Philippians 4:4-9 – “Questions to Ask When Dealing with Anxiety and Worry”

My Bible study notes for Wednesday night, Feb 28th. Remember, these are my personal study notes and not a manuscript of the sermon. They are provided as an outline each week for our Tabernacle Church family. You can find Sermon Notes, Family Devotional Guides, Prayer List, and other resources at our Church Website.

Philippians 4:4-9

This material is a collection of notes from a lecture given by Dave Powlison – Biblical Counseling Conference in Lafayette, Indiana.

QUESTIONS TO ASK WHEN STRUGGLING WITH ANXIETY

Almost 90% of all counseling involves 3 big issues:  anger, anxiety, and escapism.

What Do You Worry About?

  • money
  • health (Do I have… Will I get…)
  • past hurts
  • too many responsibilities (too much on plate)
  • Relationships
  • I always blow it – will God ever be able to change me?
  • Could God ever forgive me?
  • Will I fail?  Will I succeed?
  • What do people think of me
  • Nobody cares, nobody calls.

Remember – you have good reason to worry!  These are all things that are tough – and you can’t control them. 

Scripture never trivializes the things we worry about.  It just says you have greater reason to take them to someone who can help, rather than worrying about them.  In other words, you have reason to worry, but better reasons not to worry.  Don’t get caught in the ‘spin cycle’ (like a dryer going round and round) – twisting, turning, driving, churning.

Who Is God?

So often we overlook v. 5 “The Lord is at hand.”

When you are worrying, you are caught in a universe where no one is home – it’s just you and your struggle, but God plants a grace ‘bomb’ right here.  You can’t understand v. 6 without v. 5!

What is revealed about the character of God in vv. 1-6?

  • v. 4 – Rejoice in the Lord – Where our joy is found.
  • v. 6 – God hears- “Make your request known” – God is able to know.  He’s a hearer (Isa. 59:1-2)
  • v. 7 – The peace of God – but remember that being at peace in God can involve a lot of anguish (see the Psalms)
  • v. 9 – God of peace be with you – His presence.

The radical God-centeredness of this passage works to destroy anxiety – because anxiety is a lonely producing agent.  It isolates us.  We must change our thinking.  Our mind and our heart work closely together.

v. 8Finally…. Think on these things.  Reprogram our thinking. WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT GOD FROM HIS WORD

Where Are We Going to Place Our Trust?

Talk to God about #1 in Light of #2

In other words, talk to God about what you worry about… in light of who He is.  Frame it in the light of who you’re talking to.  Otherwise, prayer itself can become just a recitation of what I’m worrying about.  Some people’s prayers can actually be anxiety producing agents themselves, because there’s not enough of God in them.  The problem itself overshadows everything else.  But proper prayer infuses the presence of God back into the scenario.  State your worries in light of who God is.

  • by prayer
  • and supplication
  • let your requests known

Most people think the opposite of anxiety is calm.  Not true.  Philippians 4:6 says take your worries seriously.  Supplication is a CRY TO GOD!  95% of the Psalms have a cue that something verbal and out loud is going on.  The Psalms seem to be out loud – “Hear my cry, O God.” Psalm 28:1-6 – “hear the voice of my supplications.”

There are two FAULTS or abysses:

  1. Anxious, nervous, tense – my life is a self-contained psychological state that is no fun at all – it’s just me and my problems spinning and spinning.
  • It is what it is /calm – It’s not ‘no worries, man.’  And it’s certainly not, “Whatever!”  It’s not flat lined because things really do matter. The attitude of ‘whatever’ is sinful.  It’s not a studied indifference or detachment.

The flesh always presents only two opposite options… but there’s always a biblical 3rd option!

  • The biblical approach is a HOLY CONCERN or impassioned care based on the character of God.  It’s radically God relational in its concern.  The opposite of anxiety is a FOCUSED, holy concern that looks to God.

Just look at the example of the apostle Paul Philippians 2

  • He was longing for you all
  • He was distressed
  • He was less concerned and relieved of my anxiety about you

Phil. 2:20 the word ‘concern’ is the same word used in 4:6 that is translated ‘anxiety.’  So he is actually commending Timothy for being anxious about the Philippians.  Phil. 2:20 means a holy love that Paul commends.

