by Doug Nichols
Facing the future
The term ‘fear not’ is found many
times in the Bible. There are almost as many ‘fear not’ statements as there are
days in the year. I feel that each of these statements is there for me, because
I am not a brave person. I am intimidated by others, terrified to speak in
public and afraid in dangerous situations.
In 1994 I was working in Zaire among
Rwandan refugees. People were being slaughtered nightly; each morning we walked
among the bodies on the ground. In three terrifying days, 50,000 people died. I
was afraid.
Recently I awoke in the middle of
the night worried for my country’s future with its abortions, debt, hopeless
millions without employment, bad economy and declining morality. How will we
continue to support mission work around the world?
My wife, Margaret, often challenges
my fears with a passage from I Peter: ‘Humble yourselves, therefore, under the
mighty hand of God so that at the proper time he may exalt you, casting all
your anxieties on him, because he cares for you’ (I Peter 5:6-7, ESV).
Fear and worry are sources of pride.
We often think that by worrying we are somehow in charge, when, in fact, only
God can handle the terrible situations we face. Even in a dangerous, difficult
and sinful world, God will take care of his children.
Cast it all on God
So let’s do that today. Let’s cast all
our fears, anxieties, and worries on God because he cares for us.
One thing that causes fear is the
thought that God could never use you.
But when you feel God cannot use you, it is helpful to remember that Noah was a
drunk, Abraham was too old, Isaac was a day-dreamer, Jacob was a liar, Leah was
ugly, Joseph was spoiled, Moses had a stuttering problem, Gideon was afraid,
Sampson was a womaniser, Rahab was a prostitute, Jeremiah and Timothy were too
young, David had an affair and was a murderer, Elijah was suicidal, Jonah ran
from God, Naomi was a widow, Job went bankrupt,
Peter denied Christ, the disciples
slept through prayer, Martha worried over everything, the Samaritan woman was
divorced more than once, Zacchaeus was too small, Timothy had a stomach
problem, and Lazarus was dead.
‘But God has chosen the foolish
things of the world to shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of
the world to shame the things which are strong, and the base things of the
world and the despised God has chosen, the things that are not, so that he may
nullify the things that are, so that no man may boast before God’ (1
Corinthians 1:27-29, NASB).
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