Matthew 6:25-34 · Do Not Worry
Facing Fears, Kingdom Style
Matthew 6:25-34
Sermon
by Phil Thrailkill
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I had heard of the place for years, but never seen it until Tuesday in Chicago- The Pacific Garden Mission. Lori and I were on the way from a science museum to an art exhibit (I believe vacations are for learning!), and there it was on the left side of the street. I first knew it through the dramatized radio program Unshackled which tells the stories of those whose lives were turned around by faith in Christ and the help of the mission. Down-and-out to up-and-on is a story line with endless variations. Jesus Christ is in the conversion business, and those who turn to him will not be disappointed. That’s the gospel. A changed life and a new life remains one of the most powerful arguments for the truth of this faith. “This is who I was before; this is who I am now, and the credit goes to Christ and his people.” Every life is a spiritual drama, and testimonies are great faith builders. In doing research for this sermon I found a story from the mission’s founding. It is one thing to be called to a work of the kingdom, and another to discover the wonder of God’s provision for that work:

“In 1880 George and Sarah Clarke, purchased the lease for the Pacific Beer Garden. Dropping the word Beer, the couple added the word Mission, and launched a ministry to homeless alcoholics and the downtrodden. Thus was born the Pacific Garden Mission, the second oldest rescue mission in the U. S. Colonel and Mrs. Clarke bore the cost of the mission, but as expenses grew and work expanded, funds ran low. The day came when they couldn’t pay the rent. Attempts to secure funds failed, and Clarke was told he had only 24 hours to pay. Otherwise, he would lose his lease and the Mission close.

Throughout the night they asked God to guide and provide in his own way and time. They reminded the Lord of the souls being saved each night, of men and women whose lives were salvaged. They asked why they should find themselves in such straits while doing his work. They remained in simple faith and in earnest pleading until dawn.

When they walked out of their house that morning, they were shocked. What had happened to their front yard? It was covered with something white that instantly reminded them of the manna of the Old Testament. Their lawn was filled with mushrooms of the highest quality, which was a mystery because it wasn't the season for mushrooms. Gathering the crop, the couple carted the mushrooms down the street to the chefs at the Palmer House Hotel. The sale was enough to pay the rent, with enough left over to meet other expenses; the work of the Pacific Garden Mission continues to this day.1

“Seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness,” said Jesus, “and all these things (meaning whatever you need for the work to which you are called) shall be yours as well.” What do you do with a God who grows fine mushrooms out of season on the front lawns of faithful servants so drunks can have a place to hear about the Savior? You worship him and follow him and ask for a piece of the action. It feels good to be near such love.

God is utterly committed to the gospel of his Son and to anyone who makes it their first priority. Outside of that, it’s sobering to say, you’re on your own. God is not obligated to fund your projects and dreams, only God’s and the ones planted within you through spiritual gifts and divine calling. And it is not just the promise that all these things shall be yours as well but the ingenious ways in which they come that are part of the adventure of proving his words to be true. This stuff works, because behind Jesus’ words are the depths of the riches of the love and character of our holy God whom he represents as the only Son and perfect ambassador, the only one vindicated by individual resurrection. These words are not just to be admired; they are to be put into practice and proved true by people just like us so that we have more and more stories in which to brag about and draw attention to Christ. This is life abundant, life bursting with the fullness of grace. Testimonies are the appetizer to stimulate hunger for the person of Jesus. If it happened to them, could it happen to me?

It is one thing to read the Bible for religious knowledge and quite another to have it proved in your life. In Jesus the Word became flesh, and in living testimonies the Word becomes fresh again. Each of us writes a lifelong personal commentary on the Bible through the stories we tell of God’s first hand faithfulness. It’s not hard to imagine Col. and Mrs. Clark reading the words of Jesus about seeking first the kingdom, then telling the mushroom story to a congregation of derelicts who needed heaven’s help.

Mushrooms tasted differently after the story was told. No longer a fungus but a sacrament of God’s amazing grace and wicked sense of humor. While they prayed, the mushrooms grew!

