Used with Permission by Randy Alcorn
Jesus tells us to “Seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things [what you eat, drink, and wear] will be given to you as well” (Matthew 6:33). Unlike the pagans who “run after all these things” and “worry about tomorrow,” believers are told to follow Christ, live a radical life of faith, and trust God to provide (Matthew 6:25-34).
Jesus tells us to “Seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things [what you eat, drink, and wear] will be given to you as well” (Matthew 6:33). Unlike the pagans who “run after all these things” and “worry about tomorrow,” believers are told to follow Christ, live a radical life of faith, and trust God to provide (Matthew 6:25-34).
In
this passage, Jesus says that God cares for the birds. Yet birds aren’t
created in God’s image. Christ didn’t die for birds. The Holy Spirit
doesn’t indwell birds. Birds won’t reign with Christ. But we will! So
Christ asks his disciples, “Are you not much more valuable than they?” (Matthew 6:26). If he takes care of the less valuable creatures, will he not take care of us, who are far more valuable?
Of
course, the birds provide for their immediate future through
labor—building nests and obtaining food for their young. But they don’t
maintain one nest in the mountains and another at the beach. Neither do
they fill their cellars with freeze-dried worms. Birds do the work that
God created them to do; they sing when they work, they don’t hoard, and
they instinctively trust their Creator to take care of them. Should we
who know God’s grace do any less?
Jesus
says, “Accept my sovereignty and goodness, and you won’t have to worry
about tomorrow. Trust me.” All of us trust in something. The more
dependable the object of our trust, the less we need to worry. The stock
market isn’t God, the Wall Street Journal isn’t the Bible,
your asset manager isn’t your priest, and financial experts aren’t
prophets. (Prophets were put to death when their prophecies didn’t come
true!) That doesn’t mean the stock market is bad, but it does mean it’s
not trustworthy. It may do well for a day, a month, a year, or even a
few decades. But because the stock market is uncertain, it can only
produce anxiety when it becomes the object of our trust. God is the only
totally trustworthy object. Therefore, he’s the only one who cannot
betray our trust.
Why
is this truth so hard for us to accept? If we believe that God can
create us, redeem us, and bring us through death to spend eternity with
him, why can’t we take him at his word when he says he’ll provide for
our material needs?
If
God calls on you today to share your resources with another, you must
not say, “I can’t, Lord, because I don’t know where my own provisions
are coming from.” Yes, you do know where they’re coming from.
They’re coming from God. You may not know the form this provision will
take, but you do know the Source. Like the poor widow who had no cash
reserves, you know that God will take care of you, even if there are no
visible resources.
If
God has control of everything, and God takes care of his children, and
God gives everything necessary to those who walk with him; and if you
are his child, and you are walking with him—why worry? Worrying never
helps anything anyway—but has hurt plenty.
Read more: http://www.epm.org/blog/2015/Jul/20/provision-not-worry#ixzz3hNuU7hLh
Read more: http://www.epm.org/blog/2015/Jul/20/provision-not-worry#ixzz3hNuU7hLh
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