“Be still, and know that I am God”
(Psalm 46:10).
Nowadays, one reason we
know so little about joy
is that we
know so little about stillness.
In this age of the world, most of us are busy with a myriad of
priorities and projects. And we
pride
ourselves in it. The person whose schedule is packed has more prestige
than the fellow who “doesn’t have much to do.” But joy — real
joy
— is in seriously short supply.
We’ll try to define “stillness” in a moment, but just
think, by way of contrast, how unlikely it would be for joy to surface
in the kind of lives we lead. Our “busyness” produces so much clamor and
clatter, the voice of joy is drowned out. It simply gets lost in the
shuffle. Even if joy were to appear, it would go unnoticed.
But what does it mean to be “still” before the Lord? It
doesn’t mean being physically still, though stillness of the body is
often involved. And it doesn’t mean not saying anything, though that is
often involved as well. “Stillness” before God means reverence,
humility, openness, and forgetfulness of self. It means putting our
minds into a thoughtful posture. It means having our activity stilled
and our words hushed by a compelling sense of the power of God Almighty.
Above all, it means having a servant’s readiness to
obey:
“Speak, Lord, for your servant hears”
(1 Samuel 3:9).
I suggest that it would be rare for a person to
experience genuine joy if he or she were not mentally disposed in the
manner we’ve just described. That is the only kind of environment in
which real joy can make an appearance. Just as happiness eludes those
who “pursue” it, joy is even harder to bring under our own power. It
doesn’t come “on command,” but rather it is experienced, often quite
unexpectedly, by those who are “still” before the Lord. Unstill people
are simply not good candidates for joy.
So God’s instruction to us is this:
Be still, and know that I am God.
We shouldn’t obey that instruction selfishly, simply so we can have the
joy we want. Nevertheless, we won’t have any joy if we don’t obey it.
Without a reverent stillness at the center of our hearts, joy has no
chance to break through the noise of earthly life. Of all the killjoys
in the world, irreverent busyness is the worst.
“The heart that is to be filled to the brim with holy joy
must be held still” (George Bowes).
Other Articles by Gary Henry
When Strength is a Disadvantage
Competence
When Strength is a Disadvantage
Hard Times
Truth the
Touchstone