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Fear: What Happens When We Quit Trusting the Lord

Fear occurs from a failure to trust Him.

To rebel against God, or to fail to believe in Him, sentences one to live in fear.

Fear of what? Fear of everything, fear of anything and even fear of nothing.

People can fear nothing? Yes, they can.

“I will put anxiety in the hearts of those of you who survive in the lands of their enemies. The sound of a wind-driven leaf will put them to flight; and they will flee as one flees from a sword, and fall though no one is pursuing them. They will stumble over one another …” (Leviticus 26:36-37).

The sound of a leaf blowing in the wind panics them.

That’s fear.

Same with blood moons, Middle Eastern skirmishes and the latest candidate for the Antichrist.

What’s wrong with Christians? Why do they fear every little thing that comes along?

Writing in the September 24, 2015, New York Review, Professor Marilynne Robinson takes on the fear she sees among God’s faithful today. (I confess to being ignorant of this well-known teacher and author who is so highly respected among the intelligentsia. Yet, she writes as a born-again Christian.)

Some points Dr. Robinson makes:

—When people forget God, “they make irrational responses to irrational fears.”

—“Fearfulness obscures the distinction between real threat on one hand and on the other the terrors that beset those who see threat everywhere.”

—“To fear indiscriminately” is a “very costly indulgence. Likewise, trying to stimulate fear in others is a bad proposition.”

—“No one seems to have an unkind word to say about fear these days, un-Christian as it surely is.”

(Note: I find it amazing this purely Christian sermon is to be found in a secular publication like the NY Review of Books.)

What a terrible statement we Christians make to the world when we live in fear.

I love what Ezra said.

This spiritual leader had received permission from the king to return to Babylon and retrieve all the holy vessels taken from the Temple in the days of Nebuchadnezzar. Their value was easily a king’s ransom. This lengthy journey could be risky indeed.

Ezra thought of asking the king for an armed guard. He would have granted the request, he knew. But there was a problem with that. “For I was ashamed to request from the king troops and horsemen to protect us from the enemy on the way.” 

Why was he ashamed to ask for protection? “Because we had said to the king, ‘The hand of our God is favorably disposed to all those who seek Him, but His power and His anger are against all those who forsake Him.’”

So, what would they do? “We fasted and sought our God concerning this matter, and He listened to our entreaty.”

Then, they “manned up” and “the hand of our Lord was over us, and He delivered us from the hand of the enemy and the ambushes by the way” (Ezra chapter 8).

We make the same choice as Ezra every day of our lives: Whether to live up to the claims we make for our Lord. Whether to live by faith.

“When the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on earth?” (Luke 18:8).

Or, will He ask us as He did the disciples on the Galilee: “Why did you fear? Where is your faith?” (Mark 4:40).

Lord, help us to be strong in the Lord and act like we believe in Thee. The leaves are always quivering and you are not pleased when they panic us.