Never hesitate to tell someone else what the Lord has done for you, and the more personal and particular the better. It takes faith on your part to risk it, and that is just the faith God uses to make it connect on the other end. Often in difficult pastoral conversions when nothing else is getting through, not Scripture, not listening techniques, not accumulated wisdom, not acceptance, not psychological insight, I will tell a personal story of when the Lord came through for me in my difficulties. It is often the flint that strikes the spark on a hardened heart, perhaps because they then see me not as an expert trying to fix them from on high but as a fellow traveler.

And if they trust you because you are trustworthy, they will listen to your story, and the Holy Spirit will use it to stir them, even if it’s nothing more than exposing their skepticism and unbelief. It can be the bridge over which they begin to walk toward Christ. And if you don’t have anything fresh to tell, you have another problem! Like bread, testimonies tend to dry out over time. The best are hot out of the oven! I am amazed at how often the Lord provides for me in some way and then sends someone for whom that story is the perfect encouragement. Keeping us needy and insufficient in the face of challenges is one of the Lord’s best techniques to keep us humble and dependent. To always be seeking the kingdom is to live near the outer edge of predictability where needs are always greater than resources. Empty hands are not hard to fill, particularly when lifted to heaven. The goal is over time to build a track record with God, first in little things, then larger things, then impossible things, and for two reasons: 1) It demonstrates to us and others the generosity and creativity of our God, and 2) It grows us into the kinds of people to whom God can entrust important responsibilities. Needs are met, and along the way we are sifted and tempered and refined. Kingdom work gets done, and saints and leaders are manufactured. We become co-workers with God in a million different venues: business, the arts, church, parenting, government, retirement, wherever God has placed you. Your location in life is no accident; it is the place of your next kingdom assignment, should you choose to accept it!

Worry and anxiety and vulnerability and dread and apprehension and angst and fears and phobias of all sorts are part of our common fallen condition in an unpredictable and often

hostile world.2 What we do with this cluster of unpleasant emotions and mental habits will in great measure determine how we live, whether in an offensive posture of active engagement with life and its challenges, or a defensive posture of protection and steady retreat. You can’t get very far in seeking the kingdom (an active, even aggressive posture) if you are always on the defensive servicing your fears and spending all the energy of your prayers asking that nothing bad ever happen. The realism of Jesus about facing anxieties with God’s help is reinforced by the 20 year best-seller of Dr. M. Scott Peck, The Road Less Traveled. In the words of the opening section he writes:

"Life is difficult... Life is a series of problems. Do we want to moan about them or solve them? Do we want to teach our children to solve them?... (A) tendency to avoid problems and the emotional suffering inherent in them is the primary basis of all human mental illness.... Some of us will go to quite extraordinary lengths to avoid our problems and the suffering they cause, proceeding far afield from all that is clearly good and sensible in order to try to find an easy way out, building the most elaborate fantasies in which to live, sometimes to the total exclusion of reality.”3

Jesus was under no illusion about mental and spiritual health of his first followers. Thomas was a born skeptic, Peter greatly impulsive and blind to his considerable frailties; James and John used their mother to triangle Jesus and beg favors; Matthew had a history of greed and disloyalty; Judas was dishonest with money and vulnerable to Satan’s whisperings; Mary Magdalene had been deeply infested with evil; Mary and Martha had a rivalry over what and who served Jesus the best. They were men and women like us: little faith and great fears. It’s why Jesus had to keep repeating the message, “Fear not! Do not be anxious.”

He often heard their fears voiced in questions, What shall we eat and what shall we drink and what shall we wear? now that we are wandering around with you and no loner working for a living and able to provide for ourselves and our families like solid Jewish men are supposed to do? He saw fear on their faces when there were restless crowds too big to feed, when waves threatened to drown the boat, and when a particularly tough demon looked out at them through tormented eyes. Beyond what he heard with his ears and saw with his eyes, the Holy Spirit gave Jesus insight into their private thoughts as well. Of course they were full of fears. They were doing something new and odd and unconventional. They left everything, including families, to wander Galilee and back and forth to Jerusalem with the upstart prophet from Nazareth because of the lure of his person and the promise of the kingdom of God which they heard taught and saw enacted before them in stupendous healings. It dredged up every feeling and weakness imaginable.

