I am completely numb, totally spent, hopelessly crushed.
The agitation of my heart makes me groan.
(Psalm 38:8, The Voice)
Now the Lord provided a huge fish to swallow Jonah,
and Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights.
From inside the fish
Jonah prayed to the Lord his God.
(Jonah 1:17-2:1, NIV)
When the course
of his priestly assignment was completed, [Zechariah] went back home. It wasn’t
long before his wife, Elizabeth, conceived. She went off by herself for
five months, relishing her pregnancy. “So, this is how God acts to
remedy my unfortunate
condition!” she said.
(Luke 1:24-25, Message)
John Skinner's story of the novice monk has impressed upon many of us the words of council the novice was given:
Go to your cell,
and your cell will teach you everything.
The cell is a place of being away shut away with God, and with yourself. This may be a physical place or just a choice to be opened to Him in an interior way. We know it is exactly what we need, but avoid time alone and find other things to address in order to delay it. . .
The sun felt fenced in. His Father took him to the fence and bit him look. He looked and he did not notice a hedge of thorn or a barbed wire entanglement. He saw a fence of feathers.
'With his feathers shall he make a fence for you.' The son remembered how once he had said, 'There are days when little things go wrong, one after another, and I am distracted by much serving. Such days are very trying.' Then the Father had said, 'OIn such days take yourself take to yourself the words of your Savior and which you have so often given to others. Let them be your solace and your tranquility. But tell me, when you are under pressure, do you turn first to your companions or to me? Your companions listen and respond, but you never tell me about it. Let me see your face, let me hear your voice.
Amy Carmichael



In this busy season it is hard to remember to spend time alone with God. The focus is on holidays and celebrating and people might think you are strange or antisocial if you don't be around people a lot. I was hit the other day how the Shepherds were working on the night Jesus was born and they were the ones who saw the angles. :)
ReplyDeleteI wonder how silent and lonely the work was for the shepherds watching their flocks by night? Maybe this was a sort of solitude.
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