| discipleshipFacing the Future Without Fear  By Sherri Langton Guest Writer
 
 CBN.com 
		   Remember Y2K? That was the horrible doom we  faced over ten years ago that everything necessary for life would halt once the  calendar tumbled over to the year 2000. Planes would fall from the sky; cars  would sit idle. It seems silly now because nothing horrible happened, and we  shifted effortlessly into a new millennium. 		  Now, over a decade later we’re facing other  fears, and they’re not over what might happen. Businesses shut their doors. Banks fail. The country’s unemployment  rate climbs. We also wrestle with personal crises: the lump discovered on a  breast, divorce papers served, a wayward teen who felt the tug into rebellion.  Fear for the future can easily overwhelm us  these days, but we can fight it through the simple act of remembering. Remember the Creator Paul tells us, “For by Him all things were  created that are in heaven and that are on earth, visible and invisible,  whether thrones or dominions or principalities or powers. All things were created  through Him and for Him” (Colossians 1:16, 17).  These verses say that He who created,  controls; He who authored life is authority over life. The same God who spoke  the universe into existence oversees counseling sessions and chemotherapy. No  wonder God asks, “To whom shall I be equal?” (Isaiah 40:25). Life, with all its fearful debris, rotates  around the fixed axis of God’s sovereignty. “This is my Father’s world,” the  hymn says — not mine, not the government’s, not the surgeon’s who will be  operating in the morning. This doesn’t mean that bad things won’t happen but  that God will tell us what to do when we don’t know what to do. He’ll impress  us with proper actions and attitudes. The Holy Spirit instructs, convicts, and  guides (John 16:13). We can count on Him to give us sanity in the midst of  panic. And we can count on God to work bad into good if we love Him (Romans  8:28). 		  We lose sight of this because fear of the  future blurs our perception. One bad report from the blood test, a meltdown on  Wall Street, and God shrinks in our fear-skewed perception. But the truth is,  if we remember our Creator, we shrink  — not God. “When I consider Your heavens, the work of Your fingers . . . What  is man that You are mindful of him, and the son of man that You visit him?”  (Psalm 8:3, 4).  Confidence in God’s control puts us at ease  no matter what looms ahead. Jesus, for example, knew exactly what suffering  awaited Him in Jerusalem.  Yet He didn’t shrink from the future; He led the way to Jerusalem (Mark 10:32). Jesus knew that the  plan God set in motion after the Fall had triumph written between the lines of  tragedy and that even Pilate merely fulfilled a role God had given him (John  19:10, 11). Despite what we see or can’t see, what we  feel or dread, God’s world has purpose and plan. Mistakes and mishaps do not  have the final word.  Remember the Past God knows that our perspective of the future  is often limited to what we can see now. That’s why the refrains of “remember”  and “do not forget the past” lace the Scriptures together. With the psalmist,  we must determine to “remember Your wonders of old” (Psalm 77:11) when we fear  the future. Psalm 105 commemorates God’s deliverance of  His people from Egypt.  He protected them from oppression; permitted Joseph to be enslaved, planning  the key to future survival through him; made the Israelites fruitful; empowered  Moses and Aaron to perform miracles before Pharaoh and the people; sent plagues  and led the Israelites out of Egypt; guided them with fire at night and a cloud  by day; supplied food and water in the wilderness; gave them lands of other  nations. Why so much detail? Because a short memory is  dangerous. If we don’t recall God’s help in the past, we neglect to depend on  Him for the future. The overall tone of the next psalm is set with one key  sentence: “Our ancestors in Egypt  were not impressed by the Lord’s miraculous deeds. They soon forgot his many  acts of kindness to them” (106:7). This psalm alternates between the Lord’s  mighty acts and Israel’s  lapses of memory. When the people faced new challenges after their deliverance,  they refused to wait for God’s counsel because they had forgotten what He’d  done (v. 13). Their forgetfulness gave way to rebellion, impatience, murmuring,  complaining, envy, idolatry, and ultimately unbelief. We face the same danger. When fear grips us,  we tend to forget what God has done for us in times past. Most of us have  racked up enough mileage to survey the road behind us. Where in our journey did  God intervene? When did He send a messenger of hope? When did He change our  attitude and bring peace? How did He supply our needs? In custody battles,  court appearances, caring for aging parents, adjustments to singleness,  long-term illnesses, and separation through death and divorce, we can trace  God’s providential hand. One of my Red Seas  was a layoff in 1989. When I read my journal from those seven months, I see God  pushing me to mail résumés despite my apathy. I see caring friends He sent to  pray with me when I sank in depression. I reread thoughts of a sermon on John 6  — the feeding of the 5,000 — that assured me of God’s provision.  