Be Still
CARLOS WHITTAKER
Lee en español
“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 (NIV)
Standing alone in a parking lot, I watched my best friend drive away with my phone, laptop, tablet, and every other screen I owned. This would kick off seven screen-less weeks while I lived with Benedictine monks and Amish farmers.
I remembered God's invitation in our key verse, Psalm 46:10: “Be still, and know that I am God …”
I thought, This might be the first time in decades that I — truly unplugged — will be able to understand what that means.
Being still is something we have a hard time with these days. The average person spends five hours a day looking at their phone. At the time of my retreat, I spent more than seven. We all feel the suffocating chaos of an always-plugged-in life. So I decided to experiment to see what would change if I removed the thing that took up seven hours of my day.
The first few days without a screen, I quickly realized that God was speaking a lot more — and a lot louder — than I thought He was. The problem was that I'd had the volume of life turned up way too high.
How can we make changes that lower the volume of life?
Here’s one I made: I bought an alarm clock to wake me up instead of using my phone. My phone isn’t plugged in by my bed. For the first hour I’m awake, I don’t look at my phone. I spend time in God's Word, not in the words of others. I don’t have other voices distracting me from God’s voice. Allowing God to be the first and only thing you lean into in the morning, instead of the countless notifications waiting for you, will change the trajectory of your days.
This is just one of many changes that I’ve made in my life since finishing my experiment. There are so many things we’ve forgotten how to do in our screen-filled days — things like wondering, beholding, experiencing solitude, getting bored, noticing and savoring.
But more than anything, I’m learning that we’ve placed God in way too small of a box. At the end of our key Bible verse, God states, “I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth” (Psalm 46:10). And the psalmist realized this truth after speaking of stillness. Maybe it’s not only the volume of life that is keeping us from exalting God but also the speed of life.
We have such an incredible opportunity in front of us to reconnect with who God has created us to be — by falling back in love with life as it was created to be lived.
Father, I consecrate my day to You. Thank You for the gifts You have waiting for me on the other side of my screens. Restore and renew my ability to notice, wonder, behold and savor today. Help me experience this day in the way that You intend for me to experience it. I praise You. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.