I love to learn;
to play around with thoughts and ideas; to put those thoughts and ideas into
words and write them out on paper; to read how other people have looked at life
and figured things out; I love it all.
But in the end, after all is said and done, I have been brought to this
conclusion; “God is in heaven and you are on earth; therefore let your words be
few” (Ecclesiastes 5:1).
Of course the
words haven’t been few, but many. Books
upon books have been written about God.
Theologians and philosophers have spoken and written many things about
who God is and what He has done. In my
younger years I read and listened to all anyone had to say about how God works,
lives, and has His being. I listened to
the arguments and chose my side, and at time came up with my own third way of
seeing things. I don’t regret those
years, but something has changed for me.
I began to
experience the truth the “knowledge puffeth up” and I became uncomfortable being
with myself. An arrogance slipped in
unnoticed, disguised as being well educated.
I began speaking for God to others and to God more as an equal rather
than His child. Again I experienced the
truth that “one who increases knowledge increases sorrow”. I think Peter experienced these feelings
several times when he put himself on equal terms with Jesus; once when he
started telling Jesus what to do after he had just declared who Jesus was. A second time came when he was on the
mountain where Moses and Elijah appeared to speak with Jesus. Peter began ordering the event, only to be
stopped by God’s voice telling him who to listen to. Peter, like me and all human beings can take
our intimate relationship with God and run far beyond the boundaries, being a
little too big for our britches. This is
where I had come and when I realized it the sorrow came.
I had become
someone I didn’t like being around. I
became critical and judgmental, all robed in a false sense of
righteousness. In humility I repented out
of a heart knowledge that I was out of bounds.
Simply knowing and being in an intimate relationship is enough for
me. I enjoy being silent and still in
God’s Presence. I have been weaned of
impressing others and myself of all of my accumulated knowledge and
credentials. I don’t need to know
anything more than Him. He speaks to me
as I watch and enjoy the natural world that surrounds me. He speaks to me as I read the Scriptures,
giving me little treasures of thought to dwell on throughout the day. I come to know Him and know myself better
through His eyes. That helps me to know
how to respond to others and to the life I live in a contemplative way. My desire is to sit in silence and stillness,
to listen as He speaks, and to observe and obey all that He reveals to me. That is enough for me.
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