How I learned to stop worrying and love the Lord…

“Do not seek what you are to eat and what you are to drink, nor be worried.  For all the nations of the world seek after these things, and your Father knows that you need them.  Instead, seek his kingdom, and these things will be added to you.”
(Luke 12:29-31 (ESV))

Sometimes, it’s the simple things that Jesus says that are the hardest to follow.  Take, for example, the passage above.  This is surely one of the most beloved sayings of Jesus.  We can imagine Jesus, while standing in the midst of a prairie jeweled with wildflowers, the birds singing in the background, calmly teaching, “Consider the lilies of the field…”  We read the passage and say to ourselves, “Oh, that’s really nice.”  But do we apply it to our hearts?

If you stop and read this teaching (Luke 12:22-31) it will radically change your life.  Jesus tells his disciples that they are not to be anxious about anything – what they will eat, what they will wear.  The kingdom of heaven is about more than just food and clothing.  All the anxiety and worry spent in providing these things, does it really help?  The birds of the air don’t store up food, but God still feeds them.  God clothes the flowers of the field, which are here today and gone tomorrow.  If God so cares for the birds and adorns the grass, are you not worth more to God than these, will God not also provide for you?  You can’t add an hour to your life by stressing, fretting, and obsessing over it, so why do you worry about the rest.  When Jesus says, “the nations of the world seek after these things” he’s making a clear distinction.  The nations of the world are not the kingdom of God.  Without the assurance of faith that our heavenly Father will provide our needs, even our daily bread, then it would be only natural to worry and stress and even freak out a little bit.  But since we have such a loving and sovereign God who provides for our every need, such behavior is unbecoming.

That’s why I think this passage is so difficult for us.  How many of us know this passage but still get overcome by worry and anxiety?  Tim Keller, in his book King’s Cross, says that worry “is rooted in an arrogance that assumes, I know the way my life has to go, and God’s not getting it right.”  How many times have we said that to ourselves?  We’ve got our lives all planned out.  We know what needs to happen to find joy and success in life, to be secure and satisfied.  Now why won’t God get with the plan?  If God really wanted what was best for me, what’s with all this pain and loss, hardship and setback.  If this is the way it’s going to be, can I really trust God with my life?

I think that’s really the heart of the matter here, what Jesus is really driving at.  Do you trust God?  Do you take Him at his word?  Do you trust that God will provide your every need, your daily bread, that God has a plan to prosper you and to secure you in His fold? 

That’s what it means to seek the kingdom of God.  In the gospels, when Jesus talks about the kingdom of God, he is referring to God’s reign, rule, and God’s provision for His redeemed that flows from this rule.  We are told to seek first God’s kingdom, not our own.  We are told to seek first God’s kingdom, not the kingdoms of this world.  When we seek after, long for, earnestly desire the kingdom of God, then everything else will be added to us.  Unless you fix your eyes on Christ, the author and perfecter of your faith, you will, like Peter, look to the waves and be overcome by worry and anxiety.   

So how do we seek first the kingdom of God and overcome all the worry and fears of this world? 

First, know that Christ reigns and rules over you and for you?  Ephesians reminds us that God has put all things under [Jesus’] feet and gave him as head over all things to the church” (1:22).  The one who left the glory of God to dwell with us, to live for us and to die our death, lives now and reigns over us.  He is the Lamb who was slain, who is now enthroned in power and might as our High King of heaven.  If He lived for us, if He died for us, if He now reigns in power over us, what comfort and contentment, what rest and peace may we find in Him!  He who proved his love again and again, will He not continue to prove His love to those who seek after Him?

Secondly, trust that the Lord will provide, and rest in his care.  Knowing that our Lord reigns and rules over us gives us an endless source of contentment to face all situations, (Phil 4:11) and to rejoice in all our troubles (Rom 8:35).  We know that even in adversity, God is working our sanctification (Heb 12:5-11), developing Christlikeness (Romans 5:2-5), and strengthening our faith (1 Peter 1:7).  Because He has proven His provision in the past, we know that our God “will supply every need… according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus” (Phil 4:19).

Finally, turn to the Lord, cast your cares upon him.  James tells us that one of the reasons we get anxious and begin to worry that God won’t provide is that “You do not have because you do not ask” (James 4:2).  Do you take your concerns, your worries to the Lord in prayer?  It saddens me when Christians don’t take their troubles to the Lord because they don’t think God cares.  Paul tells us, “Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God” (Phil 4:6). 

Friends, I know how difficult it is to let go of the worry, the anxiety.  Without it, we feel like we’re not in control.  But, honestly, if we cannot add an hour to our lives by being anxious, why do we worry about the rest.  Oh, what release, what comfort, what peace we find when we lay these burdens down, and seek after the kingdom of God. 

