What to Do with Your "What if?" Fears

 

What if fears


What to Do with Your 

ā€œWhat if?ā€ Fears


Are you a ā€œwhat if?ā€ gal?  When faced with circumstances beyond your control, do the ā€œwhat ifs?ā€ come to your mind and roll off your tongue like marbles spilling out of their container spreading across the floor, settling underneath couches, end tables and places you didn’t even think they could reach.  


When we entertain these ā€œwhat if?ā€ questions, we are allowing these thoughts to spread far and wide through our minds, hearts, and bodies.  Continually entertaining these thoughts literally rewires our brains to our detriment.  Like the marbles that disappeared under the couch, these ā€œwhat if?ā€ thoughts may seem harmless and to vanish, but they end up manifesting themselves in our bodies resulting in stress and anxiety.  Continuing the habit of ā€œwhatifing?ā€ might even produce lasting effects on our health such as high blood pressure or even depression.


I set an intention for myself this year to stop the ā€œwhat ifs?ā€ and to be present in the moment and not borrow trouble from tomorrow.  ā€œTherefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.ā€ Matthew 6:34  I’m not saying that my tendency to entertain ā€œwhat ifs?ā€ has suddenly disappeared, BUT I’m working hard to ā€œtake every thought captive to the obedience of  Christā€ 2 Corinthians 10:5b


I believe we can learn from the following Biblical account in John 6:1-13 how to stop the tendency to ā€œwhat-if?ā€:


ā€œAfter these things Jesus went away to the other side of the Sea of Galilee (or Tiberias).  A large crowd was following Him, because they were watching the signs which He was performing on those who were sick.  But Jesus went up on the mountain, and there He sat with His disciples.  Now the Passover, the feast of the Jews, was near.  So Jesus, after raising His eyes and seeing that a large crowd was coming to Him, *said to Philip, ā€œWhere are we to buy bread so that these people may eat?ā€  But He was saying this only to test him, for He Himself knew what He intended to do.  Philip answered Him, ā€œTwo hundred denarii worth of bread is not enough for them, for each to receive just a little!ā€  One of His disciples, Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother, *said to Him,  ā€œThere is a boy here who has five barley loaves and two fish; but what are these for so many people?ā€  Jesus said, ā€œHave the people recline to eat.ā€ Now there was plenty of grass in the place. So the men reclined, about five thousand in number.  Jesus then took the loaves, and after giving thanks He distributed them to those who were reclining; likewise also of the fish, as much as they wanted.  And when they had eaten their fill, He *said to His disciples, ā€œGather up the leftover pieces so that nothing will be lost.ā€  So they gathered them up, and filled twelve baskets with pieces from the five barley loaves which were left over by those who had eaten.ā€


Let’s look at three take-aways from this passage to help us turn our ā€œWhat if?ā€ into ā€œI wonder what God will do?ā€


What if?

In the above passage, Jesus poses a question to Philip asking ā€œwhere are we to buy bread so that these people may eat?ā€ Philip responded that two hundred denarii worth of bread would not be enough to feed the 5000.  Andrew mentioned the boy with the five barley loaves and two fish, but then asked his version of ā€œwhat if?ā€, ā€œWhat are these for so many people?ā€


Philip and Andrew were looking at the circumstances and the facts as they knew them.  It seemed impossible to be able to feed 5000 people with such a small amount of money and food.  


We tend to look at circumstances through what is right in front of us or what we think we know of a situation.  We play out all the ā€œwhat ifs?ā€ and every way things could go wrong, sometimes deeming a situation impossible to remedy, much like Philip did.


Our ā€œwhat ifs?ā€ can paralyze us making us ineffective to move forward in God’s strength.


Over the years, my husband has been offered to Pastor and/or apply to Pastor at a few different churches.  When considering whether to do so, I confess that I was the one that ā€œwhat if’d?ā€ the offer because I was looking at myself, number one, and number two, I was allowing my fears to get in the way.   I often wonder if my ā€œwhat ifs?ā€ robbed my husband and I of a blessing.  Instead of looking at what God would do in my own heart and how He would provide in that which I was fearful, I allowed these imagined scenarios to derail moving forward in God’s strength and purpose.  Had I asked ā€œI Wonder What God Will Do?ā€  my hope would’ve been placed squarely on the Lord and not on myself or the circumstances AND I would have been in a positive state of expectation of how God would work in that situation.


