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Found 14 results matching "anxiety" (Verses: 0 · Topics: 2 · Articles: 12)
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2Discover powerful King James Bible verses about fear and worry. Find peace and reassurance through God's promises in times of anxiety and uncertainty.
Discover powerful scriptures from the King James Version that offer comfort, strength, and reassurance during times of anxiety. Let God's promises bring peace to your heart and mind.
Articles
12The Hebrew word shalom, translated "peace," describes primarily a state of right relationship — with God, with others, and with oneself. This guide examines the seven biblical principles that restore and sustain shalom as a relational reality rather than a private interior state.
The future is the domain where anxiety most naturally expands — filling uncertainty with worst-case projections and draining present peace. This article examines what Scripture reveals about releasing the future to God and why that release is both theologically grounded and practically possible.
What does it actually mean to seek God first — not as a morning routine but as a governing orientation of an entire life? This article examines the biblical depth behind one of Scripture's most fundamental instructions.
The fear of the future is often the fear that tomorrow's provision will not arrive. Scripture's consistent answer is not the promise of stocked reserves but the pattern of daily bread — the trust that is rebuilt each morning rather than accumulated once and held. This article examines the manna principle and what it means for the person afraid of what is coming.
When Jesus says "narrow is the way," the word He uses describes constriction, not merely difficulty. This article examines what the narrowness actually refers to — and why the Sermon on the Mount's portrait of the disciple is the key to understanding what kind of person the gate is wide enough to admit.
Worry about the future is not simply a habit to break — it is a theological displacement, a transfer of trust from God to circumstance. This article examines what Scripture reveals about anxiety, sovereignty, and the practice of returning to God what belongs to Him.
The biblical words translated "wait" and "patience" carry the sense of active, strenuous exertion toward an expected destination — not passive endurance. These verses examine what Scripture means by waiting on God and what is formed in the person who sustains the practice.
The Psalms contain a practice that is easy to overlook: the writers frequently speak directly to themselves, interrogating their own anxiety rather than simply expressing it. This article examines how preaching truth to the soul — not just about the soul — is one of Scripture's most underused paths to peace.
A practical biblical guide for understanding fear and anxiety, bringing them before God honestly, and learning how Scripture reshapes the troubled heart.
Peace of mind, in the biblical account, is not the achievement of a worry-free mental state — it is the transformation of what the mind is anchored to. These verses examine how Scripture addresses the mind as the specific territory where peace is either found or lost.
Worry is not simply a personality tendency — it is a spiritual orientation that Scripture addresses directly. These seven principles from the Bible describe how genuine trust in God displaces the anxiety that worry generates.
"Seek ye first the kingdom of God" sits between two passages about anxiety in Matthew 6 — which is not a coincidence. The command is not a separate spiritual ambition added to the life; it is the structural answer to the worry that the surrounding verses diagnose.
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