I have a complicated relationship with fear.
Like many kids, I was afraid of the imagined things that could find me in the dark. As a tween, I became afraid of the man who would stop his lawn care and maintenance every afternoon to glare at me. Every day when I walked by his house on my way home from school in broad daylight, he would do the same thing. I would scurry past, confused and afraid of his locked stare on me for as long as he could spot me on the sidewalk.
He never followed me or said anything to me, but his gaze was cold as ice. He’d look me over while he stood there holding up whatever tool he was using (like a weapon), his long blonde hair tied in a messy ponytail. He often wore button-up Hawaiian shirts covered in flowers and bright, happy colors, while the look on his face betrayed his attire. To this day, I don’t know why he glared at me, but I know I felt particularly afraid and aware of being a small girl with skin and hair much darker than his.
Fear can be a powerful motivator. It can stay in the body for a long time.
I was in fifth grade the first time a Christian used fear to motivate me away from wonder.
Back then, I knew a few things about Jesus, but neither I nor my family were considered “church people.” At that age, science, nature, and history filled me with a wild wonder and curiosity.
On a Monday at school, while walking back to the classroom after outside gym class, a new friend asked me what I’d done over the weekend. I told her about my trip to the natural history museum. I described the wooden evolution mural that had fascinated me. Her face scrunched together, and with eyes boring into my own, she immediately said, “You know that’s wrong, right?”
I thought about saying yes as my cheeks flushed with embarrassment. I couldn’t rewind and erase the excitement and fascination I’d just held in my voice, so I asked a question instead:
“Why is it wrong?”
She stood up straight and said, “Evolution isn’t Christian.”
Her quick defense of something I didn’t even really understand made me feel afraid. This friend didn’t intend to do that; she just passed on the fear she’d been given. The only invitation in her words was to make sure I was on the right side of a fence that I didn’t even know existed just moments before. I stood there like a deer in headlights, suddenly aware of oncoming traffic from both directions. This isn’t an article on creation versus evolution, by the way; this is about the way fear can resurrect barriers between two people or groups of people that are all made in the image of God.
Fear motivates and it multiplies. Sometimes it just lies.
As a child my fear kept me away from others. That kind of fear made me panic. That kind of fear made me hide the questions I really had. That fear made me judgmental and quick to squash curiosity.
Years later, I would learn that the Hebrew word for fear — yirah — used in verses in Deuteronomy and Proverbs to exhort people to “fear the Lord” meant more than what I’d experienced as a child. Yirah also means reverence, wonder, and awe.
In the New Testament, the Greek words phobon and phobos are also translated as fear — the kind of fear I experienced from a stranger on the sidewalk and my friend on the blacktop. This is the word John uses when he writes that “perfect love drives out fear” (1 John 4:18 NIV).
Jesus, perfect love personified, is the One who led me back to Him through that same wonder and curiosity I had in the natural history museum decades before.
It seems like there’s a lot of fear in our conversations and communities these days. It reminds me of the conversation I had with my friend on the blacktop. We’re still friends today, and we’ve both grown quite a bit. It’s easy to be bullied by someone else’s fear or pain, or to bully others with our own – even when we think we’re trying to push for what we are so sure we know is right. But I think of myself back then and the way this kind of fear didn’t really lead me closer to Jesus, but to a version of Him that would keep me hiding, panicked, worried there was something wrong with me – the same way I felt when I walked by that scary neighbor’s house.
God’s kingdom come isn’t coming through glaring eyes or finger-wagging. God’s kingdom come is coming through the perfect love of Jesus.
When I feel that same fear creep up in me, I say a breath prayer: Jesus.
When I feel tempted to respond to someone else in fear, I whisper the same breath prayer: Jesus.
May Jesus dispel the lie that love is too simple, too slow, too weak, too difficult, too impossible, or too woo-woo to hold us and all of our wonder and curiosity, and lead the way.
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Sooo beautiful Tasha. So poignant in today’s world where fear of what is different divides.
Sometimes we lose sight of Jesus in our own preconceived views of doctrine.
Jesus is love. Jesus was not afraid of those who were different. Jesus embraced the unknown and responded in trust and love. Thank you soo much for embracing and spreading His love. I needed this beautiful reminder today. Blessings and gratitude.
