By guest writer William Chadwick
“So I tell you, don’t worry about the food or drink you need to live, or
about the clothes you need for your body. Life is more than food, and the body
is more than clothes." Matthew 6:25 NCV
There are people who go through their lives with no troubles
or concerns. They don't worry about what other people think. They never worry
about their jobs, kids, spouse, health, or credit score. They are completely at
peace.
I don't know those people.
For the rest of us, Jesus has some words.
Many of us have been reading our Bibles for a long time.
Sometimes we don't see our lives in the Bible because we use a favorite
translation. The words are so familiar that it's been years since we thought
through what they mean. We could quote the verses while working on our
checkbook or while chewing bubble-gum and walking.
We can be like the little children James Dobson describes in
his book "Dare to Discipline." The children cause lots of trouble in
the neighbor hood. Their mother comes out every little bit and yells at the
kids to stop what they're doing. But the children completely ignore it and
continue what they're doing. "Oh yeah, that sounds like mom. But she
doesn't really mean it." We've heard it so much that we're not listening
anymore.
We say things like "Well, that doesn't really apply to
me. What I'm facing is slightly different."
When I read Matthew 6:25, for a while I've seen it as
saying, "William, you can worry about bills or finances or your job, just
don't worry about food and clothes." Even if I also read on to Matthew
6:34, for many years it's seemed to say, "William it's perfectly
acceptable to worry about your future, just so long as you don't worry about
food and clothes in your future." I saw it as strictly a food and clothes
passage. I have never really felt concerned that I wouldn't get enough food.
And, except for a few minutes when I was fourteen, I've never cared about
clothes. So, I've been thinking that whole part of the New Testament was
written specifically for people who lived in poor countries (food) and women
(clothes).
You may say, Wait! That's not what it says. Well, if you
read the whole passage and take it as a whole, it does seem to be focused on
food and clothes.
That is, it does if you're not paying attention.
One day recently, I was reading the same verse in the Holman
Christian Standard Bible. And it leapt off the page at me: "Don’t worry
about your life."
There were no student loan bills when Jesus said these
words. No. But, the consequences of failure were much more severe. They didn't
have food stamps or soup kitchens.
After telling people not to collect stuff, Jesus gets more
basic. He says not to worry about what keeps you alive: clothes, which keep you
warm in the winter, and food, which keeps you from dying.
If Jesus were here today, he would probably say things like,
"How many months will worrying add to your
job?"
"How does worry save your marriage?"
"Which credit card company reduces your
balance based on how much time you spend worrying?"
"How many cancer cells are killed with
worry?"
It's very simple, "Don't worry about your life." It
applies to you.
You have permission. From God. Stop worrying. God is saying, "Cut
it out."