The List He Didn’t Finish

We often measure our days by what we complete. But on the Sabbath, God invites us to discover that peace does not come from finishing everything — it comes from trusting the One who never stops working, even when we do.

By Raffy Castillo

By Friday afternoon, Miguel’s notebook was still full.

Not full of ideas — full of tasks: calls not returned, emails not sent, projects half-done, promises postponed.

He stared at the list the way one stares at a mirror that reflects only inadequacy.

“Just a few more hours,” he told himself.
But he had said that many times before — and the hours always multiplied.

This time, however, sunset was approaching. And with it, the Sabbath.

The Fear of Stopping Too Soon

Miguel had learned to equate worth with completion.

If the list wasn’t finished, he felt unfinished. If tasks remained, rest felt irresponsible. Stopping felt like surrender — and not the good kind.

Even on previous Sabbaths, he carried work in his head. His body might rest, but his mind kept racing through undone things.

That Friday, as the sky slowly softened into evening, he felt the familiar tug: Finish first. Then rest.

But something inside him resisted.

What if rest was not the reward for completion…
but the expression of trust?

A Small Act of Courage

Miguel did something that felt strangely brave.

He closed his notebook. Not because the list was done — but because the day was.

He whispered, almost apologetically, “Lord, I don’t know how to leave things unfinished… but I’m trying.”

And with that, he entered the Sabbath carrying questions instead of control.

What Happens When We Let Go

The next morning, Miguel woke without the usual tightness in his chest.

Nothing dramatic had changed. Deadlines were still waiting. Problems were still real.

But he noticed something different: his mind was not gripping the day.

He prayed slowly. He read Scripture without scanning for the clock. He sat quietly, watching sunlight move across the floor.

And a realization settled gently in him: The world did not pause because he stopped working. It kept moving — safely, steadily, under God’s care.

The Lesson of the Unfinished List

As the day unfolded, Miguel saw his list differently.

Some tasks lost their urgency. Some worries softened. Some problems shrank to proper size.

He realized that much of his stress had not come from the work itself, but from the belief that everything depended on him.

The Sabbath corrected that belief with grace.

It reminded him that:

–God carries what we cannot

–God completes what we cannot

–God holds what we must lay down

What He Chose Before Sunset

Before the Sabbath ended, Miguel opened his notebook again.

The list was still there. But it no longer felt like a verdict.

He added one more line at the bottom of the page: “Today, I rested — and God still held everything together.”

For the first time, that felt like progress.

Sabbath Reflection

The Sabbath does not wait for us to finish everything.

It comes precisely when things are still unfinished — to teach us that we are not the ones holding the world together.

It invites us to put down what we cannot complete, and to rest in the faith that God never leaves His work undone.

This Sabbath, may you release your list, even for a day.
May you trust what you cannot control.
May you rest without apology.

And may you discover that sometimes,
the holiest thing you can do
is to stop — and let God continue.

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