Don’t Say a Word

I was mute and silent, I refrained even from good, and my sorrow grew worse.   My heart was hot within me, while I was musing the fire burned;  Psalm 39:2-3a  NASB

Silent– Listen!  Silence is a good thing, right?  Don’t we long for an escape from the din around us?  The traffic, the elevator music, the indecipherable human clamor of the restaurant crowd, the constant cell phone chiming. Wouldn’t it be lovely to just go to the beach, the empty beach and hear nothing but the waves?  Or the mountains.  The airy whispers of wind in the trees.  The lullaby of a waterfall.  All that noisewe have to endure!  David even writes in another poem, “My soul waits in silence for God only; from Him is my salvation” (Psalm 62:1).

But if this is true, why does David complain that when he was silent his sorrow grew worse?  Perhaps some reflection on David’s vocabulary will help.

“Sorrow” is the Hebrew word kĕʾēb.  John Oswalt comments, “it is impossible to separate the mental and physical anguish as far as this word is concerned.”[1]  David notices that his deliberate decision to say nothing and do nothing resulted in increased anguish.  He found no relief at all by keeping everything inside. This is not a case of searching for that quiet spot where we can be alone with God and our thoughts.  This is a case of holding our feeling in and doing nothing at all, not even good deeds.  This is a prescription for emotional necrotizing fasciitis.  (I won’t make you look that up.  It’s the flesh-eating disease.)  Our internal state “eats” away the psychological security of life.  We feel “hot,” another way of describing an emotional fever.  We’re sick because we have no outlet for how we feel.  This kind of silence kills.

“Habitual repression of emotion leaves a person in a situation of chronic stress, and chronic stress creates an unnatural biochemical milieu in the body.”[2]

“The person who does not feel or express ‘negative’ emotion will be isolated even if surrounded by friends, because his real self is not seen.  The sense of hopelessness follows from the chronic inability to be true to oneself on the deepest level.  And hopelessness leads to helplessness, since nothing one can do is perceived as making any difference.”[3]

Maté’s clinical observation is telling—and frightening:

“Not one of the many adults interviewed for this book could answer in the affirmative when asked the following:  When, as a child, you felt sad, upset or angry, was there anyone you could talk to—even when he or she was the one who had triggered your negative emotions?  In a quarter century of clinical practice, including a decade of palliative work, I have never heard anyone with cancer or with any chronic illness or condition say yes to that question.”[4]

A tranquil beach, a mountain stream—yes, great places to get in touch with the God who really knowsand loves us.  But if we have only these places, the dreamed-for retreats from the world, we will spend most of our lives in the “hot-box,” and that’s a guarantee of deep, emotional distress.  Maté notes, “Emotional intimacy is a psychological and biological necessity.”[5]  We might add that it is also a spiritual essential.  And that raises a critically important question: “Do you have someone to really talk to?”

Topical Index: kĕʾēb, sorrow, silent, emotion, Psalm 39:2-3

[1]Oswalt, J. N. (1999). 940 כָאַב. R. L. Harris, G. L. Archer Jr., & B. K. Waltke (Eds.), Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament(electronic ed., p. 425). Chicago: Moody Press.

[2]Gabor Maté, When the Body Says NO, p. 92.

[3]Ibid., p. 99.

[4]Ibid., p. 128.

[5]Ibid., p. 198.

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Laurita Hayes

Skip, you know you just put your foot on the land mine of the world. How you lift that foot back up is going to make all the difference!

This is why the front lines of YHVH’s kingdom can not possibly be the guys at the perceived apex- what the world considers the top, the ‘leaders’ – but the ones on the ground; the ones in contact with the sorrow and the need of everyday life. And that will always be a one-on-one ratio. We are not saved in crowds, after all. (Whoops, what a devastating detail for the religions the world offers!)

If the so-called “five-fold ministry” does not, in fact, SERVE (train, disciple, support, supply and cheer on) those front lines than I say they are not actually lining up with the way God’s world works.