2 Cor. 11 Paul talks about his trials and then says, “On top of this my ‘concern’ [same word] for all the churches.”

I Peter 1:3-9 exhorts us to entrust ourselves to God in the midst of trials and concern.  Entrust ourselves to a faithful Creator.  Jesus is given as an example – Psa. 22 and Heb. 5 tells us that Jesus entrusted His soul to God with loud groanings.

Where Are You Going to Park Your Mind?

The anxious mind parks in a LIE.  The trusting mind parks itself in the TRUTH.  We have to fight off lies with the truth.

  • READ THE WORD
  • MEDITATE UPON THE WORD
  • PRAY THE WORD

What Are You Supposed to Do Today?

v. 9 – Learned, received, and heart, seen in me (other believers)

practice this things

  • the doing

Make a list of all the things that worry you.

  • Diving the list by what you control and what God controls (one big circle with a little circle in the big circle

Then do the task of the day.

  • What is today’s task?
  • What am I called to do today?
  • This is the planning stage.

EXAMPLE (taking into consideration my life… with adult children)

  • I am so worried about family member. It is consuming my thoughts.
  • What can you control and what is for God to handle? (remember the 2 circles)
  • What DO I CONTROL.
  • Pray for them. Encourage them. Biblically support and admonish them.
  • My step of obedience will be smaller than the problem.
  • Be faithful in the areas I can control.

Luke 12:22-34 – “The Danger of Anxiety and Worry”

My sermon notes for Sunday morning, February 25th. Remember, these are my personal study notes and not a manuscript of the sermon. The notes are provided as an outline each week for our Tabernacle Church family. The church provides a live stream of the service each Sunday at 10:30 on Facebook. We also provide the services through YouTube by Sunday afternoon.  You can find Sermon Notes, Family Devotional Guides, Prayer List, and other resources at our Church Website.

Luke 12:22-34

INTRO

  • Warnings from the Lord to the disciples
    • Hypocrisy – vv. 1-12
    • Covetousness – vv. 13-21
    • Anxiety/Worry – vv. 22-34
  • Rich farmer was worried about what he had
  • Here, worried about what we do not have

Defining the terms

Anxious – v. 22

  • to be apprehensive, have anxiety, be anxious, be (unduly) concerned [1]

Worry – v. 29

  • Used figuratively of the mind, to animate, incite, also to cause to be hesitant, to fluctuate, make one’s faith waver as if blown about by wind. In the NT, used in the pass. or mid., meaning to be in suspense or of a doubtful mind, anxious, fluctuating between hope and fear (Luke 12:29).[2]

Fear – v. 32

  • To put in fear, terrify, frighten. In the Class. Gr., to cause to run away[3]

It is an amazing and ironic truth that while ours is perhaps the most affluent, indulged, and comfortable society ever, it is also the most stressed out, worried, and anxiety-ridden one. No worry goes unnamed, undefined, uncataloged, undiagnosed, or unmedicated; worries merely go unrelieved. It is frightening to believe one is trapped in an inexplicable universe; to be nothing more than the chance product of a blind, unguided, random, purposeless process of evolution that did not have man in mind. The thought that there is no one home in the universe results in a sense of cosmic alienation, loneliness, and angst. The anxiety that results takes many forms, to which humanistic psychology gives labels such as obsessive-compulsive disorder, panic disorder, post-traumatic stress syndrome, social anxiety disorder, general anxiety disorder, as well as specific phobias, such as fear of heights, enclosed places, mice, spiders, or snakes. Anxiety affects millions of people and treating it (usually by drugs) is a big business.
The best the world can hope for in superficially dealing with anxiety is to manage it and mask its impact. The Lord Jesus Christ, however, offers a radically different solution to anxiety—He promises to eliminate it.

John MacArthur, Luke 11–17, MacArthur New Testament Commentary (Chicago, IL: Moody Publishers, 2013), 138.

