Dealing with Anxiety (I Kings 19:1-18) | Mike Mazzalongo | BibleTalk.tv

According to the National Institute of Mental Health, here in America, anxiety disorders, panic attacks, over-stress, burnout, those types of things, anxiety disorders, affect roughly 40 million Americans between the ages of 18 and 54. These are not stats, like, from 20 years ago. These are like April 2016 – 40 million Americans. We have more food than we can eat and, most of us have homes to live in and jobs. We’re not at war with each other yet, hopefully. We live in relative security. We can go where we want, marry who we want, eat what we want, live where we want, and work where we want. No imminent threat, and yet 40 million Americans struggle with anxiety disorders. I suppose we could use words like stress, worry, as well as anxious when we talk about the struggle that affects so many of us from time to time, and to a greater or lesser degree.It’s not just people from 18 to 54. People younger than that and people older than that struggle with these types of things, but that’s kind of the stat that I’m working with. In the world, there are a lot of remedies offered to counter the problems of stress anxiety, and worry. There’s medication, vacations, therapy, support groups, all kinds of things, breathing exercises, yoga. As Christians, however, we believe that even if these methods might be helpful, and many of them are, the most satisfying and permanent solution to the problems of worry and stress can only be found through faith, specifically through faith in Christ. With this in mind, I’d like to review the story of Elijah and how God helped him deal with his extreme case of stress worry, and eventual burnout.And that’s where we go for our lesson, First Kings chapter 19, let’s begin reading verses 1 to 3whichit says, “Now Ahab told Jezebel all that Elijah had done, and how he had killed all the prophets with the sword. Then Jezebel sent a messenger to Elijah, saying, “So may the gods do to me and even more if I do not make your life as the life of one of them by tomorrow about this time. And he,” meaning Elijah, “and he was afraid and arose and ran for his life and came to Beersheba, which belongs to Judah, and left his servant there.” Now I don’t have time to read the entire story so I’m picking it up right here, and maybe just paraphrase, give you a little bit of background. Elijah, the prophet, lived in the ninth century before Christ. He was a prophet who served God during the reign of several kings, not just one king, but many kings, but one especially bad king, and his name was Ahab and his wife’s name was Jezebel.Now much of Elijah’s ministry involved the conflict between himself and the royal couple over the introduction of pagan worship to Israel. Jezebel was from Tyre and through her influence the worship of Baal Melqart, who was the official nature God of Tyre, was being actively brought into the kingdom. The word Baal or Baal, as it’s pronounced, means master or possessor or husband. In pagan religions of the time, very piece of land had its master and so each place or each town had its version of a master or a Baal deity.That’s why do you have Baal, the name of one city, Baal, the name of another city? Every city, every town, every plot of land had this god. In response to this, Elijah prayed for a drought to come over the land and it did not rain for three years. And the point behind this is, that since Baal was a deity that was supposed to control nature, this drought was a demonstration of this pagan religion’s emptiness and lack of any power. Elijah, towards the royal couple and the country, was saying, you people are starting to follow this God, this is the God that’s in charge of nature. Let me show you who’s in charge of nature.And so he prayed to Jehovah, the God of Israel, the God of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, and prayed and said, no rain. And no rain came for three long years. Of course, the drought also made the king and queen greater enemies of Elijah. After three years, Elijah challenged all the prophets of Baal to meet him at Mount Carmel to demonstrate who was greater, Jehovah or Baal. After this meeting, Elijah taunted and ridiculed them and performed a great miracle before the assembled people to show that the God he served was the true God, and Baal worship was futile. After this great demonstration of power, Elijah then ordered that the 450 priests of Baal be killed and they were put to death by the people. The point here was that all of these priests had been appointed by Jezebel and were supported financially by Jezebel, in her attempt to bring this religion into Israel.Now, if this were not enough, he also offered another prayer asking God to send rain. So after three years, the heavens opened up and the water poured forth. After doing these things, realizing that he may be in danger, he escapes on foot to another town and that’s where we pick up the reading, where she threatens him and says I swear to you, before the day is over, you’re going to be as dead as those priests over there. So he takes off running. I give you this story to underscore the idea that Elijah experienced a physical emotional and spiritual rollercoaster for three years, culminating in the great showdown at Mount Carmel. He is only a man. And if we read between the lines, we realize that this man is close to burnout, extremely anxious, extremely stressed, and ready to completely fall apart. Now Elijah experienced things that were beyond what normal life requires of ordinary people and that’s what was causing his – I mean, I, we, don’t have time to get into all of it, but I mean, a certain amount of stress is good. You need a certain amount of stress to get you up and going, but too much stress, when the needle is in the red all the time, too much stress, that leads to burnoutAnd too much stress sometimes is what happens when too many things are happening at the same time. And so in Elijah’s life, if you look over the three years, you see, first of all, miracles were done in his name. And you think, well, that’s a good thing. But having a miracle done in your name as you call out to God is a very exciting and stressful thing. There was a war going on, that he experienced, a natural disaster. Yeah, he prayed that there be no rain. Well, there was no rain for three years, which brought a drought in the country, and terrible economic loss, and he was the cause of it, and the people were blaming him. Threats of death forced travel, he had to run away, he had to hide. Have you ever had to run away and hide for your life? I mean, think about that for a second.Imagine, people are looking for you, they want to kill you. That’s a pretty stressful thing. And then, of course, the rejection by society. He’s trying to serve God, he’s trying to do something, but everybody, both sides hates him. The king and queen hate him, and the people hate him. So people can manage some of