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Subject:
From:
Vicki and The Rors <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Echurch-USA The Electronic Church <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 6 Sep 2004 09:16:05 -0600
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I loved this today. Vicki


THE PURPOSE-DRIVENŽ LIFE Daily Devotional
September 6, 2004
Why Worry When You Can Meditate?
by John Fischer
Blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked or stand
in the
way of sinners or sit in the seat of mockers.  But his delight is in the law
of the
Lord, and on His law he meditates day and night.  (Psalm 1:1-2)
I'm a chronic worrier.  I come from a long line of worriers.  A good deal of
my conscious
time is taken up with the act of worrying.  According to Rick Warren, this
means
I would be good at meditation.
Meditation is focused thinking.  It is not just for monks and clerics.
David said
that he loved to meditate day and night on the word of God.  Now this was
also while
he was running a kingdom, fighting a perpetual enemy on the battlefield, and
at times,
running for his life.  He didn't have a lot of time to sit with his legs
crossed
and go "Ommmmmm."  That kind of meditation is meant to clear the mind of all
thoughts.
Biblical meditation is thinking focused on a particular aspect of God, a
part of
God's word, or a reminder of what He has done for you.
Worry is focused thinking as well.  It's focused on what I can't answer or
solve
about my situation.  Worry, at least for me, is returning over and over
again to
a place where I am stuck.  I must somehow negatively feed on that little
flutter
of panic each time I follow a path of worry to the same hopeless conclusion.
These
are thoughts that accompany me throughout the day.  I don't sit down to
worry. Worry
is nagging negativity.
It would stand to reason that if I can do this kind of professional worrying
while
I go about my tasks for the day, then I could choose to meditate on God's
word instead.
Worry is usually all about what you can't do anything about anyway. It's
never productive.
Imagine all that attention turned to God and His truth.
I have the feeling that if I learned to turn my chronic worrying into
meditation,
when I did actually sit down to do something about those things I'm tempted
to worry
about, I might be in a much better frame of mind to find a solution.
Try it today.  If you catch yourself worrying, turn your thoughts instead to
God
and His word.  Take a portion of scripture and turn it over and over in your
mind.
Remember what God has done for you.  Be thankful.  Why worry when you can
meditate?
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