Are there things we should be concerned about? YES

  • Our health
  • Finances
  • Family
  • Past mistakes
  • Success/failures

As a Christian, think of your life as a Big Circle (Paul Tripp)

  • Draw a big circle. Within the big circle draw a smaller one.
  • The small one is the area of our responsibility.  What we control as we live or life as a Christ follower. A life of living and following Christ. (faithfulness and obedience)
  • The space beyond our smaller circle is the God’s area of responsibility. The things outside of our control. God’s sovereignty and providence. I must trust in Him and live my life according.
  • Worry and Anxiety is when we allow our focus to be on God’s responsibility and not ours.

The problem is when they consume us.  We they consume us they become sin. The world says… label it and mask it. The Gospel eliminates it.

Jesus’ Big Truth vv. 22-23

  • Do not worry.
  • You have a God that cares.

Two Illustrations – vv. 24-28

  • Raven – Scavengers. Yet, God provides.
  • Lilies – Their beauty. Their short season. Yet, God clothes them in glory.
  • HOW MUCH MORE WILL GOD TAKE CARE OF US

v. 29 – NOTICE…  LACK OF FAITH

  • Forsaking All I Trust Him

The remedy to overcome anxiety/worry – v. 29-34

  • Seek the Kingdom
    • Matthew 6:33-34
    • The world seeks the temporal… We should seek the eternal!
  • Do not live in fear.
    • Little flock – He is our Shepherd
    • Giving us the Kingdom. His rule and reign
  • Focus on others. Give of self
    • Look to give, rather that receive.Grip lightly the things of the worldOur Stuff (Worry over our physical needs)
    • Emotions (Worry over life) Rather than looking for others to get you, help you, or understand you… DO FOR OTHERS.  Be an encourager. Serve others.

The What Now

  • Worry adds nothing to our life. As matter of fact it takes away from our life. It robs us of our joy and trust in the Lord. It robs us of precious opportunities to live for Him (Evangelize and Equip others).
  • Turn you attention off of self and onto the Lord. REMEMBER WHO HE IS…
    • Romans 8:31-34



[1] William Arndt, Frederick W. Danker, Walter Bauer, et al., A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000), 632.

[2] Spiros Zodhiates, The Complete Word Study Dictionary: New Testament (Chattanooga, TN: AMG Publishers, 2000).

[3] Spiros Zodhiates, The Complete Word Study Dictionary: New Testament (Chattanooga, TN: AMG Publishers, 2000).

The Roots of the Faith – “The Gifts of the Holy Spirit – Romans 12:3-8”

My notes for Wednesday night, Feb. 21st. Remember, these are my personal study notes and not a manuscript of the sermon. They are provided as an outline each week for our Tabernacle Church family. Our study over the next few months will be “The Roots of the Faith.” This study will focus on key biblical truths that will transform our thinking and allow us to faithfully live out the Christian life. You can find Sermon Notes, Family Devotional Guides, Prayer List, and other resources at our Church Website.

Resources for this Study

50 Core Truths of the Christian Faith – Gregg R. Allision

Systematic Theology: An Introduction to Biblical Doctrine – Wayne Grudem

Biblical Doctrine: A Systematic Summary of Bible Truth  – John MacArthur & Richard Mayhue

Basic Christian DoctrinesCurt Daniel

Prophecy

(Some view prophesy as a continuing/permanent gift, but only as it relates to Scripture… no new revelation)

  • The proclamation of the Word of God.
  • We tend to think of OT prophets.  Key is that THE WORD OF GOD was proclaimed.
  • Today, we proclaim the Bible. THUS SAITH THE LORD.
  • Not, A fresh word from God, but THE WORD from God.

Service/Ministry

  • Diakonia – serve. Build up.  Word in Acts where we get our understanding of Deacon.
  • What can I DO.  FOR THE CHURCH FOR OTHERS.  Easiest and most practical.  DO MINISTRY.

Teaching

  • Interpret and explain the Word of God.
  • Prophecy could be more the proclaiming of the Word and teaching could be more walking through and explain.
  • 1 Tim. 3:2 – able to teach
  • 1 Tim. 4:16 – pay close attention to your teaching.

Exhorting

  • Parakaleo – Come alongside someone. (HELPER  pleading, encouraging, warning, strengthening.
  • The ability to excite, motivate, advise, encourage, comfort, and warn people.
  • Heb. 10:24-25
  • Causes action.  KNOW, GROW, GO.

Prophecy proclaims truth

Teaching explains truth

Exhortation calls believers to obey and follow truth.

Contributes/Giving

  • Sharing and imparting that which is one’s own.
  • Sincere… heart felt giving (opposite is Matt. 6:2 giving.  LOOK WHAT I DID)

Leadership

  • Standing before
  • THE ABILITY TO lead and govern.
  • Diligence – earnestness and zeal.
  • Things get done

Showing Mercy

  • Actively demonstrating sympathy, so as to strengthen someone.
  • Sensitivity to suffering and needs.
  • Feelings that turn to action.

HOW DO WE EXERCISE THESE GIFTS

Generosity

  • Sincerity and in simplicity.
  • Singleness of heart and without show
  • Above and beyond

Zeal

  • Diligent.
  • haste, desire, and concentrated attention.
  • There is no room for laziness, complacency, and irresponsibility in the Kingdom of God and His church. The leaders are the ones who are to blaze the path for the flock of God, and they are to do it with zeal, hard work, and iron determination.

Cheerfulness

  • People enjoy your presence and ministry within the body.
  • Willing to forgiving others.
  • Not in a spirit of criticism and rebuke toward the person who needs help.

Luke 12:13-21 – “A Warning Against Covetousness”

My sermon notes for Sunday morning, February 18th. Remember, these are my personal study notes and not a manuscript of the sermon. The notes are provided as an outline each week for our Tabernacle Church family. The church provides a live stream of the service each Sunday at 10:30 on Facebook. We also provide the services through YouTube by Sunday afternoon.  You can find Sermon Notes, Family Devotional Guides, Prayer List, and other resources at our Church Website.

Luke 12:13-21

INTRO

  • Previously, Jesus was warning against hypocrisy.
  • Here, Jesus is warning against covetousness.
  • Wealth… the good and the bad
  • True success and happiness

The Warning

  • Take care.
    • See to it. A task at hand. Work on it. IT IS IMPORTANT
  • Be on your guard.
    • Protect yourself.  Beware. Avoid.

Covetousness

  • Wanting more
  • Not satisfied
  • Mark 7:21-23 – From within… defile a person.
  • Ephesians 4:17-24 – no longer walk as.  Callous. Given themselves up. Put off. Put on.
  • Colossians 3:5 – which is idolatry.

Life is more than my stuff

  • His abundance made him fulfilled. Want and Needs
    • Home, Car, Clothes (make me happy)
  • MORE DOES NOT MEAN CONTENTMENT
  • MORE MEANS MORE

The Parable

The Man’s plan.

  • Land produced. (We know was a blessing from God
  • Notice the ME/I
    • Talking to Himself  “Soul”
    • Arrogantly self confident.
  • Laid up for many years… relax. Eat, Drink, and Be Merry
  • What He found in his STUFF.  Success, Satisfaction, Security

God’s Plan

  • But God said, fool.
    • One without understanding
  • This night
    • God’s timetable
  • Soul required
    • Calling in a debt
    • His soul was always God’s
  • Things…whose will they be?

He was a fool because he:

  • Did not handle his possessions well
  • He had a wrong idea of finding happiness
  • HE DID NOT TRUST/KNOW GOD

The Lessons

Life is short

  • James 4:13-15 – Life is short

Contentment is the heart of the issue

  • Matthew 6:19-21
  • Satisfied in what we have
  • 1 Timothy 6:6-12

Our giving is an act of worship

  • Our giving is a reflection of our hearts desires.
  • Giving away the abundance
  • Invest in the Kingdom
  • 2 Corinthians 9:6-8

Luke 12:1-12 – “Lessons in Hypocrisy”

Luke 12:1-12

INTRO

  • As persecution intensifies. The real heart of the people will be magnified.
  • After pronouncing the Woes upon the Pharisees and Lawyer… Jesus shares the dangers of hypocrisy with the disciples.
  • Lessons in hypocrisy

Hypocrisy – v. 1

  • Playing a part (acting)
  • In NT times… religious acting
    • What I want to be known for – I am religious person.
    • What is actually happening – I am do not belong to God. Not truly converted.

It is like leaven

  • Spreads throughout
  • Purposefully, quietly and totally

How can we live free from Hypocrisy?

