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No rest for the weary
- You must keep persevering no matter how tired or overworked you are.
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More About No Rest For The Weary
What does no rest for the wicked mean?
Originating as a biblical quote, no rest for the wicked is a proverb that means evil-doers will face eternal punishment, popularly extended to mean that one’s work never ceases.
A closely-related expression is no rest for the weary, a proverb that says that one must keep working no matter how tired they get.
Where did the no rest for the wicked come from?
No rest for the wicked begins as no peace for the wicked in a 1425 rendering of the Old Testament’s Book of Isaiah 48:2: “The Lord God said, peace is not to wicked men.” The sentiment is echoed in Isaiah 57:20, which in the King James Version reads: “But the wicked are like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire and dirt.”
The now familiar version of the saying, no rest for the wicked, is recorded in a 1574 translation of a sermon of John Calvin. In Christian theology, the passage is interpreted as meaning that unrepentant sinners (the wicked) will meet with damnation upon death (no peace/rest).
The biblical passage made its way into secular metaphorical contexts by the early 1700s, taking on a humorous tone by the 1800s and conveying that work and responsibilities never cease, originally with a tongue-in-cheek implication that it’s due to their sinful (lazy) ways. The saying is usually used with reference to the speaker (e.g,. I’d love to stay and chat longer, but I’ve got a report to finish. No rest for the wicked!). A 1933 comic strip of Little Orphan Annie, where Annie has to keep after an old miser who keeps putting off replacing a church organ, used the phrase as its title, which may have helped popularize its ironic use.
Over time, no rest for the wicked maintained its humorous tone but contemporary uses often omit any implication that one’s ongoing work is due to any faults—as if it’s just the nature of being a modern worker. The saying has become common enough to feature in popular titles. For example, heavy metal rocker Ozzy Osbourne named his 1998 album No Rest for the Wicked, alluding both to the proverb and the darker, morbid imagery of his style and music.
How to use the term no rest for the wicked
Familiar to religious and secular people alike, no rest for the wicked is sometimes used truer to its biblical origins to encourage children to behave or in reference to the punishment of criminals.
As an informal saying, no rest for the wicked is used in speech and writing to comment on how a workload ultimately increases if a person has a poor work ethic. This can be wryly self-applied (I slept in and now I have to stay late at work. No rest for the wicked!) or used to admonish someone (You missed class so now you have to copy the whole lesson by hand. No rest for the wicked.)
Perhaps more commonly, no rest for the wicked is used as a humorous stock phrase issued when someone is simply very busy or to characterize that there’s always work to be done (e.g., The year-end report is finished. Now, to start collecting the data for next year’s … No rest for the wicked.). In this use, wicked perhaps implies the opposite of the wicked person in the original or early extended proverb: people who just can’t be idle and always have a lot going on in their lives.
As Osbourne’s album suggests, no rest for the wicked has been used as a title for numerous creative works, including songs, albums, episodes of television, webcomics, and films, including the 2003 fantasy webcomic by Andrea Peterson and a 2014 song by Swedish performer Lykke Li. Evoking the original sense of the proverb, the titles are often applied to works about wicked or flawed people who are laboring to complete something in spite of their failings.
More examples of no rest for the wicked:
“On top of producing, writing and filming, my husband and I thought it would be a great idea to sell our Los Angeles home and move to … wait for it … Austin, Texas! Yes, an entirely new state. Probably not the best timing, but there’s no rest for the wicked.”
—Maryse Ouellet, People, March 2018
Note
This content is not meant to be a formal definition of this term. Rather, it is an informal summary that seeks to provide supplemental information and context important to know or keep in mind about the term’s history, meaning, and usage.
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