these things, but when too many good things or too many bad things happen too rapidly, we blow a fuse, and we burn out as protection. Our body is protecting us from destruction, as if our body is saying, well, maybe you want to keep going at this pace, but I’m going to cause an electrical short circuit here, just to stop everything, so that we don’t completely ruin ourselves. That’s what was going on with Elijah now, burnout, has symptoms. And we can recognize these burnout symptoms as we look at Elijah and the dialogue that he has with the Lord. So we go back to chapter 19 and we pick it up in verse 4, the first symptom, if you wish, or one of the major symptoms of burnout is despair. In verse 4 he says, “But he went a day’s journey into the wilderness, and came and sat down under a juniper tree; and he requested for himself that he might die, and said, “It is enough; now O Lord, take my life.” Even though he had witnessed a great victory, he had done great miracles, he was in despair.And the chief – the signifying feeling about despair is there’s no hope. You have no hope. He had no hope. Not because there was nothing to believe in, not because there was no proof to support his faith, he had no hope because he couldn’t function properly to see these things anymore. Another evidence of burnout is self-depreciation. I’m no good, nobody loves me. Look at verse 4, and continue in verse 4, right to the end he says, “It is enough; now, O Lord, take my life, for I am not better than my fathers.” Self-depreciation. I’m no good, nobody loves me. Why should I try? Burned-out people are hard on themselves, no matter what they’ve done, it’s never good enough. Burnout makes you feel like a failure and nothing can convince you otherwise. Even if your wife or your husband or your friends tell you, well, no, but look at all the good things that you’ve done, and you’ve accomplished this, and people love you.You just cannot be convinced that there’s anything good about your life or your person. Those voices inside your head that tell you, encourage you, or discourage you, usually are the loudest during the times that you feel overstressed and over-worried. One of the symptoms is when that voice is constantly negative in your mind, constantly telling you that you’re not good, that you are not going to make it, you’re not worthy, then something else is taking place there.Another symptom is anger and resentment. As I said, it’s a long story, so let’s just skip down to verse 10. In this dialogue, that he’s having with God, in chapter 19 he says, “Then Elisha came there to a cave and lodged there; and behold, the word of the Lord came to him, and He said to him, “What are you doing here, Elisha? And he said, “I have been very zealous for the Lord, the God of hosts; for the sons of Israel have forsaken your covenant, torn down your altars, and killed Your prophets with the sword.And I alone am left, and they seek my life, to take it away.” Do you see the resentment there? Elija felt angry about – he felt angry about how he felt. If you do your best, if you try your hardest, if you succeed, what should happen? Well, you should feel good, not bad. When the only reward we get from all of our efforts is fatigue and depression, we need to step back a little bit, because we’re close to burnout. He’s, here, I mean, the greatest victory, single-handedly defeated all these priests, stopped the invasion of this false religion into the country and how does he feel? He says I’m the only one left. I’ve tried these and look what’s happened to me. In no other word’s says to God, I did what You wanted me to do, and look where I am now.What’s the point of serving You? What did I get for all of my effort? Anger, resentment, and the,n of course, loneliness. Verse 14, skip down to verse 14, he said, “Then he said, “I have been very zealous for the Lord,” repeats this, he repeats it from before, he says, “I’ve been very zealous for the Lord, the God of hosts; for the sons of Israel have forsaken Your covenant, torn down Your altars and killed Your prophets with the sword.And I alone am left, and they seek my life to take it away.” Does that sound familiar? Well, he just said that a little while before. The Lord is talking to him. Why are you here, Elijah? What’s the problem, Elijah? He says, well, I did what You said, and look where I am and I’m all by myself and I’m the only one that’s fighting. And the Lord talks to him some more, talks to him some more, and what does Elijah do? He repeats the same thing. He’s in shock yyouever notice people in shock? What happens to them many times, if they’re at least awake, they kind of start repeating the story.Well, I was just standing there and I went to cross the street and then cars just came out of nowhere and just brushed me back and I bounced against the wall and I hurt my head and my arm is sore. And three minutes later, four minutes later, someone else is saying, are you okay? Yeah, well, I just stepped out to go – It’s like a broken record. They keep repeating the thing, they’re trying to absorb it. He’s trying to absorb it. He can’t quite absorb everything. Why? Because he’s saturated with stress and anger and resentment and, here, loneliness. He repeated his complaint and with it his greatest worry, that he’d be left alone. Burnout makes people feel that no one understands them, no one cares, and no one knows how they feel or why they feel the way they do. It’s a lonely thing. Elijah lived nearly 3,000 years ago, yet his symptoms and feelings are so very familiar to us who struggle today in 2017 with depression low self-esteem resentment, and alienation, in our modern pressure-cooker society.Because people have not changed. We’re the same as we have always been. There are some common mistakes that people make when they suffer from too much stress or they’re on the verge of burnout. Aside from the physical feelings of fatigue and the emotional problems associated with burnout, this condition also pushes us to make mistakes that we would not normally do if we were emotionally balanced and rested properly. Mistake number one, for example, we focus on feelings, rather than facts. We focus on feelings rather than facts. Elijah prayed that he might die. He looked inward and he saw the world through the lens of his feelings, not through the facts of what had happened. I feel like a failure, therefore I am a failure. This is called emotional reasoning and it’s a mistake. I feel lost even though I’ve confessed Christ and I’ve been baptized and I’m doing the best I can to be faithful, but I feel guilty, I feel that I’m not worthy, therefore all of what he said must not be true because it doesn’t match how I feel.Well, brothers and sisters, we’re not saved based on what we feel, we are saved based on what we believe and what we do. People who are overstressed or burned out are easily drawn into focusing and interpreting our lives through our feelings, rather than our