“Cast your burden on the Lord, and he will sustain you;
he will never permit the righteous to be moved.”
(Psalm 55:22).

SDG

Strength for today and bright hope for tomorrow…

“Give us this day our daily bread…”
(Matthew 6:11 ESV)

Its Wednesday again, and here I am wondering What am I going to write about today?  Relentlessly Wednesday keeps coming, and I struggle to find something that will be a blessing to you.  I am so thankful for the encouragement that you give me, telling me how what I have written has encouraged you, how the midweek message is just what you needed to hear.  Sunday’s don’t bother me as much.  I’ve been preaching for almost 10 years now, I know how to study and prepare.  But this weekly writing is new to me.  I still get anxious for Wednesdays.

Each of us has that one thing (or many things) that we get anxious over.  What will I write about?  Will I get that job?  Will he/she ask me out for the Homecoming Dance?  Can our marriage survive this?  Will my family/children be provided for if something happens to me?  Will I recover from this illness?  Will I be welcomed and secure in my new home?  Can I find the strength to overcome this temptation and avoid sin?  Sometimes the thought of what is coming tomorrow can crush us today.  We can be so overcome and overwhelmed by anxiety about what may come that we lose hope and begin to despair.

One of the most repeated commandments of scripture is, “Do not be afraid.”  Jesus knew the tendency of our hearts was to lose sight of what God has done in the past, to fixate on the uncertainty of our future, and to be overcome with anxiety and despair.  This is why He taught us to pray to God for our daily bread – to teach us and remind us to trust in God daily for the grace we need to face the day.  Just as God provided manna in the wilderness (Exodus 16:35), just as God feeds the birds and clothes the lilies in all their splendor (Matthew 6:28), God will provide for you.

Simply telling you not to worry, though, is only half the solution.  Often times, we have to supplement a negative behavior with a positive one (I used to vacuum whenever I wanted to snack at night).  The same thing applies to your spiritual life.  Unless you supplant your anxiety with something else, you will soon return to your fears and doubts.  So what can you do?

Think about today…  Jesus pointed out the futility of our anxieties, “Which of you by being anxious can add a single hour to his span of life…  Therefore do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious enough for itself” Matthew 6:27).  Stewing over the problems we face and our inability to deal with them only compounds the problems.  Too often we rely on our own resources and our limited vision, and wind up in a bigger mess than when we started.  But when we realize that our God is bigger than the problems we face, we can find great strength and encouragement.  Lamentations 3:22-26 says, “The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.  ‘The Lord is my portion,’ says my soul, ‘therefore I will hope in him.’  The Lord is good to those who wait for him, to the soul who seeks him.  It is good that one should wait patiently for the salvation of the Lord.”  We need to learn to wait for the Lord, to trust in his grace that he has given for this day.

Great is thy faithfulness, O God my Father,
There is no shadow of turning with thee;
Thou changest not, thy compassions they fail not;
As thou hast been thou forever wilt be.

Prayer and Thanksgiving… Paul teaches in Philippians 4:6, “do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.”  How many times do we run headlong into a problem without ever taking it to the Lord in prayer?  Don’t we usually find ourselves up to our necks in our own undoing before we finally cry out to God?  Take a moment right now and think of those things that you are most anxious about.  Now tell God about it, make your request before the throne of God, and be sure to thank God for listening and for the ways He’s worked in your life before and continues to work today.  Go ahead… I’ll wait.

Pardon for sin and a peace that endureth,
Thy own dear presence to cheer and to guide;
Strength for today and bright hope for tomorrow,
Blessings all mine, with ten thousand beside!

Trust in His promises – One of the things that prayer and thanksgiving does is it helps us to remember God’s faithfulness in the past, and his promise for the future.  When the Israelites began to wonder whether God would deliver them, they would be reminded of the way His mighty right arm and delivered them from Egypt and provided for them in the wilderness.  When the early church faced persecution and oppression, they were encouraged by remembering the mighty work of deliverance through Jesus our savior.  Even today, when we wonder if maybe this obstacle is too big for God, let us remember all that God has done and have hope for what he is about to do.  God has promised good things (Jeremiah 29:11, Romans 8:28), and “God is not man, that he should lie, or a son of man, that he should change his mind.  Has he said, and will he not do it? Or has he spoken, and will he not fulfill it” (Numbers 23:19)?

Great is thy faithfulness!
Great is thy faithfulness!
Morning by morning new mercies I see;
All I have needed thy hand hath provided
Great is thy faithfulness, Lord, unto me!

SDG