“But I, through the abundance of your
steadfast love,
will enter your house,
I will bow down toward your holy temple in awe
of you.”
— Psalm 5:7 (NRSV)
The troubled nature of our spirits
in torment, having found ourselves venturing on a lonely, painful road, is the
state, ironically, inviting us to journey once again with the Lord our God.
Not that such a journey should
ever, by God’s will, be interrupted.
Pain, this way, is a good thing—it
leads us to God.
But it is by our broken, fallen
state such spiritual interruptions take us into these reaches of spiritual
nonchalance, whereby we struggle to exist. Our identities in God have been
compromised so much in these places we barely recognise ourselves as people of
God.
We have entered spiritual fatigue,
and so sudden is our realisation.
And so there is the invitation: it is written by the Letter of pain; the
Epistle of loneliness; the Covenant of emotional distance; a Note from our God
to venture in, and drink from the well of healing—by God’s Presence.
Entering God’s Presence
“But I... will enter your house,” says the psalmist.
This is the psalmist in each of
us, who, having received that divine invitation, takes the invitation and
responds in trust.
We talk about such trust in common
ways, but we uncommonly enter into God’s court in trust when we need to. This
is why we have entered God’s Presence, now, in such a plight. Our human nature
tends to leave it too late.
But God is faithful. We are helped
whenever we trust. God limits none of his divine agency in coming to us, to
heal our understanding, to bring us to a better mood, and to soothe the aches
of our souls.
Entering God’s Presence is simply
about separating ourselves from distractions, finding a quiet moment/a quiet
day, and going inward to the resolute silence is sitting with God and allowing
the healing nature of God to wash over us. The more we practice, the better we
feel.
Such a thing as entering God’s Presence
is all we need do to credit our trust to the extent that we are blessed by that
peace the transcends our understanding. God does the rest, through the pure
agency of our surrendered trust.
***
The pain of spiritual
discomfort—loneliness, grief, contention, depression, anxiousness, etc—is the
blessed invitation to rejoin
the Presence of God.
Entering the Lord’s house in taking up such an
invitation—to spend time with God—is a grand commitment of trust. Trusting God
when our spirits are troubled is the best thing we could ever do. Blessing is
soon ours toward healing strength to endure our days.
© 2013 S. J. Wickham.
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