facts. Mistake number two, we begin comparing ourselves to other people. Elijah cried that he was no better than who? Than his forefathers. We usually compare our weaknesses to other people’s strengths. And we always come out – you ever notice that? I like to play golf. Who do I compare myself to? Well, I compare myself to a guy who plays twenty strokes better than I do every time. Or well, you look at the pros on TV and you see it’s one of the pros who makes this fantastic shot, makes it look easy, two feet in front of the pin. And then when you try it and it doesn’t work, you – oh man, what’s the matter with me? What’s the matter with me? I’m going to give up this game.Who are you comparing yourself to? The world champion. Mistake number three, stressed out people motivate themselves with negatives instead of positives. Elijah complained that he had been zealous for God, but the people had rejected God and his preaching, in verse 10. Do you see it? We blame ourselves, we punish ourselves with criticism and we label ourselves with harsh judgments. It’s no wonder we feel bad. We become our worst critics. I always pray that god helps me not to be too critical, and to be more gracious with other people. You think I can be critical of you, you ain’t seen nothing till I start being critical of myself. Why? Because I know me. I know who I am. I know how hard I tried. You know what I’m saying. So when I level criticism at me, whoa it’s got a very pointy edge.You can’t motivate yourself by criticizing yourself. I’m not saying we should excuse or just let everything go by that we do wrong. No, of course not. We need to hold ourselves accountable, but we cannot motivate ourselves to be higher and better and more noble and more spiritual, by continually criticizing ourselves, doesn’t work. Mistake number four, we exaggerate the negatives. Elijah said I am the only one left.Later on, the Lord tells him, yeah, you and 7,000 others. The attitude, or this attitude, degenerates into self-pity and despair. So here’s what the cycle looks like, okay, this over-stress, over-anxious cycle. It begins we’re overburdened, we’re overstimulated, we’re overworked, we’re overstressed, we’re over worried, too much, too fast. And it doesn’t have to be bad things, it can be good things. We’ve just got too much, too many plates spinning in the air. This leads to a weakened physical and mental resistance, as well as a spiritual letdown.You just don’t have enough gas in the tank to take care of all the things that you’ve been committed to or to take care of all the things that may have happened to you. Then this condition produces a variety of symptoms, such as anger and depression and low self-esteem and moodiness and all kinds of things, because these attitudes drive us to make critical mistakes, such as emotional reasoning, and false comparisons, negative self-judgments, and further alienation from other people. And then these mistakes produce, what? Well, they produce more stress. More stress on our system, which perpetuates the vicious cycle leading to total breakdown. And what I’m saying is that sometimes the body, again, does not claim any medical knowledge, but I’ve seen it in myself – the over-stress, eventually the body takes over and says okay, buddy, you’re about to kill yourself, so we’re going to do something here, we’re going to give you a lot of lower back pain or we’re going to give you some migraines or you’re going to have an upset stomach or – we’re going to do something to just knock you out, break the cycle, because if you keep on spinning, you’re going to blow up.So God, thankfully, has a remedy for burnout, a prescription for burnout, because He is aware of the body’s frailty, especially when it is under stress. In the same passage, we see the remedy that God uses to renew a burned-out servant named Elijah. The first thing that God prescribes is rest. God gave Elijah rest for his body. In verse 5, go back to verse 5, because I’ve had to jump around in passage here. He says, “Elijah, laid down and slept under a juniper tree; and behold an angel was touching him, and he said to him, “Arise, eat.” Then he looked and behold, it was at his head a bread cake baked on hot stones and a jar of water. So he ate and drank and laid down again. The angel of the Lord came again a second time and touched him and said, “Arise, eat, because the journey is too great for you.” So he arose and ate and drank, and went in the strength of that food forty days and forty nights to Horeb, the mountain of God.” So the body will short-circuit if it does not receive rest and nourishment.A balance of work rest and leisure is the best medicine for a burned-out system. People usually rest until they are well enough to repeat the same mistakes that led to the burnout originally. They’re working 64 hours, 70 hours a week, and then they’ve got this over here, and then they’re taking care of a sick aunt, and the church things that they’ve got to do, and then they’ve committed themselves to something else, and all of a sudden, boom, they burn out. And they can’t do it. They need a rest and then they take a break, a vacation, or something, just to recharge the batteries, and what do they do when that rest is over? Well, they go back to doing the same things over again. No changes. They don’t realize that if they repeat the same type of things, they’re going to end up in the same place. People usually, as they say, rest until they’re well enough to repeat the same old mistakes. What’s needed is an attitude that understands that rest and leisure are as important as work, in developing a balanced and pleasing life to God.And many of us, unfortunately, feel guilty when we’re having fun. We feel guilty when we’re having fun. As if, oh, that’s my – my guilty pleasure is, I go fishing. Why should you feel guilty about that? And I was thinking the other day, I was giving thanks, sometimes in my prayers, I say, today I’m just going to give thanks. I’m not going to ask for anything. I’m not going to complain about anything. I’m just going to find the things in my life and just say thank you for them. And I realized, as I was making that prayer, that almost, I mean, I couldn’t think of an exception, but there may be one out there, almost everything that God has created is for our pleasure. I look at the sky, the beautiful sky, even with the cloud formation, it gives me pleasure. Pleasure for my eyes.Look at that, it’s just amazing. And I smell – the grass gets cut, and I smell the grass, and what does it – freshly mown grass, right, we know, it gives me, what? It gives me pleasure. I lay my head down on my pillow at night, the first few moments when you – before you go to sleep, oh that feels so good, pleasure. I drink a cold glass of water, pleasure. I feel the hot Sun on my head, in the afternoon, pleasure. I mean, He didn’t have to create us where almost every single experience that we have involves pleasure of some kind. What kind