Thanks so much, Nicole.
“Jesus” \0/
Love it, Janet.
Dear Tasha… Your words today made me tear up reading about your fear. It is not in Jesus’ world to glare at someone that may look different from them. I am so sorry you had to go through that. My fear comes through anxiety and I am working on that with Jesus . I have had this all my life even into horrible “panic attacks” from the time I was 6 years old and I am 78 now. If anyone reading this has ever had one of these, it is something that is so difficult to go through. I lost a lot of weight, couldn’t eat or sleep and back in those days, not much was done about these kind of things. Once I was older and my spiritual growth had increased 10 fold, I knew what to try and that was Jesus and prayer. So my fear of these are gone now and I haven’t had one for years, but the deep depression and anxiety still exists. I do have some medication now that helps me. Thank you for your story today and I wish you and your family, Tasha, a wonderful Thanksgiving………Love to you all………….Betsy Basile
I’m so glad you’ve found some support in prayer and through meditation. I’m so sorry for the long years of panic attacks, Betsey. That must’ve been so hard. Thank you for sharing that with us. I’m grateful you are here.
Tasha we can all be afraid. No matter what it is about. I was bullied at a school my Mum and Dad sent me too. I was taken out of a primary school I was already in and send to this school for the last too years of primary. This school used to be a boys only school and it was now expecting girls too it. My parents thought I am the oldest in my family. It would be a good idea saying the school was smaller less people in it. With me having a learning disability they thought I do better in a school with less people in it. It was worse I never like it. One day I was in a class the class. The other class mates were playing a game. I didn’t want to play the game I got called a name that means if you touch me you have the name I was called because I didn’t want to play the game. It was nothing to do with the teacher the pupils. I told my Dad he went to see the headmaster about it. My Dad said I can do no more. So nothing else was done. It affected me. I was so glad when I came to age to leave that school go to big school. I made friends there that are still my best friends today. Even though they now live 86 miles away from me we still keep in touch. Now and again I go to see them. They are two sisters they are saved. I am also afraid of the dark. I can’t remember were that came from to this day now married. I still sleep at night with the curtains open and the moon light in my bedroom. My husband has got used to that and he doesn’t mind. He has said to nothing will happen to you. Jesus is watching over you as you sleep. But not I still have to have the curtains open all night. My Husband and my friends have said to me to do with my primary school that I went to for the last two years of primary school were I was bullied they called me names. God loves you Dawn and you are loved. One of my friends that live 86 miles away they are two sisters. Sent me on YouTube the Father love letter one time it helps me to know what God thinks of me and he has known that before the world began. I because I was saved was able to tell God in a prayer to him that I forgive them for bullying me. Even though I have not seen them to tell them in person. If I did I have only seen one person I think. I was not brave to say I forgive them. That evening I saw her she was with her Husband and kids. So it wouldn’t have been the right time to say it too her. They might not remember doing it along with others. But I will never forget it. But it doesn’t annoy me anymore. I have a peace about it. But at the time it hurts. I was afraid them. But with Jesus help I am the person I am today. God has said Dawn as my Salvation army officer one time said to me this is everyone reading this. You remember you are Daughter of the king of kings that is Jesus. He loves you more than you ever know. One of the sister that live 86 miles away from me my best friend along with her sister. Said this to do with something else. I know it for the time I was bullied at school. She Dawn because they are not saved remember what Jesus said on the cross for what people did to him. Forgive them Lord for they know not what they do. Like the people who bullied me at school and the headmaster who did nothing because they were not saved they don’t know what they have done. Thst say it all that is another reason why I forgave them and because it right in God’s eyes too. Love Dawn Ferguson-Little Enniskillen Co.Fermanagh N.Ireland xx
Dawn, I’m sorry for the hurt you carry from those days in primary school. Thank you for sharing your story and some fears with us. I’m so glad God gave you those two dear friends you’ve been able to stay in touch with…friends who remind you how deeply loved you are.
I love the moonlight too. It always reminds me of God’s gentle, ever-present love and light, even through the dark seasons. You are a delight, Dawn.
Tasha, I absolutely love your posts. Thank you so much! ❤️
Amy, thank you! That’s so kind.