Realize our life is an open book – vv. 2-3

  • All will be known
  • God knows everything
    • Our mind, heart, actions

Live a life of Holy Fear – vv. 4-7

  • He judges
    • Psalm 119:120
    • Hebrews 10:31
  • He cares
    • Great shepherd Psalm 23:1-6

Profess Him before men – vv. 8-9

Acknowledge

  • To profess Him
  • With my action/character
    • Personal holiness (Living out the Gospel)
  • With my words
    • Proclaiming the Gospel

The difficulty of confessing Christ is undoubtedly very great. It never was easy at any period. It never will be easy as long as the world stands. It is sure to entail on us laughter, ridicule, contempt, mockery, enmity, and persecution.… The world which hated Christ will always hate true Christians. But whether we like it or not, whether it be hard or easy, our course is perfectly clear. In one way or another Christ must be confessed.

Philip Graham Ryken, Luke, ed. Richard D. Phillips, Philip Graham Ryken, and Daniel M. Doriani, vol. 1, Reformed Expository Commentary (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2009), 651.

Deny

  • To refuse to know
  • Ultimately… within the heart (Not like Peter)

Respond to the leading of the Spirit – vv. 10-12

Reject

  • Blasphemes the Holy Spirit
  • Rejecting the gospel of Jesus Christ
  • Denying the work of the Trinity in one’s life.
  • Father, Son, Spirit

Obey

  • Indwell us and Fill us
  • Guide and empower us (Words to say)

Those passages make it clear that the blasphemy against the Holy Spirit is the attribution of the works of Jesus to the very prince of demons. According to Luke, therefore, if dishonoring the Son of Man is such a serious matter (vv.8–9), then total rejection of God by insinuating that his “holy” Spirit is “evil” is so much the worse. One may reject Christ and later, by God’s grace, accept him; but there is no remedy for absolute and complete denial of the one holy God-Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. This is what “blaspheme” (GK 1059) seems to mean here.

Kenneth L. Barker, Expositor’s Bible Commentary (Abridged Edition: New Testament) (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1994), 255.

To speak against the Son of Man is to speak against Jesus Christ without fully understanding who he is or what he has done. Obviously it must not be the kind of full and final denial that Jesus was talking about in verse 9. Nevertheless, it is still a sin—a sin of weakness that God can and will forgive. A good example of such forgiveness is the forgiveness Jesus offered the men who taunted him on the cross, saying, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do” (Luke 23:34).

Somehow blasphemy against the Holy Spirit must be a different and more serious sin. From similar passages in Matthew and Mark, it appears to be the sin of someone who knows that Jesus is the Christ, but attributes his power to Satan instead (see Matt. 12:31–32; Mark 3:28–30). According to one old commentator, the sin here “must consist in a conscious, willful, intentional blasphemy of the clearly recognized revelation of God’s grace in Christ through the Holy Ghost, a revelation which nevertheless out of hate and hostility is ascribed to the devil.” It is of the very nature of the case that such a person—hardened by sin—will not be forgiven, not because of any deficiency in God’s grace, but because such a person denies the only gospel that can ever save anyone.

Philip Graham Ryken, Luke, ed. Richard D. Phillips, Philip Graham Ryken, and Daniel M. Doriani, vol. 1, Reformed Expository Commentary (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2009), 652–653.


Roots of the Faith – “The Gifts of the Holy Spirit” part 1

My notes for Wednesday night, Feb. 7th. Remember, these are my personal study notes and not a manuscript of the sermon. They are provided as an outline each week for our Tabernacle Church family. Our study over the next few months will be “The Roots of the Faith.” This study will focus on key biblical truths that will transform our thinking and allow us to faithfully live out the Christian life. You can find Sermon Notes, Family Devotional Guides, Prayer List, and other resources at our Church Website.