It would be healthy for us to write our own  version of Psalm 105, especially if we find ourselves more prone to the  attitude in Psalm 106. Recounting the Red Seas  in our pasts assures us that we can once again “Seek the LORD and His strength;  seek His face evermore” (105:4). Remember, God  Remembers God has a unique memory. When we repent of  our sins, He remembers them no more (Isaiah 43:25). But He never forgets those  He formed in the womb (Isaiah 49:15, 16).  Genesis offers an account of yet another  dimension of God’s memory. If we keep this in mind, we place a firm grip on  fears about the future when they threaten to overwhelm us. Though He decided to destroy the earth with a  flood, God made a promise to Noah: Follow the instructions for building an ark,  take your family and animals aboard, and you will be saved.  Noah may have  wondered, Will the pitch hold? Is the  wood strong enough to endure the torrents? Once the ark comes to rest, then  what? For forty days God remained silent, except  for the sound of His lashing fury. The text says that after the waters flooded  the earth for about five months, “God remembered Noah . . .” (Genesis 8:1).  This doesn’t mean that God recovered His memory but that He recalled His  promise to preserve Noah, his family, and the animals (6:18) and then acted to  fulfill it. A wind blew over the earth, and the floodwaters receded. In the  seventh month, the ark came to rest on the mountains of Ararat and with it,  whatever doubts Noah may have had. When conditions were right, God permitted  Noah, his family, and the animals to disembark into a fresh, clean world. God has made many promises to us in His Word.  Which ones  can we look to when we’re paralyzed by fear of the future? He  pledges strength and aid when we’re terrified (Isaiah 41:10).  He vows that the  waters will not overwhelm us, that the fire won’t scorch us (Isaiah 43:2). He promises perfect peace if we keep our minds riveted on Him (Isaiah 26:3). When God closed the door on me during my  layoff, I tested His memory. I trusted in the Lord and constantly retrieved my  fears from the quicksand of my own understanding (Proverbs 3:5). Though no  money was coming in, I sought God’s kingdom first and tithed on my unemployment  and severance pay (Matthew 6:33). I feared the Lord and called to Him (Psalm  25:12; Jeremiah 33:3a).  When I had only three weeks of unemployment  money left, God remembered me. He directed my paths to an organization looking  for someone just like me. To this day, He tells me “great and unsearchable  things” about His faithfulness to do what He says He will do. Holding Steady 		  Richard Fuller writes about an old seaman’s  wisdom:  “In fierce storms we must do one  thing, for there is only one way to survive: we must put the ship in a certain  position and keep her there.” Fuller likens our soul to a ship in a storm: We  must put it in one position and refuse to move it, no matter what. 		  When the waves of fear roll us from side to  side, exercising our memory holds our souls in a steady position of trust. The  Creator’s control, His past help, and a sharp memory of His promises — with  these, we can face the storms of fear with confidence. Comments on this article? Contact Sherri  Adapted from an article originally published  in the July-August 1999 issue of Discipleship  Journal. 
  Sherri Langton, associate editor of the Bible Advocate  magazine and of Now What? e-zine, has worked 20 years in Christian publishing.  She is also an award-winning freelance writer whose work has appeared in Focus  on the Family, Decision, Discipleship Journal, Today's Christian Woman, and  other publications. Sherri has contributed poetry and articles to the  collections My Turn to Care, Teatime Stories for Women, Becoming a Godly Man,  Faces of Faith, and Chicken Soup for the Soul in Menopause.
 © Sherri Langton. Used with permission. 
 
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