Reflection on Exodus 16:28–30
Adonai said to Moshe, “How long will you refuse to observe my mitzvot and teachings? Look, Adonai has given you the Shabbat. This is why he is providing bread for two days on the sixth day. Each of you, stay where you are; no one is to leave his place on the seventh day.” So the people rested on the seventh day.
— Sh’Mot (Exodus) 16:28–30, CJB
In real estate and mortgage lending, constant availability is often worn like a badge of honor. Phones never go off. Emails never stop. Being reachable 24/7 is equated with commitment, excellence, and even faithfulness to clients.
But Scripture tells a very different story.
In Exodus 16, God does not correct Israel for laziness…He corrects them for refusing to rest. The issue was not work ethic. It was trust.
God’s Provision Comes Before the Command to Rest
Notice the order in the text.
God does not say, “Rest, and I’ll see if I take care of you.”
He says, “I have already provided enough, now rest.”
“Adonai has given you the Shabbat. This is why he is providing bread for two days…”
Rest was possible because provision was already secured. The Sabbath was not a test of discipline…it was a test of faith.
Do we actually believe God has provided enough?
The Hustle Can Become a Substitute for Trust
In sales-driven industries, overworking often masks a deeper fear:
- Fear of missing opportunities
- Fear of losing relevance
- Fear that provision depends entirely on our effort
Working nonstop can feel responsible, but Scripture exposes that sometimes it’s rooted in self-reliance, not stewardship.
When God says, “Stay where you are,” He is confronting the belief that more movement always equals more provision.
Sabbath Is Where Faith Meets Work
Faith does not mean we stop working.
It means we stop believing that our work is the source.
Laying labor down one day a week declares:
- God provides even when I am not producing
- My value is not measured by availability
- Obedience matters more than output
- I trust God with my pipeline, not just my effort
Sales culture says, “Never stop.”
God says, “Stop—because I already provided.”
What It Looks Like for Salespeople Today
Observing rest does not mean irresponsibility. It means intentional boundaries.
It can look like:
- One day a week fully offline
- Proactive communication before stepping away
- Systems that support clients without constant access
- Trusting that God is still at work when you are not
Rest is not disengagement…it is obedience.
Why Laying Labor Down Matters
Exodus 16 ends simply:
“So the people rested on the seventh day.”
Nothing fell apart.
Provision didn’t disappear.
God proved faithful.
Salespeople often fear that rest will cost them momentum. Scripture teaches the opposite: rest preserves alignment.
Closing Reflection
Where have I confused constant work with faithfulness?
Where is God asking me to trust His provision enough to pause?
What would it look like to lay my labor down – intentionally and obediently – each week?
Truth to Carry Forward
Rest is not a lack of faithfulness; it is a declaration that God has already provided enough.


