• Home
  • About
    • Our Contributors
    • Our Beliefs
  • Blog
  • Bible Studies
    • Scripture Dig
  • Archives
  • Shop
  • Advertise
  • Contact
    • Email
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter

Do Not Depart

Encouragement and Tools to Abide in God's Word

You are here: Home / Archives for Believing Better

Believe better, worry less

December 8, 2011 by Lisa Burgess 23 Comments

I’m worrying good right now.
That means I’m believing bad.

When we stepped outside to feed our 1½-year-old Golden Retriever Tuesday morning, she lay perfectly still in her dog house and refused to come. A panicky trip to the vet proved that Kandie was a very sick dog.

Cracks of worry

I worried whether she would live or die.
But when the vet called with a surgery option, I worried whether I’d be a wise steward to spend so much money on a dog.

What does this have to do with “believing better”?
Well, maybe everything.

One of my spiritual resolutions for 2011 has been to release my worry into more dependence on God.

So when I find myself anxious about situations and choices, I remind myself there’s a crack in my belief.

Because I believe that what I believe about God affects the way I see everything else.

Do I trust Him or not? Can I honestly answer, “Yes!” if I’m actually living, “Sort of”?

When I read Jesus’ words from the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew 6:25-34, I detect the fissures that can break open my mountain of worry.

1. He knows

Does God really keep track of everything going on in my life? Is He even aware that my dog has some mysterious illness? Yes, He’s very aware, even of the next strand of my hair turning from brown to gray (Matthew 10:30). He knows every small and large thing I need (Matthew 6:32).

That means He also knows not only that my dog is sick, but what it is that is making her sick.

2. He cares

So if He does know (and I can easily believe He does know), then does He care? If He cared enough to feed every cardinal and mallard and crow outside my window this morning (Matthew 6:26), won’t He care even more about me, one made in His own image? Of course He will. And if He cares about me, He’ll care that I’m hurting over one of His creatures that is sick (Matthew 10:29).

So if I come to believe that He does care (I do believe), the next belief I have to challenge is in His willingness:
If He cares so much, why doesn’t He do something about it?
(This is the hardest one for me.)

3. He works

He IS doing something about it. Whether I realize it or not, God is always at work for my good and for His glory (Romans 8:28). He keeps me fed, sheltered, and clothed (Matthew 6:30). I can see the evidence of that if I’ll look. I must remember to look.

But my dog?

My worries are that (a) she’ll die and I’ll be sad. But hasn’t God proven faithful to sit with me through much larger sadnesses already? Yes. And hasn’t He promised grace to cover those yet in my future? Yes. So even if Kandie does die, God has already strategically planted ahead gifts of grace to see me through it.

But I also worry that (b) I’ll overspend unwisely on a pet. But isn’t God at work here too? If I pray for wisdom (I am)—and if I believe He’ll give it (I do)—I can trust He’ll actively guide me with each decision that I have to make (James 1:5-6), one at a time.

Believe better

So as I believe better—that God knows, God cares, and God works—even about a family pet, I turn away from my sin of anxiety, and become satisfied with how God will handle it all.

It’s not up to me to control the situation; it’s only up to me to believe in the One who can.

Whew. Doesn’t that take a load off?
I believe it does.

Do you have a problem with worrying, too?
What scriptures help you believe better and worry less?

______________________________________________

For the month of December we are sharing posts and quotes to help us escape the Cycle of Try Harder, through Believing Better.

Read more Believing Better posts here.

Don’t just think – drink!

December 7, 2011 by Lisa Burgess Leave a Comment

Ever been really thirsty?

You get a glass of crushed ice, pour a cold Diet Dr. Pepper (that’s my favorite) on top.

You believe this will quench your thirst. So there. Thirst quenched? Not hardly.

Believing is more than thinking. It is picking up the glass and drinking.

Belief is not merely an agreement with facts in the head; it is also an appetite for God in the heart, which fastens on Jesus for satisfaction. “He who comes to me shall not hunger and he who believes in me shall never thirst!”

Therefore eternal life is not given to people who merely think that Jesus is the Son of God. It is given to people who drink from Jesus as the Son of God. “The water that I shall give him shall become in him a well of water springing up to eternal life” (John 4:14).

He is also the bread of life, and those who feed on him for nourishment and satisfaction live by him. “I am the living bread that came down out of heaven; if anyone eats of this bread, he shall live forever” (John 6:51).

The point of these images of drinking and eating is to make clear the essence of faith. It is more than believing that there is such a thing as water and food; and it is more than believing that Jesus is life-giving water and food. Faith is coming to Jesus and drinking the water and eating the food so that we find our hearts satisfied in him.

~ John Piper, Future Grace

 

______________________________________________

For the month of December we are sharing posts and quotes to help us escape the Cycle of Try Harder, through Believing Better.

Read more Believing Better posts here.