To strip this Christian faith of its unpredictability and risk in order to turn it into a warm velvet limo ride to a perfect world is to destroy it. The reality program Fear Factor may disgust you with bug eating and terrorize you with heights, but at some level we all know that getting the rewards of life is dependent on facing and conquering our fears, and that is nowhere more true than in our relationship with Jesus Christ and the kingdom he is intent on bringing to this world. He knows how large are our fears and how puny our faith. It honors him when we trust him. Nothing about us surprises or makes him love us any less.

That he repeatedly referred with gusto to his most loyal associates as “O men of little faith” is a great encouragement to all us beginners.4 It was little faith, but on the other had it was rightly placed in one who was anything but little. Better a little faith in the right object than a lot of faith in the wrong. When it comes to faith, placement is the issue. It is not the size of faith but the worth of its object that is the measure. Jesus said a mustard seed was enough, and that’s nearly invisible. Trying to work up faith in a crisis is like whistling in the darkness; it doesn’t fool anyone. Our faith is not in our faith, and our trust is not in our trust; it’s in him, in who he is. The more experiential knowledge we have of Jesus Christ, through reading his biographies and finding him utterly reliable, the greater our faith will be, not in ourselves but in him. So when he said to his followers, “O men of little faith,” I believe it was less a rebuke than a back-handed compliment, probably delivered with a smile.

There is perhaps no more revealing question to ask and answer than this one: Tell me about your fears, what you avoid and what makes you anxious? When the love of God grows larger, the fear of people and circumstances grows smaller. In his first letter John deployed the extreme language of exorcism to describe the process, “There is no fear in love,” he wrote, “but perfect love casts out fear.”5 To the extent we are dominated by fear, to that same extent we are ignorant of the love of God. A hard truth, but an accurate one.

In the book Beyond Jabez, Bruce Wilkinson tells of a poor, old African woman who had faith in God. She lived in a mud hut and had taken on the care for 56 orphans.

A group of volunteers had arrived in Swaziland to plant gardens. On the final day of their visit, they came to her tiny home, surrounded by children. Little gardens had been dug all around the hut, but no plants were growing in any of them.

As the volunteers learned, earlier that day the woman had told the children to dig lots of gardens. When the children asked why- since they had neither seeds nor money- she responded, "Last night I asked God to send someone to plant gardens for us. We must be ready for them when they come."

Wilkinson's volunteers came with hundreds of ready-to-plant seedlings. God sent them to the very place where one of his servants had begged for his intervening hand. The faithful grandmother and her children were ready when the answer came.6

What did 56 orphans and an old, Africa mother learn about faith and faithfulness that day? Having workers show up to fill the children’s gardens with plants made it easy to believe the words of Jesus, “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?”

“Therefore,” said Jesus to his little-faith flock, “do not be anxious saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For the Gentiles seek all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them all.” The promise of God’s provision is not a general promise for all peoples, much as many have read it this way. It was given in the first instance to those who were already disciples, and it was given in the context of their active pursuit of Jesus and his kingdom; they were literally on the road together. So if you are not a follower, or if you are and are not seeking the kingdom as the first priority of life, then these promises do not necessarily apply to you. To that extent you are on your own, which come to think of it, is an even more frightening place to be.

TURNING TO THE TEXT

a) vv.25-30 Worry Over Basics Mocks God’s Care.

One day the German mystic Johann Tauler met a beggar. "God give you a good day, my friend," he said.

The beggar answered, "I thank God I never had a bad one."

Then Tauler said, "God give you a happy life, my friend."

"I thank God," said the beggar, "I am never unhappy."

Tauler then said in amazement, "What do you mean?"

"Well," said the beggar, "when it is fine, I thank God. When it rains, I thank God. When I have plenty I thank God. When I am hungry I thank God. And since God's will is my will, and whatever pleases him pleases me, why should I say I am unhappy when I am not?"

Tauler looked at the man in astonishment, "Who are you?" he asked.

"I am a king," said the beggar.

"Where, then, is your kingdom?" asked Tauler.

