I used to worry about so much
though as a kid. I took life way too seriously. I was that kid that had no
chill.
One of the things that bugged me
the most was the possibility of dying in quicksand. Because you know there’s so
much quicksand in the United States especially around the Chicago area.
I never worried about actual adult
stuff you know, like how to build up a credit score or what to say when in laws
you hate ask for money, no, but I had a contingency plan for falling into a pit
of quicksand Indiana jones style alone out in the safari while being chased by
mummies or zombies.
So while worry can be funny,
thinking over my quicksand scenario really got me thinking on how stupid
worrying is.
I mean, I literally was afraid of
something that I literally never have to worry about.
Craig Groschel describes worry as revealing
what you fear the most and where you trust God the least.
I won’t lie, we as the millennial
generation really do have a lot of stuff trying to get into our heads and make
us worry.
Turn on the tv:
-the economy
-the presidential election
-possible wars
-diseases and cancer
Go to school
-if we should take risks in joining
a team or club
-Should I ask him or her out?
Think about the future
-How we will be able to run a
country when we’re in charge
-How will I get a job to support a
family
-can I make it through college
And just like the other issues
we’ve covered, worry is a sin and can turn into an addiction.
BUT just like all the other things
we have covered, worry is not something that we are forced to do, but a matter
of perspective.
Continuing on Paul’s letter to the
philippians, Paul is still in house arrest and 24/7 chained to the Roman
equivalent to a Terminator and he was fundamentally waiting on the decision as
to whether or not he would live or die.
If anyone had a reason to
worry it was him. This is the same Paul that dealt with
-shipwrecks
-deadly snakebites
-public stoning
-flogging
-imprisonment on a regular
basis.
And yet he was still able to write from prison:
“Rejoice in the Lord always.
I will say it again: Rejoice! 5 Let your gentleness be evident to all. The Lord
is near. Phil. 4:4-5”
Paul’s perspective is solid. NOTHING can separate him from
God. NOTHING can take away the love of God from him and so he had NOTHING to
fear.
After all this happened, instead of seeing these events as
hardship, he saw them as times when the Lord provided and protected Him from
even greater pain.
Paul proves to us that WE
DON’T HAVE TO WORRY BECAUSE WE KNOW WHO IS IN CHARGE.
A relationship with God comes with the luxury of not having
to worry about the “hows” in life but merely focusing on the “who’s” in our
lives. God can handle the craziness of our lives, and all we have to do is
trust that He is still in control.
Throughout my life I literally had no idea what I was doing
for a future, once I wanted to be a musician, then I wanted to be an Army
chaplain then I wanted to be a missionary and now here I am teaching all you
awesome people.
What I’m saying is that if I would have trusted the lord
more back then through all of that, I probably would have gotten into youth
ministry sooner, yet even in my weakness, God still was directing me even when
I thought everything was falling apart. Never forget, when you think everything
is going insane, God is still completely in control.
One of my favorite verses of all time is found right here
when Paul writes about anxiety and fear in our lives: “Do not be anxious about anything, but in
everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to
God. 7 And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard
your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. Phil 4:6-7”
See we as humans tend to try and trust God with things in
our lives, money, relationships, our futures and whatnot, but then if things
don’t happen right away, then we try to pull it back from God and take control
again.
However God commands us to rest in His presence, understand
that He is worthy of praise and then present our needs to God. He hears you. I
promise. It might not be on the time that you want, but it’s definitely on the
time that you need.
Think on having this perspective for the next week: I
will do what I can do and trust God with what I can’t.
I know that life is heavy. I know that we have pain and
issues in our lives that seem to dominate all our thoughts and all our effort.
Yet what verse did I tell you guys at three weeks ago when I last spoke?
“Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give
to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be
afraid. John 14:27”
What about my health?
What about my
relationship?
What about my broken
family?
What about my broken past?
What about my broken past?
What about my future?
What about my
addiction?
What about my secret
sin that I can’t talk about?
What about the fact
that I feel like time and time and time again I never can do anything right?
What about the fact that I feel alone?
“My peace I give you”
Satan will try to
overwhelm you with fear over the unknown, yet I am here telling you this truth:
YOU DON’T HAVE TO WORRY.
Paul’s perspective
CAN be our perspective too. We can look at all of the chaos of life and all the
pain that it brings and still look at God and HONESTLY say “God this is the
scariest thing I’ve ever done, but I trust you.”
Instead of pleading
with God to meet our needs, let’s try to understand that God is all that we
need.
Instead of worrying
where God is taking us in the future, what if we hid in the knowledge that He
holds our future?
What if we rejoiced
in the fact that God is on our side and found our first satisfaction in Him?
I’m going to read you
one last verse to finish this up: I rejoice greatly in the Lord that at last you have renewed your concern
for me. Indeed, you have been concerned, but you had no opportunity to show it.
11 I am not saying this because I am in need, for I have learned to be content
whatever the circumstances. 12 I know what it is to be in need, and I know what
it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every
situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want. 13
I can do everything through (Christ) who gives me strength. Phil. 4:10-13
Paul wrote this in a situation where I personally would have
fallen apart, yet he stood strong and confident. Not because he was so strong
or so great, but because he knew that he had a GREAT GOD standing above him and
the Holy Spirit standing with him.
So maybe you’re in a situation where you can’t control
what’s happening, maybe life is so painful that you wonder if you can even make
it: Hold on. God has a plan in all of this. I promise.
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