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For quite a few years, we sent our children to a Christian elementary school and they would come home with all kinds of songs to sing, including this one. My name is Worry Warthog. I live in misery. Instead of trusting in the Lord, I worry constantly.
Although I know it's silly, although I know it's bad, still I find a certain joy in always looking sad. Sometimes my mother asks me, why must you worry so? Our graciously heavenly Father loves all creatures here below.
You worry in the night time. You cry when you're alone. You'll be one great big wart before you're even grown. And no, I will not sing that for you. Do you ever worry?
And the answer is, of course. Do I worry?
The answer is, of course. We worry and fret. The problem is, there are so many things to worry about. From stock markets, to health, to the world, to the election, to viruses, to vaccinations, nuclear bombs, salvation of loved ones, student loans, our grandchildren growing up in such a world.
So many things to worry about. Too much snow to get to church? I mean, the list is endless, right? I don't know if you're like me, but sometimes I've wakened in the night and I feel like there's a boa constrictor around my neck strangling me.
And I can just think of those thoughts. It makes me worry about so many things. As a matter of fact, the English word to worry means to strangle. Because it's just all-consuming and it's just choking you from your relaxation and calm.
And so today we'd like to talk about, or I'd like to talk about, what does the Bible say about worry? It's almost like the respectable sin of Christians. We know how bad some other sins are, but what about worry, the forbidden fruit?
So we're going to take a little deviation on snow Sundays. We meet at 1030 and we have no Sunday school, no Sunday night. And also I pull up an older sermon that I know is good for me and good for you.
So we'll deviate from Luke 4 today. Turn your Bibles to Matthew chapter 6. The greatest sermon may be ever preached. The Lord Jesus preaching the Sermon on the Mount. And I want you to know this morning that there are solutions to worry.
And God, the Heavenly Father, cares so much for you. He doesn't want you to worry. And He can certainly take care of you and could look after you and your children and your grandchildren and your great-grandchildren.
And certainly if you want to plan your future and have prudent provision for yourself and work hard, there's nothing wrong with that. But worrying is a sin. And we need to see it as such. And then we need to see that the remedy for worry is trusting in the Lord Jesus.
This sermon in Matthew 5, 6, and 7 is found in the book of Matthew. And I love even the name of Matthew just to catch you up in the book of Matthew a little bit. Matthew means gift of the Lord. And certainly His name means that.
And also this book is a gift from the Lord as we see in this book. Jesus extolled as King. Everything about it from the very beginning with His genealogy. I mean, whoever reads genealogies, right? When I started my Bible reading for the year, the McShane Plan, to read through every book of the Bible again this year.
Of course, Matthew 1 was on January 1st and it's got a genealogy. And then Esther 1 and 2 have all kinds of names. And I thought, I'm glad we can look at genealogies a little bit differently. This is the book about Jesus, the King, the Sovereign Lord.
If I had one verse in all of Matthew to describe it, it would be Matthew 21, 5. Say to the daughter of Zion, behold your King is coming to you.
And that's exactly what happens.
The King, the Lord Jesus, arrives. The first book in the New Testament having so many Old Testament connections. It seems fit and right. Malachi ends and now we have Matthew and we have Jesus, the Messiah.
Jesus, the King. Early on in chapter 2, for he has been born King of the Jews. And then at the very end in Matthew 27, the charge against him, red that was put over his head on the cross. This is Jesus, King of the Jews.
And if you look at Matthew 4, verse 24, what has been going on before Jesus preaches this sermon? It says in verse 24 of Matthew 4,. So his fame spread throughout all Syria. And they brought him all the sick, those afflicted with various diseases and pains.
Those oppressed by demons, epileptics and paralytics. And he healed them all. Great crowds followed him from Galilee and the Decapolis. Those ten Gentile cities. And from Jerusalem and Judea. And from beyond the Jordan.
Seeing the crowds, Matthew 5. He went up on a mountain. Sounds like Moses going up to Sinai, right? Jesus going up to a mountain. We see a lot of this similarity and parallel from the Old Testament to the New.
