Be Still and Know

Just back from Women of Faith. Sheila Walsh used one of my favorite verses in her talk- Psalm 46:10 “Be still and know that I am God“. That’s the last verse in a great psalm, but in v. 1-3 we read:

God is our refuge and strength,
A very present help in trouble.
Therefore we will not fear,
Even though the earth be removed,
And though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea;
Though its waters roar and be troubled
Though the mountains shake with its swelling.

I think this psalm is to be taken absolutely literally when it speaks of raging water and mountains crumbling at the sound of His voice. However, when I move to personally applying it, I utilize some symbolism. The wild waters are always a picture of the emotional turmoil I find myself in from time to time. The instability, unpredictability… the way the waters cover over and wash away everything familiar… floodwaters that carry uncleanness. In contrast, the mountains are the constants, the things I depend on. So for me, these verses read:

God is my place of absolute security and safety. He is my confidence. He is abundantly available and reliable.
Therefore I should not be afraid, distressed, depressed.
Even when I have found my own resources to be nonexistent, and everything else I have confidence in- my judgment, my perceptions, my ability to reason things through- is swept into the maelstrom.
Even when it is at its worst…
Be still- stop trying to fix this yourself, stop wearing yourself out…
and know- when you stop, then you will realize at the very core of your being
that I AM – your place of absolute security and safety, your confidence. I AM abundantly available and reliable.
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Friday Update: Firefox and Flu

Today, I’m in St. Louis at Women of Faith. Each year, I look forward to taking a break from the routine and focusing on God. These two days go a long way toward recharging my spiritual batteries.

Friday update: I’m actually writing this post a few days early, but if I’ve stayed on schedule, I’ve got one chapter to go. This is the intense resolution of the book with some of my favorite scenes.

Mozilla Firefox
Image via Wikipedia

What have I learned this week- technically speaking? Mozilla Firefox rocks! The add-ins are tremendous and it’s faster and slicker than IE. I also got some comments on my blog posts which were incredibly encouraging.

What have I read? I’m kind of on vacation so I’m reading , The Great Influenza about the 1918 pandemic. It’s a narrative nonfiction. The fascinating thing to me is the description of the world of the turn of the century. I don’t always grasp how different society was, how far we’ve come and the developments are not always positive. On the book so far, my verdict is: nerds only or skip a lot.

What did God teach me this week? He taught me I still try to handle far too much on my own. He showed me that perhaps ‘the way we’ve always done things’ may not be the best, most effective way.

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