“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
Reprint permission: You have permission to
reprint for your ministry or repost as long as you do not alter the post and
give credit to its author. An email note from you would be appreciated by the
author and a link back to this blog is always appreciated.