And when he sat down, his disciples came to him. Of course, that's how they would teach back in those days. You know here at the church, when I'm preaching, I stand up. Back in those days, when rabbis would teach, they would sit down.
It would be a very formal thing. They're sitting down to teach. And you know, there's a little bit of that in the synagogues. There's a seat of Moses. Or even today, the professor at a university has a chair.
Because that's a formal thing. And so now Jesus is going to teach. And if you're not careful, you read chapter 5, verse 2, and you think, what is he doing? And he opened his mouth and taught them, saying, I mean, don't you have to open your mouth before you teach?
The answer is yes. It's hard to just mumble. And so this is a formal way of saying, this is important. When you hear this language in Scripture, he opened his mouth to teach. This is going to be kind of hold on to your hat type of thing.
Get ready.
This is going to be very, very important. Acts 8, Philip opened his mouth and preached Jesus to them. Acts 10, Peter said, opening his mouth, God shows no partiality. And so now Jesus is going to be teaching.
Of course, I know you love the Sermon on the Mount, but not everybody does. Remember the old Russian leader, Khrushchev? He said, I'll tell you what the difference between Christians and me is. That if you slap me on the face, I'll hit you back so hard, your head will fall off.
Instead of turning the other cheek. Harry Barnes said, once we make a candid examination of the actual teachings of Jesus, it must be admitted that they're not only archaic, but even destructive for any advanced civilization.
If the teachings of Jesus as they exist were applied to contemporary society, nothing less than anarchy would inevitably follow. Not everybody likes this sermon. And one more man said the doctrine of salvation and the Sermon on the Mount stands in sharpest contradiction to that of Paul in Romans chapter 3 through 8.
There's a gulf between Jesus and Paul that no exegesis can ever bridge. I don't quite think so. I think you know this passage. You've read it regularly. And I think you'll be encouraged and convicted as we look at God's prescription for worry.
If you'd like an outline today, it's super simple. I'm going to give you six charges to work through by the grace of God to help you look at worry God's way. In essence, God's solution for anxiety and worry.
And they're not going to be with alliteration. They're going to be alphabetical, acrostic.
A, B, C, D, E, F.
That's my outline. A, B, C, D, E, F. I know, that's rare.
That's rare around here.
So I think we should probably turn off the live stream because I don't think those watching at home should enjoy the things that we do in person, right? Just kidding. So we're going to look at God's prescription for worry and anxiety.
Six charges, starting with A, working our way all the way through F.
Letter A.
Admit that all worry and anxiety is sinful. Matthew 6, 25. Just recognize it and believe it for yourself. This is in fact sinful. If God says not to do something and I do it, that would be sinful. If God says in Philippians 4, be anxious for nothing and I'm anxious for something, I have to just say that's sin.
And by the way, as we work through this passage, once you recognize something's sin, there's hope. Because God doesn't forgive diseases or illnesses or syndromes. He forgives sin. Because Jesus is a great forgiver.
And so when we realize and confess it opens up everything for us. It's God's compassion to even tell us.
Through the Lord Jesus here,.
To see worry as God sees it as sin. Matthew 6, 25. Therefore, I tell you, do not be anxious about your life, what you will eat or what you will drink, nor about your body, what you will put on. Is not life more than food and the body more than clothing?
And once again, we need to recognize the gravity of things and not to do something. And we do it, let's just admit that it's sin. And so when we worry, we ought to immediately say, I know you're telling me not to be divided and distracted and worrying and working through these things with fretting.
And so I will admit, Lord, that's sin. You might ask the question, like a good Bible student, it says in verse 25, the first word, therefore, so it must be connected to something. It says in verse 24, no one can serve two masters for either he will hate the one and love the other or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other.
You cannot serve God and money. And so the logical conclusion, if you can't serve money, then we shouldn't be concerned about things that money can buy like food and clothing, what we eat, what we drink, what we put on.
Does anybody here have King James?
Okay, what's it say?
Verse 25 of Job 12. Just kidding.
I'm kidding.
625, it says take no thought. Does it not? Okay, stop there. Take no thought. He's not saying you should never think about it, but it's this grinding worry and this kind of, you know, sometimes in computer programs, it just gets stuck in these loops and just over and over and over.
I'm not saying we're dogs at all, but when I would train dogs or be around dogs,.
They just kind of stare.
And they're fixated on something and I have to just give them kind of a little prod, right? I know what, you know, some of my enemies might think that he called us dogs again. I'm not saying that at all, but like a dog, similar to a dog with similes of language for the dog, it's like we're so fixated on something, we're taking thought about something so much more than what you drink and what you put on.
If you are worrying, stop. And if you're not worrying, don't worry. That idea of fretting over things and being consumed about this stuff that might happen or is happening, this gnawing or this biting.
Jesus says don't be anxious about it. By the way, do you see the argument? Since God has given you life,.
Won't he take care of you for what you need for life?
If he gives you the greatest thing, life, wouldn't he give you the lesser?
Clothes?
Someone called the world's trinity of cares what we eat, what we drink, and what we wear. There's a genuine concern we have to provide for our family, obviously, but there's a difference between concern and worry.
If we're not supposed to worry about the essentials of life, eating and drinking what we wear, well, then should we worry about what kind of car we drive? What kind of snowblower we have? My snowblower is on the last legs.
It's a 27-year-old snowblower, and he, Luke, today, was out there getting ready.
My father always said.
He had a 15-year-old snowblower.
When I was 15.
He had a 16-year-old snowblower.
When I was 16.
If you think about what happened back in the Bible days, no Costco's, no Hannaford's, none of these stores.
It was all about.
If you're supposed to not be worried about what you eat and drink, then, I mean, everybody's talking about sometime this year the grid's going to go down, and three weeks at least, five weeks at least, ten weeks at least, what are we going to do?
Well, we're going to do what we did back in the Bible days, and that is not worry about these things.
You say, well, it's easy for you to say.
Well, it is, because it's right here, but it's the Bible. You say, well, you don't know my circumstances. Well, okay, at least I don't worry as much as the other guy does. My support group says it's fine to worry.
Jesus says, don't worry. If you're a Christian, you're not to worry. It's a sin, so the next time you worry, you just ought to say, Lord, I'm sorry I've sinned against you. Please forgive me. I don't want to make any excuses and sound as bad as Aaron did.
I just threw in this gold and out came this calf. I don't want to sound as dumb.
Verse 12 -38,.
And we'll be forgiven. It says in 1 John 1, if we say we have no sin like worry, we're deceiving ourselves and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins of worry, he is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins of worry and everything else and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
My little children,.
I'm writing these things to you in appreciation or the wrath is assuaged by him for our sins including worry, not for ours only, but also for the whole world. I read this week that 19 million adults suffer from some kind of anxiety disorder.
I'm not here to talk about whether disorders are true or not and whether syndromes are true or not. I'm more thinking about anxiety really is real. I don't know what you want to call it,.
But anxiety is real.
You can do some self-tests online too. Have you been concerned about any of these things or been bothered by them in the last six months? Have you been restless, easily tired, problems concentrating,.
Irritable,.
Muscle tension, falling asleep, having trouble falling asleep, staying asleep or restless sleep? If you've answered I'm also known as GAD. I think I've got like ten of those six. I found another one because I thought it might help me.
Do you have two or more of these symptoms? Feeling on edge, easily fatigued, having a hard time concentrating, muscle tension, having a hard time falling asleep? I'm like, yeah, that's me. Heart racing, chest pain, difficulty breathing, grandchildren speaking out of turn.
I could ask you this. What makes you the most worried? Finances?
Health?
Election? The Bible says anxiety in the heart of man weighs it down, but a good word makes it glad. And the good word is you don't have to worry. Jesus asked the question in verse 25. Do you see it at the end of verse 25?
Is not life more than food?
Is it not?
And the body more than clothing?
And not just focusing here.
A hundred years from now,.
It'll make no difference that you went to a Michelin star restaurant.
Did you know that?
In 100 years, it'll make no difference that you wore an Armani tie when you preach from the pulpit. Matter of fact, I'm wearing one right now. I got it at the thrift store.
How much was it, Grace?
It makes no difference.
So, letter A,.
Is sin.
Just confess it as sin and go to the Lord for forgiveness.
