Saturday, April 20, 2013

WHAT I KNOW ABOUT FEAR (Part 2)

Fear Has Devastating Effects
Fear, being in close association with sin, especially sinful pride and selfishness, makes people tell lies or hide themselves or the truth. They do so, for example, in order to maintain the status quo of a relationship or opportunity or an advantage. They fear to offend or upset somebody, or fear to lose someone or something. God asks, ‘Whom did you dread and fear, so that you lied?’ Isa 57:11. You know what I am talking about. You tell lies perhaps because you are afraid that your dark/bad side/deeds or past will be discovered and exposed. Thankfully we have examples of this all around us and in God’s Word, the Bible, which I will try to pick or cite from so we can learn and be different.  From Adam and Eve, there are many things that we fear because sin brought and still brings much misery, and fear often debilitates us from doing much good and what is right. Talk of the fear of death or of the unknown, fear of inconvenience, of failure and loss. Fear cripples and will keep us from serving God and one another, and from using and perfecting or increasing our capacities or talents and gifts. We will better bury our talents like that servant in the parable of the talents in Math 25:18.
Some people may assert that a bit of fear is OK or good if or because it motivates them to do something good. For example, fear of failure causing/motivating somebody to study or work “hard”. That is most simplistic and dismissible logic! If you want or need to work hard, you simply do it because you know it leads to or brings good results or success. But if or where there is fear, failure may be too. A student or pupil who fears to be laughed at will not ask any question(s) and remains in ignorance and fails the test or exam. I don’t think there is anything good about fear in itself, just like sin; although God may use it, for His glory, to work for good to those who love Him and are called according to His purpose. People who want to use fear as motivation to avoid something they are afraid of, like failure, have perhaps not considered that fear and failure could be two sides of the same coin and that fear could be on every one side of all the coins (hearts)!

Many people have courage to do wrong/evil things especially in the dark but fear and fail to do right and good things in the light. Some people fear shame and yet fear uses them shamefully when no one is watching/seeing. And fear is infectious, mostly in the night or dark. Fear will make you to eat, or imagine, say and/or do things that you would otherwise not.

Fear is so terrible that it will make you hate and avoid even a little inconvenience; any little trouble and can turn you into a “cabbage” and a fine-weather friend of nature, reality and God. The sad thing is that fear does not take these away. Adam and Eve’s case and David’s in 1Sam 27:1 onwards Psalm 55:5 should suffice. Fear makes you hide and run away from reality as long as you can, but the very thing that you dread finds you or comes upon you, Job 3:25. Remember Peter denying Jesus three times over and he remembers and weeps bitterly like a child after the rooster crowed Mathew 26:69-74.  

Fear breeds laziness/slothfulness – intellectual/mental and physical laziness. It wants you to keep the status quo or possibly make it worse. It even gives you vain comfort by introducing suicidal thought or tendencies and it has such power as to drive you insane or kill you if you allow it! That is why sin and the Devil like to use it. Fear will take or drive us to a point where we fail to see or think clearly and rationally, no wonder it is a close associate of many vices or evils such as deception, cowardice, failure, self-pity and so on. It will also make us give lame excuses for anything, damn! You recall the man in Proverbs 22:13 who for some reason feared to go out of the house to be useful or productive, referred to as the sluggard, saying "There is a lion outside! I shall be killed in the streets!" Again in 26:13 the sluggard says, "There is a lion in the road! There is a lion in the streets!" Verse 14 concludes saying, “As a door turns on its hinges, so does a sluggard on his bed.” And for admission of his fear, oh my, was the servant in the parable of the talents called names: evil, lazy and useless! Math 25:26-30 See also the recount of the patriarch Abraham, and later his son Isaac in Genesis 26, letting in fear by what he saw or perceived in Genesis 20. Fear can make us see an anthill as a mountain.
Some time towards the end of 2012, fear made me give lame excuse, drove me near self-centeredness and I was blind to the blessing of courageous, sacrificial and humble service of God. It was Love that rescued. How swiftly, can come tragedy when we forget God or His promises or not believe in His Son Jesus, and let what we see and hear be the basis of our decisions and actions. This feeds fear or connects powerfully with it; or is it the other way round that fear engineers the forgetting of God or His promise and tragically clouds our faith, our vision and decision-making? In Isaiah 57:11 the Lord is asking, ‘Whom did you dread and fear, so that you lied, and did not remember me, did not lay it to heart? Have I not held my peace, even for a long time, and you do not fear me?’

