First Peter 5: 7 conveys a similar message: “Cast all your
anxiety on him because he cares for you.”
There is a slight distinction between the anxieties in Peter’s letter
and the cares in David’s psalm. Anxieties
may come and go, but the word used in the psalm literally means “what is
given,” or “lot” or “portion.” These cares are our daily burdens – the things
that are such a part of our lives that we get used to carrying them. Maybe we
don’t think of them as burdens – like raising our children or caring for our
homes - they are just “what we do.”
David’s words are beautiful because they tell us that God
wants to be a part of our everyday lives. There are people who manage to get
through life without seeking God’s help but God wants to help us. He wants to share the load so it is lighter for
us. The verse goes on to say that he will sustain, or “He will make you
sufficient for it.”* Not only does he want to help us carry our burdens, he
promises to supply us with the strength and the resources to do what we have to
do.
Finally, David tells us that God will never let the
righteous fall, or “never permit the righteous to be moved.” David
doesn’t promise that God will give us immediate relief from our troubles, nor
does he imply that God will remove them. But how comforting to know that he is
eager to be the source of strength for the cares of life if we will let him!
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