That's the first thing.
If Jesus calls something sin, we call it sin. Own it. Secondly, B, believe that your Heavenly Father.
Is loving, good,.
And provides everything you need. Believe in the goodness of God the Father. If you're a Christian today, you know and you've tasted and seen that the Lord is good and the people that evangelize me, these are the people that taught me the Bible and all leading up for that time where the Spirit of God makes me alive and makes me born again to love the things I used to hate and hate the things I used to love.
I've seen the goodness of God. I've seen Him answer prayer. I've seen Him convict me. I've seen Him open my heart. All these things I know all about it and now Jesus is going to draw on that fact. Remember the Heavenly Father, verse 26, right, stop, look, and listen.
Sometimes people say, stop, drop, and roll.
Remember, did you do that.
When you were a kid in public school? Nuclear bomb, like that was really going to help. Stop, drop, and roll. Look at the birds of the air. They neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns and yet your Heavenly Father feeds them.
Are you not of more value than they? So it's one thing to say,.
Don't worry.
It's another thing to say,.
It helps us to say,.
We say no to sin, we kill sin, mortification, we put off, and then we say yes, we want to live under righteousness, motivated by grace,.
Motivated by the Lord, Titus chapter 2,.
And then we want to live rightly and we put on. So if we don't want to worry, then what do we do instead to replace it? I've said to myself many times before.
Trust.
That's what he's doing here.
Trust in the Heavenly Father. What are your other options to overcome worry? You can call 1 -888-ANXIETY. You can call the National Anxiety Foundation. You can call Anxiety Disorders Association of America.
You can read books like Living with Fear Peace from Nervous Suffering. You can be like G. Gordon Liddy. Remember he was involved in a tough guy, G. Gordon Liddy. Remember he had a fear of rats, electricity, and heights.
He didn't like to be up high. He didn't like rats.
He didn't like electricity.
So what did he do to overcome his worry and his fear? Remember? He climbed up an electric pole and ate a rat. That's an option. Maybe not a good option. I hope he cooked it first, but that's alright. Some Christian psychologist said we suggest setting aside 15 minutes in the morning and another 15 minutes in the evening for active worry.
What Jesus said, your Savior, your Redeemer, your friend said remember the Father. Remember how good the Father is. Instead of worrying, you need to trust.
He could have said,.
Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. It's cured with doctrine. Anxiety is cured with doctrine. The Lord takes care of.
Who he has made.
And so we have the command, verse 26, look at the birds. It's almost like, get out of that fixation. You're staring at your own problem so much. Get out and look at the birds. I was talking to Hannah Abendroth the other day and they were just in Netherlands and I think they saw,.
Did you see Corrie Ten Bloom's house?
Okay. They wanted to. It was one of the camps in Germany. And I think she said something like, when it comes to looking, when you look around, you get distressed.
Amen?
You look inwardly, you get depressed. And when you look out and you look up, you find rest.
I thought, you know, that's really good.
So Jesus directs to look, to go outside, to be the bird watcher and just to look. Take a long look.
Stare.
Be like one of those geriatric 63-year-old men outside with nice cameras and binoculars.
That he probably has bifocals too.
And just stare at those birds. Because when you're looking at the birds, you should be thinking something. The Lord God takes care of them and their birds. I mean, what's a bird cost?
What's a bird worth?
He says, I want you to look. Martin Lloyd-Jones, the theologian, said the essence of worry is a failure to think. Or in this case, a failure to look and think. To look. To think.
Through the issues.
To realize that God shows some kind of concern for a bird. He shows some interest of a bird that even cares that there's a bird there. Now we're not to imitate the birds.
We're not to say,.
Well, they don't store things up. Well, they don't store things up out of instinct.
God providentially cares for the birds. If he providentially cares for the birds and he's my father, and the only way he's your father is through faith in the Son, if you're one of his children, he will take care of you.
I don't see the birds lining up at BJ's to try to get stuff. Birds stockpile,.
But out of instinct only.
One man said, nobody ever saw an earthly father feed his birds and abandon his children.
I'm your heavenly father?
Jesus is not saying,.
