Now I know that at this point someone may be saying, "I can see from the reasons you have been giving that I ought not to worry. But still I do worry. Is there an answer? And if there is, what is the solution for me personally?" I believe that the answer to this question is a simple one. It has three parts. 

The apostle Peter was one among many Christians who have learned this lesson. In the early days of his association with Jesus he was worried about many things. After he first had courage to walk upon the water he began to look at the waves and became so worried that he began to sink (Matt. 14:30). He was worried that Jesus might not pay taxes (Matt. 17:24ff.). At one point, He was anxious about who might betray Him (John 13:24). He was worried that Jesus might have to suffer and so rebuked Him on one occasion (Matt. 16:22), and sought to defend Him with a sword on another (John 18:10). Peter was a great worrier, but after he had come to know Jesus better he learned that Jesus was able to take care of him.

Now what are those three teachings? The first is found in verse 24, which is, properly speaking, the conclusion to Christ's words about money. In that section of the Sermon Jesus taught that a love of money was harmful because it is impossible for a person to serve God and money at the same time. Now He says that for the same reason His followers are not to be anxious about some future happening or provision. 

In yesterday’s study, we saw that Jesus provided a cure for anxiety by what He said in Matthew 6: "Therefore, I say unto you, Be not anxious for your life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor yet for your body, what ye shall put on... For after all these things do the Gentiles seek. For your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of these things. But seek ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you" (vv. 25, 32-33). 

In March 1961, Time magazine published a cover story on the presence of anxiety in America. The article was entitled, "Guilt and Anxiety." The point of the study was that the breakdown of faith in God (in the nineteenth century) and in reason (in the twentieth century), coupled with the accelerated pace and high tension of modern life, has produced intense anxiety in many millions of people. So much so, in fact, that it is correct to call worry one of the most widespread and debilitating characteristics of our time.