God’s Kind of Prayer for an Anxious Heart [Php 4:6-7]
When I am overcome with anxiety, I like to remind myself of what Paul, prompted by The Spirit, tells
me to do in Php 4:6-7.
Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests
be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all comprehension, will guard your hearts
and your minds in Christ Jesus.
Overall, Paul reminds us to replace our anxiety with prayer. However, it is a specific way of praying that
Paul is revealing to us – with thanksgiving. This really is the heart prayer. This is God’s kind of praying.
God owes me nothing, but I owe Him everything. I deserve nothing, but He has given to me all the riches
in Christ Jesus [Eph 3:8]. Paul also cautions us to – present our requests to God. And ‘requests’ is what
they are to be. We are never to make demands to or have expectations of God. HE is Master. We are
not.
When Paul says – do not be anxious, he’s letting us know that anxiety really is a choice. And so is prayer.
So is walking by faith and not by sight. There will be times when we must continue to present the same
requests to God, at least until that peace that goes beyond any human understanding kicks in. Paul
makes it abundantly clear that God’s overall answer to any of our “anxiety-ridden” prayers is His perfect
peace. It is not to get what we feel we are lacking or to be relieved of whatever is troubling us. Although,
He may graciously grant either or both to us.
When Jesus was in that familiar garden crying out to His father as the sweat poured off His brow (sweat
mixed with blood), He made it perfectly clear that He did not want to drink that cup of wrath meant for
us. He did not want to take upon Himself all the sin of mankind. This is because He knew that the very
moment He did, He would instantly be separated from The One whom He so dearly loved – His Father.
So, God The Son begs God His Father to take that cup from Him. Three times, Jesus prays these words.
Then, as He prays that third time, He adds at the very end – not My will but Yours be done. These words
were and still are meant for us. Jesus allowed Himself to endure such pain and torment so that we could
learn from Him how to seek The Father when we feel so overwhelmed with the difficulties of and in life.
It is in our “not my will but Yours be done” that peace begins to fill us up – His peace that goes beyond all
human understanding.
So, here is the lesson learned - When it comes to having an anxiety-ridden heart, we can (and we will)
only experience the fullness of God’s perfect peace, when we are fully surrendered to His will. This is
God’s Kind of Prayer for an Anxious Heart.
A Shepherd's Muse





