be quiet

Be quiet.

The gray, white, and brown of the landscape makes me think the winter artist paid a visit to Chip and Joanna at the Silos and gained inspiration from the color scheme they have made famous. The spaces of silence are broken periodically by the red cardinal pecking at the window for his daily “hello” or the sound of a piece of ice breaking off the roof and falling to the deck. I am alone–a rarity for me. I live in a busy, bustling, noisy house with people running in and out and never knowing who will knock on the door. That is a blessing. People are a blessing and a gift and I am thankful for them. But on this gray and white and brown day with snow falling, the people are all in other towns and other places and the massive sound of silence startles me and causes me to stop. Sit down. Pick up the journal and the pen, but don’t write just yet. Listen.

Be quiet.

We are coming up on a year now since the powers that be mandated that we all just stop and go home because sickness had invaded the world. We travel for a living. Like all the time. Like 8 days out of 10, sleeping in another bed in another city or another country and almost always another time zone. And the mandate said, “Go home. Stay there.” So, we did. All of a sudden, it was back to cooking our own food if we wanted to eat. It was worshipping with our own family if we experienced worship. It was playing board games if we wanted entertainment. The kitchen cabinets did experience a transformation from brown to black and so did a few doors and some new pictures appeared on the walls and the pile of curtains in the corners assumed their places over the windows. But after the projects were done and we felt rested and had frozen meals to last for weeks, “normal” did not return and it was “now what?”

One morning, I was alone in my room while the rest of the house buzzed and hummed and I sat with His Word and my journal and wrote the question, “Lord, I have never been in this place before. What do you want out of me in this season?” I raised my pen, ready to write the answer. Almost immediately, it came: “Study to be quiet.”

Be quiet.

Okay, Lord. I hear You. I wrote it down. I knew it was from the New Testament, but didn’t know where, so I looked it up. And it said, “And that ye study to be quiet, and to do your own business, and to work with your own hands, as we commanded you;” (1 Thessalonians 4:11). I wonder why the Holy Spirit inspired Paul to write that? Was Thessalonica in the middle of a pandemic and people didn’t know how to handle it? Probably not, but it still makes me wonder why.

I have been to the modern city of Thessaloniki and have wandered down in the areas in which Paul probably walked. I have seen the bustling seaport and the old stone tower in which prisoners were thrown for whatever offenses they had committed. The ancient city center was a bustling arena of humanity and probably hasn’t changed much through the centuries since that verse was written. To be honest, on my visit there I didn’t feel so very different as I feel going around in my own town and living my daily life. Lots of market stalls, cafes and restaurants, transportation options, people being people. Separated by centuries, but not separated at all by spirits and by need for love and by grasping for significance and the driving desire to be recognized as having worth.

Be quiet.

Paul told them to study to be quiet. Being quiet doesn’t come naturally. Even the most soft-spoken among us has a need to be heard and to make our voice known. So, if we are going to have to be quiet, we must study how to do it.

The only textbook I know which can teach that is the Word of God. I don’t think we will learn how to be quiet on Facebook or Twitter or Instagram. I don’t think being quiet is part of the curriculum as we text all the live long day to whomever, wherever, whatever we feel we need to say. It takes effort to be quiet in this radical, noisy world. It takes effort to be quiet when everybody around us is losing their head and becoming a different personality like a chameleon every other minute.

Be quiet.

I have no doubt that was the Voice of God to me that morning. And as we navigate through these stormy, blinding waters of these strange days, is it perhaps the Voice of God to you? Lord, how do I manage this new life? How do I homeschool the kids as I do my job from the office in the closet? How do I teach the Bible stories as we sit in the living room instead of on the church pew? How do I be the leader in ministry I’m supposed to be when the rules are changing every other day? How do I do this? How do I do that?

Be quiet.

Find a place of solitude for 15 minutes and take a pen, your journal, and your Bible. Write down the “How do I…” questions. Then, be quiet. Listen. He will answer you.

Be quiet.

the filter of first

“I can’t think in the morning. My body gets up, but my brain doesn’t wake up until noon.”

“I am SO not a morning person.”

“My mornings are chaotic. No way can I connect with God.”

“I’m a young mom. I haven’t slept through the night in forever. I have to drag myself out of bed way too early as it is. I simply cannot connect with God in the mornings.”

“I already get up at 5:00 a.m. to go to work. And now you are saying I have to get up earlier than that? That’s legalistic and extreme. I can talk to God anytime during the day and He hears me.”

We have all heard it.  We have probably all said it in one form or another at one time or another.  But regardless of our personal opinions and preferences, there is no denying the compelling case that the Word makes for meeting God in the mornings. 

Whatever you do first in the day is the filter through which everything else in the day passes.

Whatever you do first in the day is the filter through which everything else in the day passes.

  • If you start with texting, you are beginning your day through the filter of earthly relationships.
  • If you start with Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, you are beginning your day through the filter of the thoughts and activities of other people.
  • If you start your day with internet, you are beginning your day through the filter of earthly events, crises, and situations.
  • If you start your day with conversation, you are beginning your day through the filter of the needs of your home.

