This post is a little bit longer than the other Hideaway posts. It is also the last one for the Hideaway series, if you will. I hope that my lessons and musings have thus far contributed good to your own journey. I have included the bibliography here as well.
Johnson,
Jan. When the Soul Listens:
Finding Rest and Direction in Contemplative Prayer. Colorado Springs, CO:
NavPress, 1999.
———. “SF 611 Christian Formation and Soul Care
Intensive.” Class notes, Intersession course, Colorado Springs, January 20-24,
2014.
Willard,
Dallas. Hearing God:
Developing a Conversational Relationship with God. updated and expanded /
by jan johnson. ed. Downers Grove, Ill.: IVP Books, 2012.
God
speaks, and silence is the context from which He speaks. That is to say our attentiveness invites The
Lord into conversation, and not necessarily our lack of words or activity. When we pay attention to Him, we notice when
He reveals to us basic truths about who we are, or challenges us about what existence
apart from Him looks like, or else shows and invites us to share His deep
longings.[1] It is a silence of soul, which allows our
spirits to cry “Abba! Father!” by His Spirit (Romans 8:15). From this posture we can hear and receive all
that our gracious God would offer to us, and reciprocate with all of our heart,
mind, soul, and strength (cf. Matthew 22:37).
Perhaps
more to the point, silence is the context from which we can more readily hear
God. Our Creator is not rude, but is
patient to wait for and hear our cares and concerns, and endure our lapses in
attention and affection, until we have come to the end of our words, after
which we might come to realize the comfort of His presence, and rest therein.
As
we have been made each from the love of God, and as we all are attempting to
abide in that love, God is changing our perception of one another, that we can
regard each other according to His perspective.
This includes care with our words for the sake of others. I do not know how much or how explicitly this
is stated among God’s saints, but I believe that God chooses His words
carefully. If we were to discern our
current functional image of God, for example, and then seek to receive even
more of who God is, we would certainly find that He fulfills and yet deepens
our correct assumptions about His nature.
Keeping this in mind, we also, who desire to develop a lifestyle of
communing with God, know that He is not harsh in revealing the divine nature to
us. When we discover the limits of our
faith we joyfully long for more, regardless of our often timid advances toward
that end.
I
am grateful for what I have learned from four days spent away from many
distractions. During this class, which
took place in the context of a retreat, I encountered God as my Beloved Friend. I interacted with others both in silence and
simplicity, in addition to the times of noise and laughter. I was reminded of the journey on which God
has brought me thus far, and I am encouraged to see the ways by which He is
making me more like Him.
From
this retreat, my view of God has developed, and I am more assured that He
delights in me, cares for me, and wants me to be beside Him so that I can
cooperate with Him in the transformation of my soul. In once saw God as an aloof though beneficent
Boss who basically had His own glory in mind and allowed me to have my small
role in bringing that glory to Him. I
have come to realize the error in this way of perceiving the Almighty. Though I am still learning what our
friendship with one another looks like, I know that His strength is for me,
because of His love for me. He calls me
to His glory. God delights in me, simply
because. He is attentive to my life, and
even to my words. He longs for me—and
all of us—to encounter Him experientially: to reveal Himself as the Love from
which I find life, and to communicate to me that He wants communion with me,
until I am found to be hidden within Him, and He in me. This is the marvelous love of the Lord! Imagine if Monday through Friday of every
week were filled with opportunities to encounter this God.
[1] Jan Johnson, When the Soul Listens: Finding Rest
and Direction in Contemplative Prayer (Colorado
Springs, CO: NavPress, 1999), 155-181.
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