For example, if I were to ask you what the most important part of a plant was (let’s say a plant that was going to feed you), what would you say? Obviously it would be the part that makes it possible for that plant to minister to your needs. Would it be, say, its leaves, that embody chloroplasts to transform sun energy into energy for you? Would it be the resulting fruit that actually fed you? What if I said that none of that would occur in a way that sustained your life optimally without the presence of vast colonies of OTHER LIFE on the roots and actually in the plant? The ability of a plant to transform atmospheric nitrogen, say, is solely contained in those colonies of soil life that also transform inorganic minerals into forms the plant can then use. The plant ‘trades’ vast amounts of sun energy and air that it gathers to those organisms in return. It is impossible to then say if it is even the plant itself that nourishes us, the eaters.

On a side note (if there is such a thing); looking at a modern agriculture model that – by design – routinely kill all other life in and around plants and animals, too, I think we are facing a tsunami headed our way. The groundswell is already emerging, in the form of deficiency diseases that run rampant in plants and animals and people alike, for there is no substitute for those organic minerals and resulting vitamins and other vital necessities that are built on those minerals from the soil. We kill and isolate other life to the peril of our own.

In like fashion, I think the body of Christ must be a body organized in such a way that it makes it possible (and optimal) to meet the needs of the world, of which I think you just described the biggest need of all – the need we have for each other. What we need most, I believe, is not ‘trained’ professionals, but ordinary folks living ordinary lives who become willing to meet others right where they are at, and engage – with the full support of heaven and the Body behind them. Optimally, of course.

I think the world is suffering from vast deficiencies, of which community may be the biggest: a community designed for the greatest health of its front lines, which is where the rubber of heaven meets those on the road to perdition and says – one precious contact at a time – “come with me”.

Laurita Hayes

The moral of the above? Speaking from my own silence, I shut up when I saw no one was listening. Who did David have he could talk to? We see how crazy Saul got sitting in that chair of isolating power. The kings of this world pay a terrible price, I think, in artificially elevating themselves ‘above’ their subjects. I think Yeshua came to show us how a leader really acts. And, even though nobody could relate to Him (at the time, anyway), either, He still had His Father. Hopefully, He now also has us who can hear His heart in all the lost around us. It may be a little late, but we can still listen to Him and walk with Him today. I think this was the joy He looked forward to. May we increase that joy today by listening to each other!

Rich Pease

Excellent insight, Laurita.
The love we’ve each been given is to be given to
each other. And giving an earful to another, is right
where it begins!

Lucille Champion

Like your ag model Laurita. I come from ag country (farmers/ranchers) and yes, our soil is very depleted. Learned herbology, homeopathy and natural healing handed down from centuries past. My dad would take on nature hikes (teaching to hunt by reading broken branches, size/type of animals by their prints, etc) and he would point out ‘good to eat and not good to eat’ plants/herbs. Great learning back in the day! Called ‘survival’ today… And yes, so many wounded, hurt, frightened folks out there. Meeting them where they are at… I remind myself to do that when I am working with someone who can’t get past the ‘victim’ role. It’s a good barrier breaker and helps build trust. Not to enable their self pity but to gently lift them as fragile as they really are. It brings to mind Matthew 9 and Luke 10… “the harvest is great but the workers are few”… you see it, I see it.

Laurita Hayes

Lucille, I find it more than interesting that the biggest class of eroded minerals in our soil consist of the salts: magnesium-based calcium and chloride, in particular. This true “salt of the world”, so vital to life, has been supplanted by the life-killing, artificial salts of the world (in the form of inorganic fertilizers) that have, in my lifetime, eroded and depleted the soils of over HALF its own minerals, as well as burning out most of it’s life-containing humus! I have started going to the sea in the last few years (after I got mad about that and prayed) and started bringing home marsh-filtered seawater from the coast and dumping it back on the land and boiling it out on the stove for us. I have seen some real miracles as a result. Fruit trees quit dying and tomato leaves got as big as my arm and our health skyrocketed. And, y’all, full-spectrum, non-leached sea minerals are yummy!

Lucille Champion

Spot on!!! I add ionic minerals to my aloe/green tea/ raw local honey sweetened cranberry juice everyday. Mag chloride is amazing to heal those broken down nerve endings and fortifying bones. Coastal waters are contaminated. Have family fishermen that complain about the condition of our sea life. I shoot for deep earth minerals well below the salt mines, if I can get it. That’s one component to healing… the other is how we handle the outside world… STRESS. Getting out of victim status into victory thru Yeshua. That’s a lot slower/harder work for many who haven’t been introduced to him.

