Day 23

Silence



1 Kings 19:1-13, Psalm 37:3-7, Psalm 131:1-3, Isaiah 30:15, Habakkuk 2:20, Mark 6:30-33

BY Jen Yokel

My best days begin with nothing. I wake up, make a cup of coffee, then settle on the floor with a pillow and a journal. I resist checking email and set a timer on my phone for ten minutes. And then, with a few slow, deep breaths, I settle into silence. 

Whether it’s accompanied by a quiet request to God tuned to the rhythm of breath, or soundtracked by a collision of wandering thoughts and internal monologues, those ten minutes of silence feel like a small island in a chaotic sea, maybe because they are. There’s no denying we live in a culture of noise. I relish quiet, but it’s rare to find a moment where I’m not reading something, or thinking about something, or scrolling on my phone, filling my head with something. The voices are loud and incessant, and they beg for attention every waking second. So maybe that’s why silence feels so countercultural, so sacred. Away from the noise, I can finally listen.

In one of my favorite passages from the Old Testament, the prophet Elijah experiences the gift of quiet. After a stunning display of God’s power before the prophets of Baal, Elijah is on the run. Scared, angry, and alone, he flees into the wilderness and screams toward the sky: “I have had enough! LORD, take my life, for I am no better than my fathers” (1Kings 19:4). But in the night, he doesn’t hear fearful judgment; angels come to him, encouraging him to eat and rest before the next journey.

For forty days, he walks, and I can’t help but wonder if those forty days felt like forty years. I wonder if he begged for signs, if his heart pounded at the memory of the altar bursting into flame, or if the shouts of violence haunted his dreams. But then one night, in a cave, at the end of the forty days, God speaks again.

“What are you doing here, Elijah?” (v.9).

Elijah lists his grievances. The Israelites have rejected their God, the king and queen are corrupt, the prophets have been killed and rejected, and the most heartbreaking complaint of all: “I alone am left” (1Kings 19:10). So, God beckons him outside for the show of his life: a cliff-shattering wind, a churning earthquake, a raging fire. But God doesn’t speak in any of them. Instead, “after the fire there was a voice, a soft whisper” (v.12). God doesn’t give Elijah more work to do or tell him to stop moaning. God meets him, repeating the gentle question, “What are you doing here, Elijah?” (v.13).

We don’t lack reasons to grieve or work to do, but what may we hear when we “come away…  and rest for a while” (Mark 6:31) and “wait expectantly for Him”? (Psalm 37:7). Like Elijah, we may look around and despair, feeling all alone. God invites us to practice silence, to turn down the noise so we can hear His soft whisper and turn toward Him.

Post Comments (87)

87 thoughts on "Silence"

  1. Lyndj Goodman says:

    I loved this one and could especially relate to the silence ~ this is how I feel when I soak in the tub at night. It’s completely quiet. I don’t get on my phone. Sometimes I just sit and listen ~ so much peace and it does feel sacred to me.

  2. Cristi Caston says:

    Yes, Becky! This is so good, He never leaves us and just live I’m constantly reminding my own kids these days, He is here for us always, even when our emotions are clouding our ability to see Him more clearly.

  3. Dianne Pacewicz says:

    ❤️

  4. Rebecca Wagstaff says:

    Yes Iike your thinking here. Thanks

  5. Rebecca T says:

    @Kate M

  6. Rebecca T says:

    Me too, and coming up on my 47th birthday and I finally starting to get comfortable with it. My mind absolutely races with thoughts and ideas and I often use music and podcasts to drown them out. But I have started small and have begun to accept them, let them flow without judgement. Start small, set a timer for a minute or two and see what happens. Ask God to sit with you. You can do it!

  7. Becky Hollar says:

    I wonder too if God repeating his question wasn’t unlike a parent doing the same to a distressed child. He asks Elijah the first time, and you can imagine he responds “in his feelings”. Then God puts on these displays and shows up not in the crashing and roaring, but in the calm and quiet. And he asks Elijah again. I imagine Elijah responding more calmly, able to share the problem without so much of the heightened emotion. Then God tells him what he’s to do next and, my favorite part, tells him he’s not alone, that there are 7,000 who have not worshipped Baal.

  8. Maiya K says:

    Here’s a great song that has been a beautiful reminder of this: “quiet” by Elevation rhythm

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *