A Revolutionary Role for Women

1 Timothy 2v11-15 Insta

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We’re living in days of revolution. Many are trying to start a revolution, to change the nation and even the world. So far, the effects appear to have been mainly destructive. They’ve made the world a worse place.

I invite you to join me in another kind of revolution. A revolution that will turn the world upside down – which will actually put it the right way up?

The context of verses 11-15 is right order in the church that will promote salvation. Here he limits public teaching roles to men. In chapter 3, he further limits it to a certain kind of men – gentle shepherds and loving servants.

THE CHRISTIAN WOMAN’S ROLE IS CLEAR

“Let a woman learn quietly with all submissiveness. I do not permit a woman to teach or to exercise authority over a man; rather, she is to remain quiet” (11-12).

NB: Men and women are essentially and spiritually equal, but physically and functionally different.

Learn quietly: In a culture that viewed women as intellectually inferior to men and therefore only educated men, these were liberating and dignifying words. Learning for women is in, but certain kinds of teaching are out; specifically the teaching of men by the authoritative proclamation of God’s Word in a public worship service. Men have much to learn from women but there’s one forum where that is not to take place, and that’s public worship in the church.

Submit humbly: “Submission” means to yield to God-given authority, which here is the elders of the church. To submit to God-given authority is to please and honor the Lord by cooperating with the way God has designed and ordered society.

Teaching and ruling may please us, but learning and submitting pleases God.

“Is there any reason to this?”

THE CHRISTIAN WOMAN’S ROLE IS REASONABLE

“For Adam was formed first, then Eve; and Adam was not deceived, but the woman was deceived and became a transgressor” (13-14).

The order of creation: “Adam was formed first, then Eve.” In the Bible, being firstborn was not about superiority, but authority and responsibility. When God made Adam first, he wasn’t just setting up our first parents but male-female roles and relationships for all time. God wants the creation order to be reflected in church order.

The order of sin: Eve was deceived first. Look what happened when the creation order was reversed, when Adam gave up his God-given role and Eve took over a role that was not hers.

Male and female roles are based on timeless truth not cultural considerations.

“Is there any encouragement to this?”

THE CHRISTIAN WOMAN’S ROLE IS BLESSED

“Yet she will be saved through childbearing—if they continue in faith and love and holiness, with self-control” (15).

Continue in godliness: Continue in faith, love, holiness, and self-control is shorthand for following God’s order.

Saved through child-bearing: Childbearing is shorthand for giving, protecting, and sustaining life. If you follow God’s order you will not only be much happier, you will be much more influential as well. Women will exert godly influence from the bottom up by Christ-like influencing of children. Woman can re-create world order by re-creating the creation order.

Revert to God’s order and you’ll revolutionize world order.

LIVING THE BIBLE

Accept your God-appointed role and responsibilities and you will massively influence children, and therefore the church and the world, for good.  To be a godly mother is to be a revolutionary.

1 Timothy 2v11-15 Infographic Insta


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How to Pray When You’re Feeling Depressed

Prayer is hard at the best of times, but it’s hardest during anxious or depressed times. During such seasons, most of us find it hard to concentrate, we feel God is far away, and we despair of God hearing or helping us. All of this makes prayer so difficult and discouraging.

How can we make prayer easier and more encouraging to us in such dark and disturbing spells? Here are five words I give to people to help them with the how of prayer when they are anxious or depressed:

  • Short: Better one minute of real, concentrated prayer than fifteen minutes of distracted, wandering prayer.
  • Frequent: Try to pray these short prayers throughout the day to keep you in contact with God. Perhaps set an hourly timer on your phone.
  • Simple: Pray like a hurting child to a loving father. You don’t need complex theological compositions.
  • Scriptural: When you can’t find any words of your own, use the words God has provided in the psalms, in the Lord’s Prayer, or in Paul’s prayers.
  • Together: Ask someone to pray with you when you can’t pray for yourself. Perhaps they can pray over the phone with you and you can piggy-back to the throne of grace on their words.

If these five words help us with the how of prayer, let me give you five phrases to guide you in the what of prayer.

You Are

You are sovereign, Lord. You are good, wise, strong, gracious, and faithful. You are my rock, my shepherd, my peace.

Depression and anxiety turn us in upon ourselves so that we get self-centered and sometimes self-obsessed. We see all our lacks and hurts. Prayer helps us to put God at the center of our lives instead, which not only gives us something better to look at than ourselves but also helps us to see everything else better, including ourselves. That’s why we want to start prayer with worship, reminding ourselves of who God is and what God has done. We praise him using descriptions of his attributes and biblical images of his character. This changes what we see and how we see, giving us a God-centered view of our world and ourselves. That in itself is an encouraging and calming perspective.

I Am

I am the opposite of who you are, Lord. I am sad, anxious, and weak. I feel hopeless, helpless, and lonely. At times I don’t want to live. I know this is wrong, and I confess this to you. I am not who I want to be. I am not where I want to be.

Having begun with a God-centered worldview, we can then admit who and what we are and are not. Confession is simply telling God honestly who we are and where we’re at. God already knows, of course, without our telling him, but he still asks us to pour out our hearts to him. It honors God as the sympathizer with weakness and the forgiver of sins. It is therapeutic for us to hear ourselves describe ourselves in the presence of the God who understands our frailties and who forgives our transgressions. Depression and anxiety bring a ton of guilt upon us (both false and real guilt), an oppressive load that crushes our spirits and closes our lips. Being honest and transparent about it before God begins to shift that load off our shoulders and on to Christ’s.

I Trust

Faithful God, although I don’t feel much faith or confidence in you, I will not be guided by my feelings. I trust you, Lord. I trust your word, your character, your faithfulness. I believe all that the Bible says about you, and I will recall your past faithfulness. I trust you, therefore, that you have not changed, though I have; that you are still here, though I don’t sense you; that you are my God, though I don’t feel like I’m your child. I trust your plan for me, and I rest in you as you carry me through these dark and disturbing days.

As songs like Psalm 42, 43, 37, and 73 demonstrate, expressions of trust build trust. The more we articulate our confidence in God, the stronger that confidence grows. And when we can’t say it with 100% certainty, we can always say, “I believe, help my unbelief” (Mark 9:24). Perhaps you can recall past times of God’s faithfulness to make your faith fuller. God is honored and pleased with faith, especially when we are walking in darkness and have no light (Isa. 50:10). Some of my spiritual heroes are Christians who have battled serious mental illness and have held on to God and his word, even with the fingernail of their little finger. That’s far more difficult than trusting God when everything is going well for us, both internally and externally. It’s also more God-glorifying.

I Need

All-sufficient Provider, I am desperately needy. I need you above all. But I also need peace, joy, hope, patience, sanity, and so much more. I beg you to help me even just to get through this day. Will you help my family and friends as they struggle to understand me? Teach them how to love me. But help me also to love them, especially when I feel so flat. Help me to do my daily duties even when I find no joy in them. I pray for the needs of other depressed and anxious people, too.

God can supply all our needs in the blink of an eye without our asking (Matt. 6:8). However, he asks us to ask and to look to him for everything we need. We can bring to him our physical needs, emotional needs, mental needs, spiritual needs, social needs, and vocational needs. Nothing is too big, and nothing is too small.

I Thank

Giver of every good and perfect gift, I thank you for all you have done, are doing, and will do. I thank you for all you have given, are giving, and will give. I thank you that I am not even worse than I am. I thank you for moments of joy and peace. I thank you for pastors, for brothers and sisters in Christ, for counselors, for doctors, for psychologists, for psychiatrists, and for medications.

Depression and anxiety focus our attention on what we lack, so it’s important to take time to remember all God has given to us and has done for us, both in redemptive history and in our own personal history. Ask him to help you see what you often are blind to or just take for granted. Even just walk around your kitchen or yard and thank God for all you see and have there. Thanksgiving is life-giving.

Prayer is rarely easy. But I hope these five words and five phrases make it easier in times of depression and anxiety. Let me close with a prayer for you:

Lord, you are full of joy and peace. Many of my readers are not. They are sad and panicky. Help them to see who you are and to worship and praise you. Lead them to confess their sins and their faith. As you know their needs and you can easily supply them, give them supplications that honor your willingness and ability to give. Give them what they lack and give them thanksgiving as they see you more clearly in their lives. Above all, remind your people of Jesus Christ who suffered more and deeper for them, and fill them with gratitude for his grace in coming, your love in sending him, and the Holy Spirit’s fellowship that applies all this to the soul. AMEN.

Why Am I Feeling Like This?: A Teen’s Guide to Freedom from Anxiety and Depression

Why Is My Teenager Feeling Like This?: A Guide for Helping Teens through Anxiety and Depression


What is a beautiful woman?

1 Timothy 2v9-10

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What is a beautiful woman? The world’s answer to that changes every year. Therefore, if your primary question is, “How can I be beautiful?” you’ll never have the right answer for long. There’s also the added problem of not just the world changing but you’re changing too as you age.

Yesterday we looked at one especially male sin – being too angry to pray. Today, in 1 Timothy 2:9-10, we’re going to look at an especially female sin – being too pretty to work.

“Likewise also that women should adorn themselves in respectable apparel, with modesty and self-control, not with braided hair and gold or pearls or costly attire, but with what is proper for women who profess godliness—with good works” (1 Timothy 2:9-10).

DON’T FOCUS ON ELABORATE HAIR OR EXTRAVAGANT CLOTHES

Elaborate hair: If you went into the Ephesian church and looked out across the congregation you would have seen row after row of braided and be-jeweled hair, fancy hairstyles with towers of hair, ringlets of hair, and all topped off with numerous attachments of gold and pearls.

Extravagant clothes: Some were dressing for church in the latest high and pricey fashions. The Bible makes clear that there’s nothing wrong with nice clothes (Prov. 31:22) and attractive jewelry (Song 1:10-11; Isa. 61:10). As John Calvin put it, “The fault is excessive concern and eagerness about dress.”

If your appearance is your focus, your God will be out of focus.

“So, what should I wear? Should I never try to be pretty?”

FOCUS ON FITTING MODESTY AND BEAUTIFUL PRACTICALITY

Modest clothes: “Respectable apparel” means clothes that are becoming, appropriate, fitting for a Christian women. “With modesty” means keeping within the bounds of what is decent and proper. “With self-control” means not dressing seductively or suggestively. To put it bluntly, you can’t dress like a prostitute and say you are a child of God.

Practical clothes: He’s stated what’s not fitting or becoming, and now describes what is most becoming, fitting, and beautifying for a godly woman – good works. There are three areas of good works that are especially commended to women in the Bible:

  • Devoted service to your husband and children
  • Hospitality to Christians and non-Christians
  • Mentoring of younger women

These kinds of good works make you beautiful and attractive to God and to others.

What’s a beautiful woman? Here’s God’s answer. Do something beautiful for God and you’ll become beautiful doing it. That kind of beauty can grow with age. It can reverse the aging process.

Paul’s contrasting the artificial glamor of the world and the true beauty of a godly life, the cheapness of expensive clothes with the value of godly character and service.

John Stott wrote, “The church should be a veritable beauty parlor, because it encourages its women members to adorn themselves with good deeds.”

True beauty isn’t skin-deep, it’s soul-deep.

LIVING THE BIBLE

Men are to speak godly words and women are to do godly works. A focus on self, lives for people to say, “You’re so beautiful!” A focus on others, makes God say, “You’re so beautiful.” Which are you living for? Which did Christ live for?

1 Timothy 2_9-10 Infographic


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Understanding Teen Anxiety and Depression

Many anxious teens will feel as if they are completely weird, that no one else is like them or understands them. They look around at their peers and can’t imagine anyone else their age feeling like they do. They see the carefully curated social media images of perfect, happy, and confident classmates and conclude that they are the odd one out. Ashamed and embarrassed, they withdraw from friends, family, and social occasions, to suffer alone in lonely isolation. “I’m just weird,” they conclude.

One of the best things we can do for our teens is to explain to them that many teens suffer in the same way. Despite what the social media feeds communicate, the reality is that teen anxiety is at epidemic levels, so much so that it is now the most common issue for which teens seek counseling.

  • Nearly a third of thirteen- to seventeen-year-olds will experience an anxiety disorder (38 percent of girls and 26 percent of boys).
  • An estimated six million American teens presently have some kind of anxiety disorder, although the number is probably higher because the majority do not seek treatment.
  • Fifty-four percent of college students surveyed said that they had “felt overwhelming anxiety” in the past twelve months.
  • In 2011, 11 percent of teen girls had a major depressive episode in the past year. By 2017, that number had risen to 20 percent.
  • While the depression rate for boys has risen more slowly, the suicide rate has spiked to a thirty-year high.

Anecdotal evidence backs up the statistics. One female Christian counselor recently described how, when she first started counseling twenty-four years ago, “Probably one out of every twenty kids coming in were dealing with anxiety. . . . Now, out of my new appointments, I would say at least sixteen of every twenty families are here for that reason, if not more.”

It’s not just common in our culture, it’s also common in the Bible. Even strong and mature Bible characters such as King David and the Apostle Paul battled worry, anxiety, and fear (Ps. 56:32 Cor. 7:5; 1:8). The most common command in the Bible is “Fear not!” which means it must be a very common problem.

Teen Anxiety and Depression Often Come Together

You might be wondering why one book would try to deal with both anxiety and depression. Aren’t they different problems? While there are differences, many experts now view them as two sides of the one coin, or two faces of the one basic problem. Yes, someone can be depressed but not anxious, or anxious without being depressed, but about 50 percent of teens who have one also have the other, to some degree.

When it comes to depression, 13 percent of twelve- to seventeen-year-olds experience major depression in any one year, with depression affecting about 20 percent of adolescents by the time they become adults. That’s every fifth teen in your child’s class.

We also find biblical figures who experienced depression. Look at how depressed the psalmists were in Psalm 32 and Psalm 88, how depressed Elijah was at the lowest point of his ministry (1 Kings 19:1–8), and how Job slipped into depression at various times (Job 3:11–15; 30:16–26).

As anxiety is more common than depression for teens, and it usually comes before depression, the primary focus of this book will be anxiety. However, most of the remedies work for both anxiety and depression, as we will see.

Teen Anxiety and Depression Are Normal

Apart from using statistics and the Bible to assure teens that anxiety and depression are common, one of the best ways we can “normalize” these problems is to talk about mental illness and other emotional disorders as common experiences in a fallen world. Speak about it around the supper table or in the car. If we are teachers or preachers, we can talk about it in the classroom, in the pulpit, or at youth groups. Look out for long-term changes in your teen’s behavior and moods and take opportunities to ask her what’s going on in her thoughts and feelings. You could say, for example, “You seem to be a bit down or troubled. Can I help in any way?” To maximize the chances of your teen opening up to you, try not to come across as judgmental, critical, or scared.

Only one thing is worse than never talking about such disorders, and that is to mock, shame, or stigmatize those who suffer with them. Such a cruel and arrogant attitude will ensure that our teens will never talk to us about these challenges or seek our help. They will either bottle it up and suffer in silence, or else they will seek help from others outside of the Christian community, who may lead them astray. At worst, they may start cutting themselves to find temporary relief, or even attempt suicide as a permanent solution.

Instead, in our homes, our schools, and our churches, we want to talk about these issues as normal abnormalities in an abnormal world. We want to build a culture of transparency and trust so that our teens will feel free and safe to talk about their fears without fear. Anxiety and depression are simply two of the many consequences of the fall, and teens should be able to talk about them just as we talk about asthma, broken arms, disrespect, purity, and so on.

Teen Anxiety and Depression Are Varied

We must avoid stereotypes of anxiety and depression because they actually can manifest themselves in multiple ways. Just because we or someone else we know suffered in a certain way does not mean that everyone experiences it in that way.

There are many kinds of anxiety. The most common are panic disorder, specific phobias, generalized anxiety disorder, and social anxiety disorder. Some anxiety (and depression) is genetic, sometimes it is a response to trauma, and sometimes it is caused by exhaustion or perfectionism. Some of these disorders are long-term but low-grade. Other times they are brief but acute. They make some kids withdraw and others aggressive. Sometimes it is the result of guilt—both true and false guilt. Nervous kids get it, but so do hyperconfident kids. Girls get it, and so do boys; although more girls admit it than boys. Help your teen identify their unique symptoms of anxiety—physical, spiritual, emotional, mental—so they can recognize it in the future.

It’s important to appreciate the variety and diversity of anxiety and depression, because if we have a set but limited caricature of an anxious person, we could miss it or respond to it wrongly. This is why it’s important to get experienced professionals like doctors and trained counselors involved in diagnosing these disorders.

Teen Anxiety and Depression Are Terrible

Imagine that you are driving your family to church, and you suddenly hit black ice, spin out of control, and start heading toward a precipice. Your fight-or-flight system is firing on all cylinders. You’re sweating, your heart is pounding, your muscles are tensed, your insides are doing somersaults, and you know you are about to die.

But, by God’s grace, your vehicle stops just before going over the cliff. You are safe but shaking uncontrollably; your guts are a mess, you can hardly string two words together, you want to cry or even scream.

That’s what anxiety is like for many of our teens. You will calm down an hour or so after your brush with death, and eventually the memory of the black ice will fade. But for anxious teens, it’s like they are heading toward the precipice twenty-four hours a day. That’s how terrible and terrifying this can be for them. It’s as horrifyingly real to them as you heading toward the cliff. Try to remember that when you are talking with them. Or look up the hashtag #thisiswhatanxietyfeelslike on Twitter to sample some of the raw descriptions that people have submitted.

Depression is no better, and often is worse. Imagine the sadness you would feel if one of your loved ones died. That can be the level of pain in depression, often with no hope of alleviation. In 2016 the demographic with the highest increase in rate of suicide was ten- to fourteen-year-old girls, for whom the rate tripled. Again, look up the hashtag #thisiswhatdepressionfeelslike for more graphic descriptions.

Teen Anxiety and Depression Are Treatable

One of the most encouraging aspects of teen anxiety is that although it is so common, varied, and terrible, it is also one of the most treatable mental or emotional disorders. That’s why it’s so tragic that a 2015 report from the Child Mind Institute found that only about 20 percent of young people with a diagnosable anxiety disorder get treatment.

Depression is more stubborn to remove, but, there’s still much that can be done. God has provided many ways to heal these agonies or help your teen to manage and handle them better. As parents, pastors, teachers, and counselors, we have a great opportunity to reach out to our suffering teens and help them access help, as well as play a role in providing help ourselves. One of the first steps in becoming a resource for our suffering teens is understanding what’s actually happening in these disorders.

Why Am I Feeling Like This?: A Teen’s Guide to Freedom from Anxiety and Depression

Why Is My Teenager Feeling Like This?: A Guide for Helping Teens through Anxiety and Depression


Are there male sins?

1 Timothy 2v8 (1)

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Are there gender-specific sins? Or, to put it another way, are there sins that men are particularly susceptible to, and are there sins that women are especially susceptible to?

In 1 Timothy 2:8-15, the Apostle Paul identifies two sexes, male and female, distinguishes between them, and then addresses sins that each are prone to, and that can be especially problematic in the church. In verse 8, he addresses two male sins in the church:

  • Too passive: Being too scared to lead
  • Too aggressive: Being too angry to pray

Paul began discussing public worship in verses 1-2. He digressed in verses 3-7 to speak of the great salvation and the great Savior that motivates our worship and prayer. In verse 8 and following, he returns to the details of public worship.

MEN ARE TO LEAD IN PUBLIC PRAYER

“I desire then that in every place the men should pray” (8).

The command to pray: “I desire” is not just a personal preference, but is based upon reason. It’s often used to describe an authoritative command.

The place of prayer: “Every place” appears four times in Paul’s writings. All four times it refers to the official assembly of the church for public worship.

The leaders in prayer: “That the men pray.” The Greek word here for men is the specific word for “male” as opposed to female. When it comes to public prayer in public worship, it is men, males who are to lead the congregation in prayer. This is a call to men to step up to the plate, to take the lead, to take responsibility and initiative.

Passive leaders are poor leaders.

“I know men who have no problem leading, but they lead in the wrong way and in the wrong direction.”

MEN ARE TO PRAY WITH HOLY HANDS AND HEARTS

“…men should pray, lifting holy hands without anger or quarreling” (8b).

Holy hands (looking to God): This posture may simply give outward expression to inner thoughts and feelings, that we are weak and we extend our hands to the one who can help us. Or it may be that the outward physical actions encourage the inward disposition of looking to God in dependence.

Holy hearts (loving others): Having an encouraged a dependent relationship to God in prayer, he then calls for a loving relationship with others. The problem in Ephesus was that instead of men praying with clean hands, they prayed with clenched fists! I once did an internship at a church in Scotland. The weekly prayer meeting was like a war zone as two of the men engaged in theological battle in their public prayers. An angry spirit, an argumentative spirit, is not conducive to prayer.

You can’t be poison in private relationships and pious in public prayer.

LIVING THE BIBLE

Men can be too passive or too aggressive. To the passive, the Apostle Paul says, “Men are to lead in public worship.” To the aggressive, Paul says, “Men are to lead with holy hands and hearts.” Therefore, replace fear-full passivity with faith-full activity, and angry aggression with loving affection if you want public worship to be heavenly worship.

1 Timothy 2_8 Infographic Border


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Help! My Teen Is Struggling with Anxiety

After many months of battling anxiety, Pam had taken an overdose of pain medication and was rushed to hospital. Thankfully it wasn’t a fatal dose, and the next day she was transferred to a mental health unit for teens.

A week or so later, Pam returned home to her still-shocked parents. Pam’s attempted suicide had rocked them to the core and left them in the rubble of confusion, anger, fear, helplessness, and despair. They had attended some seminars for parents at the mental health unit while Pam was there and returned home with lots of leaflets and booklets, but they didn’t really know where to start. They called me and asked if I would meet with them. As they looked at me and then at Pam, their faces said, “We don’t know what to think, we don’t know what to say, and we don’t know what to do.”

I’ve been in similar situations in different homes and with different parents. Most of them were really good homes and really good parents. Their kids went to really good schools and really good churches. But they were all in really bad situations.

“Friends,” I appealed, “we’ve got to stop looking at ourselves or at one another. We have to look to God. He knows what to think, he knows what to say, and he knows what to do.”

Everyone relaxed a little, I prayed for the Lord’s help, and started to reorient us all in a God-centered approach to recovering from this blow. While grateful for all the interventions and instructions from mental health professionals over the previous week, both Pam and her parents also needed a God-centered approach for long-term recovery. I therefore walked them through three truths that I’ve found helpful to parents and their kids through these times.

God Understands Anxious Kids

When anxiety invades our kids’ lives, confusion and perplexity storm into ours, and so do many unanswered and unanswerable questions. What did we do wrong? Why did she do this to us? What will people think? What’s really wrong with him? Is he on drugs? What’s God doing? While God may not answer these questions, we can answer on behalf of God in these two areas.

God Knows the Factors

It’s so important to bring our ignorance, our bewilderment, our demoralization, and our questions to God. Why? Because he alone knows all the factors involved in Pam’s suffering (Ps. 139:13-18). Anxiety can be an incredibly complex problem, and often has no single cause. It’s usually a mixture of various life events and life choices, some within our control and some not. What came first, second, third, and so on? What’s cause and what’s effect? God alone knows.

Therefore, go to God and acknowledge this, praise him for it, and ask him to share his insights with you, to lead you into more understanding of the various factors involved in your child’s suffering: physical, emotional, spiritual, mental, and social factors. The more we understand, the more our children will sense our understanding, which alone be a huge accelerator of healing.

God Understands the Purpose

God not only understands the factors involved but he also knows the ultimate purpose of it all (Jer. 29:11). Although it may seem random to us, it’s not. God has brought this into our child’s life and into our life, but he has done so with a wise and good purpose (Rom. 8:28).

I’ve seen many kids transformed for good after recovering from anxiety. God uses their painful experience to mold them into more caring, sympathetic, and resilient adults. But perhaps God’s purpose in our children’s suffering may also be our own good. He uses such times to humble us, to make us more prayerful and dependent, and to equip us to be caring counselors to others too (2 Cor. 1:3-7).

“Alright,” you respond, “I’ll use God’s understanding of the factors and the purpose to help me understand the factors and purpose better. And I see how this will help me communicate more understanding to my child. But we’re still sinking. I need more than God’s understanding. I need his strength.” That brings us to a second stabilizing truth.

God Supports Anxious Kids

God doesn’t just understand and sympathize, he also acts to support anxious kids. How does he do this? He does it by listening and by speaking.

Kids with anxiety often feel like no one listens to them, which of course only deepens the anxiety. We therefore want to encourage our kids to speak to God in prayer and sing to God in worship, because God listens to their prayers (Matt. 7:11) and appreciates their worship (Matt. 21:14-16). The fact that God always listens to and appreciates their voices can be used to help our kids express themselves to God honestly. God’s promise to listen to them is a strong support. But there’s another strong support.

God speaks into our kids’ lives through his word (Ps. 34:11-17). We therefore want to encourage our kids to keep reading the Bible and to read it, even just a few verses a day, as if God is speaking to them personally. We need this for ourselves too, and we can help our kids speak to God and listen to God by showing them how we speak and listen to God.

As we and our kids are supported by speaking to our listening God and by listening to our speaking God, we learn how to support one another. We learn how to listen supportively and speak supportively. These supports will stop us and our kids from sinking further and stabilize us for recovery.

“Yes, what about recovery?” you ask. “Understanding and support are great, but can God actually heal my kid, get her up out of this turmoil, and give her peace again?”

God Heals Anxious Kids

God sympathizes by understanding, he stabilizes by supporting, then he heals by providing many helpers and many helps. Neither the parents nor the kid are going to recover on their own. All have to reach out for God’s help. The key to rebuilding after anxiety is to use all the helpers and helps God has provided. Here are a few of them.

God Provides Many Helpers

  • Pastor: Even if the anxiety is mainly or partly a physical or biological problem, spiritual guidance is still needed. Ask your pastor to help with the child’s spiritual needs. Pastors can pour in the truth of God’s word and pour out their hearts in prayer.
  • Counselor: A pastor can do much, but a specialist counselor may also be required to help with more complicated issues. Someone who deals with anxious people all day every day is going to have a lot more experience and expertise than most pastors.

God not only understands the factors involved; he knows the ultimate purpose of it all.

  • Doctor: Involving a doctor at an early stage is also advisable as certain medical conditions can cause anxiety. Doctors can also provide a good objective outside assessment of whether your child is getting better or worse.
  • Friends: Although anxious kids tend to withdraw, encourage their friends to stay friends and maybe guide them in what to say or not to say. Socializing with those who love them is very therapeutic.

God Provides Many Helps

  • Routine: God has made us in such a way that our bodies love routine and thrive when there’s rhythm and regularity in our lives. Try to help your child get into a good sleeping, eating, resting, and working routine.
  • Rest: 7-8 hours of sleep a night and a weekly Sabbath are God’s gift to us and our kids (Ps. 127:2Mark 2:27). Therefore, let’s receive these presents from God’s loving hand and use them to heal.
  • Exercise: When we exercise, our bodies expel damaging chemicals and produce healthy ones. Regular exercise gives a sense of well-being and accomplishment.
  • Digital downtime: Our brains are susceptible to over-stimulation from digital technology, so deliberate breaks and fasting from devices is usually essential for mental and emotional peace.
  • Nature: Jesus points us to nature to heal anxiety (Matt. 6:25-31). A God-centered view of the world is a uniquely powerful therapy.

Let’s help our kids and ourselves by using God’s helpers and God’s helps.

Use God’s understanding, support, and healing to understand, support, and heal your anxious children.

Why Am I Feeling Like This?: A Teen’s Guide to Freedom from Anxiety and Depression

Why Is My Teenager Feeling Like This?: A Guide for Helping Teens through Anxiety and Depression