of God do we have? We have a God that gives us pleasure. Not illicit pleasure. Not sinful pleasure.We don’t have to do things that are illicit or disobedient to have pleasure, because He’s created everything in this world to give us some kind of pleasure. We have to understand that life has work in it, of course, and even that can be pleasurable, but it also needs rest and it also needs leisure to be properly, to be balanced. If you’re overstressed and close to burnout something is wrong. You have to figure out what the wrong thing is and something has to change to find again the balance. And that’s why I’m not throwing this at you as an accusation, I’m saying this is what you need to be thinking about if that’s your situation: over-stress anxiety, and burnout. Something will have to change. It might be, that there needs to be more leisure. Wouldn’t that be great? Or maybe there needs to be fewer commitments or maybe there need to be new commitments, in different areas.I don’t know, but something has to change. Number two in His prescription – so we said rest, the next one is release. God allowed Elijah to pour out his heart, his frustrations, his fear, and his anger before Him. Again, I’ll read one more time verse nine, “Then he came there to a cave and lodged there; and behold, the word of the Lord came to him, and He said to him, “What are you doing here, Elijah?” I mean, do you think God didn’t know what he was doing here what was he doing? He was giving Elijah a chance to expresshimself. And he did. “I have been very zealous for the Lord, the God of hosts; where the sons of Israel have forsaken your covenant, torn down your altars killed your prophets with the sword. And I alone am left, and they seek my life, to take it away.” He’s just, it’s just pouring out of him. Notice there’s no, dear Lord, I humbly come before you, my God of hosts and I appeal to you as your humble servant, Lord. There’s none of that. It’s just Elijah, what are you doing here? Oh well, they hurt me, then I hurt them. The problem with burnout is that it’s like a low-burning fire inside that never gets extinguished.It keeps burning and building and destroying us from the inside. You can pray and cry and share with others and enter your heart before God. The emotional energy created by the stress needs to be released and released positively, not in a negative way. Some people, get released, all right, but how do they do it? Well, they abuse drugs or alcohol or other things like that. Or they do other self-harming things, thinking that this will – hey I drive my car at 120 miles an hour, that’s how I get some relief. Or I go bungee jumping off a bridge. Yeah, that feels better. There are better safer ways and more constructive ways to release the raw emotional energy created by over-stress. The third part of his prescription: is rest, release, and refocusing. Refocusing. Elija was seeing only the problem, but in the cave at Horeb, he sought, again, the version and the vision of God that had originally sent him to prophesy, he hand heard the voice of the Lord.This time, in verse 11, “So he said, “Go forth,” God is saying, “Go forth and stand on the mountain before the Lord.” And behold, the Lord was passing by! And a great and strong wind was rending the mountains and breaking in pieces the rocks before the Lord, but the Lord was not in the wind. And after the wind an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the earthquake. And after the earthquake a fire, but the Lord was not in the fire; and after the fire a sound of gentle blowing. When Elijah heard it, he wrapped his face in his mantle and went out and stood at the entrance of the cave. And behold, a voice came to him and said, “What are you doing here, Elijah?” Sometimes it isn’t a change of place or a change of people that we need, sometimes it’s a resetting of our sights on God and His Word and His Son Jesus Christ and His Church, that is truly needed.In other words, sometimes we need to re-establish our spiritual priorities because many times the overstressed anxieties are caused because we have confused our priorities. We’ve taken God, who should be up there, and we’ve put Him down here. Or we’ve taken our spouse, for example, which should be our main priority, and we put them down here, because, well, I got a lot of work to do and my career is demanding this and I play, whatever, I play soccer on Thursday and Friday. But for some reason or another, I’ve taken my spouse, who should be my priority, and I’ve put her down in spot number four.And I don’t realize that spot number four, her being in spot number four, is causing a lot of stress and a lot of anxiety in my marriage and my personal life and her life and the life of the children. So sometimes we need to refocus and reorder. So: rest, release, refocus, recommitment. Recommitment. As far as Elijah was concerned, one task was over, it had been a challenge, it had been a burden, and after a time of rest and prayer and renewal, Elijah was given a new ministry, a different service to perform for the Lord.This time we go to verse 15. The Lord said to him, “Go, return on your way to the wilderness of Damascus, and when you have arrived, you shall anoint Hazael king of Aram; and Jehu the son of Nimshi you shall anoint a king over Israel, and Elisha the son of Shaphat of Abel-me hola you shall anoint as prophet in your place.” So God gives him another task. There’s work to be done, you need to go. You need to go anoint a new king. You need to find another assistant, a new prophet.Many times the best way to beat burnout is to be active in different ways, with different people, pursuing different goals. Not always, but sometimes. If our focus is on God and His purpose, He will be able to direct us into some service that will give us fresh hope a renewed sense of purpose, and enthusiasm. He will also supply us with health to do the work at hand. He noticed that Elijah, this guy was burnt out, he was toast. He had given his all. He wasn’t the same man as he was before, so what does He do? He gives him a younger man to work with him, to help him, to mentor, to carry on the work. Sometimes part of the stress is, who’s going to continue the good stuff that I’ve been doing? Who’s going to take care of my family? Who’s going to take care of my ministry my job or the business that I’d built up? I’ve spent so much time working on this and now I’m getting tired and I’m getting old.Who’s going to take over? Who’s going to bring it to fruition? Who will love it enough that they won’t let it die? That they’ll continue it with the same zeal that I had. These are real worries that people have. Elijah was human like all of us here, who nearly burned out because of the pressures of his service to the Lord; but God renewed him with rest for his body, release for his soul, the refocusing for his spirit, and a recommitment for his heart. Also, a reinforcement for his ministry, and that would be Elisha. God not only cares for us, He knows exactly what we need, for what ails us, no matter what the generation is that we live in. So the question begs, are you overanxious, stressed, burned out? Do you recognize yourself, whether you’re a man or a woman, whether you’re older or younger, whether you’re married or single? Do you recognize yourself in Elijah? Is there a little bit of Elijah in you? Are his symptoms, your symptoms? Have you given up on man’s solutions to fix the problems, worldly ways to be renewed: denial, escapism, materialism, medication, or hedonism, all the isms?I encourage you to try God’s prescription for burnout. Just a reminder: number one, find the proper balance between work and rest, even if it means less money. It’s not all about money, brothers and sisters. Number two, express your feelings to God honestly in prayer, and do it often and do it sincerely. Number three, reestablish your priorities, putting Christ and His kingdom first in your life. Once again, this will then properly order all of your other priorities. And number four, begin seeking new ways to serve the Lord through His church, to serve your family, to serve your career. Sometimes working on different things with different people helps us in our renewal process. So if this prescription means that you need to be baptized, for example, or you need to be restored through prayer, then, of course, we wait for you to come forward as we stand and as we sing the song of invitation.As found on YouTube ᶦˢ ʸᵒᵘʳ ᵍᵘᵃʳᵈᶦᵃⁿ ᵃⁿᵍᵉˡ ᵗʳʸᶦⁿᵍ ᵗᵒ ˢᵉⁿᵈ ʸᵒᵘ ᵃⁿ ᵘʳᵍᵉⁿᵗ ᵐᵉˢˢᵃᵍᵉ? ɪꜰ ʏᴏᴜ ꜱᴇᴇᴋ ɢᴜɪᴅᴀɴᴄᴇ ᴀɴᴅ ɪɴꜱɪɢʜᴛꜱ ɪɴᴛᴏ ᴛʜᴇ ᴘᴀꜱᴛ, ᴘʀᴇꜱᴇɴᴛ, ᴀɴᴅ ꜰᴜᴛᴜʀᴇ ᴡɪᴛʜ qᴜᴇꜱᴛɪᴏɴꜱ ᴀʙᴏᴜᴛ ʟᴏᴠᴇ, ʀᴇʟᴀᴛɪᴏɴꜱʜɪᴘꜱ, ᴏʀ ᴍᴏɴᴇʏ – ᴄᴏɴɴᴇᴄᴛ ᴡɪᴛʜ ʏᴏᴜʀ ᴀɴɢᴇʟ ᴛᴏᴅᴀʏ https://aef5aa-t-ztics23v7-ljxbw4j.hop.clickbank.net/ 

Stress from Failure – Mike Mazzalongo | BibleTalk.tv

 – All right here we are, “Stress Busters” the series, the name of the series iStress Busters,” all the different ways that stress can affect us. We’re on Lesson Number Four of this series and tin his particular lesson, we’re going to be talking about stress from failure, stress from failure. Well, in our series thus far on stress, we’ve talked about the problem of stress in general and also the problem of stress that is caused by worry, nd the particular problems that stress causes in our work lives. I’ve talked to some people and it seems to me that they think that, you know, just listening to these lessons is what’s going to lessen the stress in their lives. You know, they have this equation in their mind, okay, I’m going to binge-watch “Stress Busters” online, and after I’ve listened to these lessons, I’ll be fine. You know, the stress of my life is going to go down. Well, hopefully,, the lessons that I’m sharing with you may be soothing, and perhaps you might feel reassured that someone understands you, someone understands that you may be going through these problems of stress. However, here’s the big however, nothing changes stress in the stress level until there is a real change in your life. There’s no change in your stress level until there’s a change in your life. For example, if you’ve begun living, you know, one day at a time, you know, trusting God to provide for you one day at a time, or if you’ve begun just not going past your limits, understanding that you have limits, and not going past your limits, well, if you don’t do those things, you’ll still have the, it’s not just understanding the principle of the thing. You’ve got to do the thing. You’ve got to make a real change, and unless you balance your workload and your attitude toward your work, you’re not going to achieve the peace of mind that we’ve been talking about, and I always say, you know what, what’s the point of succeeding in your career if you burn out? What’s the point? What’s the point of all the work that you do and all the effort that you make if your body and your mind are so deteriorated by stress that you don’t even have the strength to enjoy what you’ve accomplished? So the point I’m making here at the outset is these lessons don’t help unless you respond to them unless you take the material and you take the advice and you take the things that are taught and practically, you know, insert them into your lives and use them. All right, so this time we look at the stress that is created by failure and what we can do about it. Well, here’s the first thing I want to say about that. Our society rewards success and punishes failure. Our society rewards success and punishes failure. There’s a great pressure, you know, to make it, to get it together, to excel at something or other. To excel is popular, it’s in, it’s lovely. Just to be ordinary, not so much. No prizes for being just ordinary. We love winners, and we ignore everybody else in our society, in our western society anyways. From Little League to college to careers, the message is always the same. Making it is what life is all about. So you go to the best schools because you want to go to the best schools to get the best advantage so that you can make it, ’cause making it is, you know, the goal. Success is the goal. So as a result, you know, we grow up with a deep-seated need to succeed. Now I’m not, you know, I’m not promoting failure here. I’m just saying that in our society, we have a great need to succeed, and we punish failure, we punish failure. It’s not always a conscious, but it is visible in the highs and the lows that we feel as we chase success in whatever field we happen to be in. So not surprisingly, therefore, there’s a great stress associated with the pursuit of success. If we and it’s a double-edged sword, if we succeed, we’re stressed to keep that success, and if we fail, we’re stressed because of the consequences of our failure, and the continued desire to succeed. Now, different types of stress are associated with failure, two types of stress associated that I want to talk about. The first is the stress caused by the failure itself. I mean, it is stressful to fail because failure brings all kinds of negative consequences. You know, a loss of health for example. If you have an accident, you know, you lose your health, you lose your wealth, the loss of your reputation. You know, you’re a young person, you do foolish things, you film yourself doing foolish or immoral things online, and it’s just one night, it’s one crazy night, but that image and that film and that video iareout there forever, even future employers are taking a look at that before they consider you for a job. You know, you lose your reputation, or if you commit a crime. I mean, we never talk about that, but you know, you write a bad check,, or you write a lot of bad checks or steal something or you cheat or whatever, and you’re convicted for that, and some, you have to go to prison, or you’re guilty of some immortality of some kind, some public immoral failure, and you lose your reputation because of it. That’s a failing. The loss of self-esteem, how many have this self-hatred that they have to deal with all the time? A loss of relationships, children who lose their parents? You know, how difficult is it for children when they have to be told, well, your mom’s going to live over here and your dad’s going to live over there, you know, and you’re going to spend a weekend over here, and then you’re going to spend a weekend over there, and now you have a new mom or a new dad or whatever, and they have different rules, they have different families. Very difficult on children and of course, very difficult on adults, the stress of failing at a relationship. So whatever the failure, there’s usually a pain or loss of some kind, and the pain and the loss create natural stress in the person. You know, people are so afraid of admitting that they may be failing at marriage that they keep it a secret because they know that there are a lot of negative consequences that come with a failure at marriage. So therefore they say nothing, make it worse, and the marriage fails, and then all the negative consequences that come with it, and the stress that comes from the failure of that relationship. So there’s stress caused by failure of, you know, so many different kinds. Then there’s stress caused by the fear of failure, not by the failure itself, but the apprehension that we may fail, that perhaps we might not succeed. We worry about failing, we worry about not making it, not being good enough, not living up to someone else’s expectations, whatever. You know, the student, we know the story, right, of the student who knows the material front and back, who’s aced every test so far, but they worry sick until the results are in, they’re so afraid of failure. So whether we fail or we’re afraid of failing, the experience causes stress, and this stress can immobilize us and keep us from either enjoying our success or keep us from trying anything that involves any degree of risk. Because if there’s any risk involved, that means that I might fail, and I don’t want to suffer the consequences, I don’t want to suffer the stress and the pain that comes with failure, so I’m not even going to try. So how do we deal with this type of failure, this stress from failure? Well, two main ideas that I want to talk about that help Christians, remember, my perspective is always talking about Christians who have to deal with stress, and so two main ideas that’ll help Christians deal with the stress that accompanies failure and the fear of failure that I would like to share with you, and the first idea is this. Understand that failure is normal. Failure is normal. Ah, what a relief to know that failure is normal. The problem with the success-oriented evolutionary mindset that exists in this world is that failure is seen as some form of aberration instead of being the norm. You know, the basic concept of the Christian religion taught in every first chapter of the Bible is that failure, once begun by Adam’s sin, is inevitable. We live in a technological bubble here in the West and in a kind of social time warp in North America. Look at history. It’s been one war and one disaster and one pandemic after another, never stopping, always increasing, a testimony of God’s pronouncement in the garden that the earth was cursed and society would be in labor until the end. What’s there not to understand when God is telling, you know, the earth is cursed, will be in labor, you know, until the end of time, until the, you know, eventually the earth and the heavens, you know, will be destroyed? Technically, we are advanced, and because of this, we have the illusion that the world is a better place, but in reality, the earth continues to deteriorate, and man is as evil selfish, and cruel as he ever was. But because of this illusion, you know, this technological illusion that we have, all shiny and bright and new, we can go faster, we can go better, you know, look what we can do with our phones and with our, you know, we’re sending rockets to Mars and all that business, because of this illusion, and also because of a godless philosophy that for a century has made our society believe that we are simply evolving to higher and higher life forms, we see failure as something that needs to be eliminated. We see failure as just being unnatural. It’s impeding the general progress of humanity. We just have to get rid of failure, because it is seen as something unnatural. Those who fail are considered less than human, less than what is naturally, you know, what naturally ought to be. This idea here, it creates stress, and it creates stress because it goes against reality and it goes against what’s essentially true. The truth of the matter is that there is an inner principle in all people that induces them to fail. I mean, failure is normal, success is tasurprise. This is why we honor success. This is why we get excited over success, because failure is the norm. That principle that I’m talking about within all human beings is called sin. The Bible tells us that because of sin, man fails. He fails to do what he should, and he fails to avoid doing what he shouldn’t do. In Romans chapter three verse 23, Paul summarizes it. He says “For all have sinned,” and what is sin? A fail, failing to keep God’s laws, that’s the fail. “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” What is the glory of God? Well, perfection, complete success, that’s the glory. Paul said all have sinned and all fall short of the glory of God. So when we understand that failure is normal, it helps relieve the stress from failure in several ways. First of all, it allows us to be just a little more charitable with ourselves and others who fail, because we all share this characteristic. Criticism of self and others for their failings is the single greatest generator of stress. I mean, there’s an entire, you know, psychological method of therapy that is based on developing positive self-talk to silence the critic, you know, that is within all of us. This idea here gives direction and motivation to our actions. We help out because we can relate, and perhaps we’ll be the ones who will need help one day. We do that when we understand that failure is normal, and it also sends us searching for an answer to failure outside of ourselves, outside of our achievements and willpower, and our success philosophies. Because if all fail, then no one ras the answer. How many books come out to describe how we really can get success? And yet the books keep coming out all the time. It’s like diet books. You know, they keep, every year there’s hundreds and hundreds of diet books come out. You’d think that eventually one would come out and it would be the answer. It’s the same thing with the success books. You’d think after hundreds of years of people writing books about how to succeed, we’d figure it out, and yet there’s a new book coming out every month. Like Paul in Romans chapter seven verse 25, who recognized the overwhelming failure of his own life, regardless of his superior efforts at success, here is Paul the Apostle who cries out, “Who can save me from this body of sin?” When he says “body of sin,” what is he saying? Failure, who can save me from this failure of my life? When failure brings us to this point, we finally learn the ultimate answer to our failings given by God in Romans chapter eight verse one where he says, “There is now therefore “no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” I add the, like a parent theoretical statement, just to clarify this. “There is now therefore no condemnation,” brackets, “for failure for those who are in Christ Jesus.” What does God condemn us for? Well, he condemns us for our failure, our failure to obey his commands, our failures to be perfect as he is perfect. And so the ultimate answer to failure is not success, but rather faith in Jesus Christ, and with that faith comes peace that dispels the stress that accompanies the impossible race for perfect achievement at work, perfect achievement at raising children. You know, what do we parents say, how many times have I heard parents say raising children is the most gguilt-producingactivity that one can do? Why, because raising children shows you how weak you are. It reveals to you, you know, how easily you can make mistakes. It demonstrates how little you know. We feel guilty because why? We want to be perfect parents because we want our children to be perfect. We don’t want them to fail. When we understand this, it gives us an understanding of the world and ourselves ainwhatever we try to do. Another idea about failure that we need to know, aside from the fact that failure is normal, is this. Failure is a good teacher. Failure is a good teacher. Now, failure is not pleasant, but man’s approach to failure is not some quest to eliminate it, but rather to learn from it. You know, a quick look at history will show us that those who saw failure as a teacher didn’t succeed in eliminating failure from their lives, but they did achieve great things despite failure. You know, Abraham Lincoln, for example, failed at many attempts to gain political office before he became the President of the United States. Thomas Edison did 2,000 failed experiments before he found the correct elements for his first incandescent bulb. 2,000 failed experiments. Winston Churchill said, and I quote, “Success is going from failure to failure “without loss of enthusiasm.” I like that. “Success is going from failure to failure “without loss of enthusiasm.” Here’s a man who understood that failure was the norm. In the Bible, we have countless examples of men and women who failed in their lives, failed in their relationships, but they were used by God in great ways despite their failings. If we choose to, we can learn many things from the failures in our own lives. For example, we can learn about God through failure. There is an endless amount of information we can learn about God, and failure is a great teacher because when we fail, we usually can see the distance between ourselves and God. Isn’t that unusual? It’s when we fail, morally, spiritually, when we fail at these things, we recognize God is over there and I’m over here, and there is such a chasm between us, and my failing has revealed how wide that chasm is between myself and God. You know, when we justify or hide or deny, we lose the opportunity for God to teach us the difference between ourselves and him, and when we begin to see the differences between ourselves and him, we grow in humility, and that humility gives us peace, it gives us joy, it gives us comfort. You know David, the psalmist, the king, David rejoiced in his newfound knowledge of God’s gracious and forgiving spirit, but he only was able to do this after he acknowledged his failure with Bathsheba. We know the story. He seduced this woman, this other man’s wife, and then of course she became pregnant, and after the pregnancy, he conspired to have the man killed and lied about it. You know, it was just one bad thing after another until the prophet came to reveal and expose David’s sin, and David confessed it and repented. Then he wrote about hisexperiencec, and listened to to what hesaid aboutt this experience of failure and what resulted from his failure. He says, “How blessed is he “whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered! “How blessed is the man to whom the Lord “does not impute iniquity, “and in whose spirit there is no deceit!” He’s saying how blessed, he doesn’t say how blessed is the rich man, the man whose stomach is full, the man who’s got 15 kids. He didn’t say that. He says, “How blessed is he, “the one whose transgression is forgiven.” He’s talking about himself here of course, and he’s saying what a blessing to have my failure forgiven, to have my failure covered over. “How blessed is the man to whom the Lord “does not impute iniquity “and in whose spirit is no deceit,” meaning I’m not lying about my failure. I’m owning up to it. He goes on to say, “When I kept silent about my sin, “my body wasted away “through my groaning all day long. “For day and night, your hand was heavy upon me. “My vitality was drained away “as with the fever heat of the summer.” Do you see the stress he’s talking about here? His failure,  and in his case, his moral failure, created tremendous stress as he hid from it, ae denied it, aandhe tried to push it away. He goes on to say, “I acknowledged my sin,” the turnaround, “I acknowledged my sin,” change the word sin to failure, “I acknowledge my failure to you, “and my iniquity I did not hide. “I said, ‘I will confess my transgression to the Lord.’ “And you forgave the guilt of my sin. Selah. “Therefore, let everyone who is godly, “pray to you in a time when you may be found. “Surely in a flood of great waters, they will reach him. “You are my hiding place. “You preserve me from trouble. “You surround me with songs of deliverance.” Now, does this sound like a man who is overstressed because of failing? He says, “I will instruct you and teach you “in the way which you should go. “I will counsel you with my eye upon you. “Do not be as the horse or as the mule “which have no understanding, “whose trappings include bit and bridle “to hold them in check. “Otherwise they will not come near to you. “Many are the sorrows of the wicked, “but he who trusts in the Lord, “lovingkindness shall surround him. “Be glad in the Lord and rejoice, you righteous ones, “and shout for joy all who are upright in heart.” This is the sinner who’s talking here. This is the guy who failed, and failed miserably, who is saying all these pleasant and joyful things, a man who was weighed down by the stress of his failure, who finally cried out to God for forgiveness and acknowledge his failings. And then, so I say, we can learn about God and how good he is and what he gives us and what he provides for us, and then secondly, we can learn about ourselves. Failure teaches us about us. Failure is the