Jesus Doesn't Want You to Be Afraid

Three weeks ago, I asked several hundred college students a question:
What is your biggest obstacle today to giving your whole life for God鈥檚 global mission?
Let me be clear, as I was that day鈥擨 wasn鈥檛 asking about dropping out of society, selling everything, and moving to Turkmenistan (although that was fair game).
Rather, I explained that giving your whole life for God鈥檚 global mission is being fully given over to God鈥檚 purposes in the world. If you鈥檙e following Jesus' calling, you can serve God just as well as a businessperson in the U.S. as a church planter in Sri Lanka.
I had people text me their biggest obstacles to fully following Jesus (you can, too: 608-352-3263). Some answers were not very surprising: selfishness, busyness, lust, health issues, lack of self-discipline, and materialism.
And the Number One Obstacle Is . . .
But one answer stood out, named by a quarter of those responding as their biggest obstacle to giving their whole life to global mission: fear.
These students鈥攁nd Christians, no less鈥攚ere afraid of everything:
- Being alone
- Failing
- Being uncomfortable
- Not knowing where they鈥檙e going or what they鈥檙e doing
- Entering a new culture
- What their parents would say
- Not hearing God correctly
- Not being good enough
- Being unprepared spiritually
- Not speaking well
- Being too broken
I couldn鈥檛 believe it. Fear is the biggest obstacle to these followers of Jesus fully joining in his mission, whether here in the U.S. or anywhere in the world. How did this happen?
Real Reasons for Fear (Escalators Not Included)
We know there are people around the world with seriously fearful surroundings鈥攇nawing hunger, no education for their children, violent crime, unjust local officials, unhealthy water, and spreading disease.
And most of us know, when we鈥檙e logical about it, that a lot of our fears here in the West are wildly spun out of control. We find TV reports like, 鈥淭he Hidden Dangers of Escalators.鈥 Really?
And then there are big fears. At the end of it all, we are dead. And that scares us. So we run around trying to do whatever we can to preserve our lives, whether through work, success, family, relationships, art, or health. It makes sense to me that people who don鈥檛 know Jesus would be afraid. We hear messages all day saying, 鈥淚f you鈥檙e not afraid of all these things, you鈥檙e not normal.鈥
A Call to Abnormality (Yes, This Includes You)
But I thought that鈥檚 exactly what Christians are supposed to be鈥攏ot normal.
Think about what we read in the Bible:
- 鈥淭he Lord is my light and my salvation鈥攚hom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life鈥攐f whom shall I be afraid?鈥 (Psalm 27:1).
- 鈥淒o not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell鈥 (Matthew 10:28).
- 鈥淭he Spirit you received does not make you slaves, so that you live in fear again; rather, the Spirit you received brought about your adoption to sonship. And by him we cry,鈥橝bba, Father鈥鈥 (Romans 8:15).
- 鈥淔or the Spirit God gave us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love and self-discipline鈥 (2 Timothy 1:7).
- And perhaps most pointedly: 鈥淭here is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear, because fear has to do with punishment. The one who fears is not made perfect in love鈥 (1 John 4:18).
Admittedly, we are outliers on this one. We got married while we were still college students. A year later, we boarded a plane for Nicaragua with a vague connection to a friend of a friend that we hoped would meet us when we arrived. We lived without power, water or transportation. We took our baby daughter to the most polluted city in the world, Lanzhou, China. We rode motorcycles across southern Africa.
That doesn鈥檛 mean we didn鈥檛 get scared. We got scared when Adam鈥檚 amoebas wouldn鈥檛 go away in Nicaragua and then his already weak body picked up malaria. Or when we blew black snot out of our noses in China. Or when our neighborhood had its third break-in within a month in South Africa (where you鈥檙e 20 times more likely to get murdered by gunshot than in the U.S.), and then Chrissy found police dealing with a dead body down the street.
But do you think God didn鈥檛 really mean that stuff about fear in the Bible? When you get scared, you have to do something about it. Naming it helps. Reading and claiming these biblical reminders can helps. Praying light-saber prayers that cut your fears to pieces can help.
As we wrestled with trying to follow Jesus here in the U.S., Chrissy wrote a chapter on fear in . She said fear is like underwear. Everyone鈥檚 putting it on every day and keeping it politely covered up.
Here鈥檚 your chance to bring your fear out into the light.
A Step Through Our Fear
The hundreds of Christians I spoke to named fear as the greatest obstacle to joining in God's global mission. And, truth be told, there is good reason to be afraid. I work for . Each year, we hear about Urbana alumni who have suffered and even been martyred for their faithful proclamation of Jesus Christ, even while serving obvious needs in hard places around the world. Jesus' call to give up everything we have (Luke 14:33)鈥攖he call to follow the Way, the Truth, and the Life, and the call to take up your cross and step into God's global mission鈥攊s not to be taken lightly. But a life of playing it safe rarely results in God being glorified or our neighbors being loved.
So. What are you afraid of? Name it as a first step in facing your fear. And then ask God鈥攖he stronghold of your life鈥攊f you should as a next step in facing your fear and being open to his mission for your life, whatever it might be.
Then text me (or leave a comment below), and let me know what he said.
After years of living and working in Nicaragua, China, and South Africa, Adam and Christine Jeske have come back to the U.S. to follow Jesus in a kind of normal, middle-class place. Their latest book, This Ordinary Adventure: Settling Down Without Settling, is about the first year and a half of that process. She is getting a Ph.D. in anthropology at the University of Wisconsin, and he leads social media for and the . Connect at their or at or follow and .
(This post originally appeared at on Oct. 31, 2012)



