"If I can just get through this problem, Im sure that everything will be okay." Ever think that? So you grit your teeth, and sure enough, you get through that problem, only to find several more have cropped up on the horizon. Its something like pedaling a bicycle. Going uphill is so slow and takes so much energy, while the downhill run very quickly turns into another uphill climb.
Interestingly, the Chinese character for crisis is a combination of two characters that stand for danger and opportunity. Both are involved when you are confronted with a problem.
"If I can just get through this problem..." Now, theres nothing wrong in getting through that one problem before you tackle the next one, but getting through the immediate one wont be the end of challengeås.
The word which we translate "worry" or "anxiety" in the New Testament is an interesting word. Paul used the word when he described his care or concern for the churches, a legitimate area of concern, but he also used the word when he talked about not being overwhelmed by the immediate problembut rather to pray about it and commit it to the Lord (see Philippians 4:6).
That Greek word for worry comes from a verb which means "to be drawn in different directions," or to be distracted to the point of really being worked up over a situation. Do you ever find yourself in that position, where your head and your heart dont tell you the same things? Your head says, "That problem confronting you is a pretty big one!" and your heart says, "God is bigger than this problem, and I think that I can trust Him." You are drawn or pulled two different ways. The end result is you worry.
When I am confronted with a situation such as I have just described, Ive learned that I generally decide how its going to bewhether I give in to what my head says and worry, or I yield to the inner witness of the Spirit in my heart which says, "Trust God!"
The Swiss psychiatrist Paul Tournier says that the most powerful and unused gift from God is choice. That observation is one that comes from the pages of Gods Word, the Bible, and in this whole matter, it is younot circumstances, or fate, or the enemies of your soulwho do the choosing. You do! The choice is to worry or trust. Commitment or vaccilation. Progress or losing ground. Making decisions or having decisions made for you. Walking with the Lord, or walking alone in the dark.
"In the world you will have trouble," said Jesus, but He didnt stop there. If He had, the future would be pretty bleak. But he continued, saying, "But take heart! I have overcome the world" (John 16:33), and those words tell me that He not only walks with me as I take the upward climb, but Hes on the other side to welcome me as well. Hes been there!
In his book Why Us? Warren Wiersbe tells of a blind girl who was struggling with some tough issues. She turned to him and said, "Pray that I wont waste all of this suffering!" That was a young woman who saw Gods purpose in the upward climb. So can you, friend, no matter where you are on the incline of life. - Resource reading: 2 Corinthians 6:1-13