Let your first thoughts be thoughts of Him.

Let your first words be words to Him.

Let your first communication be from Him through His Word.

If your day begins through the filter of His Word and communication with Him, everything else that happens in the day takes on a totally different hue.

“Be still and know that I am God.”
Psalm 46:10

The filter of first.

Keep reading.  These are not my words, they are His…

Psalm 108:2-“Awake, psaltery and harp: I myself will awake early.”

Psalm 143:8-“Cause me to hear thy lovingkindness in the morning; for in thee do I trust: cause me to know the way wherein I should walk; for I lift up my soul unto thee.”

Proverbs 8:17-“I love them that love me; and those that seek me early shall find me.”

Mark 1:37-“And in the morning rising up a great while before day, he went out, and departed into a solitary place, and there prayed.”

Isaiah 50:4-“The Lord God hath given me the tongue of the learned, that I should know how to speak a word in season to him that is weary: he wakeneth morning by morning, he wakeneth mine ear to hear as the learned.”

Psalm 5:3-“My voice shalt thou hear in the morning, O lord; in the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee, and will look up.”

Psalm 55:17-“Evening, morning, and at noon will I pray and cry aloud and he shall hear my voice.”

Psalm 57:8-“Awake up, my glory; awake, psaltery and harp: I myself will awake early.”

Psalm 63:1-“O God, thou art my God; early will I seek thee:”

Let the Filter of First guide every single day of your life.

© 2014 by Melani Brady Shock

revelation prayer

Below is the prayer printed on the bookmark contained in the Eat This Book study.  It should be prayed each time we open the Scriptures. I keep it in my Bible at the spot where I will begin reading each day. . .

Dear Lord.
Thank you for this day.
Thank you for your goodness and kindness toward me.
As I open the pages of your Words to me, I ask that you speak to me.
Open my eyes to see.
Open my ears to hear.
Give understanding to my mind.
Fill my heart with your love.
Fill my soul with your peace.
Reveal to me what you would have me know and understand from
this Logos. . .this Living Word. . .this day.
I will accept, embrace, and obey your Word.
I give you praise and thanksgiving for allowing me
such intimate communion with you.
AMEN.

© 2012 by Melani Brady Shock

the nona freeman prayer for night people

(originally posted on 12/15/2011)

My daughter recently tweeted about praying the “Nona Freeman prayer” and how God took her up on it and she wasn’t sure if she was glad about that or not. (Posted tongue-in-cheek, of course.) We got several questions as to what we were talking about and the explanation takes up more than the 140 characters Twitter allots.

Here is the story behind what we call “The Nona Freeman Prayer for Night People”:

Nona Freeman was a veteran missionary for many years to Africa.  She told incredible stories and  probably died with more stories in her head and heart than ever came out. 

She was a woman of faith and of prayer and a believer that God could and would do anything for His people…the problem was/is that we just don’t ask Him enough and specifically.

She described herself as a night person.  One who was more alert in the evening, who would rather stay up late and sleep later in the morning.  She was not one who woke up early, chirping with the birds, and ready to conquer the world.  That came later in the day.  She was a night person.

However, she was a firm believer that God needed the first part of our day.  Therefore, she knew that in order to give that to Him, she must not sleep until the last minute, but must wake up earlier than necessary in order to have time with Him.  So, she prayed a prayer that went something like this:  “Lord, I know that I need to talk to you first thing in the morning.  But it is so hard for me to wake up and even though I set my alarm to get up earlier, I end up shutting it off to sleep until the last possible minute.  So Lord, I’m asking you to wake me up 30 minutes early every morning.  YOU wake me up.  Don’t let me go back to sleep.  Wake up my mind and my heart so that You and I can have quality time together before our day begins.  I want to, Lord, but my flesh is weak.  So YOU help me.  YOU wake me up!”

I heard her tell this story at our church when I was just a young girl and will never forget when she said, “And the Lord has done just that.  Regardless of what time I go to bed or how little sleep I have received, He always wakes me up 30 minutes before I must begin my day.”

I didn’t pray that prayer for many years, because I am the ultimate Night Person and, quite honestly, didn’t want God to answer it.  (Confession.) But as I matured in Him, I realized that it was absolutely vital that I spend time with him FIRST before anything else had a chance to enter my mind, my heart, and my spirit in the morning.  I realized all the scriptures in the Word that speak of spending time with Him first in the day, and was convicted.  So, I prayed the prayer.  He not only wakes me up 30 minutes early…He usually wakes me up 1 – 1 1/2 hours early!  And I’m fine with it!  I love it…there is no sweeter communion than the communion of first fruits.

I have challenged many of the young women in our church to pray that prayer.  I have tried to convey the necessity, the beauty, the love, the wonder that comes with meeting with Him first in the day.  I let them know they must mean it before they pray it, because He WILL answer it.

So, it takes them a while.  It’s serious business.  And when they are finally ready to get serious about it, they pray it.  And He answers them.

It’s “The Nona Freeman Prayer for Night People.” 

It’s a prayer that will change your life if you are willing to allow your life to be changed.

© 2011 by Melani Brady Shock