Oswald Chambers who is best known to us as the writer of the devotional classic, "My Utmost for His Highest," was the administrator and teacher of the Bible Training College in London. During its four year existence before WWI, it was a spiritual training ground for over 120 students who studied and went into the mission field. In his writings Chambers often spoke of the College as a place for "soaking." Under the care and leadership of Oswald Chambers, the students found themselves in a college which not only provided instruction, but also a spiritual soaking where they could be equipped by the Holy Spirit for His work through them.
"Soaking" is such a wonderful image. Soaking speaks of being immersed for an extended time. The soaking takes place in a change agent. Most of us need more soaking time. In an ideal world we would go away from home to some retreat center and spent a weekend or a week under the guidance of a spiritual director, but the ideal world is not where we live. We live in a world where a living has to be provided, children have to be reared, and schedules are too filled. If any kind of spiritual soaking is going to take place in our lives it is likely to come out of our own initiative and from the time we set aside for spiritual devotions.
Allowing the image of soaking to guide us might enable us to use a set aside devotional time differently. Our normally structure times of devotion could become a time not of doing spiritual stuff, but of learning how to sit and listen to the stirrings of the Spirit. Instead of reading chunks of Scripture, a verse or two could become a focal point for meditation for several days, or even a week. The idea would be allowing the Word to become digested instead of just being tasted. Our usual devotional time could become a time of seeking whatever change might come to us by being immersed in the divine change agent, the Holy Spirit.