way that God draws a kind of a chalk line if you wish around our physical abilities, our spiritual maturity, or our emotional strength. Here you are, you’re this strong and no stronger. You’re this capable, but no more capable than that. Without failure, we rarely can get an objective view of ourselves. Then thirdly, through failure, we can learn what is truly important. A failure brings loss, and loss helps us to reevaluate what is truly valuable to us in our lives. You know, I knew a Christian man who suffered a heart attack and realized that you know, his truck and his guns and his buddies, ’cause he was a good old boy, all of this business, these things were not going to be missed as much as his little children were going to be missed if he died from a heart attack. He learned that his family was what was important to him. Even though he’d been preached at for 30 years, the threat of losing them finally brought the lesson home. Failure, even if it’s the failure of our health, acts like a pair of glasses that bring into perspective what counts what is important, and what we reed in this life. Failure is a great teacher in this regard. A lot of the stress caused by failure is due not only to the loss that we encounter, but also the fact that we failed to learn the lessons of failure, and we continue to produce the stressful things in our lives caused by ignorance of God and ignorance of ourselves and ignorance of our life. We don’t let failure teach us anything, and so we continue to repeat the mistakes that cause failure and we gain the accompanying stress that comes with it. So what have I said, you know, so far? We’ve kind of gone in a lot of different directions, so what have I said so far? Well, first of all, I’ve said that stress is caused by failure itself, or the fear of failure. Secondly, we live in a world that is unkind to failure, and so we’re stressed even more at the mere thought of failure. Never mind failing, just the fear of failing causes stress in us. Now, dealing with the stress caused by failure is possible. We have to understand that failure is normal. You’re going to mess up so you better get used to it. Don’t be afraid of trying, because, because of, you might fail. As forgiven people, we have a right to start over again. Try to learn from failure so that you can avoid repeating mistakes, and also enrich your life. So let’s apply the lesson to Christians and have a spiritual exercise here as we kind of end up with this lesson on stress from failure. So here’s a little exercise that you can do along with me here, okay? First of all, I want you to think about your worst failure. You know it, you know it. Your worst failure, whether it’s a financial thing, a family thing, a crime, or a spiritual thing. Think of, as far as you’re concerned, your worst failure. Okay, number two, ask God to forgive you. Just ask him to forgive you. Lord Jesus, I did this thing, you know I did this thing. I need you to forgive me. Please forgive me. I want to tell you something. If God forgives you, then you can forgive yourself. See, a lot of people, just can’t forgive themselves, and they don’t know why they can’t forgive themselves. Well, it’s because you can’t forgive yourselves unless God forgives you first. If he forgives you, then you can forgive you. If he doesn’t forgive you, or if he hasn’t forgiven you, no wonder you can’t forgive yourself. You’re still carrying that burden around. Now remember, I’m talking to Christians here. If you’re not a Christian, well obviously, the way to receive forgiveness, as Peter says in Acts chapter two verse 38, you need to repent of your sins and be baptized and as you go into the waters of baptism, the blood of Christ washes away all of your sins. But I’m talking to Christians now, and if you’re a Christian and you’ve still got to a sin that’s on your mind and your heart, then ask God to forgive you and know that he has. 1 John chapter one verses seven to nine talks about that. If we acknowledge our sin to God he is faithful to forgive us, and the blood of Christ washes away all of our sins. Remember, if God forgives you, then you can forgive yourself. Then one last little exercise. Tonight I want you to write down two things that you’ve learned from that failure that you talked about. You know, I said to you, think about your worst failure, then ask God to forgive you for that failure. I also want you to write down two things. What did you learn from that failure, either in the past or just as we’ve talked about it tonight, and then finally, move on with your life? Move on with your life. So many Christians, you know, make the mistake of always looking bbackward There’s nothing back there. The only thing that’s back there is failure. Know that the cross of Christ takes care of failure. Failure in the past, failure in the present, failure in the future, the cross of Christ takes care of all of that. Paul tells us, he forgets what lies behind, and what does he do? He keeps his eyes forward. I’ll tell you right now, the stress that comes from failure, most of the time it comes because we inflict it upon ourselves by looking back at the things we’ve done, at the things we’ve failed at, at the things that we didn’t quite measure up and whatever, you know. Don’t do that. Stop doing that. Stop looking back. Tell yourself, to stop looking back. Look forward, only look forward to the hope that we have in Christ Jesus. Doing that will eliminate the stress that comes from failure. You know, nostress accompanies the contemplation of heaven. I never feel stressfulen I think about heaven, when I think about the end when I think about how it’ll be when I’m with Christ with a glorified body and no sin and no death. You know, that doesn’t cause me stress, and I encourage people not to look back. That’ll just stress you out ’cause you’re just going to see your failings. Look forward to what God has promised and what od has prepared for us. Okay, so that’s our lesson tonight or today about failure, stress, and failure. Remember, we’ve got different resources. We’ve got the study sheet that you can download and work with as we go through it, and in this particular lesson, we also have the bonus material for a lesson, for this lesson. We have small group discussion sheets that you can download. If you happen to be ain   all group and you want to have an extra exercise to do, then I encourage you to download that material and work with that. Well, that’s our lesson for tonight. We’re going to continue with Lesson Number Five in this series, and I hope to see you for that one. Take care, God bless you, and we’ll see you soon.As found on YouTubeꜱʟɪᴍᴄʀʏꜱᴛᴀʟ The World’s Only Slimming Crystal Water Bottles! The unique combination of crystals is so powerful that it has been used for decades by crystal healing experts to help thousands of men and women change their lives for the better ➯➱ ➫ ➪➬ ᴛʏᴘᴇ ᴏʀ ᴘᴀꜱᴛᴇ ʏᴏᴜʀ ᴄᴏɴᴛᴇɴᴛ ʜᴇʀᴇ [Official] ᵘᵖᵗᵒ ⁷⁰% ᵒᶠᶠ ᵗᵒᵈᵃʸ!