CALMING MY RESTLESS MIND

In my quiet time, I use a phrase that calms the thoughts in my mind through repeated repetition. The desert monks and mothers in the early days of Christianity recited and used the Jesus Prayer “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God have mercy on me a sinner,” as a way of calming their restless thoughts and minds.

They would use the prayer to concentrate and meditate upon God in pursuit of a deepening and abiding relationship with Christ. The repetition of the words of the prayer was a process of silencing the mindless thoughts that seem to dominate our lives. Contemplative prayer is a way of creating a space for experiencing God’s presence in our heart. The pathway of silence led to experiencing the depths of Christ’s love in their souls. The goal of solitude and contemplative prayer is the union of our heart with the heart of God.

It is essential to understand as you take the time to get alone with God, there will be internal chaos and noise in your head like never before. Everything in this world stands against your offering your devotion and heart in allegiance to the will of God.

When you decide to get alone with God, you will be like the person who has the door of their house open every day of their life and then suddenly closes and locks the door. The moment the door closes, everyone outside now starts pounding on the door asking to let them in. The visitors want to know why they can’t come in any longer. The mind with all its disturbing and confusing thoughts springs alive at that moment with every kind of thinking bombarding you. They are yelling with all their lungs for you to open the door and let them in again. The thoughts are speaking in your head all the things that you need to get done, and there is not enough time for getting alone with God. There are appointments to keep, bills to pay, work that must be done and accomplished. The thoughts and voices demand entrance so they can continue to dominate and torment your soul.

There is no way of stopping the thoughts from continually barging in upon you. In the initial phase of getting alone in the silence you learn to let the thoughts come, and then you give them up. You let them go because they are the seedbed of distraction. I handle them by releasing them and allowing God to take them. I release them by willfully turning them over and over to Him. I then make the decision to let the distracting thoughts become the source of my prayers. They become prayers about what I need to get done and the people I need to see. I let go and release the thoughts as prayer concerns, so I find peace and rest in God.

This practice gave a new meaning of how to take every thought captive and make it obedient to Christ (2 Cor. 10:5 NIV) “We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.”

I no longer try and control my thoughts I turn them over and release them moment by moment in prayer. I focus on the hope that Christ is the Lord of my life. The beautiful truth is the more you practice the silence; the less the thoughts invade your mind, and the love of God abides. It just takes time, effort and practice to accomplish it. Without energy and work, there is no calming of the mind. The goal is the work of living in the present moment and releasing my thoughts and cares over to God and finding perfect peace of mind.

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