The beggar replied quietly, "In my heart."7

Such stories are disturbing, perhaps because they raise more questions than they answer. They slip inside the defensive perimeter and set off explosive charges under all worries and all our stuff. More stuff, better stuff, more stylish stuff, stuff our parents never had, always knowing the next rung on the upwardly mobile ladder to the earthly heaven of ultimate stuff. Alarms and insurance to protect our stuff, wills to pass on our stuff, accountants to keep up with our stuff, tax specialists to keep the government from getting our stuff. Worries to remind us of our stuff. Needing a regular fix of new stuff to keep our mood lifted and neuro-chemistry adjusted. Shopping not for things we need but to satisfy a craving, wandering malls just to see if anything makes an appeal, cruising catalogs or shopping channels in an easy chair to see what strikes our fancy. It is a symptom of spiritual bankruptcy and a lack of attraction to the kingdom of God. We are simply not acquainted with the true riches. It’s not that Jesus was naive; it is that we are out of touch.

Jesus and his first followers lived a stripped-down life. Having worked as carpenters and fishermen and low-level government bureaucrats, they were now all jobless and unemployed, except for the demanding daily work of paying close attention to the one who said, “Follow me.” Theirs was a basic life. I know that because that is where their anxieties were housed: what to drink, what to eat, and what to wear. We are not talking about luxuries but necessities, things to keep you alive. This is the level to which following Jesus had purposely reduced them: shall we live, or shall we die, and in the meantime go naked? I was precisely to men and women living with him near the edge that Jesus said, “Therefore, I tell you, do not be anxious about your life....” That’s really not fair, is it? First he takes away everything in which they trusted; then he tells them not to worry about how it feels, which is extremely uncomfortable, on the verge of a panic attack! The Lord is not playing with them; he is exposing what’s in them and training them in the dynamics of the kingdom of God which is walking by faith and trust when nothing is visible except needs and fears.

“Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothing?” That is the first of nine questions in this section, which means Jesus is probing deeply. It is an inquest, and he is the interrogator. Will the God who gave the greater thing, which is life, not also give the lesser things, in this case what sustains and protects life? We see the importance of this question most clearly in the excess, when life is reduced to bodily appetites of hunger and lust and entertainment and excitement, which are precisely the obsessions of our culture. Is my life a gift from God, and if so, can I trust God to sustain it? There is no more basic question, and our lives each give an answer, don’t they? Once the basic needs are met, is there anything more? Life without an appetite for God is flat and stale. And the grand conspiracy of Satan and the culture woven around us is to deaden that appetite and distract us from its call.

The film, Big Kahuna, is about three salesmen working together to make an important sale at a hotel convention. Late one night, Larry (Kevin Spacey) and Phil (Danny DeVito) are talking about God. Phil says, "I don't know why, but I've always had this haunting feeling that I had some kind of mission here on earth."

"Mission? What kind of mission?" Larry asks.

"I have no idea."

"Well, I'll tell you what your mission is,” Larry says. “Your mission is the same as mine: to be a liaison between parties."

"Things like that don't bother you, huh?"

"What do you mean?" asks Larry. “Dreams?"

"Questions about God," Phil answers.

"Well, I figure we'll find out sooner or later. My wondering about it ain't going to change anything, and in the meantime, why lose sleep? I get precious little as it is." "But you still wonder, don't you?" Larry nods thoughtfully and answers, "I'm human, Phil."8

What does it mean that my life is a gift? What does it mean that God has allowed me to come within earshot of the message of Jesus, close enough to make a serious response? What does it mean that I have this nagging sense of mission which will not go away and that grabs me by the throat at birthdays with a zero after them and whenever I run across someone who seems to be clear on theirs? Is this an illusion, or is it the deepest and truest thing about my life? In the phrase Is not life more than... Jesus goes to the deepest heart.

It may be hard to get people to pay their bills, but it is even harder to get them to pay attention. After forty years of training people in short attention spans through television sound bites, it is no wonder that sermons, even good ones like this one! are hard to follow and that people keep asking, Can you make it simpler? at some point past which you have to say, No, not and keep it faithful.

