"As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for you, my…
THE SILENCE OF GOD
Oswald Chambers said, “Has God trusted you with His silence— a silence that has great meaning? God’s silences are actually His answers. Just think of those days of absolute silence in the home at Bethany! Is there anything comparable to those days in your life? Can God trust you like that, or are you still asking Him for a visible answer?”
While we often think God’s silence means He has abandoned us or left us, that is not true. God’s silence does not equal God’s absence. But what do we do in those moments? God is inviting us into something through His silence, just like He does through His leadings, promptings and moves in our lives.
Philip Yancey in his book Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference? gives some helpful steps on how to handle the silence of God or what seems like unanswered prayer:
- Do I have any sins to confess?
Many times our distance with God is because of unconfessed sin. When we struggle to move forward in relationships, when we struggle to hear God, to find freedom in our lives, it is because of our sin that we are carrying around; bitterness we haven’t let go of, people we still blame, situations we replay in our minds, and secrets we keep hidden.
- What are my motives for prayer?
Many times we pray to get something, to become rich or to have an easier life. We want God on our terms, and when this happens we miss God. This is why God feels distant. We aren’t looking for God, we are looking for a version of God we’ve created. In this, are you listening to God or just talking to God? Too often our prayer life is one way, me just telling God what I want, what I need, what He can do. I’m not asking Him questions, I’m not listening to Him. Another one I’ll have people say is, “I asked God about – (and in the blank is always something God has already told us the answer to in the Bible), but He didn’t answer.” Of course not; He’s already given you an answer. Why does He need to tell you again?
- Am I pursuing results rather than closeness with God?
I said earlier that the writers of Scripture spend little time answering why suffering happens and more time on what suffering, pain and silence produce in us. It produces perseverance, character, patience, hope, joy and so on.
- Is God preparing me for something?
Often God is using our spiritual dryness for something in the future. I read once that a vintner refuses to irrigate his vines because the stress caused by occasional drought produces the best, most tasty grapes. Seasons of dryness make the roots run deep, strengthening the vine for whatever the future holds.
- Pray with others.
This is the power of community, praying together and sharing evidences of God’s grace. When you sit with your Priest and share how you have seen God work in your life, and you can’t think of any, but the person next to you shares several, yes, you will get mad at first. Why isn’t God moving in my life like He is yours? Why is God not answering my prayers? But you will also start to see that even when you cannot see God at work in your life, He is at work.
A clergy once shared a testimony about his ministry. His church was growing and things were going well. They were outgrowing the space being used for worship, so they moved to a larger school. However, within six months the congregation had left. This really hurt him, rocked his confidence and made him question his leadership. Should he quit? Did he make a wrong choice? Was he a bad leader? During this time, every pastor he met was leading a church that was growing. He was watching his shrink. He asked God why, and got nothing.
Slowly he stopped asking why and he started asking God what He wanted to show him and what He wanted to invite him into. He then began to see His invitation to know His love for him which seemed like an odd answer because at the time it had very little to do with the ministry. And yet his relationship with God is deeper than ever before, his heart towards God and people is softer than ever before. Could that have happen without him losing his confidence? Maybe, but God saw that as the best way forward for him. Many times God’s perceived silence is to draw us deeper into Him. The dark place you are in might be God’s invitation to you to meet Him there. You will not walk out the same.
Henry Blackaby said, “You can respond to the silence of God in two ways. One response is for you to go into depression, a sense of guilt and self-condemnation. The other response is for you to have an expectation that God is about to bring you to a deeper knowledge of Himself. These responses are as different as night and day.” James, the brother of Jesus, says in the New Testament, “Draw near to God, and He will draw near to you.” James does not give us a time line on this promise, just that it is a promise. Too often the reason we miss God is our rush for something to happen, for something to change.
Frequently God’s silence is an invitation for us to stop, to slow down, to meet God and do some hard heart work. This can be painful and is often why we try to skip out of it. Yet, just like we will miss out on God’s best if we don’t follow His leadings, we will miss out on His best for us if we don’t follow His silence.
Have a blessed week as you trust God to speak to you through His Silence.