[5 Conversations With Christ] Anxiety and Worryഉദാഹരണം
A Common Human Experience
There’s a lot to worry about in our nation and in the world. The pandemic is a global thing. Even conversations about it create worry. There are some people who think it is a hoax; other folks know it is real and say, “I’m never leaving my house.” Anxiety is so easily found these days!
Anxiety is more than just a storm; it’s a drizzle in all of our lives. It’s more than a thunderstorm; it’s more like a fog we walk through. It’s like a buzz in your heart. Adam Mason, the head of our Julianna Poor Memorial Counseling Center here at First Baptist Church of Houston, defines it like this: “Anxiety is one of the most common experiences of humanity. It is a state of psychological arousal associated with restlessness and insecure thoughts. It has a twin sister of depression who joins her brother when the insecure thoughts turn to hopelessness.”
The Greek word translated as anxiety in Luke 12:29 means to be torn apart, of doubtful mind, to be held in suspense; it is a picture of a ship being tossed in a storm. The English word worry comes from an old Anglo-Saxon word that means to strangle. So, worry strangles us; it gets us antsy. It is something psychological, yes, but it’s also spiritual, biological, and circumstantial—it’s all those things.
How do we battle anxiety? There's a lot to worry about. In this passage, Jesus had just been speaking before a crowd of many thousands. But this word was especially for his disciples, for those who believe in him. He said, “Don’t worry about your life, what you will eat; or about the body, what you will wear.” He asked them, “Can any of you add a cubit to his height by worrying? If then you’re not able to do even a little thing, why worry about the rest?”
Author Corrie ten Boom said it like this: “Worry does not empty tomorrow of its sorrow; it empties today of its strength.”
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The 5 Conversations with Christ series explores five of Jesus’ conversations in Luke. This plan focuses on Jesus’ words to his disciples regarding worry about what they would eat or drink. Anxiety wears us out emotionally, and it wears us out physically. Know that Jesus can meet you right where you are. With Him, your mind can be renewed, and He can set you on a new path.
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