In God's Hands: Finding Peace in Anxietyنموونە
Anxiety Is Not a Sin
I sought the LORD, and he answered me and delivered me from all my fears. (Psalm 34:4)
Growing up, when I read verses like Psalm 34:4, I took them to mean that negative emotions—fear, anxiety, depression—were a sign of insufficient faith. Being prone to anxiety, I had to learn to understand such verses another way.
When you are anxious, your body produces a panicked feeling much like a cancer patient’s body produces unwanted cells: it’s out of your control. For example, I expect to enjoy today. I like writing these devotionals, and after I’m done with them, I will teach a roomful of bright and good-hearted students whom I adore. I will go to the gym. I will take my wife to the movies. And yet, all morning I have been short of breath, restless, and irritable. This is a very typical day for me.
Nowadays, when I read verses like Psalm 34:4, I take them not as statements about what our thoughts or emotions are doing, but about what our will is doing. Whether fearful or not, the psalmist seeks God. This is something you do, not a mere feeling. The change in feeling is secondary. You can make the decision to seek God even as fear gnaws at your heart.
Later, the psalm tells us, “Many are the afflictions of the righteous” (v. 19). We cannot smile them away. But we can say, with the psalmist, “Taste and see that the LORD is good” (v. 8).
As you pray, confess your fears to God, and affirm God’s goodness and love.
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About this Plan
Anxiety, with its constricting fear for the future, can narrow our vision so that God’s gracious presence is harder for us to see. This four day series points to some of the ways that the Bible is speaking back to our anxious thoughts and fears. Phil Christman, the writer for this series, lives with anxiety and his reflections are based on his own experiences with faith and anxiety.
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