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What if the pursuit of rest isn't about doing less, but about discovering who you are when the doing stops?
Cle Adore, songwriter and former worship pastor, explores the profound difference between taking a break and finding true rest. From ministry burnout to creative awakening, from constant doing to simply being, this conversation uncovers rest as something far more complex than we've been taught.
After over a decade in full-time ministry, Cle shares the story of stepping away for the first time, only to discover that rest isn't found in the absence of activity. It lives in the presence of safety, in relationships made right, and in the uncomfortable space where you finally ask: "Can I be okay with just me?"
For worship leaders and creatives who've built their identity around constant service, this conversation offers something deeper than productivity tips or self-care advice. It's an invitation to consider rest as a practice of resistance against the machinery that keeps us moving when we should be still.
By The Hymnal with Daniel LaSheaWhat if the pursuit of rest isn't about doing less, but about discovering who you are when the doing stops?
Cle Adore, songwriter and former worship pastor, explores the profound difference between taking a break and finding true rest. From ministry burnout to creative awakening, from constant doing to simply being, this conversation uncovers rest as something far more complex than we've been taught.
After over a decade in full-time ministry, Cle shares the story of stepping away for the first time, only to discover that rest isn't found in the absence of activity. It lives in the presence of safety, in relationships made right, and in the uncomfortable space where you finally ask: "Can I be okay with just me?"
For worship leaders and creatives who've built their identity around constant service, this conversation offers something deeper than productivity tips or self-care advice. It's an invitation to consider rest as a practice of resistance against the machinery that keeps us moving when we should be still.