Laurita Hayes

Thankfully, I have access to one of the cleanest-rated coast/marsh sections on either coast. Dream often of trolling for deep water minerals offshore. There is a company that is harvesting them correctly, now, called Ocean Grown, I think. Until my budget improves, however, I have to stick with harvesting and processing my own. Thankfully, the marsh takes out most of the remaining petroleum fractions left after the boiling and filtering I do for the rest of those contaminants. We all do what we can and then YHVH blesses it!

Seeker

Laurita gave a lot of thought to chew on. I am left with a few questions…
Is it not a fact that when we remain silent and wait humbly for God’s response to guide us that we have the same feelings and emotional depression as David had. Then looking at what Job endured to experience the personal response of God.Is this not where God wants us to be so that he can provide us a new cloak… Walk of life?
It is calming for our mindset to find tranquility in the creation… Is this not the same as worshipping through the creation, making it our mediator to find God. Or the same as denying the Spirit of God and teachings of Yeshua to be our guide…
Is it not maybe that God wants us to find his closeness in our ‘silence’ rather than in our environment… He needs to make an abode in us not in his creation he is already there…

Laurita Hayes

Seeker, you asked “Is it not a fact that when we remain silent and wait humbly for God’s response to guide us that we have the same feelings and emotional depression as David had.”

The question I hear you asking is one of a couple of things, I think (please correct me!). The first thing I hear, because you asked it in question form, could possibly be asking why do you feel this way whenever you “remain silent and wait humbly for God’s response to guide us”? The second possible way you could be asking is if this is the ‘way’ to wait on the direction of God. I couldn’t tell exactly where the question was coming from.

It sounds like it could be an important question for you, so that is why I am asking for further clarification: if, in fact, you were asking open- endedly because you wanted to know, or if you were just asking rhetorically because you thought you already did know. You don’t have to answer, of course.

Laurita Hayes

Seeker, according to today’s episode of Ancient Medicine For Modern Illness (gave link on another thread) our microbiome is largely responsible for either manufacturing or signaling the manufacture of our neurotransmitters – you know, that stuff that makes us feel certain ways. We are feeling what our gut bugs are feeling, in other words. The ones in our lining determine what is us or not-us, too. The central part of our DNA coding, too, which is the protein sequencing of stuff like placenta formation, immune as well as our neuroplasicity capacity, are all mostly retrovirally wired. We have all the supposedly essential features of what we think is ‘us’ farmed out! Those lining organisms also are collecting data (RNA sequences out of air and what we consume) and building according to those codes, too. What if we really ARE simply the ‘shepherds’, or stewards, or EXPRESSION of the creation in and around us? I have been thinking more about Yeshua Who ’emptied Himself” to take on our form. Less than 1% (genetically expressing OR cellular counting) of ‘us’ is actually us! What if we are ’empty’, too, so that we can take on the expression of the creation we were given dominion over? I am going nuts!

What if trust is built on how well we are linking with reality? That is determined, according to Mate’, by our gut, too. Not much of a cognitive exercise, is it, but rather an expression of a real connection (or not). If so, then I may be feeling bad (or paranoid) because my bugs are not well connected! There is solid science for certain probiotics treating depression.

