“He shall not be afraid of evil tidings: his heart is fixed, trusting in the LORD. His heart [is] established, he shall not be afraid, until he see [his desire] upon his enemies.” (Ps 112:7-8 AV)
Evil tidings are a part of life. There is nothing you can do to keep them from coming. All one has to do is visit a local hospital to see this truth. There is coming a day when I will sit down with a doctor and he will tell me that I have a limited expectation of the time I have left. There will come a time when I will have to move from a house to a small apartment. The car will break down. The bills will mount. The children and grandchildren will come to adversity along the way. My parents have passed, and soon I will get phone calls one after another, as I hear of siblings and all those whom I love doing the same. A mark of maturing is one begins to attend more funerals than weddings, graduations, school plays, etc. As the book of Job teaches us, man is born unto trouble, as the sparks fly upward. The writer’s solution was to establish his heart in trust. He did not run to a cave and hide from the world. He did not give up and choose to escape by more drastic means. Rather, he chose to establish his heart in trust. Trust in the LORD.
I was a rather nervous child. My father was an angry and unpredictable man. At any time, he could arrive in a fit of rage and take it out on the nearest child. At school, I was the object of bullying. A lot of bullying. I had no safe place in which to dwell. The only escape I had was my paper route and a friend’s house. But those were only temporary. Less than an hour a day, and I found myself in a whirlwind of turmoil. The LORD gave me an epiphany. I cannot say it permanently fixed my skittishness, but I can say that it went a long way in starting me down the right path. One afternoon, while in gym class (I hated gym class), as the teams were being picked, I was the last chosen. That was usually the case. A gym full of 50-60 boys and I was always the last one picked. This particular time was disturbing because both captains and a number of boys gave me a look. That corporate look said, “we are going to go after you with all the violence we can muster. Both sides will make sure you are eliminated with zeal and callousness”. I was nauseous. I ran to the bathroom and vomited. Then the LORD spoke to me. He asked, “What is the worst thing they could do to you?” We, it was hitting me so hard that I would die. To which he replied, “And what is so bad with that?” It happened. God gave me the correct perspective in which to look at all adversity. What is the worst thing that could happen?
I won’t say that I always have a handle on adversity. There have been some very dark times since then. There have been times when my entire world came crashing down, and I wished for the day of my home-going. It was in those times that I had to establish my heart in trust. The word ‘established’ is very important. It means to permanently lay to rest so that it does not move. This is not a reactive result of yielding. Rather, this is a conscious choice by the writer to place his heart at rest because faith is always stronger than adversity. Some love to live in the state of an undisciplined heart. Some love the adrenaline rush of unabated emotion and thought. They love to live there. But that is not what the Bible instructs. The Bible teaches us that the whole person; body, mind, and emotions; must be brought under subjection. Today’s answer is medical. Although there may be a component to this, the answer must start with a choice. This choice places the fear, confusion, frustration, etc at the feet of faith. It chooses to shut down the heart and force it to rest in the hope of the promises of God’s word. What we think or how we feel is brought under the dominion of the word of God. “Yeah, but” has no place. What saith the LORD is the right answer! Establish the heart. Do so in trusting the LORD and His word. It is the first and last thing that will bring the peace we look for.