Psalm 37:7 — Be still in the presence of the Lord, and wait patiently for him to act. Don’t worry about evil people who prosper or fret about their wicked schemes.
There are some things in life you have to learn to appreciate, aren’t there?
Porch sitting is one of them. As a kid, it used to bore me to tears. I couldn’t understand why that was all the adults wanted to do—just sit there. But as I’ve gotten older, I’ve discovered it really might be one of the greatest pastimes there is.
Most simple things are.
Things like slowly reading a book or watching the clouds roll by.
For me, one of those simple pleasures is time spent watching hummingbirds with my mom.
Back during COVID, we would do this daily. I’d sit on the porch working on my laptop. My mom would sit nearby, keeping me company. We wouldn’t always say much. We’d just be there, together, occasionally pointing out the skittering birds when they showed up, and we’d refill the feeders when they ran dry.
It was mesmerizing. It felt like catching a glimpse of something you were never meant to miss. They stopped by just for a moment, then dart to and fro again. They would be gone almost as soon as you noticed them.
But if I’m honest, I think this would’ve bored me to tears before, too.
So, what changed?
It really boils down to one thing.
Stillness.
That’s the acquired taste that most simple things require. Simple pleasures like front porches, slow books, and hummingbirds ask you to sit down enough to pay attention. And that’s harder than it sounds.
Because life will hand you plenty to fixate on. Things that feel unfair. Things that seem like they’re falling apart or impossible to manage.
But out on that porch, none of that follows you.
You sit. You breathe. You notice the beautiful things God is doing around you.
So today, maybe there’s an invitation there—to be still in the presence of the Lord. To wait for Him to act instead of trying to carry everything yourself. To loosen your grip on all the noise and let Him meet you in the quiet.
Because it’s often there—in the stillness—that the smallest, most beautiful things come into view.
A MOMENT TO REFLECT
- What distractions or worries have been making it difficult for you to be still lately?
- When was the last time you slowed down enough to notice God’s presence in ordinary moments?
- What would it look like for you to wait patiently for God instead of trying to control the outcome yourself?
