I’m
reminded of a time this past summer or fall I invited one of my friends to go
hiking with me at First Landing State Park in Virginia Beach. It’s one of my favorite places around
here.
Lately
I had been listening to this worship album by Jonathan and Melissa Helser
called Endless Ocean, Bottomless Sea. And what it actually was, was a 2-CD
album of the extended versions of the songs from their previous album On The Shores. When the Helsers were recording their first studio album,
they tried to record it the standard way, and they said they could just tell
God was not in it at all. Finally,
what I remember, they set up their house on their farm in North Carolina as a
studio, and they said, “We’re just going to worship, using these songs as
starting points, but we’re going to worship freely, spontaneously, and keep the
tapes rolling.” And through that,
they had an encounter with God that set them free in a lot of areas in their
lives, and they realized that this is how they were called to operate as worship
leaders and recording artists. So Endless Ocean, Bottomless Sea was the
long, relatively “unabridged” version of their worship time in the studio
during the recording of their latest, On
The Shores.
And
the album was really special to me, because it really matched where I was with
the Lord. They were very free
during their spontaneous worship time.
They didn’t necessarily try to say anything super profound (as if the
simple truths aren’t profound enough); they didn’t shy away from sounding childlike
in expressing their affection for the Lord, or reveling in his affection for
them; and maybe most meaningful to me at that particular time, they didn’t feel
the need to “fill up the space”: they were totally comfortable just easing into
the time and not having a lot to say.
It seemed like that made the words have a special quality to them, even
if, like I said, they weren’t particularly “profound” or brilliant. They were spontaneous; they were not
“obligatory” in any way; and maybe most of all, there was a restfulness to them, that drew you into
the reality that time spent with God is meaningful, and we can rest in him
without feeling like we have to justify that time by saying something profound
or impressing him with our zeal or something like that.
God
really ministers to me through nature, many times. It’s always helped me get re-centered and get my head
clear. As I was walking the trail
with my friend, I felt in my spirit not to rush at all, and often I would just
stop at a certain view for a long time, or just simply stop and sit against a
tree. I felt God drawing me at
certain times to just stop and soak it in, soak him in, without feeling like we
had to make “progress.” I was
worried sometimes that my friend, he would get impatient. But what I felt from the Lord was,
“What was it you’ve been appreciating so much about that album? The restfulness? The quiet assurance of knowing that
worship is not about pretending that you have so much to offer me, but
acknowledging all that I have offered you? Do you want your life to reflect the same truth, or do you
want to keep that as another American, bottled entertainment experience on your
CD that you can pull out when you want to pretend?” I felt like God was saying, “I want to make that same music
spring forth in your life; but you have to change your life to make a place for
it so I that I can do that. You
have to change your outlook. You
have to change your modus operendi,
and it starts now. Do you here me
calling you? Do you hear me drawing
you through these trees, this landscape that I created you to love and
appreciate?”
I
felt a new freedom by the end of that walk (and my friend didn’t get upset with
me! He like’s the place too, and
was find waiting or walking ahead and doubling back). I’m glad I started taking steps in that direction of making
an empty space, empty time, that God can fill, just like Jonathan and Melissa
Helser do on their albums. I’m
happy that our God is a living God, and the experience that I had listening to
their record didn’t have to be just another “bottled American entertainment
experience” on CD, but was able to point me to the way that I could connect
with my living God on my own as Father.
That
journey has been long and has required a lot of persistence, and I think I have
to be honest and say I still can’t see what’s at the end of it. But maybe we’ve been fooling ourselves
if we thought we could look ahead at the final outcome of things in the first
place. Maybe what’s really been
needed all along is the childlikeness and willingness to know him along the
way, and walk by faith. Knowing
the journey that I’ve been on, and now in this post looking back at one of the
moments that initiated this journey, I have one last thought that seems worth
sharing. And that thought is about
“waiting until…”
I
got the phrase from Luke 24:49: “And, behold, I send the promise of my Father
upon you: but tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem, until ye be endued with power
from on high” (King James Version).
“Tarry…until.” “Wait
until.” Jesus told the disciples
to “wait until” the Holy Spirit had come upon them and empowered them for the
work he had given them. I think we
as modern American Christians have lost the ability to accept when God says
“wait until…” I think after a while
when we start to get fidgety, we eventually take things into our own hands, and
even say we are doing it in his name.
We sometimes say things like, “Well God gave us a brain, and he wouldn’t
give it to us unless he wanted us to use it, figure it out!” And that’s true in many cases, and it’s
not always wise to “wait until…” if God didn’t say to. BUT, I believe there still are those
times when we’re supposed to “wait until…” and I believe we are so
self-reliant, or reliant on the world’s system that we will often directly
disobey God during those times, and rationalize it. I think we tried to follow Jesus without first laying down
our self-reliance and reliance on the world’s system. I believe that is mostly why there are so many Christian
activities and Christian initiatives which started shouting that they were
about to do something great for God,
and now mostly serve to keep us busy going around in circles and feeling
virtuous about it. Imagine if the
apostles had rushed out and tried to fulfill Matthew 28, “The Great
Commission,” without obeying what Jesus said here in Luke 24:49. No Pentecost. All their efforts twisted and warped by reliance on man’s
wisdom and ability.
King
Saul was judged unfit by God to continue as king because, under pressure from
the Philistines, he would not “wait until” the prophet arrived to offer the
sacrifice (I Samuel 13:1-14). (The
fact that he offered a sacrifice shows that he tried to pass off his
presumption as something he was doing for God.) The Israelites wouldn’t “wait until” Moses came back down
from Mount Sinai (forty days is a
very long time, and probably much longer than they had expected), and they felt
they had to make themselves another god, the golden calf. The Apostle Paul, even though he started
preaching about Christ in the synagogues immediately after he met Christ, he
still had to “wait until,” years later, the Holy Spirit sent him and Barnabas
to go start their ministry (Acts 13:1-3).
I suspect that Jesus, when he was driven into the wilderness by the Holy
Spirit, probably didn’t know ahead of time that it would be forty days, and
then he would leave. He probably
had to “wait until” the same Spirit who led him into the wilderness led him
out. We’re glad the Savior “waited
until,” and overcame the devil in the wilderness before starting his
ministry!
Anyway,
that last point took longer than I had planned, but I do believe there are
crucial times (like in Luke 24:49) when we are supposed to “wait until” God
reveals what to do. Jonathan and
Melissa Helser, if you’re reading this (which I’m sure you’re not), thank you
for your CDs! It’s been fun
recollecting and reflecting how God used that at a particular moment in my
life, and taught me to do what you all started doing from your first album:
setting a place for him, and counting the time waiting in his presence as
perhaps the most meaningful!
Hi John, Long time no correspondence! How are u?
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