It has been suggested that the chief problem with worrying . . .
It has been suggested that the chief problem with
worrying—other than the obvious fact that it is rarely productive—is that it
tends to scatter our energies. When we
start worrying about all the things we need to do, or feel we ought to do, or
are still planning to do, it isn’t long before our minds have set up camp in a
hundred places, all at once. In effect,
we are pulled in so many different directions that we end
up frantically spinning our wheels to the point of exhaustion, without moving
an inch!
We all know that excessive worrying does little good; but no
matter how hard we try, we still find ourselves fretting over this or
that. Indeed, in my experience, one of
the least effective ways to stop worrying is to try and not think about
it. Maybe that approach has worked for
some of you—and if so, I’d love to learn your secret—but whenever I am told,
“Just don’t worry about it,” I usually start worrying about it all the more.
This is why Jesus’ advice in the Sermon on the Mount—“Do not
worry about what you will eat, or what you will wear”—has always struck me as
being somewhat impractical. How can he
possibly expect us not to be concerned with the basic necessities of life? Granted, “One does not live by bread
alone.” But then again, one isn’t going
to live very long without it either!
However, upon closer examination, I think we may be
misreading Jesus’ intent. He is not
saying, “Just put the worries out of your mind.” What he is saying is, “First, put your minds
on the kingdom of God, and then all of those other concerns will fall into
place.”
It’s almost as he was saying, “If you want to worry about
something, worry about that which is worth the effort and energy. Worry about larger and more significant
things than tonight’s dinner menu or tomorrow morning’s meeting. Worry about the things of God—truth, life,
and love!”
Does this mean that we will suddenly stop sweating the small
stuff? Probably not. As long as we live in a world filled with
tensions and troubles, our minds will never be entirely free from worries. But if we can keep returning our hearts and
minds to the kingdom of God, then we may eventually realize that whatever we’ve
been worried about doesn’t matter nearly as much as the matters of heaven!