Each morning you awaken to an unpredictable set of hours filled with surprises and trials and anxieties. You know before your feet ever touch the floor you are in for another who-knows-what day. You could be in an accident on the freeway, fired from the job, the victim of a personal attack, mistreated, robbed, slandered, or threatened with a lawsuit. Sounds pretty bleak, but it's true. Happens to hundreds like us daily.
Living in the fear of that brings trauma . . . internal stress prompted by worry. Many a soul starts priming the pump of worry even before they get the morning paper. All sorts of energy is burned up as the mind runs up and down the dark alleys of imaginary dread.
"We must get rid of Fear!" advised Thomas Carlyle. Sure . . . but how? How do you break the habit? The same way you stay in the dentist's chair when you're tempted to get antsy—you trust. You consciously and willfully abandon yourself to Someone who is trustworthy. It certainly worked for David. He wrote:
When I am afraid,
I will put my trust in You. (Psalm 56:3)
Meaning what? Meaning this: "I will lean on, rely on, rest in, surrender to, depend on, relax." How can I do this? By being convinced that God is totally trustworthy. He cares. He's reliable. He isn't clumsy. Or unskilled. Or out to get me. Or only working part time. Or available just to adults. When He says, "This won't hurt a bit, trust me," He means it.
Excerpt taken from Come before Winter and Share My Hope by Charles R. Swindoll. Copyright © 1985, 1988, 1994 by Charles R. Swindoll, Inc. All rights reserved worldwide.
Used with permission. All rights reserved.
Listen to today's broadcast of Insight for Living with Chuck Swindoll at OnePlace.com.
Visit the Bible-teaching ministry of Chuck Swindoll at www.insight.org.