Oh, don't worry because you don't really have troubles.
You have troubles.
But he's saying, don't worry because I'm your heavenly father. I would feel so bad if one of my children when they were little said, Daddy, are you going to provide us enough food for tomorrow?
Do you think we might have clothes.
For tomorrow to wear? I would think that's impugning my nature as a father who wants to protect the child of goodness. He's eternally good. Is there anything about God.
That isn't good?
J .I. Packer said, if you understand that God is your father, you get Christianity. One simple word, father, you understand it. He said, you sum up the whole of the New Testament teaching in a phrase, father.
In the same way, you can sum up the New Testament religion by saying that you know that God will teach you.
When you're alive.
I don't want to do that. Who wants to be the worry warthog? It's not even good for you physically,.
You can understand how many times people have to go to the hospital from ulcers and other things.
Out of worry.
It's really saying to yourself, God's not my heavenly father. God has not sent the son to redeem me. And God can't provide for what he's made. I think there's a hymn to my listening ears. All nature sings, and round me rings the music of the spheres.
This is my father's world. I, what? Rest me in the thought. That's what the Lord wants us to do. We don't want to walk around like there's no God. Worry essentially is unrighteousness, that's true. But it's an atheism.
It's a willful ignorance that God cares.
It's a willful ignorance.
Towards our schoolmasters and teachers. Whenever you listen to a nightingale, you're listening to an excellent preacher. Said the robin to the sparrow, I should really like to know why these anxious human beings rush and worry about so.
Said the sparrow to the robin friend, I think it must be that they have no heavenly father such as cares for you and me.
John said,.
See how great a love the father has bestowed on us because you're God's child. You're not supposed to worry. You're supposed to work, that's true, but you're not supposed to worry. I've quoted a couple poems and songs today.
I might as well just keep going. No other elder here to tell me I did the wrong thing. So I do what I want today. Preach as long as I want. Quote as many poems as I want. Many songs as I want. Mention my kids as much as I want without giving a dollar.
We are free today. Why should I feel discouraged? Why should the shadows come? Why should my heart be lonely and long for heaven and home? When Jesus is my portion, my constant friend is he. His eye is on the sparrow and I know he watches me.
I sing because I'm happy. I sing because I'm free. His eye is on the sparrow and I know he watches me. The Lord doesn't want you to worry. When I have children that worry or I worry,.
It's even unfruitful.
Do you know that, verse 27?
The Heavenly Father wouldn't want us.
To be involved with this because it doesn't do anything. There's no result. It's useless. And which of you, dear Bethlehem Bible Church, by being anxious can add a single hour to his or her lifespan? NAS says add a single cubit to his lifespan.
I think ESV is right there. A single hour.
If you worry,.
Can you live longer?
You can.
I don't think it does any good. I mean, I wouldn't do this because I'm a pastor and I know worry is sin.
But if I said,.
Okay, go ahead. You like to worry? Just worry all weekend and see how that works out for you. Worry as much as you want. Drink a lot of caffeine,.
Stay up all night.
Worry, worry, worry.
And tell me how that works out for you. Stonewall Jackson, when it comes to death, people are worried about when they're going to die, how they're going to die. Will they die with enough money to pass on to their children?
What does Jesus say?
Keep going in Matthew 6,.
Verse 28.
He gives another illustration of looking or considering or getting outside to take a good long think, if you will. And why are you anxious about clothing? Verse 28 of Matthew 6. The lilies of the field,.
How they grow,.
They neither spin nor toil. Yet I tell you,.
Jesus said,.
Even Solomon in all his glory, and he had great glory, was not arrayed like one of these. Just go out and observe. Get yourself a good magnifying glass and just take a look at some of those lilies. As a matter of fact, it would be a good thing to do.
Get like a little jeweler's loop or a magnifying glass.
And see how much glory you had there,.
But not compared to what the Lord can do. Remember, Queen of Sheba saw Solomon and she said, the half was not told me how much splendor you had. So Jesus says, when you're going to be anxious, just essentially admit it as sin.
And then remember the Father. How do you remember the Father? You can't see him because he's invisible. Of course, you could read the Bible or you could go outside and all the arrows and chickadees and other things.
