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Face
Down Fear |
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FACE DOWN FEAR
By Marjorie F. Eddington
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What are you afraid of?...
First day of school? No friends? Not having
enough money? An angry boss? Forgetting things? Being
alone? A "terminal" disease? Getting into
an accident? Losing your family members? Dying in
a war zone? Another terrorist attack?
God, His angels, and the Biblical writers, prophets,
Messiah, and apostles all have a response to those
fears: "Fear not." And they say, "Fear
not," a lot!
Fear not! Why? Why shouldn't we be afraid when all
these horrible things could happen to us? We could
get hurt or be embarrassed or suffer loss. Well, the
real questions are: Why should we fear? What does
fear do for us? Not much. There's no real benefit
to fear. For the most part, fear doesn't help us think
more clearly, learn more quickly, or act more confidently.
Rather, fear often clouds our reasoning, making us
scared of the "what ifs," which are usually
negative.
At the same time, if we do find ourselves afraid,
fear should not keep us from doing anything we want
to do. FDR's often quoted phrase, "There's nothing
to fear but fear itself," gives way too much
power to fear. How is being afraid of fear supposed
to help us be courageous in the face of danger or
new adventures? Courage doesn't mean not being afraid.
Courage means being brave in the face of fear. There's
no convincing reason why we should be afraid of fear.
There are a lot of extreme situations when people
would say that if we aren't afraid, we're being foolish.
So, what we need to learn is how to face fear, live
through it, conquer it.
"Fear not" is one of my favorite commands
in the Bible, as it's the beginning of healing and
understanding.
- "Fear not" is what Elisha told his servant
when they discovered that the Syrians (the enemy)
had them surrounded (II Kings 6:16). Elisha prayed
that his servant's eyes could be opened to see the
"chariots of fire" (17) that surrounded
and protected them. They were able to lead the Syrians
to the king of Israel and negotiate peace.
- "Fear not" is what Jesus told Jairus,
a ruler of the synagogue, when one of Jairus's servants
came to him and told him that his twelve-year-old
daughter had just died. Jesus had been on the way
to Jairus's house, but while enroute, through the
mass of people surrounding Jesus, a woman with an
"issue of blood twelve years" came and
touched Jesus's robe and was healed instantly (Luke
8:43-48). Jesus stopped and talked with her. When
the messenger told him about the girl, Jesus responded:
"Fear not: believe only, and she shall be made
whole" (50). And she was! Jesus began most
of his healings by telling people not to be afraid.
- "Fear not" is what the angels told the
women who came to Jesus's tomb after he was crucified
and couldn't find him because he had resurrected
(Matt. 28:5). Their lives were changed as a result.
They understood that life is eternal. They spread
the fantastic news to the rest of the disciples.
The disciples, understanding the power God had given
to them (to all of us) started healing people as
Jesus healed people.
How did these two simple words give them comfort,
courage, strength, power, and freedom? Jesus told
a group of followers, "And ye shall know the
truth, and the truth shall make you free" (John
8:32). The truth is that fear has no real power. Once
these people were able to stop being afraid, they
could trust God. It's impossible to trust God and
be afraid at the exact same time. We can't do both.
Either we know that God is in control of the situation,
or we believe He isn't. And the truth is that God
is in control, regardless of what circumstances make
us believe. God is telling us:
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For I the Lord thy God will hold thy right
hand, saying unto thee, Fear not; I will help
thee. (Isa. 41:13)
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What more could we want to give us peace? God is
holding our hand, helping us. There are so many incredible
stories and passages in the Bible dealing with fear.
That in itself is comforting. We're not along in feeling
fearful -- no, indeed. And we do not need to be alone
in conquering fear either, since God is always with
us.
Even though it often seems like it, fear is not really
in our nature. God did not create us to be fearful:
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For God hath not given us the spirit of fear;
but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.
