Philippians
4:6-7 (NIV)
Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by
prayer and petition with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all
understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.
This verse
reminds me of some of life’s truisms like “To err is human”, “Life begins at
40”, “The early bird gets the worm” and so forth. There also are hundreds of funny truisms like
“Experience
is something you don't get until just after you need it”, “For
every action, there is an equal and opposite criticism”, “No
one is listening until you make a mistake”,
“the severity of the itch is proportional to the reach”, and “If at first you don't succeed,
then sky-diving definitely isn't for you!”
Truisms are
brief, sometimes funny, timeless truths that very few would dispute yet don’t
take them seriously. This passage from
Philippians is an example of a truism.
Everyone on the surface would agree that you shouldn’t worry and instead
you should pray, yet most people worry and few people pray and experience the
true peace of God. You are to stop
worrying as you tend to blow things out of proportion, but by the time you read
this a couple of days or more after his sermon, you have worried about many
things! You know what are the right
things to do, yet you don’t do them!
Why?
Why do people
worry so much? Worry is a coping
mechanism, but worry is not from the Lord. If you are worried about something, if you are
anxious about anything, you are not trusting the Lord. That’s why this verse contains the
counter---don’t be anxious, but do pray.
Prayer is relinquishing your anxiety to the Lord. We all intellectually understand this truth,
yet for some reason, we still worry too much and worry much more than we
pray.
Have you ever
noticed that people who suffer the most worry less than those who suffer
little? Have you not interacted with
someone who is experiencing or has experienced lots of troubles, yet they seem
less worried than you? Why is that? Perhaps the major reason is that people who
suffer most also pray the most. Prayer
is the antidote of worry.
Most worrying
results from circumstances over which we have no control. Think about it---what do you worry about the
most? Death, illness, loss, aging, what
other people think, actions and safety of family members, finances, failure,
etc. What is common about all of these
worries? There’s little or nothing that
you can do about them, they are out of your control. So why spend excessive or even a little time
worrying about what you cannot control?
Instead give over these worries and anxieties to the Lord through prayer
and claim the promise He makes that by doing this, you will experience His
peace that you will not even begin to understand or explain.
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