God takes care of them. He'll take care of me. They're not image bearers.
I am.
And then you look at.
If God clothes animals or clothes here plants, won't he clothe me? I mean, if you consider and work through what happens, let's just expand it. From a plant to the universe.
I read this week.
That the globe's weight is six sextillion tons. That's a six with 21 zeros. And it's perfectly put at 23 degrees. A little less.
Burn,.
A little more.
Polar freezing. Did you know that our globe revolves at the rate of 1 ,000 miles per hour or 25 ,000 miles per day or 9 million miles per year? And that how many of you have tumbled into orbit because of that?
Not one.
And if God can do that and make the stars and provide for the lilies and provide for the animals, Jesus asked in verse 30, but if God so clothes the grass of the field, which is today alive, much more clothe you,.
O you of little faith. Do you see it?
Worry questions God. Worry shows that it's a faith issue, a trust issue. So when we're worrying, we're not trusting in the Lord. I mean, I don't think anybody in this congregation that I know of would say, I don't believe the Bible.
It's not infallible. It's not for us today. I don't believe Jesus is the only way. I don't believe Jesus died on the cross and the baby prays for us. It's just all mumbo jumbo. I don't think we do that.
But as children,.
Sometimes we question the Father and it's an issue of faith. Every time I worry, it's not just useless, doesn't do anything, the last few verses, it's actually questioning God. It's a mark of faithlessness.
O you of little faith. I don't want to be that. I know you don't want to be that. So I went to a church in England and he preached at a country church and this was talking to people and he asked a choir member, what's your name and what do you do for a living?
And she said, I keep pigs. Interesting.
How many do you have?
Well, 192. Well, how do you know you have 192 pigs? I mean, do you count them?
Well, of course I do.
I have names for every one of them. Sounds like Jesus knows his sheep.
By name.
Therefore, verse 31, do not be anxious.
What should we eat?
What should we drink? What shall we wear? For the Gentiles seek after these things. Pagans do that. Unbelievers do that. Unbelievers don't have a heavenly father. They have a judge and your heavenly father knows you need them all.
Choosing worry is choosing not to trust God. I love 1 Peter 5, casting all your anxiety upon him because he cares for you. I mean, just don't let that go by too fast. God, the triune God,.
Cares for you. He cares for you. He cares for me.
And you can say then, because of that relationship, the Lord is my shepherd.
I lack what?
Food and clothing and what I wear.
Of course not.
He who did not spare his own son but delivered him up for us all, how will he not also with him freely give us all things? A. Admit that all worry is sin. B. Believe that your heavenly father is good and provides all you need.
C. Chase after God and his will and his glory. This is something else we can do.
Besides worrying.
Let's do something else. Let's put off and let's put on. Let's put on by thinking rightly about the heavenly father and let's put on by doing something. Let's get out there and do something. Seek first, verse 33, the kingdom of God and his righteousness and all these things, what we eat, what we drink,.
What we do.
Sometimes people get so crippled by worry they don't get anything done.
Same thing happens with people.
When they become depressed. They don't get anything done and one of the things they need to do for both worry and depression is to make a list and say I'm going to start getting these things done and checking off the list.
In this particular case, it's the list of serving the Lord Jesus and his kingdom and his righteousness. See what he's trying to do there?
Seek.
The higher priority is the Lord Jesus' kingdom. Corrie Ten Boom again said, worry does not empty tomorrow of its sorrows, it empties today of its strength. He, the Lord Jesus, wants you, he wants me to be seeking all in, absorbed in, trying to make sure we realize it's the Lord's kingdom and it's not my little kingdom.
I love Colossians 1, same word, if you've been raised up with Christ, keep seeking the things above where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God and God and his glory are above. I mean, instead of seeking something else, we seek this.
Everybody's a seeker. And what does he say in verse 33? And all these things shall be added to you. That sounds just like Philippians 4 to me. And my God shall supply all your needs.
According to his riches,.
In glory, in Christ Jesus. Too busy to worry. Too evangelistic to worry. Too ministry oriented to worry. We've seen admit, we've seen believe, we've seen chase, and now D, do not worry about the future.
