Sunday, June 21, 2009

Psalm 46:10

“Be still and know that I am God.”

I recently was very privileged and blessed to accompany Pastor on rounds to the nursing home. It just so happened to be the time of the month when he goes to give communion. We visited 3 people who received communion that day and man was it a moving experience. Our first stop we visited a retired pastor full of knowledge and advice (especially for someone my age). We simply talked with him for a while and after 30 minutes of talking or so we had a short service filled with prayer which ended in communion. We moved on and did the same thing with an elderly woman, this time the service was out of the hymnal, but the same procedure. Lots of talking followed by communion. The last stop was much the same more talking (in my case listening) which ended again in communion. After each of the individuals had partaken in communion it seemed like pastor and I just got up and left. Well it didn’t seem like it, because it is exactly what we did. On our rather short drive back I asked him, why do you leave right after communion. His response was simple, and also where this verse came to mind for me. He told me that it is only once a month that these individuals receive communion and that there is just a level of reverence that he feels should be their time alone with God. “Be still and know that I am God.”

So often while in nursing homes it appears to be hard to see God’s hand at work. These people I got to visit changed that opinion completely for me. They were open and caring to not only me, but to others in the home as well. They asked us to offer up prayers of petition for the others in the home, especially those searching for God as well as those who hadn’t found Him at all yet. And as I look back on it each and every one of them sat there. Completely still, knowing that God was there with them, not only through pastor and I, but through communion and through the individuals in the home as well.

The verse came to mind again today during the Gospel lesson. The reading was from the book of Mark the fourth chapter. The passage speaks of the calming of the sea. Christ spoke to the wind and the waves saying “Quiet, be still!” The wind and waves obeyed. It’s not just about the wind and the waves though. It’s about each and every one of us. How often are you quiet, just sitting there, listening to God? How often are you looking around through all the storms of this earth and seeing how He is working.

As you enter the mission field wherever it may be, in your house, your neighborhood, down the road at Victory Mission or Salvation Army, or whether it is overseas, in Africa, Brazil, or just in a neighboring country like Mexico, I urge you to be quiet and be still. Search to see where God is leading you. Search to see where He is already working, and where you can help out. Trust that God is working in your life, and look around to see how He is working in others. Be willing to step out of your boundaries and share Jesus with someone. Let Christ lead you to walk in His ways, so that others can have confidence, and when that storm of life comes their way, that they too can be still and know who God is.

1 comment:

Duane Highley said...

Thank you for this message and your observations. I am blessed by it today.