"I call to remembrance my song in the night: I commune with mine own heart: and my spirit made diligent search" (Psalm 77:6)
Both the Bible and the testimony of a thousand saints show that there is experience beyond song. There are delights which the heart may enjoy i the awesome presence of God which cannot find expression in language; they belong to the unutterable element in Christian experience. Not many enjoy them because not many know that they can. The whole concept of ineffable worship has been lost to this generation of Christians. Our level of life is so low that no one expects to know the deep things of the soul until the Lord returns. So we are content to wait, and while we wait we are wont to cheer our hearts sometimes by breaking into song.
The Bible is a musical book and, next to the Scriptures themselves, the best book to own is a good hymnbook. But still there is something beyond song.
Where the Holy Spirit is permitted to exercise His full sway in a redeemed heart the progression is likely to be as follows: First, voluble praise, in prose speech or prayer or witness; then when the crescendo rises beyond the ability of studied speech to express comes song; when song breaks down under the weight of glory, then comes silence where the soul, held in deep fascination, feels itself blessed with an unutterable beatitude.
Lord, as I "commune with mine own heart" (Palm 77:6), let me in that silence find that something which is beyond song. I worship You now in the stillness. Amen
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Silence in the Presence of God
"Stand in awe, and sin not: commune with your own heart upon your bed, and be still" (Psalm 4:4)
The Bible and Christian biography make a great deal of silence, but we of today make of it exactly nothing.
At the risk of being written off as an extremist or a borderline fanatic we offer it as our mature opinion that more spiritual progress can be made in one short moment of speechless silence in the awesome presence of God than in years of mere study. While our mental powers are in command there is always the veil of nature between us and the face of God. It is only when our vaunted wisdom has been met and defeated in a breathless encounter with Omniscience that we are permitted really to know, when prostrate and wordless the soul receives divine knowledge like a flash of light on a sensitized plate. The exposure may be brief, but the results are permanent.
Today, Lord, I long for that moment of silence in Your majestic presence. Speak, Lord, in this stillness. Amen
~A. W. Tozer~
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