No need to worry about worries

Published 8:47 am Friday, July 26, 2019

Once there was a man who worried all the time about everything. He was a chronic worrier. Then one day his friends saw him whistling. “Can that be our friend? No, it can’t be.” They asked him, “What happened?”

“I’m paying a man to do my worrying for me,” he replied.

“You mean you aren’t worrying anymore?” they asked.

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“No,” said the man. “Whenever I’m inclined to worry, I just let him do it.”

“How much do you pay him?”

“$2,000 a week.”

“Wow! How can you afford that?”

“I can’t. But that’s his worry!”

That comical story reminds us that worry is something we all are faced with. Statisticians at the University of Wisconsin have studied the things human beings worry about.

They found that the average individual’s worries can be divided into four categories: First, there are the things that never happen, which constitute 40 percent of our worries. Second, there are things over and past that couldn’t be changed by all the worry in the world, and they are another 30 percent of the total. Third, there are petty worries and needless worries, which are 22 percent. Fourth, there are legitimate worries, and these are only eight percent of the whole.

So how do we handle the 8 percent of worries that are legitimate?

Well, the man in the story definitely handled it the wrong way!

Jesus taught us the right way in Matthew 6:31-34: “Do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. Therefore, do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.” (NIV)

Jesus was telling us to live one day at a time, not to worry about tomorrow but live today to its fullest.

You see, worry produces doubt in a threefold direction: (1) God’s love is doubted. Worry implies that He cares little for His blood-washed children. (2) God’s wisdom is doubted. Worry indicates that He is not able to plan for His own, that He does not know what is best for them who belong to Him. (3) God’s power is doubted. Worry says His grace is not sufficient for our needs.

So, if we would simply learn to trust in God’s ability to take care of us we could save ourselves a lot of stress!

In 1871, a young medical student was worrying. Then one day he read 21 words that changed his life.

The 21 words were written by Thomas Carlyle: “Our main business is not to see what dimly lies at a distant, but to do what clearly lies at hand.”

Later, the young man founded the Johns Hopkins University and became the Regis professor of medicine at Oxford University.

The young man’s name was Sir William Oscar.

So, take this day that God has given you and put your whole heart into it.

Focus on the tasks at hand. Don’t waste precious time and energy worrying over the past or things that may never happen.

Give your worries to God — He is well able to deal with them.

Don’t worry about tomorrow.

Remember: God is already there!

Rev. Doug Johnson is the senior pastor at Raven Assembly of God in Raven, Virginia