Our First Problem

December 6, 2011 by Katie Orr 2 Comments

Our first problem is that our attitude toward sin is more self-centered than God-centered. We are more concerned about our own “victory” over sin than we are about the fact that our sins grieve the heart of God. We cannot tolerate failure in our own struggle with sin chiefly because we are success-oriented, not because we know it is offensive to God.

God wants us to walk in obedience—not victory. Obedience is oriented toward God; victory is oriented toward self. This may seem to be merely splitting hairs over semantics, but there is a subtle, self-centered attitude at the root of many of our difficulties with sin. Until we face the is attitude and deal with it we will not consistently walk in holiness.

—Jerry Bridges, The Pursuit of Holiness

_________________________________________

For the month of December we are sharing posts and quotes to help us escape the Cycle of Try Harder, through Believing Better.

Read more Believing Better posts here.
 

Believing Better

December 1, 2011 by Katie Orr 24 Comments

Think of a struggle you have. Lingering sin that just doesn’t seem to go away. Maybe it is a tendency towards fear and anxiety? Do you struggle with impatience? Laziness? Pride?

How do you typically try to fix the problem?

The Cycle of Try Harder

I notice a cycle many of us get caught in. I saw it in college students, when I worked with Cru. I see it in church ministry. I experience it in my own life.

It starts with a need to change behavior, a longing for victory over sin.

Do this. Don’t do that. Try this, and that Take a look around, and try what she does.

When all of that doesn’t work, go look for a “better” church with a “better” pastor. Try a conference. A retreat. Another Beth Moore Study. Find an accountability partner…

TRY. TRY. TRY.

People and tools certainly have a part to play in our personal growth (and I am in no way suggesting that you stop going to church, or doing your Bible study!) But, even the best preacher, the greatest tools, and our most sincere efforts cannot change our hearts.

Effort spent on the Cycle of Trying Harder leads to frustration, failure, and it does not produce true and lasting change. It is impossible to keep this “wheel” going; whether it takes weeks or years, failure comes, and it leaves us stagnant and feeling guilty.

Two Roads Leading to the Same Thing

Some use this guilt as fuel to try even harder. They jump back in—more resolved than ever to change—but failure comes sooner or later, and the cycle continues on. Many have managed to keep this wheel going their whole life; they are exhausted, prideful souls who don’t experience the grace of God in their day-to-day living.

Others eventually see the futility, and recognize that they will never be able to change. They usually give up the cycle altogether; they quit trying to change themselves, stop coming to church, give up reading their Bible and the pursuit of being good. They, also, do not experienced the grace of God in their day-to-day living.

The problem with the Cycle of Try Harder, is that our energies are focused on the wrong thing: our own effort.

Are you so foolish? Having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh? —Galatians 3:3 ESV

Trying harder lacks the ability to bring true heart change. 

Don’t hear me wrong, the Christian life takes effort. It is hard work. And you and I can do the exact same “disciplines” but reach much different results.

The key to realizing “success” in the Christian life is not in trying harder; it is in believing better.

Believing Better

If we focus our efforts on responding to the character of God and His work and calling in our life, true and lasting change can occur. Problem is, most of us have incorrect views of God, ourselves, and the great gospel that gives us the freedom and ability to obey.

New Year’s resolutions are around the corner. Many of us look forward to a new year, a clean start, and hope for big changes in our life and behavior. Instead of continuing on the Cycle of Try Harder this new year, we invite you to focus on Believing Better.

For the month of December the common thread in our posts will be on Believing Better. Looking at who God is, who we are as His child, and how Believing Better about God and ourselves will drive us to obedience. Not out of a guilt-ridden pressure to perform, but out of a grace-laden freedom to worship the One whom we have encountered in a deeper way.

We would love for you to join us in this journey, so be sure to subscribe to get posts sent directly to your inbox.

Are You Stuck in the Cycle of Try Harder?

Do you see yourself in this cycle? Do you see the connection between what you believe about God and how you behave? Is there lingering sin in your life which you just can’t seem to get rid of? Are you weary from the try harder life?

We’d love to walk alongside you this month—leave a comment if this resonates with you!

« Previous Page

This Month’s Theme

  • Jesus is the Way
  • And He Shall Be Called Series Intro

Enter your email address to have new posts emailed to you:

We’ll come to you

Enter your email address to have new posts emailed to you

Categories

Bible Memory – Lent 2021

Memorizing Isaiah 12

Let the Children Come

Let the Children Come

Want more #HideHisWord resources?

Memorizing Psalm 1

Find Us on Facebook


Search

Recent Posts

  • Series Wrap-Up: The Lord Is My Light
  • His Marvelous Light
  • When the Darkness Deepens
  • Though I Sit in Darkness…
  • Let Your Light Shine
  • Life-Giving Light

Archives

© 2026 · Pretty Creative WordPress Theme by, Pretty Darn Cute Design