Send us a text
What if the thing you’re calling “natural concern” is quietly choking your faith? We open a candid, compassionate conversation about anxiety, worry, and trust—testing big claims against both scripture and lived experience. No clichés, no easy outs: just a room full of believers wrestling with Peter’s sinking, Job’s silence, and the spike of a modern amygdala.
We start by separating uncertainty from worry. Uncertainty is inevitable in a finite life; worry is what happens when control becomes an idol. Some of us argue that vigilance—like a parent rushing a child from the street—is love in action. Others push back with passages that call worry a thorn that stifles fruit. The middle path emerges: not all who suffer are guilty, but all suffering signals a fallen world. That lens reframes the question from blame to direction—do we grasp tighter, or do we cast our cares on God who cares for us?
Voices around the table bring it home. A mother confronts late‑night dread over her adult daughter, choosing repeated surrender over rumination. A believer shares how panic once ruled her days and how God used prayer, community, and time to bring real relief. We look at pre‑fall logic to consider whether anxiety could exist in Eden, and why that matters for how we name what hurts us now. Then we read Jesus’ warnings about the “worries of life,” and Peter’s command to humble ourselves and cast anxiety onto God. Psychology doesn’t threaten faith here; it clarifies the battlefield. Trauma can lock our nervous system into overdrive, yet hope calls us to keep handing the weight back to Him.
By the end, we offer a practical, faithful rhythm: name the fear, refuse its throne, seek wise care, and keep praying. Guard your mind, resist the enemy’s snares, and let uncertainty drive you to deeper dependence. If you’ve ever wondered whether worry is sin, symptom, or signal, this conversation will challenge and comfort in equal measure.
If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage today, and leave a review so others can find these conversations.
Support the show
BE PROVOKED AND BE PERSUADED!