BY JACK WARD
PASTOR, TOMAHAWK MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH
There seems to be no limit to our fears. In a Peanuts cartoon strip, Charlie Brown goes to Lucy for a nickel’s worth of psychiatric help. She proceeds to pinpoint his particular “fear.”
“Perhaps,” she says, “you have hypengyophobia, which is the fear of responsibility.” Charlie Brown says, “No.”
“Well, perhaps you have ailurophobia, which is the fear of cats.”
“No.”
“Well, maybe you have climacophobia, which is the fear of staircases.”
“No.”
Exasperated, Lucy says, “Well, maybe you have pantophobia, which is the fear of everything.”
“Yes,” says Charles, “that is the one!”
Sometimes we feel like we are afraid of everything. We are afraid of ourselves. We are afraid of people. We are afraid of the future. We are afraid of the past. We are afraid of life. We are afraid of terrorists. We are afraid of war. We are afraid of death.
Even Paul, the sturdy Christian warrior, had to fight fear. Paul had fallen flat on his face in Athens. He did exactly what he intended not to do, and in his own eyes he had failed. He wrote of his arrival in Corinth: “For when we came into Macedonia we had not rest, but we were troubled on every side; without were fightings; within were fears.”
Paul was full of fears, just like you and me – the fear of inadequacy, the fear of failing.
But perhaps the most surprising fear of many people, and one that we do not like to address, is the fear that God is not really on our side.
One of the great fears of the ancient people was that their god would fall asleep. Can you imagine such a thing? When the prophets of Baal could not get their gods to rain down fire on the top of Mt. Carmel, Elijah taunted them: Maybe your god is asleep. But the Jews took great comfort in the fact that the God of Israel neither slumbered nor slept.
Over and over again the message of the Bible is fear not. When Abram took his family to the Promised Land, he feared he was turning his back on everything he knew, his security for the unknown. God spoke to him: “Fear not Abram, I am your shield and your reward will be great.”
When the Jews stood at the Red Sea and could see Pharaoh’s chariots coming on the horizon, they cried out that they would all be slaughtered. Moses said to them: “Stand still, fear not, and see the salvation of the Lord.”
When the angel of the Lord came to Mary and said that she would bear a child, she trembled with fear. What would become of her? Said the angel: “Fear not Mary, for you have found favor with God.”
Fear not! Fear Not! How do you do it?
Remember that God will always keep His promises to us and God’s integrity will not allow Him to forsake you in times of trouble. “Fear not. I will never leave thee nor forsake thee.” (Hebrews 11:6)
Hear Pastor Jack’s sermons and more at tomahawkmbc.com.