(II Tim. 1:7)
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God has imbued us with the power of love. John records
what love does for us:
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There is no fear in love; but perfect love
casteth out fear. (I John 4:18)
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When we love God supremely, when we allow ourselves
to be completely filled with love, we cannot fear
others, even our enemies (for we are loving them).
Fear and love cannot abide in the same space. It may
be really difficult to love bullies at school or vindictive
co-workers or terrorists. But if we don't, who will?
That does not mean that we roll over and play dead.
While David, as he was becoming the king, had to flee
for his life from Saul and later had to flee from
his son, Absalom, who wanted his kingdom, David's
own army fought for him. Many of the psalms he wrote
reveal how he turned to God to help him conquer his
fears and his enemies:
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I will not be afraid of ten thousands of people,
that have set themselves against me round about.
(Ps. 3:6)
The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom
shall I fear? the Lord is the strength of my
life; of whom shall I be afraid? When the wicked,
even mine enemies and my foes, came upon me
to eat up my flesh, they stumbled and fell.
Though an host should encamp against me, my
heart shall not fear: though war should rise
against me, in this will I be confident. One
thing have I desired of the Lord, that will
I seek after; that I may dwell in the house
of the Lord all the days of my life, to behold
the beauty of the Lord, and to inquire in his
temple. (Ps. 27:1-4)
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If we live in God's house, no enemy -- be it in the
form of a person, a group, a nightmare, a phobia --
can touch us. Fears are truly like nightmares. When
we awake from the nightmare, we realize that what
we were dreaming, though quite scary, is not real.
Therefore, it has no power over us, unless we consent
to give it power.
Usually what we're afraid of is something unknown
in the future. Usually there is no real corroborating
evidence to support our fears: what if the plane crashes;
what if I fail the test, what if nobody likes me,
what if I lose my job
? The future is always
in the future. That's the very nature of it. So why
give the future the power to ruin our present? If
something bad happens, we will be better equipped
to handle it if we do not let fear govern our actions
and make us do foolish things we may regret later.
We need to be careful, though, of creating self-fulfilling
prophecies. Sometimes we give so much credence to
our fears that we make them real and experience the
effects of fear: "For the thing which I greatly
feared is come upon me, and that which I was afraid
of is come unto me" (Job 3:25).
Sometimes, though, our fears are based on what some
would call more substantial evidence. Since 9/11,
we have the "Terror Alert" system. The Terror
Alert level rises when people in the government have
good evidence to suggest that there is a high possibility
that terrorists are planning an attack. The alerts
are there to put us on our guard and help us be more
aware of what to do and where to go. They are not
to make us afraid. We cannot give too much power to
the terrorists. We cannot stop living our lives. More
importantly, we cannot believe that terrorists of
any kind are more powerful than God. If we fear them,
then they have won. If we give into their fear tactics,
then we have given them power to control our lives
with fear. Are we going to give up our faith in God?
No!
"Any kind" of terrorists includes other terrors
we face -- pain, disease, accident, famine, family arguments,
divorce, lack of money, scary dreams, death. When God
or His angels tell us not to fear, they don't give us
a "fear not list" that excludes ailments.
"Fear not" is meant to comfort and encourage
us in any situation. Because God is with us, we can
be confident and say with the psalmist: |
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What time I am
afraid, I will trust in thee. In God I will praise
his word, in God I have put my trust; I will not
fear what flesh can do unto me.
(Ps. 56:3, 4) |
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But we must take a stand against fear. We must defend
our thinking from the effects of fear and kick them
out of our thoughts and experiences as vigorously
as a mother bear defends her cubs from attacks. If
we honestly and courageously understand the truth
that we are safe in God's constant care, then we truly
have nothing to fear. Fear will cease to have power
over us and eventually fade from our experience as
easily as the dark of night gives way to the light
of day.
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Fear ye not, neither be afraid: have not I
told thee from that time, and have declared
it? ye are even my witnesses. Is there a God
beside me? yea, there is no God; I know not
any. (Isa. 44:8) 
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What
are your issues?
Email
us with suggestions,
and we'll try to address them
in the coming months. |
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