Put Fears to Rest

What do you look for when shop­ping for a bed? Size? Com­fort? Cost? How about pro­tec­tion from bio-chemical attack? Bul­let­proof plat­ing? Intruder prox­im­ity detec­tor? For “the safest rest ever,” try the Quan­tum Sleeper

Safest Bed ever

(I don’t think this is a ship­ping prod­uct.) I don’t mean to make light of people’s fears, but I am amazed at how fear-driven our world has become. C.J. Mahaney writes:

Fears reveal lies and lusts. Fears reveal idols. Fears reveal func­tional gods. When we sub­mit to fear we sub­mit to a false god rather than serv­ing the God of Scrip­ture, the God we seek to serve.

Mahaney quotes from Edward Welch’s Run­ning Scared: Fear, Worry and the God of Rest (Greens­boro: New Growth Press, 2007):

…We know that worry and fear are more about us than about the things out­side us. They reveal what is valu­able to us, and what is valu­able to us in turn reveals our king­dom alle­giances. We also know that God is patient and com­pas­sion­ate with us, and he gives grace upon grace. Though alert to our divided alle­giances, he per­sists in call­ing us away from fear and worry, per­suades us of the beauty of the king­dom, and gives more than we can imagine.

I humbly sug­gest adding this corol­lary to G.K. Chesterton’s famous line: “When we cease to fear God, we will not fear noth­ing, we will fear anything.”