Seeker

Laurita thank you for the dialogue… Sorry long response Skip. I do not know a shorter method…
First the general feeling is we have freedom of choice. Either to respond or to ignore. David decided to wait which is also a positive reaction to the circumstances he was facing. Reading through Francis Fenelon’s work again I read of this emptying principle which, let us say Paul explained it as make no provision for the flesh… This includes knowledge, insight, experience or urge to do…
David as Job decided to stick it out for a direct answer from YHVH. Both Hebraic and Christian thinking require an action to help, to be mediator for a divine pointer, if I may call it that. So is David and Job’s decisions more correct than the latter understandings or does our own conviction and action which reflects our faith actually determine the truth?
I would say our faith will determine our response…
But if we decide to stay neutral for a specific circumstance even though we would normally react… Would it be sin or would it be failing to be the servant or would it just be a case of get over it and the next predicament will be the guiding factor.
This Laurita is the problem with knowledge based choices. All seem correct and justifiable yet all could just as well be wrong in the eyes of YHVH.
So yes I am rather asking a rhetorical question.
Is being silent not the better choice than giving a pointer and being judgemental based on where you are in your relationship which will be more confusing for others establishing their relation. I have come to accept that I should only eat of what is put on the table. My own food is between me and God… As Yeshua said I have food you know not of, my food is to do the will of him who sent me. Not to think up a task for myself…
Again remain silent or be the mediator… When will we know which is the right choice. I’ve been told that people are not ready for the truth as it is a scary and lonely journey. Religion is not the issue but faith and people want religion above faith as it is a social support structure. We rather have a tendency to shy away from faith. And this shying away is not the silence David was referring to…
As for DNA and RNA. Science is weird and only answers questions people want to know… Wayne Dyer etal have written a lot on this view and science is just supporting it not revealing the actual truth, for it is not given for us to know. For this view actually claims no one will become ill or need faith per se.
If the creation is for a purpose as I believe. Our total automated system will manifest this purpose in that robotic cause we just need to let go… And letting go is the hardest thing to do.
And it is this letting go that makes us silent not a cognitive choice…
If that answered your questions and clarified mine!!!

Michael Stanley

Francis Fenelon. I haven’t heard his name in decades. I used to love his works. IMO he wrote some of the most worshipful hymns and poems- with the possible exception of King David, but, of course, he did have the advantage of writing about the Messiah post ressurection. Now I will have to reaquaint myself with this 17th century French Catholic arch-bishop. Thanks.

Michael Stanley

Whoops. Spoke too soon. When I went to look for the old hymns I once loved so much, I realized it was another Cathlolic priest named Fredrick Faber that I so admired (mid 1800’s). Fenelon and Madame Gunyon were among the Catholic mystics I read in my early days and always wondered why I never got what they got in my Catholic upbringing… nor ever even heard of such devotion. All I got was sore knees and bruised knuckles!

Luz Lowthorp

I’m a little bit lost today, I might need help. I am from the tropic and I had lived in several Latin American countries. It is easy to create bonds with new friends and new family so one can not feel alone or unhappy(it’s a cultural thing). It was not until I moved here that I learn to live with the coldness of people and learn what loneliness means. So I decide to give meaning to every little thing I do just to please my Abba father and that makes me happy.
When I read king David’s psalms, most of the time I see a man repented from all his wrong doing; so there is reason to feel alone, he missed the mark and he knows it. Yahweh did not want Israel to have kings/gods like the nations, but since they wanted one there were requisites they needed to meet.David and most of the kings failed, no wonder why he was so miserable.
Deut 17 says” 14 When you come to the land that Adonai your God is giving you, possess it and dwell in it, and you say, ‘I will set a king over me, like all the nations around me,’ 15 you will indeed set over yourselves a king, whom Adonai your God chooses. One from among your brothers will be appointed as king over you—you may not put a foreigner over you, who is not your brother. 16 Only he should not multiply horses for himself or make the people return to Egypt to multiply horses, because Adonai has said to you, “You must never go back that way again.” 17 Nor should he multiply wives for himself, so that his heart does not turn aside, nor multiply much silver and gold for himself.18 “Now when he sits on the throne of his kingdom, he is to write for himself a copy of this Torah on a scroll, from what is before the Levitical kohanim. 19 It will remain with him, and he will read in it all the days of his life, in order to learn to fear Adonai his God and keep all the words of this Torah and these statutes. 20 Then his heart will not be exalted above his brothers, and he will not turn from the commandment to the right or to the left—so that he may prolong his days in his kingship, he and his sons, in the midst of Israel”

Should I live pursuing happiness when I am not doing what I should, and then crying to G-d because I feel alone and mute in my loneliness? That does not make sense to me .

Roy W Ludlow

The Biblocal Counselor has a roll to play here. He or she is trained to listen and steer rhe person to God via the scriptures. There in is hope for the world for which no psychologist can provide.