The
Power of Worry
Death was walking toward a city one morning and a man asked, "What
are you going to do?"
"I'm going to take 100 people," Death replied.
"That's horrible!" the man said.
"That's
the way it is," Death said. "That's what I do."
The
man hurried to warn everyone he could about Death's plan.
As
evening fell, he met Death again. "You told me you were going
to take 100 people," the man said. "Why did 1,000 die?" "I kept
my word," Death responded. "I only took 100 people. Worry took
the others."
This
interesting tale portrays so well what the National Mental Health
Committee reported a few years ago: Half of all the people in
America's hospital beds are constant worriers. Mental distress
can lead to migraine headaches, arthritis, heart trouble, cystitis,
colitis, backaches, ulcers, depression, digestive disorders and
yes, even death. Add to that list the mental fatigue of nights
without sleep and days without peace, then we get a glimpse of
the havoc worry plays in destroying the quality and quantity of
life.
Worry
is, and always will be, a fatal disease of the heart, for its'
beginning signals the end of faith. Worry intrudes on God's compassionate
ability to provide. When we allow our problems to overshadow God's
promises, we unknowingly, doom ourselves to a defeat that was
never part of God's eternal plans.
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