I’ve been trying to establish a consistent quiet time in my life this year. I did pretty good the first 19 days of the year, then I stopped for the next 21 days. I’m now roughly back in a patter with 2 out of the last 3 days.
Some days I seem to really get hit by something I’m reading and other days I feel like I’ve simply checked off the box next to that day on the reading plan I’m using. Tonight was one of the heavy hitting nights.
Generally during my quiet time I have iTunes shuffling through my Gospel & Religious genre. Music helps me focus and I love when the song that’s playing lines up with something I’m reading in my quiet time. My friend describe it as: “it’s almost like God’s reading along with you” and is picking the soundtrack to His story.
Tonight I read Genesis 42:18-45:28, Matthew 13:47-14:36, Psalm 18:16-40, and Proverbs 4:7-13. Here’s what I wrote in my journal after I finished reading those passaged:
It’s amazing the people God exalts in scripture. Joseph was the second youngest son of Israel. He was sold into slavery and exalted to second in command of all of Egypt.
David was a boy when God exalted him before the Israelites and he eventually became King and “a man after God’s heart”.
And 12 random men from various backgrounds, as well as other prophets like John the Baptist.
If these people can become exalted for God and glorify Him out of humble beginnings, why am I not living that way?
Somewhere in the middle of reading all of that, “The Shadow Proves the Sunshine” by Switchfoot came up in iTunes. There is a line in the song that goes
O, Lord, why did you forsake me?
O, Lord, don’t be far away
Storm clouds gathering beside me
Please Lord, don’t look the other way
I can’t help but think that must have been what Joseph was thinking after his brothers sold him into slavery in Egypt. And that David must have been thinking
Too scared that I’ll run away
Hold fast till the brink of daylight where,
The shadow proves the sunshine,
The shadow proves the sunshine
on the night before he was to face Goliath in battle. Or that the disciples had that thought more than once when they were with Jesus. And the hook of the song
the shadow proves the sunshine
defined the life of many of these people. The Matthew passage includes the execution of John the Baptist. His life was punctuated by a pointless execution, but the “shadow proved the sunshine” of the love of God. The earthly life of Christ was ended under the darkest of shadows only to prove the sunshine three days later.
But what’s the point of all this? What do a shadow and sunshine have to do with any of this? If you study the lives of everyone in these passages (and of Solomon, the primary author of Proverbs), each of their lives were decidedly marked by dark periods. But they used the darkest days of their lives to prove the glory of God. The Shekhinah (the dwelling place of God’s glory) was in the stories and lives of these people.
And they all came from humble beginnings and were eventually lifted to places of honor in their societies by the grace and deliverance of God. They trusted him through the good days and the bad days (the shadows) and through that His love and mercy (the sunshine) was proven.
After I finished reading these stories I realized that I don’t live like that. I don’t live a life where the good days and the bad days are used to exalt God in my life. I don’t trust God the way I should in all things. I haven’t embraced the wisdom that the Proverbs teach about in order to achieve righteousness. I don’t trust, or more accurately expect God to deliver me to greatness. I trust myself to get me to OK-ness. God hasn’t called me to live an OK life. He has called me–and wants to give me–a life of greatness. A life glorifying Him and satisfying to me.
God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in him.
- John Piper -
The call to Christian living isn’t to live an OK life. There is nothing satisfying or glorified about an OK life. We are called to live lives of excellence and satisfaction and glorification of Him.

