Be still and know that I am God. (Ps. 46:10)
It is a hard thing to do. We
think we would like to be still until we have to do exactly that. We are given
the opportunity to do so several times a day. We allow other things to crowd in
on that still time. We keep our schedules before us. We have reminders that pop
up on our phones, that E-mail us automatically when we have an appointment
coming up, or we carry pocket calendars around with us lest we miss some
momentous event.
Many of us do not like
stillness and quiet. We crowd our lives full of events and responsibilities to
avoid the still time, for it is in that still time that the Scripture promises
us God’s presence.
Yes, He creeps in and whispers
something that the everyday rush and noise would have allowed us to ignore in
almost any other circumstance. However, in the stillness of that quiet moment
there can be little doubt that God has spoken and is now still, awaiting our
response. What do you say when God shows up in the midst of your quiet time?
Unfortunately, many of us treat Him like someone we hardly know. We don’t know
what to say, how to act, or how to respond to His actions.
This short piece was one of
the more difficult things for me to write in a long time. I started and threw
out maybe as many as a dozen ideas, some made it all the way to the words on
the page only to fall victim to the delete button. I was frustrated. I got
anxious. The topics were good, but why didn’t the words seem to be the ones
that I needed to say.
In frustration, I put my head
down. I was still. I heard God saying, “This is where I have wanted you for a
long time, but you have been too busy for me. Even your “quiet times” have been
whirlwinds of activity.”
“Yes, Lord, you are right.
You’re always right.”
It took a bit, but I soon saw
that God had been trying to get my attention for some time on this matter. I
remember reading a chapter in a book, Christianity
for the Rest of Us, how many churches were incorporating extended moments
of silence into their worship services. I had read another article about
pastoral Sabbaths and the need to get away to experience the presence of God. Both
of those articles were duly noted and filed away as trends, something to talk to
the worship committee, or novel to try on some future Sunday.
All the time God had been doing
something so much greater than giving me
new ideas to try in some future context. No, God had been calling to me. “You! Hey,
You there, come over here and experience my divine presence.” So, before I
wrote this I sat down with God. I got no new talking points, no sermon
revelations, no soul shaking instructions. I simply experienced the presence of
my Savior in a calm and comforting way.
So, on this Advent Sunday of
Hope, get rid of the hustle, don’t rush anywhere, turn off all the media and
all the electronics, and enjoy the Hope of the Gospel as your Savior sits with
you.
Pastor Craig