It seems a bit hyperbolic to use the term "fear" or "fearless" these days when talking about how we approach our lives.
When I think of fearless people, my mind turns to our military, firefighters, police officers. Not someone like me who is just trying to navigate a complex world.
However if we turn to what it meant to be fearless in Biblical times - especially Old Testament times - we find that SIN was the number one thing people feared. Proverbs 28:1 tells us this:
The wicked flee though no one pursues, but the righteous are as bold as a lion.
Meaning having a guilty conscience, due to sin, makes the wicked turn tail - and run.
So...does being fearless, in the faith-based sense, mean we should disregard being sinful?
No.
I believe it means that we should know - really KNOW - that God is with us always. That his forgiveness is given before we ask for it.
And that is really what we need to do - freely repent without fear of condemnation from God.
For God loves us and never leaves our side. It is faith that allows me to believe this is true, even when I don't feel like anyone is by my side. It gives me great comfort to pray to God - the unseen Father - even in those times when I feel like no one is listening and no one cares.
God cares - all the time. And in those times when he doesn't answer my prayers in the way I want - I have to believe he didn't because what I wanted wasn't right for me. No matter how it feels to me in the moment.
Which is, for us mere mortals, the hardest part of all. Acknowledging that God is in control, not us. No matter how much our own precious little egos believe we ARE in control.
To me it is the biggest leap of faith to accept this. And I have to re-believe every day. Always.
It is the very least I can do for a God who loves me in the moment, who accepts me for who I am in the present without ever holding the past against me.
The Book of Joshua, Chapter 1, is the origin of the quote above. The entire book of Joshua deals with what happens after Moses dies. In Chapter 1, it is God's promise continuing to be fulfilled - to deliver the Israelites to their Promised Land - even though his first leader has passed away. Joshua is given the task to keep the Israelites moving to the lands outlined in verse 4:
Your territory will extend from the desert to Lebanon, and from the great river, the Euphrates—all the Hittite country—to the Mediterranean Sea in the west.
Note: all biblical verses are copied directly from Bible Gateway.
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