Fear Can Be Conquered
Although fear will always be there with us until our final redemption when the world comes under the perfect reign and civility of Jesus, God gives power for a leash around it. First, take perfect example of courage from the Lord Jesus concerning fear. He did not fear coming to earth, knowing He would have to contend with sinful people and the devil himself, and eventually die on a cross. You have been given a green light to conquer it, yeah! Like sin, it shall not have mastery over the Christian. Look at where you are and ask yourself if that is where you really ought to be, but for fear. It can make you ineffective or useless if you don’t face and address it, or still harass you if poorly tackled. Squeeze it by the neck however little it may be, kill it and let it not deceive you when it subtly pleads though it makes no scream.

It is important that each of us honestly, humbly and thoroughly search ourselves, and face and fight our fear(s) continually, day-by-day and moment by moment if we are to conquer. We must do so especially in the light of God’s Word because God recognizes that we are prone to fear and miss out on blessings of being courageous, obedient, faithful and rational beings whom He created in His own image as an action relationship God.

Fight fear with the humble and yearning realization of who you could be or really are or ought to be in Jesus Christ. Ultimately conquer fear with the love of God in you if you believe in His son Jesus and his covenant work of redemption. Nothing short of this will definitely do! Learn from Abraham, a humble but courageous friend of God, "I am nothing more than the dust (and ash) of the earth. Please forgive me, LORD, for daring to speak to you like this.” Gen 18:27. He was earlier told not to fear because God was his exceeding great reward, thus he was bold to speak with the Lord Gen 15:1.

By the working of His Spirit, we love Him because He first loved us.  1John 4:18 says, “There is no fear in love, but perfect love casts out fear. For fear has to do with punishment, and whoever fears has not been perfected in love.” In God’s love, we have the precious blood of the Land with which we overcome. Remember always, that he who fights with the precious blood of Jesus fights with a weapon which cannot know defeat; at whose presence sin dies, death ceases to be death: heaven’s gates are opened!

Even more why Christians should not fear
Only God’s enemies should fear in this world. In Joshua 1:9 the Lord God says, ‘Have I not commanded you? Be strong and of good courage. Do not be afraid, neither be dismayed. For Jehovah your God is with you in all places where you go.’ God intervenes whenever fear rears it ugly head in and among his people. He commands and exhorts, and we trust and obey!

We Christians should not fear because we are doubly His, by creation and divine purchase or redemption. Isaiah 43:1But now thus says the LORD, he who created you, O Jacob, he who formed you, O Israel: ‘Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by name, you are mine.’” We know righteousness, and are the people in whose heart is God’s law/Word which guides us by the Holy Spirit’s leading. Also He who is bigger than the heavens, the Almighty warrior holds our right hand and helps us, Isaiah 41:13. He alone is the Lord God, the holy one of Israel and the Rock of our salvation that is immovable and whose bold witnesses we are, Isaiah 44:8, Philip 1:14. And the apostle Paul says in 2Tim 1:7 that we have been given power in spirit, therefore our confidence is in Him; Heb 13:6. 

Some Things that We should not Fear
We should not fear death because it is slavery from which Jesus Christ delivered us, Heb 2:15, Psalm 23:4. We ought not to fear man (what can man do to me?) Heb 13:6:  the fear of man only lays a snare Prov 29:25; nor fear what man fearsanything that frightens (storm, darkness, earthquakes, beasts, drought/famine, thunder and lightning etc) 1Pet 3:6. Old age is feared by some people but God says, “Listen to me … even to your old age I am he, and to gray hairs I will carry you. I have made, and I will bear; I will carry and will save.” Isa 46:3-4 The Lord exhorts us neither to fear any suffering, danger, sword Rom 8:35, Rev 2:10 nor the reproach of man Isa 51:7.
 
Nothing will be able to separate us from God’s love which in Jesus Christ. In all the things that would frighten or come against us, we are more than conquerors through him who loved us, Rom 8:37. Fear Not!

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

WHAT I KNOW ABOUT FEAR Part 1)

And of whom have you been afraid or feared, that you have lied and have not remembered Me, nor laid it to your heart? Isaiah 57:11

A life of fear is not a happy life and with fright, soon comes flight. Mwango Lupupa 09/04/2013

There are some things that every wise man or woman, boy or girl can make light of. Fear should not be one of them. Since fear is something we all personally experience at one point, see or witness or hear/read about, I invite you dear readers to contribute what you know about it, particularly the things that people fear and why we, especially Christians, should not fear.  However, only post something after you have read my post. And I set the ball rolling!

