For God did not give us a spirit of fear but of power, love, and a sound mind.
2 Timothy 1:7
A spirit of fear is one of the most pernicious spirits in the demonic realm. We have all heard the axiom that fear is the opposite of faith and if faith produces peace, this fear produces inner turmoil. Fear, phobias, and anxiety are almost epidemic in America – even among believers. In a country where we should feel more secure than any other place in the world, our people are full of fear.
Fear is a natural response to danger and often is quite appropriate. If you are walking through a West Texas field or canyon and hear a distinct rattle, fear is a very appropriate response. It stops you in your tracks, heightens every sense, and usually produces the good judgment to back up slowly.
But fear that becomes a resident in your life is not appropriate. It robs you of peace, confidence, and a future because you fear moving into the future. It may make you timid and prompt you to stay in the shadows or it may make you an aggressive controller who only feels safe when you are in charge and telling everyone around you what to do. It is the source of worry that Jesus counsels against in Matthew 6. It robs us of joy, of relationships, and eventually our health. We often give into it, medicate it, and excuse it because we don’t know what else to do.
The phrase “Don’t be afraid” or “Fear not” is sprinkled throughout the scriptures. If fear were not so prevalent in the human race, God would not have said it so often. Our first look at fear came immediately after Adam and Eve sinned in the Garden. They covered themselves and hid. They were clearly afraid because they were suddenly aware of their nakedness and clearly believed at some level that the love and care of their father had been suddenly removed. They feared punishment and the prospect of becoming orphans in a dangerous world.
Our current epidemic of fear is based on the same assumptions. Somewhere in our lives, we had an experience that left us believing that either there is no God and we are on our own in a dangerous world or that God exists, but he is angry or detached, or powerless and we are still on our own in a world that wants to hurt us. The spirit of fear and an orphan spirit always work together. One whispers that no one cares for us or is looking out for us and the other prompts us to worry, seek control, and live with a generalized fear (anxiety) that disaster and loss is always in the pipeline.
God speaks to that over and over and the cure is simply faith that God will never leave us nor forsake us (Heb. 13:5). When Moses encountered God at the burning bush, Moses was afraid to return to Egypt. He made every excuse possible for his unwillingness to obey God’s call. God’s consistent answer was that He would go with Moses. God’s presence would ensure his protection and provision. He promised the same to Israel and he promises the same to us. There are hundreds of such promises in the Bible. The question is whether we will believe them.
Anxiety gets down to what we truly believe about God. Do we believe that he exists? Do we believe that he is good and that he cares about us? Do we believe that he is willing to involve himself in our lives as our daily bread? Do we believe he is powerful so that he cam provide our every need and overcome the enemy’s attacks in our life?
We could list all kinds of reasons that we might find it hard to overcome our human experiences and trust God when we have never met anyone else who would not eventually let us down. But the truth is that we must come to believe God if we are going to live without fear. That is where a spirit of fear operates. He whispers that God can’t be trusted. He whispers that God was there for us in the past but we can’t count on him in the future. He whispers that God is there for other believers but not for us because we are too defective, too perverse, and too unbelieving. He simply whispers that, like others, when we need God the most, he won’t be there for us. Not only that but he pervades the airwaves. The news and the talk shows are full of fear that we are always on the edge of extinction and catastrophe. When we watch or listen to the pundits, we absorb the fear from our environment. We feel as if the problem is so big or so pervasive that even God can’t deliver us.
So…how do we come to believe God…not just at an intellectual level but in our hearts as well? How do come to believe that he exists, he loves us, he wants to be actively involved in every second of our lives, and that he is an all-powerful Father who wants the best for us? How do we come to believe that when we have experienced trauma, loss, and betrayal in this life more than once and wonder where was this powerful, loving God when I lost my spouse or my child or contracted MS? I will share some thoughts on all of that in my next blog.