Worry-Free Living
Matt 6:25-34
I’m not too much of a worrier, but the things I do worry
about I do a real good job with! When I
entered the ministry, I worried and still do worry a lot about the people I am
responsible for. Am I meeting their
needs, guiding them, ministering to them properly. In fact for many years, I had Matt 6:34 right above my
computer.
Have you really looked at that verse? Depending on the day you have been having,
it has different meanings. If life is
going pretty smooth, then the first part seems to jump out to me. “Do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow
will worry about itself.” That’s right,
no need to worry about what tomorrow might bring. However, when life isn’t going so well, the last half always
jumps out at me. “Each day has enough
trouble of its own!”
When we are worrying people, we worry about today AND
tomorrow. Have you ever realized that
in a real sense, worry is telling God that we don’t believe he can handle our
problems?
PRAYER
I. Dealing
with Worries
A.
5 questions to help us deal with worry
1.
As you read this passage, 5 questions come to mind to help us
deal with worry appropriately
B.
What is really Important?
1.
I am a day planner type of person
2.
I like to organize my day and tasks from the most important to
least important.
3.
That really sounds good on paper, but half the time I spend
getting caught up in the urgent and not the important.
4.
What I mean is that I get thinking, that this has to be done
right now.
5.
So I focus on the task I think has to be done right now
instead of the task that is really important in the scheme of the week.
6.
There are always urgent things call for our attention, but are
they really important things?
7.
Jesus uses this passage to say, focus on what’s really
important.
a)
It isn’t fashion, or good meals
b)
It’s your relationship with God
C.
How much control do I have over things that worry me.
1.
I once read that 90% of what we worry about is beyond our
control.
2.
If that is true, why worry about something you can’t do
anything about anyway?
3.
I can relate to the analogy Jesus used in Vs 27.
a)
Vs 27 can really be interpreted in 2 ways in the Greek.
b)
One hour to you life
c)
One cubit to your stature
4.
The Jewish people at the time of Christ were shorter than most
people of the world and the men were always looking for ways to appear taller.
5.
In light of this, Jesus could very well be talking about
height rather than the length of our lives.
6.
I know exactly how they would be feeling!
7.
The answer to the question is that no amount of worry is going
to make you grow an inch taller, so quit worrying about it.
D.
Isn’t it best to live in day-tight compartments?
1.
Think about your worries.
a)
How many of them are centered on what happened yesterday or
what might happen tomorrow?
b)
If it happened yesterday, it’s too late to do anything about
it.
c)
Who knows what tomorrow will bring.
d)
Think about how what people worried about on Sept 10 changed
dramatically on Sept 11.
2.
Jesus says tomorrow is tomorrow, deal with what you need to
for today.
E.
Isn’t our God big enough to handle the toughest situations
anyway?
1.
That’s the heart of this passage.
2.
God is big enough to handle all the things you are worrying
about.
3.
He can deal with them when you cannot.
II. Practice
the Presence of God
A.
A parallel passage from Paul
1.
READ Phil 4:4-9
2.
Let’s look at some advice Paul gave us on the subject of
worry.
B.
Prayer
1.
If you want to feel the presence of God, begin with prayer
2.
You don’t have to be in a church building, don’t have to say
special words or use a monotone.
3.
Just talk to God.
4.
I practice what Norman Vincent Peale calls arrow prayers. Short prayers shot off to God whenever I
have a need or occasion to share something with God.
5.
In traffic, in the elevator, shower, at the desk, anywhere is
fine for arrow prayers.
6.
However, I would suggest not closing your eyes if you are
driving and praying.
C.
Praise
1.
The second thing Paul focuses on in this passage is praise
2.
Build your prayer requests from an atmosphere of praise and
thanksgiving.
3.
Our small group in Indianapolis kept a prayer journal. We had two columns; one was prayer requests,
the other was praise and recognizing answered prayers. After a year, it was cool to look at how
many of our prayers God had answered.
4.
We tend to thank God for saying yes to our prayers, but we
also need to thank him for saying no.
5.
Sometimes we can look back and be very glad Jesus said no to a
certain prayer.
6.
One writer shares that he prayed every day as a child for God
to answer a specific prayer and God always said no. As an adult he was so glad God said no. You see his prayer was that he could have teeth like Grandpa’s
that he could take out at night.
7.
God knows best.
D.
Peace
1.
In vs 7 Paul talks about the peace of God that guards our
minds.
a)
He uses a military term that has the picture of a place being
guarded by a garrison of soldiers.
b)
That’s a great peace to have, knowing that God has his
soldiers all around your spirit protecting you.
2.
That’s the peace that allowed Jesus to sleep through a great
storm.
3.
That’s the peace you see in many people who have nothing, but
God.
4.
Absolute contentment in the God who is taking care of them.
5.
Real peace.
E.
Poise
1.
When I first began preaching as a teenager, was absolutely
terrified every time I stepped into the pulpit.
a)
I wasn’t very good.
b)
As a youth minister I preached a little more often wasn’t
quite as scared and did a little better at presenting the material.
c)
Now I preach every week, I am still a little nervous every
time I am up here, but I know I have improved tremendously since my teenage years
because I preach all the time now.
2.
That’s the same with our spiritual walk.
a)
The more we study, pray, and live a life that gives itself
over to God the better we become at doing it.
b)
We can study about religion all we want, but it doesn’t become
a part of us until we start living our religion.
c)
The more we do it, the more poised we become.
III. Relinquish Your
Life to God
A.
If you want to sum up what Paul and Jesus are saying, you can
use the word relinquish.
1.
Ruth Senter writes:
Relinquishments calls for a reversal of our natural bent. It means I must be willing to live without
some one, some thing, some status, some right, some security. No wonder when Jesus talked about “losing
one’s life” as a guarantee for “saving it,” his disciples did not
understand. Such reasoning ran contrary
to their natural way of thinking.
2.
Let go of the controls and let God take control.
3.
He’s a much better driver and he knows where we need to go.
4.
When we can do that, we can deal with worry much more effectively
in our lives.