Pay attention, said Jesus. Look at the birds of the air. Consider them for a while, perhaps while lying on your back. See how busy they are, but they are not anxious. You have never seen a bird punch a clock or ask for a psychiatric consult. No bird has a to-do list. God makes them breakfast, dinner, and supper. Tasty worms and such. Same with the lilies. You’ve never seen a lily sweat over fashions or their weight. Their clothes are magnificent, more spectacular than King Solomon. And the next day they are fuel for the fire. Their beauty is senseless and extravagant. A God attentive enough to paint fields with lilies and fix brunch for birds can surely take care of you, can’t he? I remember a childhood poem:

"Said the robin to the sparrow,
I would really like to know
Why those anxious human beings

Rush about and worry so.
Said the sparrow to the robin,
Well, think that it must be
That they have no heavenly Father

Such as cares for you and me."9

All this counsel about birds and flowers is built on a fundamental biblical conviction, and that is while critters of all sorts are our companions, and while the plants are another kingdom, that human beings have unique dignity and value above anything else God made. Jesus assumed a Yes answer to the question, Are you not of more value than they? So in the choice between a person and a plant or between a person and a critter, always choose the person because that is what God does. The more valuable is chosen over the less. Critters and plants have value because they too were made by God and are necessary to balance of this world, but we are of more value since we alone bear God’s image and likeness. We are over all else, not to exploit it but to understand and develop it with respect.

I believe, with John Wesley I might add, that the new heavens and the new earth will include animals and plants because it is not less than this world but this world utterly restored.10 Lions and lambs will play, and I am secretly hoping for a conversation with my childhood dog Trusty, who if I followed the Lord the faithful way he followed me as a boy, I would even now be glowing with divine love. Some radicals in our world have abandoned the biblical order for a different vision in which all things are of equal value, which means that you ought to be as upset about a cracked turtle egg as an aborted fetus. We wander beaches to save turtles while pro-life pregnancy clinics lack resources. Nothing wrong with turtles, but what about human beings? The God who gave us life and installed us all in high office as superintendents surely has the power to sustain us if we trust and obey. We have a permanent place in the order of things. Excessive anxiety, the kind and pulls us apart and afflicts us with sleepless nights and fragmented days, is a lie against God who has given us such dignity in creation and who has come in Christ to restore the dignity we have lost to sin and lies and evil. Corrie Ten Boom, who survived the death camps and went on to be a beloved evangelist, once offered this technique for facing worry:

"When I worry I go to the mirror and say to myself, 'This tremendous thing which is worrying me is beyond a solution. It is especially too hard for Jesus Christ to handle.' After I have said that, I smile and I am ashamed."11

Not only is frantic worry an indictment against God, it accomplishes nothing. It is worthless and destructive of good health and sanity. It doesn’t add length or quality to life, “And which of you by being anxious can add eighteen inches to his span of life?” The answer to which is No one! No one wants to be around a worrier, and I observe that men or women married to one will find ways to be away from the house as much as possible.

I am thankful for the new medications that help people with severe anxiety and depression; they are a God-send to relieve misery. My concern is that medications alone without counseling and a plan of spiritual growth is just not as effective as the two together. Some may be more prone to these afflictions than others, but it is the legacy of every Christian, whatever the level of emotional strength, to grow in our ability to trust God in the midst of stress and to increase in the love that casts out fear. That Jesus devoted such repetitive teaching to the issue of what to do with anxiety means that he knows how deep and difficult it is to root out. The Episcopal evangelist John Guest wrote these wise words:

“When Scripture encourages us to pray without ceasing, and to cast all our care upon him, it is literally saying redirect those restless, energetic minds into a positive stream of communication with God. Turn it all into prayer!

Instead of nursing wounds of self-pity, pray for the grace to forgive. Instead of worrying about those for whom we are responsible, ask God to intervene and lift the burden from our shoulders. Instead of thinking creatively about how to bring someone else down, pray creatively how to build them up.

My landlady had a little wall plaque that read, ‘Why pray when you can worry? I always saw the humor of it-and the reverse psychology was good for me. It always drove me to really say, ‘Why worry when you can pray?’”12

Jesus has a remedy for paralyzing anxiety. Ask where your life came from. Say No to unnecessary surplus. Believe what Scripture teaches about human dignity. Become a bird watcher; arrange flowers; immerse yourself in the outdoors. Read about the effects of stress on the immune system. Face your fears with the help of Christ and the support of other disciples. Turn the negative energy of worry into the spiritual energy of prayer. Take the little faith you have and put it in the right place. Learn to let God provide for you through normal and surprising channels. Then help someone else learn the same.

b) vv.31-33 Worry Diverts Us From Seeking God’s Rule.

