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Daily Bread

How will my worry look?

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Which of you by worrying can add one cubit to his stature? — Luke 12:25

Hans Christian Andersen, author of such well-known fairy tales as “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” had a phobia of being buried alive. As a result, he always carried a note in his pocket telling anyone who might find him unconscious not to assume he was dead. He often left another note on his bedside table stating, “I only seem dead.” Such was his anxiety until he finally succumbed to cancer in 1875.

We may think such a fear is strange, but do we have fears that will someday look just as irrational? Is it possible that the day will come when we look back and marvel at our own anxieties? Will we one day wonder at that foolish person who chose to worry rather than to pray? Will time eventually cast us as a pitiful person who was plagued by fear because we did not face life with the resources lavished on us by the Almighty Lord of the universe?

Worrying doesn’t change anything. But trusting the Lord changes everything about the way we view life.

Forgive us, Lord, for our inclination to worry. Help us to see how foolish it is for us to worry about what You have promised to provide. Don’t let us bury ourselves alive with fears. — Mart De Haan

A strategy for winner over worry

Identify specific worries.

Work to change what you can.

Leave what you can’t change with God.

READ: Luke 12:22-34

When we put our cares in God’s hands, He puts His peace in our hearts.

The Bible in one year:

• Numbers 11-14

vuukle comment

ALMIGHTY LORD

CHANGE

HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN

LORD

MART DE HAAN

NEW CLOTHES

ONE

WORRY

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