Wednesday, August 29, 2012

HOLY BOREDOM




“He says, “Be still, and know that I am God;     I will be exalted among the nations,
    I will be exalted in the earth.” – Psalm 46.10

“Holy Boredom”

By Stephen L. Dunn

Recently Dianne and I were blessed with the gift of four days at a rustic cabin in the mountains of Fulton County PA.  We were celebrating our 40th Anniversary with some special time together.  It was also a chance to escape a house that was almost neck deep in boxes as we were in the midst of packing up our house of eleven years to move.  (Did you ever notice how much you collect and then forget you ever owned until you have to move it to a new location?)

Our hosts, Dennis and Jean, graciously introduced to its comfortable amenities—which included being at the end of a lane in an area where the very few neighbors are very friendly, but things are quiet enough that you are likely to see deer standing in the field right outside your front door or hear a car on a road over two miles away.  It had a microwave and dishwasher so no one needed to spend much time in the kitchen.  Comfortable furniture inside where it was air conditioned.  Windows strategically placed to see the beauties of nature in every direction.  A front porch simply to rock and relax.

It also had no television or internet.  The nearest place with Wiifi was a McDonalds eleven miles away.  If you are a communications junkie, you were isolated beyond your wildest imagination. If you were hooked on ESPN or Rizolli and Iles, you were simply out of luck.

And that also made it incredibly quiet.

It was a place where media junkie or someone who always required the background noise of a TV to function—it was a place to be bored out of your skull.  There were times that even the nothing I was doing got old and I would seek something new to do from a selection that leaned towards stasis.

Most contemporary Americans find silence unnerving and boredom tends to be the unforgiveable sin from the day we are born.  We fill our days with many things to do, too many things usually to be done sanely if accomplished at all.  We find meaning in activity and worship accumulation as a measure of accomplishment—which is the measure of our self-worth.

It is interesting then that we hear these words from our Creator, “Be still and know that I am God.”  God rarely shouts or engages a publication relations firm.  He chooses silence at times to deliver His most compelling messages.  He tends to wait until we are ready to listen.

Busyness is the enemy of the soul because we rarely stop to hear God at all.

Perhaps a little holy boredom is God’s way of getting our attention.  That is, if we don’t rush to escape that boredom.

It’s a lesson that I, as a not-so-recovering workaholic, am trying to learn.


© 2012 BY STEPHEN L DUNN

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Saturday, August 18, 2012

WHO ARE YOU INFLUENCING?


“WHO ARE YOU INFLUENCING?”
 
 BY STEPHEN DUNN 

“Greet all God’s people in Christ Jesus. The brothers and sisters who are with me send greetings.  All God’s people here send you greetings, especially those who belong to Caesar’s household.” – Philippians 4:21-22

      Years ago there was a religious commercial on television.  It took place in a busy airport.  A high-powered businessman was racing through the turmoil accompanied by his entourage. The next scene was a little boy carrying a box of prized possessions walking carefully down the middle of the concourse, eyes fixed firmly on the contents of the box lest he lose some.  Then the inevitable happened.  The onrushing businessman collided with the little boy, knocking the box from his hands and scattering the contents.

      The little lad looked forlornly at the debris, somewhat immobilized with shock.  The businessman stopped and stooped, and began helping him retrieve the items.  His horde had passed by and then one of them spun on his heels and shouted, “My God, man, hurry up!”

      The boy looked up into the eyes of the businessman, and wide-eyed himself asked, “Are you God?”  The man smiled, finished his task and moved on.

      We often go careening through life with little thought upon our impact or influence.  We can be more focused on our agenda or our circumstances than on anything else, including those whose lives intersect ours.  Even when we have to slow down or are tied down to a situation, we do not stop to consider what our lives are communicating.  And we rarely plan what that witness will be.

      Yet unplanned or unplanned—our lives have influence and impact.

     The apostle Paul found himself imprisoned in Rome awaiting trial by Caesar.  A free spirit and constantly on the move apostle, he was now confined to a house in the center of the empire, under guard by soldiers from Caesar’s household guard.  Obviously Paul recognized this opportunity, albeit constrained and planned to continue his ministry to the Gentiles even with the uncertainty of whether or not he had much of an earthly future once Nero decided to try him.

      And in those words found at the conclusion of his letter to the Philippians are the evidence of that intentionality.

      What influence and impact are you planning, given the mission and the mission field that God has given you?

© 2012 by Stephen L. Dunn