Resources for this Study


INTRO

  • In keeping with his particular works, the Holy Spirit endows the church with gifts.
  • The main purpose of spiritual gifts is to nurture the maturity and mission of the church by equipping each and every member to engage in ministry.
  • Other purposes are the confirmation of the gospel message and its messengers; provision of a foretaste of the fuller, future work of the Spirit; and the manifestation of Christ’s victory over his enemies.
  • It is important that believers identify their gift(s), learn how to use their gift(s), and serve in ministries in accordance with their gift(s).
  • Disagreement exists between cessationism, which believes that some spiritual gifts have ceased, and continuationism, which maintains that all the gifts continue today.[1]

Romans 12:4–8; 1 Corinthians 12:1–14:23; Ephesians 4:7–16; 1 Peter 4:10–11

Spiritual gifts allow us (empowers us) to do what God is calling us to do.

  • The doing of the Christian life (Faith into action)
    • Our Worshiping
    • Our Serving
    • Our Ministering
  • FULLFILL THE GREAT COMMISSION – Disciple making
    • Evangelism
    • Discipleship
  • Before Him
  • To others
  • Through the Church

Spiritual gifts are given to every believer upon conversion

  • The indwelling of the Spirit
  • The filling of the Spirit
  • We are supernaturally indwelt and empowered at the moment of our conversion.

Spiritual gifts flow out of our walk with the Lord

  • As we walk in faithful obedience
  • We yield to the Spirit within us.
  • The natural overflow of the Spirit filled life

Spiritual gifts are discerned and developed through service and ministry

  • We always be through the body life of the church (BODY… GIFTS go together)
  • We have seasons of life and service.
  • As we grow our gifts grow. Spiritual maturity. Spiritual wisdom

[1] Gregg R. Allison, 50 Core Truths of the Christian Faith: A Guide to Understanding and Teaching Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books: A Division of Baker Publishing Group, 2018), 193–194.

Luke 11:45-54 – “Woes or Blessings”

My sermon notes for Sunday morning, February 4th. Remember, these are my personal study notes and not a manuscript of the sermon. The notes are provided as an outline each week for our Tabernacle Church family. The church provides a live stream of the service each Sunday at 10:30 on Facebook. We also provide the services through YouTube by Sunday afternoon.  You can find Sermon Notes, Family Devotional Guides, Prayer List, and other resources at our Church Website.

Luke 11:45-54

INTRO

  • Religious leaders are questioning Jesus.
  • Who He is. Who He is from. How He impacts humanity
  • SAME QUESTIONS TODAY!!!
  • They thought he would apologize, but instead…
  • Declared 3 WOES
    • Declaration of judgment
    • For their sin against God
  • Woes to the Lawyers for what did and did not do.
  • Blessing to those that live and do differently
  • THE HYPOCRISY of the Pharisees and Scribes

The Woe – Their service – Adding legalistic burdens

  • Their service – Their ministry – Their life before God
  • Adding more burdens (legalism and tradition), rather than taking them away.
  • WORKS not GRACE
  • Rather than giving freedom… they were heaping up burdens
  • They lacked… Offering the grace and mercy of the Gospel

What we can learn (the blessing)

  • Jeremiah 31:25 (refreshing through the New Covenant)
  • Matthew 11:28-30
    • An invitation for the overloaded to come
    • Rest now and ultimately for eternity… the already and not yet
  • Good Shepherd Provides – Love, Care, Nourishment, Guidance, Protection

The Woe – Their Heart – The hardness of their heart

  • Their spiritual heart – Their standing before God
  • Tombs of prophets
    • Their ancestors killed to messengers of God
  • Rejecting God’s plan of redemption
    • God’s means of Grace
  • The message from the prophets
  • The message from Christ
  • The message from the Church
  • They lacked receptive hearts

What we can learn (the blessing)

  • See yourself through the lens of the Gospel
  • See Christ through the lens of the Gospel
  • DO NOT HARDEN YOUR HEART
  • Respond now to the leading of the Spirit

The Woe – Their Message

  • Twisting God’s Word
  • Not faithfully teaching God’s Word
  • Then… the proper application of the Law.
  • The Bible today
  • Hindering others form receiving God’s grace
  • Removing the key of knowledge
  • Robbing people of God’s Word
  • They lacked… Trusting God’s sufficient Word

What we can learn (the blessing)

  • The Gospel is our hope
  • The Word is our hope
  • We need to lift high the Word of God
    • We seem to be ashamed of it today
  • Believe and share the truth of God found in His Word
  • Clearly, Lovingly, Boldly…TRUSTING IN GOD TO WORK