Making a quiet space in our spiritual life.
I am concerned that our only weekly service offers very little space for being silent, for listening, for making a connection with the still small voice that often gets drowned out by the noise of our lives. I used to practice what I called a daily quiet time every day. I have fallen out of the habit lately and am now realizing how necessary that time was for my spiritual life, indeed for all of life. As I pondered my reasons for neglecting this important part of life, I began to wonder if the church, as a body often neglects this as well. I believe we do neglect this time of quietness and to our detriment. We spend a great deal of time trying to make the worship service "flow" and trying to bring a passionate response from the congregation through uplifting sermons and often loud emotionally charged music complete with visual stimulation just in case filling one sense (hearing) is not enough. I think all of these things are good things and the more senses we can have involved in our services then the more likely people are going to respond in a positive way with our Creator. But I also wonder if we are carrying on a one-sided relationship with God. We have very little time in our service to just listen to God. We talk about God and about what God is doing. We sing of our adoration of God and we even sing to God with songs such as "I Love You Lord". But we very seldom get quiet enough to hear any response that God might have for us. We all have people in our lives who talk "at" us and seem never interested in our response. I fear the church is becoming one of those who talks "at" God but isn't much interested in God's response. Maybe our main weekly service is not the most appropriate service to encourage the other side of the conversation. We can and should all try to listen everyday in our personal lives to what God is trying to share with us so that when we come together as a body then we can share through our songs and sermons and testimonies what God has done and is doing but shouldn't there be some place and time that the church can meet together to listen to the other side of the conversation?
I believe recently we have heard some begin to cry out for more quietness in the service. I don't necessarily think they are calling for a quiet time with God or a time of meditation though I know some are asking for a more quiet place and time to worship or express their worship in that manner. I also know that some are really just asking for less noise at certain times in the service. I wonder if we had a different time during the week that was geared towards a service of more quiet worship and meditation if we might begin to be more tolerant of the "louder" Sunday evening worship service. I suppose tolerant isn't really the word I am looking for here but rather "enjoy" the Sunday service. It would seem quite like being fed dessert all time, after awhile you can no longer enjoy that wonderful dessert because you are lacking the other wonderful foods such as vegetables and meat and bread. There is no balance and your body would begin to rebel. So I think our spirit is rebelling a little at being fed a steady diet of stimulation in our weekly service without the balance of a more quiet time of listening to God's response to our worship and our prayer. I'm sure that not all of us need such a structured service in order to make a quiet place in our spiritual lives but some of us desperately need a more structured place available to us to nurture this part of us.
I think we are getting bogged down with focusing on the "noise" and trying to fix the "noise" level when maybe we should focus on the lack of a space in our lives for quiet. It is not the noise that keeps us from experiencing this solitude and quiet worship in our lives but rather the lack of setting aside time for both the noise and the quiet. We should rejoice in our Sunday worship service and not be afraid to express the more louder emotions but if we are to be free to do this and enjoy this in ourselves and others then we have to learn to set aside a space and time and make a quiet place in our spiritual life and we must do that as a corporate body as well as individuals. I believe God will speak to us individually but I also believe God wants to speak to us as a church. Sometimes we need to hear God together just as we need to sing together to God.
As you know I am one who has cried out for a more quiet service. I have not heard anything from God during the service in quite some time. I don't doubt His presence, He has always been there. There have just been so many distractions lately that His presence seems to go unnoticed. I miss the times of being able to feel His presence throughout the service. I am hopeful we will find a way to quiet ourselves and put the focus back on why we are all there.
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