It was in November of 1965 that my ship, the USS WRIGHT (CC-2), pulled into the docks at Newport, Rhode Island. It was snowing flakes as big as golf balls, and the world was pretty much quiet. The snow had absorbed the sounds. As the line handlers tied the ship to the dock, the radio on the ship picked up a local radio station, and it played throughout the ship. It was the first time I heard Simon and Garfunkel sing “The Sounds of Silence.” For some reason, this combination of events and sounds made a lasting impression on me. Every time I hear that song, I remember it. Every time it snows like that, I remember it. Silence can be loud sometimes. I always think that this is what the duet was trying to say. Only when the clamor and distractions of the world around us are silenced do we hear God.
As Job was undergoing the greatest sufferings in life that one can imagine, one of his friends, Elihu, urges him to remember all of God’s work in the world and to let sounds bring to mind the power of God. Throughout chapter 36 of the book of Job, Elihu extols God’s greatness. He is the source of all the sounds of nature. He refers to a full range of audio images: thunder, cracking, lightning, rain, snowstorms, etc. In Verse 33, he says that the “crashing” of the lightning and thunder “declare God’s presence.” It’s almost as if God stops the world and creates an environment where he makes Himself known on earth. Yet, we are so often obsessed with all the natural things around us that we are unaware of His presence. God wants us to hear Him. C. S. Lewis said that God gets our attention through our pain. He whispers to us in our pleasures but shouts at us in our pain. We could not hear the wonderful blessings in his whispered promises if he didn’t first get our attention.
The Daily Bread told a relevant story from a Pastor named James H. Brookes. He spoke of visiting a friend’s house and hearing the music of a bird singing. It was not the ordinary sound of chirping; instead, it resembled the strains of a lovely melody. At first, Brookes didn’t know where it was coming from, but when he glanced around the room, he saw a beautiful bullfinch in a birdcage. The lady of the house explained that it had been taught to sing that way at night. The teacher would repeat the notes time and again until the bird was able to mimic them. But this was possible only because it was dark, and the bird’s attention would not be diverted. Back in Chapter 35, verse 10, Elihu said that God, “our maker,” gives “songs in the night.” It is often true that when the darkness of pain and suffering surrounds us, we can finally let go of our hold on all the things on earth and give God our undivided attention. Brookes concludes, “How often we learn our sweetest songs when the blackness of trial closes in around us…. let’s not despair when the darkness of trouble descends upon us. God is with us; God will help us and give us a song.”