Drew Boswell

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    • “Freedom To Live For God” Galatians 5:13-25
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    • “The Promise of God That Changes Everything” Galatians 3:15-29
    • “No One Is Beyond the Reach of His Amazing Grace” Galatians 1:10-24
    • “A Letter to the Recovering Pharisee” Galatians 1:1-9

The Spiritual Discipline of Silence and Solitude


As of late, there is within me a strong desire to be alone in the wilderness. To just have time to clear my head and to seek the face of God. I am reminded in Scripture that Moses’ and Paul’s time in the wilderness transformed them into great leaders, but my times away are stolen fading moments. These men were both transformed by their isolation in a remote wilderness.

Donald Whitney in his book Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life, says “When we think with balance we realize that it would be neither right nor desirable to be cloistered from our God given responsibilities involving other people. Biblically reality call us to family, fellowship, evangelism, and ministry for the sake of Christ and His Kingdom. And yet through the Holy Spirit, “deep calls to deep” (Psalm 42:7) in such a way that there is a part that craves silence and solitude.”

So one has to find balance in these dual pulls in life. In order to have power and strength, wisdom and direction in service to the multitudes, you have to spend time away from them and with the Father. This is the spiritual discipline of silence and solitude. So I go to the mountain (or Gathland State Park), which is only a couple of miles from my home. I carry a Gideon New Testament and hike. I’ll stop and read, pray and mediate — then hike some more. Some times I’ll go for miles, other times less than a mile.

There are several biblical examples of this practice. Elijah went to Mt. Horeb to hear the whisper of God (1 Kings 19:11-13), Habakkuk stood guard alone to see what God would say to him, and Paul went to Arabia after his conversion so he could be alone with God (Galatians 1:17).

It is sometimes stressing to be alone with your own thoughts. How many times do we drown them out with noise so that we won’t have to listen? So not only do I go to the mountain to converse and listen for God’s voice but I also try to put my own thoughts in order. For a guy, this is easier if you are physically doing something — I know the Bible says “be still and know I am God,” but sometimes I just need to move (in silence) in order to be still later. I just need to get some things out of my system.

Whitney gives several reasons why a Christian should practice solitude and silence:
to follow Jesus’ example,
to hear the voice of God better,
to express worship to God,
to express faith in God,
to seek the salvation of the Lord,
to be physically and spiritually restored
to regain a spiritual perspective,
to seek the will of God, to learn to control the tongue

For me it’s to be physically and spiritually restored, and even though I haven’t been doing it for very long, I can feel the difference. Why don’t you try it, and let me know how it went?

Cub Scout "Go See It"




Today was our Tiger Scouts first “Go See It” — this is where the boys get to experience something and experience something new. We went to Daybreak’s Respite ministry held at Grace Community Church in Adamstown, MD. The boys did a great job helping where they could. They pushed kids in wheelchairs, swept up hair, and served lunch. They served for about an hour and afterwards had some pizza and hung out. There was a video game room where most of the guys stayed.

We had a member of our church coordinate letting us borrow several new video game programs (playstation, x-box, etc..) — if I had more time I would have been all over that.

So at the end of the day I believe it was good to get them exposed to kids who may be a little different than they are, to serve the community, and to have a great time. Way to go Tiger Cubs!

Rookie

This is Hannah, she’s a rookie. She worked very hard today and without new people like her willing to give it a try we can’t reach and help new families. We had several community groups today that enable us to expand — so thanks for all of you volunteers!

How Do I Get Involved?

This is Kim L. she helps Kim R. (I know “the Kims”) to organize the monster we call Respite.

What is Respite?

This is Kim R. and she’s the Director of Rooftop Ministries. Over eight years ago she approached the pastor of Daybreak and myself about starting this ministry and it has grown from a handful of kids to the hundreds that we have today. It takes an amazing amount of organizing to pull a Respite off — and they do a great job every time.

In case you are wondering (from the video) the green tape on her shoulder means that she “floats” or is a person who is available to help if you need someone. That sums Kim R. up in a nutshell — always ready to help!

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"For by grace you have been saved through faith." Ephesians 2:8

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