The RenewaNation Review 2018 Volume 10 Issue 2 | Page 22

Hearing God in the Dark By Megan Clark T HE MARSHMALLOWS WERE BOUGHT, the camp chairs were set up, babies had taken good naps, and all was ready for the perfect backyard bonfire night. We had worked hard to build our own stone fire pit, and the boys had found their ideal roasting sticks. The first hour was pure bliss of burnt marshmallows and sticky fingers. But we soon ran out of our small stockpile of wood. Since everyone unanimously voted to continue the fun, our only option was to head to the woods for more firewood.   Our woods lie at the back of a five-acre field; it’s wide, open, and on clear nights you can see almost every star in the sky but can hardly see your hand in front of your face. Armed with our cart and a flashlight, we set off across the dark expanse towards the shadow of the woods on the horizon. It didn’t take long for the lights from our house and fire to disappear into the night behind us and for the boys and me to be swallowed by the dark. The flashlight beam hardly penetrated the darkness, and the boys kept anxiously directing its light anywhere they thought they heard a noise.   Funny how a place completely transforms in the dark. The boys would have thought nothing about taking off and running barefoot through that field just two hours earlier, but now they took timid steps around invisible barriers and cautiously peered around in all directions. 22 They moved slower and slower the closer we got to the woods. If the wide field wasn’t dark enough, the thick trees ahead were a whole new definition of dark!   Then the Holy Spirit met me in my parenting and created the perfect discipleship opportunity right in the middle of that pitch dark field. I came to a stop and said, “Boys, shine the flashlight right here, right in front of us.” The ground directly in front of us lit up under the beam, and the darkness scattered giving way to green stalks of grass and hay. I directed them to concentrate on that lightened space. Their tenseness drifted away at the familiar sight of illuminated green earth. We stepped over into that bright spot and then into the next and the next. We slowly, but more securely, made it to the woods.   Along those illuminated steps where the boys kept the light right in front of us, we talked about Psalm 119:105. I said to the boys, “An oil lamp like David was talking about isn’t a spotlight or an overhead fixture; it’s similar to your small flashlight. It doesn’t light up every single thing from here to the end; it gives just enough light to take the next step and then the next and the next. And that’s exactly how God’s Word can guide your heart through this life. You won’t and can’t see through to the end. I can’t either. But if I study and pray and seek wisdom from God, I will have what I need to clearly take the next step, and so do you.”