And as we will learn next, not only did God do an amazing thing in front of the disciples by feeding the 5000, but He can do those same amazing things in our own lives.


I Wonder What God will Do?

Had Andrew and Philip responded ā€œI wonder what YOU will do?ā€ when Jesus asked where they were to buy food to feed the 5000, doubts would’ve never entered their minds.  They would’ve believed in the power of the Person who was asking the question.  The verse states that Jesus knew what He was going to do, but asked them about the food in order to test them.


How often are we tested by God when circumstances come up in our lives that leave us feeling hopeless, worried, wondering how it will ever work out and ā€œfailā€ by asking those ā€œwhat if?ā€ questions.


What if {see what I did there ;-)}, when tested by God in these situations, we instead expect great things from Him - with wonder and excitement, anticipate what God will do in the situation. 


Years ago, my daughter was facing a difficult situation and it looked like all her prayers to change the situation were going to be answered with a NO as the last piece that would close the door on the yes was pretty much a guarantee.  I remember talking to a friend of mine about the situation and she said, ā€œI believe God is going to work in the unseen places and that He will put a stop to the situation and answer her prayer with a resounding yes!ā€  My friend took all of my ā€œwhat ifs?ā€ and with confidence replaced them not only with, ā€œI wonder what God will do?ā€, but proclaimed in Jesus name what she believed would happen.  I carried that hope with me.  I did not allow the ā€œwhat ifs?ā€ to come and I waited expectantly wondering how God was going to work in the unseen places.  And then it happened, a week later, the most insignificant occurrence ended up derailing the course of the whole concerning situation and put a definitive stop to it.  God indeed worked in the unseen places and answered my daughters prayers with a YES! by putting a stop to the circumstance that caused her great concern.


When we spend our time and energy wondering what God will do in our situations, we are essentially living in the hope of who God is and believing He will do what is best for us.  Anxiety cannot creep in when we are resting in God’s provision and will for our situations.


Just like Andrew and Philip, what they perceived as lack, Jesus turned into plenty and they were able to feed the 5000 with food left over.   In God’s economy, we lack nothing.  He is our provider and knows what we need in any circumstance we find ourselves in.


Even if

In the Biblical account above, the story turned out with a miraculous solution to their problem.   Yet, had Jesus not multiplied the bread, He would’ve provided for them in another way.  Think back to the Old Testament when the Israelites were starving in the desert and God provided manna from the sky for them to eat.  Our God can turn even the most hopeless situations around for our good and benefit.  


For instance, the next time you are worried about a medical test result, instead of saying ā€œwhat if it is cancer?ā€  or ā€œWhat if it is something serious?ā€  Instead say, ā€œeven if it is cancer, I know the Lord can still heal me.ā€  ā€œEven if He chooses not to bring healing, I know that He will be with me,  strengthen me and fill me with peace.ā€  This is an extreme example and I admit a difficult one, but when we trust the Lord and His care over us and allow ourselves to accept His will for our lives, we are set free from the bondage of worry and anxiety and instead rest in Him.  Psalm 46:10 says, ā€œBe still and know that I am Godā€. 


An ā€œeven ifā€ statement is very powerful because we are surrendering our lives and our care to the Lord, the only place it should be.  Habakkuk 3:17-19 says ā€œEven if the fig tree does not bloom and the vines have no grapes, even if the olive tree fails to produce and the fields yield no food, even if the sheep pen is empty and the stalls have no cattle— even then, I will be happy with the LORD. I will truly find joy in God, who saves me.ā€



Remember when we are spending time in the ā€œwhat ifs?ā€ we are already living in THAT anxious ā€œrealityā€ BEFORE it even comes to fruition - IF it even comes to fruition.  


When we exclaim ā€œI wonder what God will do?ā€, we are placing our trust in Him, NOT in our own abilities or allowing the circumstances to dictate the outcome in our minds.


And finally, when we truly find joy in the Lord and are happy in Him, the ā€œeven ifsā€ will come from a genuine place of trust in our Heavenly Father to care for us in His amazing love and perfect will.   


ā€œPerfect love casts out fear.ā€ 1 John 4:18


"This article first appeared on IBelieve.com, April 29, 2024ā€

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