, even on that ‘holiday’, Jesus could not totally get away from people who needed Him (Mark 7.25-26). Perhaps it is a reminder that there may be opportunities to serve the Lord even when we are on holiday, or to be uplifted ourselves by sharing in fellowship with other Christians. Whichever it is, have a good holiday! And that’s what Jesus would say to you for He knew the need for rest and refreshment of body and spirit, and He will go with you so that, in His quiet strength, you can be restored and renewed.
Have a good holiday!