In the second block of teaching, verses 31 through 33, Jesus repeats the command against anxiety and names again the worries beneath the fear: what to eat, what to drink, what to wear. But here his response is different. The healing discipline does not involve an immersion in nature and a rational appraisal of the futility of worry; instead, it involves an unfavorable comparison with pagans, with Greek and Roman polytheists who drive themselves crazy trying to please this and that god and are ignorant of the one God of the Jews, the heavenly Father of Jesus. You see, if my future is already fated and lady luck the only arbitrator, then anxiety about everything is a logical response. To learn that there is only one God, and that this God not only made me but loves me and has shown me the way back to God in Jesus Christ was news almost too good to be true. What a relief for a man or woman who flitted from one temple to the one down the street trying to appease them all and hold life together. So when you meet someone who is cynical about their future and who couples that with a devotion to gambling or foolish risk-taking, recognize that what you have met is an ancient pagan in modern garb. They are worshiping Fate and Fortune. Their beliefs and behavior are not in line with the truth about God; they are lost in a world they simply don’t understand. We are not fated, and the world is not ruled by luck and the stars and lucky charms and magical rituals. Such doctrines are in fact demonic. To know a God who already knows my needs is the beginning of freedom and responsibility.

So if we are not to copy the pagans, what are we to do? The answer to which comes in verse 33 as a comprehensive program for the organization of life, “But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things (meaning whatever we need to do what God has called us to do) will be yours as well.” Put God in the front room, and supplies will march in the back door. It is a law of the kingdom of God. Love the Lord God; follow Jesus with his people; listen for the voice of the Spirit. In whatever your station in life, and in whatever job, let truth-telling and service and love be your goals. Persevere in hard times because help is on the way. Take God into your confidence in all matters great and small. Be alert to enemy opposition. Look above you for mentors, around you for partners, and below you for someone to lift up. Ask God to prune away the unnecessary and the distractions. Aim your life like an arrow at the center of the target. Then watch what begins to happen. The closer you approach your call and destiny in God, the more you will be aware of an invisible support system surrounding you and providing what is needed right on time. When you need guidance, it is there. When you need a resource, it comes. When you need encouragement, God sends it. God always manages to get supplies to the front lines where the kingdom is pressing against and displacing the alien rule of the Evil One and those who cooperate with him, whether consciously or not. This requires a military mind set and an awareness of the tactics and strategies of the other side, one of the chief of which is to afflict us with all sorts of fears. Fear is a useful physiological response; fight-or-flight can save your life. It can also become a crippling mental habit; it can be further agitated and worsened by a demonic spirit of fear. A story from another pastor helps me keep things in perspective when I get lost in a fog of fear. He writes:

“According to our nation's Bureau of Standards, a dense fog covering seven city blocks to a depth of a hundred feet contains less than one glass of water.

All that fog, if condensed into water, wouldn't quite fill a drinking glass....

Like fog our worries can thoroughly block our vision of the light of God's promises, but the fact is, they have little substance to them.”13

Seeking first the kingdom of the Father that is in the Son and by the Spirit will make you a person of passion and purpose. You will stand out, not because of self-promotion but because you are following the only one worth your all. People will notice. Some will try to douse your flame; others will come to the warmth and light of it. Dorothy Sayers, the great English writer, said it best:

“In the world it is called Tolerance, but in hell it is called Despair, the sin that believes in nothing, cares for nothing, seeks to know nothing, interferes with nothing, enjoys nothing, hates nothing, finds purpose in nothing, lives for nothing, and remains alive because there is nothing for which it will die.”

Don’t become that kind of person. Pursue the kingdom and the king. Let it be the burning center around which all other activities are organized. Larry Crabb put it this way, “Whenever we place a higher priority on solving our problems than on pursuing God, we are immoral.”14 Tough words, but I think Crabb is right. God is not a human convenience to be used. God is the end of our seeking.

c) v.34 Worry Over Tomorrow Robs Living In The Present.

