This week, I’m heading to the speaker/writer
conference She Speaks, with my book proposal in tow. I’m filled with anticipation
of exciting possibilities ~ meeting women from across the country, learning
from experts in their fields, and appointments with publishers to present my
proposal. And despite the excitement, a measure of fear lurks beneath. And I’m
not alone. I see from friends I know and those I will get to know that many are
experiencing similar emotions.
Some worry about their families at home. Others
about the conference itself and what they’ll say in their presentations.
Worry seems to be a universal tool of the enemy
to keep our eyes focused on ourselves instead of God. But thankfully, there’s
an antidote to worry.
Jesus knew the disciples would be called to speak
publicly and He had this advice for them:
“...don’t worry in advance about what to say. Just say what God tells you at that time, for it is not you who will be speaking, but the Holy Spirit.” Mk 13:11
The Holy Spirit inside us, comforting us, guiding
us, dispels the worries that plague us.
If we try to fit God into our agenda, we’ll be worried
and stressed. When we rest in the knowledge that the Spirit is doing the
talking, we’ll experience peace. This is not to say that we shouldn’t be diligently
prepared. It is to say that we let God
guide our thoughts and actions.
We have no
control over many of the things that happen to us each day. Family, health,
financial, weather, and job situations press upon us and weigh us down. In any
given moment, we could receive bad news, have an argument, be required to do
something seemingly beyond our ability.
In that
moment, we have a choice.
We can
wallow in the gloom of self-pity, worry, fear, or depression. Or we can ask God
for His perspective. In his letter to the Philippians, Paul shares the secret
to finding joy in troubling times:
Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things. Phil 4:8
This
process is the same whether it’s worship or worry. Worry is life-sucking meditation on the negative. Paul tells us
what to meditate on: what’s true, noble, just, pure, lovely, things of good report, virtuous and praise-worthy
things.
When a dear friend was going through a terrible time, she
started a list. Using this Scripture, she decided to list verses that
stated what was true, noble, just, etc. She never got past "true."
Her truth list was comprehensive enough for her to rewire her brain to meditate
on the truth of God's unfailing love, His hope-filled plans for her, His
never-ending compassion, His mercy, His trust-worthiness, His peace that passes
understanding.
What's on your truth list?
5 comments:
Go with God as you journey through to publication.
Excellent post, Susan. Thoughtful and true! I am very excited to go to She Speaks...and can't wait to connect there. I have so much to do before then and my pitch is terrifying me...I needed your reminder today. Thanks friend!
Thanks for sharing. Good luck on the conference. Have a great time.
Jesus said it so many times: do not worry. So, I believe worry is a sin. he says NOT to dot it, so if we do it we go against His will. Hhhmmm... difficult lesson to learn, but we'll get there :)
Thank you for this post.
"Worry is life-sucking meditation on the negative." I'll remember that and hopefully think about what's true, noble, etc. instead. Thanks, Susan.
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