Don't borrow trouble. Verse 34, therefore do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious for itself, sufficient for the day is its own trouble. I'm going to anticipate what could go wrong tomorrow is doubling trouble, essentially.
Lloyd-Jones says, if it can't get us to be anxious and burdened and borne down by the state of condition of things that are actually confronting us, it will take the next step and go into the future.
What about tomorrow? Another man said, you can't change the past, but you can ruin a perfectly good present by worrying about the future. And it might even happen tomorrow. Your worry could be a liar.
Jesus is the same yesterday, today, and forever. We don't have to worry about tomorrow. He's not going to become unloving tomorrow. The Father's not going to be unproviding tomorrow. Therefore, this is the day that the Lord has made.
Let us worry and fret in it.
Let us rejoice and be glad in it. Lamentations 3, surely my soul remembers and then bow down within me. This I recall in my mind. Therefore, I have hope. The Lord's loving kindness and deed never cease, for his compassions never fail.
They are new every morning, including tomorrow morning. Great is thy faithfulness, including tomorrow morning. Therefore, I have hope in him. And as they used to say in Africa, Lord, make my heart set down.
Make my heart set down. God's prescription for worry, admit, believe, chase, don't borrow, and now entreat,.
Which means to pray.
Entreat God. Turn to Philippians 4. Jesus' disciple and apostle Paul echoed Jesus' words. And you know this passage in Philippians 4.
Paul's in jail.
And what does he say? Here for Paul to put off and put on is put off anxiousness and put on prayer. Do something else instead of worry. And of course, when you pray, you're recognizing you're praying to the almighty one, the omniscient one, the one who loves you, the one that sent Jesus to redeem you,.
The one who cares for you.
And if I pray to him, that's going to make my eyes look to him and to consider him and to get myself off my problems. You want to worry with less? Pray more. Start to worry, pray. Philippians 4 .6. Be anxious for nothing.
You can say no thing. You can't be anxious for anything. But in everything by prayer, and he started listing all these words for prayer here. With prayer, that's a general word for prayer. And supplication.
You need something.
Let your prayers be known to God.
Let your thanksgiving. Let your requests be made known to God.
And the peace of God.
We have peace with God because of Jesus, but this is an internal peace. This is the fruit of the spirit, is love, joy, and peace.
And the peace of God,.
You can't even describe it because it surpasses all comprehension, shall guard your hearts and your minds.
In Christ Jesus.
We're not to worry about one thing. We're not to worry. When I start to rely on my own resources,.
My own brains, my own money,.
My own ways to fix things, my own control of things, and the second it becomes I have to be in charge, I have to do all these things, I start to worry because I realize quickly I can't do that. I don't have the right resources.
I'm not smart enough. I'm not rich enough. I can't do all this enough. There's no way I can do it, so I begin to worry. But when you pray, what happens? You realize I'm dependent. I have to say, Heavenly Father, your Holy Father, because you're in heaven, your name's hallowed, and I need from you even my daily bread.
I need from you forgiveness of sins. There's nothing I can do on my own because when I pray I realize I'm needy. When I pray I realize I can't handle it on my own. When I pray I realize I'm just a child.
I remember all day yesterday with Luke as the girls were out.
It's kind of tiring to watch a kid all day.
I used to get tired when I was 30 watching a kid all day, and now that I'm 75 it's harder. Every little thing. You know, you want to make sure that nothing goes in their mouth, and they can't fall down the steps, and they have to be fed right, and the food can't be too big, or they're going to choke, and how do you do a Heimlich on the kid,.
And what is that again?
ABC, airway, breathing, chest, all these things. I just wanted to kind of enjoy him and have him laugh at me and smile,.
And say, Grandpa.
All these little details that I was aware of, and Luke was aware of as we were watching little Amos.
And if I could have such a love,.
And care, and concern for every little detail. For Amos, do you think the Heavenly Father is better than I am? Every evening I turn my worries over to God. He's going to be up all night anyway.
That is so good.
I mean, there's some sermons I like to preach, because I know I need it, and I know you do too. Don't we know in this church the sovereignty of God? Don't we know about how He ordains things, and control things, and He's sovereign over all.