Someone has said that worry is the interest we pay on bills not yet due. Worry is a "small trickle of fear that meanders through the mind until it cuts a channel into which all other thoughts are drained."15 Worry is toxic; it is pure poison, and so to counter it in yet a third block of teaching Jesus gave us wisdom on managing time in verse 34.

Trust God that your life is a gift and that the one who gave it can keep it running: that’s first in verses 25 through 30. Make God’s business your prime business: that’s second in verses 31 through 33. Once those two are in place, learn the wisdom of living one day at a time in partnership with God: that’s the substance of verse 34. "Therefore, do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious for itself. Let the day's own trouble be sufficient for the day." It is today’s obediences that open up tomorrow’s opportunities.

Planning is one thing, worry quite another. There are texts in Matthew that show Jesus praising forethought and planning.16 What he forbade was worry and the restless anxiety that robs today of joy and blinds us to what God is doing right now. Victor Hugo put it well, "Have courage for the great sorrows of life and patience for the small ones. And when you have finished your daily task, go to sleep in peace. God is awake."17

CONCLUSION

It was a small adjustment that could make a big difference. Sure, it was against NASCAR rules, but almost everyone else was doing it. So crew chief Tim Shutt crawled under the No. 20 car of Mike McLaughlin, who races on the Busch circuit.

"Joe Gibbs, the team owner, is adamant that we don't cheat," says Shutt, a relatively new believer who encountered Christ at a Christian retreat for participants in the racing industry. "Most teams figure that as long as you get away with it, it's not cheating."

"I said to Mike that morning in practice, 'If we're no good in practice, I'll put this piece, the illegal piece, on. Probably 30 other teams are doing it.’" I was justifying it.

"I got up under the car, I got halfway through putting it on, and that verse, 'Seek ye first the kingdom of God,' came flashing in red in front of me, and whoa, that was it. I said, 'I'm leaving this up to you, God.'" Shutt didn't put the piece on the car.

McLaughlin won the race. It was Talladega, one of the biggest races of 2001.

"When we won, the first thing that came to my mind was that verse," Tim says. "God wanted to show himself to me."18

Make of that story what you will. The reward was not the win or the purse or the fame or the bragging rights. It was a lesson in character and kingdom priorities for Tim Shutt. God loves wrench turners and table waiters and will show himself to anyone who dares to modify their life in order to seek the kingdom of God.

What is God teaching you these days? Are you hearing as clearly as Tim Shutt? And how is fear blocking your path?


1. Rewritten from PreachingToday.com search under Matthew 6:25-34.

2. For a discussion of anxiety and its current treatments, see Mark Yarhouse, et. al., Modern Psychopathologies: A Comprehensive Christian Approach (Downer’s Grove, ILL: IVP, 2005), Chapter 5, “Problems of Anxiety,” 109-146, and on depression, David

B. Biebel & Harold Koenig, New Light On Depression (Grand Rapids, MI: 2004).

3. New York, NY: Touchstone, 1978, 15-17.

4. 6:30b, 8:26, 14:31, 16:8, 17:20.

5. 1 John 4:18.

6. Bruce Wilkinson with Brian Smith, Beyond Jabez (Portland, OR: Multnomah Press, 2005), 147-148.

7. Quoted in Michael Green, Matthew (Waco, TX: Word, 1988), 86.

8. PreachingToday.com search under Matthew 6:25-34.

9. David Dockery & David Garland, Seeking the Kingdom (Wheaton, ILL: Shaw, 1992), 96-97.

10. Sermon 60, “The General Deliverance,” http://gbgm-umc.org/UMHISTORY/ Wesley/sermons/serm-060.

11. Idem.

12. Idem.

13. Idem.

14. Idem.

15. Michael Green, ed., Illustrations for Biblical Preaching (Grand Rapids: Baker, 1990), 21.

16. Matthew 25:14-30, 24:45-51, 25:1-13.

17. Michael Green, editor, Illustrations for Biblical Preaching (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1990), 21.

18. PreachingToday.com search under Mt. 6:25-34.

by Phil Thrailkill