Rise and Stand

Stand
Stand

I’m a night owl. If I never desired contact with regular people I could happily live with my days and nights almost reversed. My mom used to catch me studying after midnight and say, “Honey, why don’t you get up at 5:30 with me and study when you are fresh?”

The only way I could study at 5:30 a.m. would be if I stayed up until 5:30 a.m. pulling an all-nighter –or I had the flu, and the word fresh would not dare enter the room.

Owls marry larks. We didn’t know that. The first year of marriage neither of us slept. In our 41st year he gets up at 5:30 a.m. and works when he’s fresh. I accuse him of giving up and going to bed before the day is over, but he just harumphs and toddles off and I put the kettle on for my next round. One of the reasons I think we have managed to stay together this long is that we have a rule. I will not take seriously (or emotionally) anything he says after 10 p.m. and he will tell me nothing of importance before 10 a.m. –unless it’s an emergency.

Morning people always talk about rising before dawn for prayer and Bible study or to meditate and prioritize their goals for the day.

“Jesus rose up before dawn,” they say, “We should follow his example.”

I tried that for a while, and then I realized I was giving the Lord the worst part of my day. My prayers were something like, “Um…yeah.. uh.. thank you for this day…. anda… um………………..zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz…oh, sorry,….for ….. for… something. There was somethingsomething…”

I was awful when I had early-rising babies. I could easily diaper the wrong end. When the kids were grown (or almost grown) and my workday didn’t start until afternoon so I didn’t have to get up early, I started watching late-night T.V.. Alas, David Letterman, although a witty conversationalist, never acknowledged my input, so I started talking to God. He’s a good listener.

Then he began to talk back (God, not David Letterman. I’m not that crazy.) Questions I asked him were answered -in dreams, or scripture passages that came to mind, in co-incidences like the same book being mentioned by three totally different sources in the same day, in pod-casts or blogs I stumbled upon, or in nature, or in songs that get stuck on repeat in my head until I stop and pay attention to them. I still felt guilty for being undisciplined and not “doing morning devotions” but that’s when I realized he wants a relationship with me and not with someone who punches a time clock out of duty and is glad when that’s done and can be crossed off the list. He doesn’t mind that I wake up slowly or that I’m at my peak when others collapse and fall into bed. He gets it, because he made me this way.

We rise and stand to do battle in the night, or sometimes just be, saying and doing nothing in particular. Now that sleep doesn’t come as easily as it used to, some of our best times together happen in the wee hours, even at 5:30 a.m. -and it’s all good.

Now may he grant you your heart’s desire
    and fulfill all your plans!
 May we shout for joy over your salvation,
    and in the name of our God set up our banners!
May the Lord fulfill all your petitions!

 Now I know that the Lord saves his anointed;
    he will answer him from his holy heaven
    with the saving might of his right hand.
 Some trust in chariots and some in horses,
    but we trust in the name of the Lord our God.
 They collapse and fall,
    but we rise and stand upright.

(Psalm 20:4-8)

10 thoughts on “Rise and Stand

    1. I understand this. My friend, who can seldom sleep later that 5 a.m., finds participation in evening meetings and plays or concerts that don’t start until 8 p.m. to be quite a challenge. Some people have delayed sleep phase issues and some have advanced sleep phase issues. I guess, as usual, we need to give people the grace to be different than ourselves. My daughter jokes she’s neither a morning person nor a night person. She’s a noon person.

      Like

      1. I cut out all sugar and caffeine after noon years ago, but I still lay awake for two o three hours if I go to bed the same time as my husband. It seems like a such a waste of time, so I just get up. But my man doesn’t get a hot delicious breakfast like your men do. Those pancakes looked wonderful.

        Like

  1. How I understand this!!! My husband has always had an early-to-work schedule. Now that he is semi-retired, it is so different. He doesn’t go to bed quite so early and I miss that. I like being a night-owl. With kids all out of school (but still in my house), I have no reason to be up early. As long as I still get my 8 hours, I don’t see why it matters.
    But… on Thursday and Friday I have to make an exception. My Mother stays with us two nights a week and she’s an early riser.
    When my hubby and I go on trips, I have no problem waking up early so we can get on with our next day’s journey.

    Like

  2. I remember long ago doing morning devotionals and then a message asked if it was ritual/habit or real heartfelt time. I find that deeper time for me is also later in the day. He meets each of us where He needs us. Blessings to you.

    Like

    1. When we love someone spending time with them is not a duty, is it? And the closer the relationship the more we can trust them to love us even in our less than glorious bed-head hours, eh? Maybe I need to re-define “doing devotions” as studying the Bible with Holy Spirit and the rest of the day as just hanging out with the Creator of the Universe.

      Like

Leave a reply to Charis Psallo Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.