Much will be required of the person entrusted with much, and still more will be demanded of the person entrusted with more. Luke 12:48

We are not to be anxious about many things. Jesus keeps telling us not to worry – about what we will eat, about what we will wear, and about tomorrow and the problems it will bring. We are in good hands, all the time. A gracious, all-powerful, loving God is solidly in charge and nothing will happen in the world and nothing will happen to us that this Lord is indifferent to.

Our faith, at its core, invites trust, and not just abstract trust, belief that good is stronger than evil. No. To say the creed, to say that I believe in God – and originally the Christian creed was only one line, Jesus is Lord – is to have a very particularized, concrete trust, a trust that God has not forgotten about me and my problems and that, despite whatever indications there are to the contrary, God is still in charge and is very concerned with my life and its concrete troubles.

When we anxiously worry, in essence, we are denying the Christian creed because we are, in effect, saying that God has either forgotten about us or that God does not have the power to do anything about what is troubling us. When it looks like God is asleep at the switch, God is still in charge, is still Lord of this universe, is still noticing everything, and is still fully in power and worthy of trust.

Our problem is that we project our limited, selective care onto this God. We feel that God is inadequate because often we are, that God falls asleep at the switch because we occasionally do, and that God forgets about us in our problems because we have a habit of letting certain persons and things slip off of our radar screens.

And so we fear that God sometimes forgets and does not notice us, that God, like us, is an inadequate Lord of the universe. That is why we get anxious and fret, because, like one without faith, we can feel that we are in an unfeeling universe. [Excerpt from Ron Rolheiser’s “The Way of Trust” September 1997]

Author: DV Dan

A lifelong seeker of truth and oneness with God, Daniel has journeyed through the rich and varied landscape of Christian denominations in search of a deeper understanding of what it truly means to be one with Christ. This search has been one of both heart and intellect—guided by a desire to know Christ more deeply and to live in communion with Him. Through a transformative study of the Gospel of John, particularly Chapter Six, which illuminated the mystery of the Paschal Sacrifice of Christ and revealed its living expression in the Catholic Church’s liturgical celebration of the Holy Eucharist, led to his movement from decades of Evangelical Christianity to full communion with the Catholic Church, where faith and worship converge in the sacrament of the altar. Daniel holds a Master’s Degree in Theological Studies from the University of Dallas.

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