The Blessing of Fear

READ Psalm 128:1-6

 

How joyful are those who fear the LORD
     all who follow his ways!

When I was a child, I was afraid of sirens. If a police car was racing
through our neighborhood with its siren blazing, I’d plug my ears and
find a safe place to hide. During my first year in elementary school, I
hated the last Friday of the month, because there would be a test of
the air-raid sirens throughout our town. At 10:00 a.m. on that fateful
day each month, the sinister sirens would sound, and my fellow students
and I would drop on our knees and hide under our desks for a
nerve-wracking minute. I hated that noise, but I hated even more my
feelings of fear. Though I knew the shrieking of the siren wouldn’t
hurt me, I was painfully afraid. Fear, it seemed to me, was a terrible
thing.

To
be sure, fear can be agonizing. But not all fear is bad or to be
avoided. If a tornado is blowing your way, the fear that gets you into
a storm cellar is your friend. If fear of an accident keeps you from
driving too fast, you should listen to that fear.

There is
another kind of fear that we ought to embrace and that can enrich our
lives: the fear of the Lord. When the Bible says, “How joyful are those
who fear the LORD” (128:1), it is not envisioning a fear that makes us
run away for safety. Rather, fearing God is a matter of being stunned
by his glory, dwarfed by his power, and astounded by his holiness. When
we sense the awesome presence of God, we are inclined to drop on our
knees, not in order to hide from God under our desks, but because we
realize that we can never hide from him, and because the King of kings
is worthy of our complete submission.

We’re sometimes told
that fear of the Lord is reverence for God. This is true, though our
use of the word “reverence” can fall short of the implications of
“fear.” Genuine fear of the Lord permeates my life, transforming the
way I live each moment. Thus, when I revere God with all that I am, I
will indeed “follow his ways” (128:1).

Psalm 128 begins with the
unexpected insight that those who fear the Lord are “joyful.” The
Hebrew word translated here as “how joyful” is ‘ashrei, which
is often rendered “blessed.” This Hebrew word does convey a sense of
happiness, but it often has a wider meaning. In Psalm 128, for example,
those who fear the Lord and walk in his ways are joyful or happy
because their whole life is shaped by God and filled with his
blessings.

Psalm 128 reminds us that the fullest and most
joy-filled life is based on the fear of the Lord, on a deep, abiding,
and pervasive reverence for the living God.

QUESTIONS FOR REFLECTION:
How do you respond to the phrase “the fear of the Lord”? Do you fear
God? In what ways? Have you ever experienced joy connected with the
fear of the Lord?

PRAYER: O
Lord, as you know, this language of fear can get us in trouble. Usually
when we are afraid of something, we rightly want to get away from it.
But fearing you is different. The more we sense your awesomeness, the
more we are drawn to you. Though we realize how helpless we are before
you, we feel secure because we know that you are utterly good and
utterly loving. You will not consume us in the fire of your holiness,
though you surely could.

O Lord, may I grow in my fear of you
as I come to a clearer understanding of just who you are. May deep
reverence for you fill my life, impacting everything I do, each
relationship, each task, each thought, each prayer.

And as I
grow in righteous fear of you, may I also grow in joy. May the
confidence that my life is in your powerful hands give me delight as I
live each day, trusting you, serving you, offering my whole life in
worship to you. Amen.

_________________________________________________

Would you like to receive a Daily Reflection like this one in your email inbox each morning? 

Here’s how . . . .
This devotional comes from The High Calling of Our Daily Work (www.thehighcalling.org), a wonderful website about work and God. You can read my Daily Reflections there, or sign up to have them sent to your email inbox each day. This website contains lots of encouragement for people who are trying to live out their faith in the workplace. 

More from Beliefnet and our partners