Somewhere in the year 2012 my mind began to be intensely occupied by the subject of fear in an investigative or analytical way. Talking to people is something I do quite a lot and easily, most of the time. So with this interest and easiness came the desire to try to understand from a different viewpoint other than that of direct sin, what sometimes or oftentimes causes/makes people to lie mainly – not to tell the truth but lies, even when under oath! I discovered it is fear. Is it because life for so many is so unpredictable that the only thing predictable about life is its unpredictability? Read on.


I will talk about fear not as one exempted or at an advantage per say, for I know and feel the horrible tease or harassment and hideous effects it sometimes would bring upon my own heart. Hardly a week or so after I became a Christian in December 1994, the reality of being a sinner and especially impending death brought such fear that I somehow developed stomach ulcers! Well, the good news is that fear can be faced, tackled and overcome. But the problem usually is when people do not realize that they are afraid or refuse or hesitate to face and deal with it in the first place, and consequently they are swiftly or eventually overcome by this sly enemy. It is my sincere hope then, seeing, that fear has no right to any part of us, that we, Christians in particular, go about a good and lawful warfare, in the name of God, if drive it out.

Webster defines fear as: A painful emotion or passion excited by an expectation of evil, or the apprehension of impending danger. Fear is accompanied with a desire to avoid or ward off the expected evil, he adds. Fear is an uneasiness of mind, upon the thought of future evil likely to befall us. Fear is the passion of our nature (I and not Webster, will say after “the fall”) which excites us to provide for our security, on the approach of evil. It is anxiety; solicitude (concern, care, worry), which makes us put ourselves first regardless. The Hebrew brings out words like horror or terror. Clearly, this is not and cannot be how we Christians are told we should fear God. He is our dear Father, our friend and we are His co-workers – it is reverence and honour, and I will not get into that now but I say one thing to God’s enemies (the unbelievers, non-Christians, the wicked) that they should ‘fear him who can destroy both soul and body in hell.’ Mat 10:28. So I will use and talk about it as defined by Webster.

The word fear (+ feared) appears about 443 times from Genesis to Revelation, about 341 times in the Old Testament alone; while afraid occurs 167 times in the entire Bible and only 39 times in the New Testament. That’s an average of 6.7 times in each book for fear. That could be either commanding us to revere and honour the Lord; or saying that we did/do not do so; or commanding/exhorting us not to actually be troubled, anxious/worried or be in panic and freeze as though dead, but calm, bold, confident and focused. God could also be telling to His enemies that they should be actually troubled, anxious/worried and panic and or saying that they experienced this. God demands reverence and honour from everyone because He deserves it, he is worthy of it as the Lord our God, although He does not force it. And because He is not a tyrant, people disobey thinking they will get away with it. In Hebrews 11:7 the word reverent is used with fear to emphasize the great respect of God by Noah. Thus we can deduce that fear is primarily used in those two senses. I now present to you at least three major things I know about fear or terror.

Fear Has a Beginning and is Universal
Fear tracks us like a bloodhound, from Adam and Eve, and finds us out! It came through the sin of disobedience by Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, Gen3. We are told that upon eating of the fruit of the tree from which God had commanded them not to eat, “the eyes of both of them were opened. And they knew (realized) that they were naked.” And when “they heard the voice of Jehovah (the Lord) God walking in the garden in the cool of the day”, it is stated “Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of Jehovah God in the middle of the trees of the garden.” And upon being called out to, Adam responded, “I heard your voice in the garden, and I was afraid, because I am naked, and I hid myself.” The opening of their eyes signified opening (awakening) the “eyes” of their consciences and their hearts condemning them and they feared as a consequence of the sin they had committed. Their fear was as real as their realization of what they had done, and of losing God’s favour, friendship, blessedness and their dominion over (nature and perhaps particularly) the creatures, and what they opened themselves to, namely: shame/disgrace, God’s judgment and enmity, and other miseries.

We may perceive it differently and it may appear in different shades and degrees, but fear is everywhere in the world and is tacked somewhere in every heart of fallen humanity and in nature, seeking opportunity for manifestation. The fact that fear is something we all personally experience at one point or another, something we perceive or witness or hear/read about, cannot be refuted and does not need a genius to convince us. Its mention numerously from Genesis (through Abraham and Isaac, David, the disciples in the New Testament) to Revelation is also enough evidence of its universality; and God’s ample command or encouragement for us not to fear is proof of its devastating effects if left free or unchecked.  Continued in Part 2!