He does whatever He pleases.
The answer is yes.
We know better. But I don't want to rely on my own self, my own resources.
I'd rather shift the burden to the Lord and pray.
Have that joyful communion with the Lord.
And then lastly,.
F, number six. Forget not that God doesn't worry. Don't forget that God doesn't worry. Turn your Bibles to 1 Timothy 6 for our last passage today. God doesn't worry. As you're turning there, what if God did worry?
Can you imagine if God is biting His fingernails, pacing back and forth in the universe, as it were, hoping this is all going to work out? I mean, He set it in motion. Jesus did a pretty good job, but I don't know if He'll make it to the end.
I mean, that's blasphemous. That's weird. That's liberal theology. That's process theology. That's not biblical theology. That's not what Jesus taught. Here's my premise with 1 Timothy 6. If God isn't worried, don't worry.
If God is worried, worry. Paul's writing to Timothy, pastoral knowledge, but there's great little nuggets here of truth. 1 Timothy 6, verse 13. In a world that's upside down and crazy,.
Is God calm?
Is He at rest, as it were? I charge you, verse 13 of chapter 6, in the presence of God, who gives life to all things, and of Christ Jesus, who testified the good confession before Pontius Pilate, a real God-man in front of a real governor, real pilot, that you keep the commandment, Timothy, without stain or reproach until the appearing of our Lord Jesus, which He will bring about at the proper time.
He who is the blessed and only sovereign King of kings and Lord of lords, who alone possesses immortality and dwells in unapproachable light, whom no man has seen or can see, to Him be honor and eternal dominion forever.
I want you to focus in on one word in all that section that will let you know that God is not worried.
What word do you think it is?
If you look at all that section,.
13, 14, 15, 16,.
And what's the one word.
That I'm looking for.
That should tell you God isn't worried, that God is content, that God is fulfilled, that God is at rest. What's the word? Sovereign would work. I knew you were going to say that. This is my sermon, and I want a different word.
Blessed.
Do you see it?
The Beatitudes, blessed is the man, happy is the man. Hear the word blessed. It means fulfilled. When referenced to God, it means He's happy. He's not frustrated. There's no anxiety. He's blessed. One writer said, He's content, satisfied, at peace, perfectly joyful.
While some things please Him.
God is not sweating. He's not wringing His hands. Everything is on target. That's why we walk by faith and not by sight. And so if God's worried, we should be worried. But if God's not worried, we ought not to be worried.
And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those that love God and those who are called according to His purpose.
Does anyone else ever think,.
The Father won't take care of me? Of course not.
And so dear Christian,.
Admit when you worry that it's sinful and ask God to forgive you. And He does. Focus on the Heavenly Father and His goodness and His kindness. Be concerned about gospel ministry and seeking after God's kingdom.
Don't bring your worry into the next day, tomorrow. Pray and remember that God's not worried. And whether it's the election, finances, health, salvation of family members, there are more important things for you to think about and cast your burden upon the Lord, Psalm 55, because He will sustain you.
My guess is.
Something's going to happen in the next couple days that's going to make you want to worry. Because you know how it is, you read the Bible or you hear a sermon.
And you're like,.
Are we listening or not?
Do we want to do the right thing? And so now we're armed and prepared. And let's ask God for help.
Bow with me please.
Father, thank you that you're good and kind and that when we rehearse the truths in Scripture about your track record, there's nothing there that would make us think you don't care,.
That you're not good, that you don't love us, that you don't provide for us,.
That you don't love the people.
And we think about the Lord Jesus. Out of all the shepherds,.
He's the chief shepherd.
Out of all the shepherds, He's the good shepherd. And out of all the shepherds,.
He is a shepherd.
Who takes care of us.
And so Father,.
Would you forgive us for sinning? I worry, I don't want to.
Would you forgive me?
This dear congregation, they worry too and we want to be people of prayer just like when Jesus would teach the disciples how to pray, that it's all about your kingdom, Father,.
And your will.
And then we just respond with need. Give us bread, forgive us our debts, and lead us not into temptation. For Jesus' sake, amen.