Don't Overthink It
Overthinking
is a subtle thief. It often disguises itself as responsibility, preparedness,
or wisdom. But underneath, it drains peace, amplifies fear, and keeps us stuck.
Scripture consistently calls us to a different way of living—one marked by
trust, simplicity, and surrender.
Worry never
adds to our lives; it only subtracts. It shrinks our world until the problem
becomes all we can see, overshadowing the God who stands above it. Worry feels
productive, but it accomplishes nothing. It doesn’t extend life, improve
outcomes, or solve problems. It simply exhausts us. Overthinking is like
running on a treadmill—lots of motion, no progress.
When worry
fills our vision, everything else fades. A small object held close to the eye
suddenly looks enormous, even though it hasn’t changed size. In the same way,
“what ifs” distort our perspective until God’s presence feels distant.
Over time,
those swirling uncertainties can make God’s presence feel distant—not because
He has moved, but because our focus has drifted. Anxiety narrows our vision
until all we can see are potential threats, and in that tunnel vision, the
steady, reassuring nearness of God becomes harder to perceive. The “what ifs”
become louder than the “God is.”
Peace
doesn’t come from figuring everything out. It comes from focusing on the One
who already has everything figured out. Worry forces us to live tomorrow’s
challenges with today’s strength, which is why we feel overwhelmed. It drains
us twice—once in imagination, once in reality. When we release overthinking, we
reclaim the mental and emotional space God designed for joy, clarity,
creativity, and rest.
We often
assume peace is something we earn after solving every problem or securing every
outcome. But that kind of peace is fragile—it depends on circumstances behaving
perfectly. Scripture offers a different peace, one rooted not in our
understanding but in God’s faithfulness. Peace isn’t found in certainty; it’s
found in Christ.
Our
perspective will always be limited. We see a moment; God sees the whole story.
That’s why Proverbs instructs us: “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and
lean not on your own understanding.” (Proverbs 3:5) Peace doesn’t come from understanding everything—it comes from shifting our weight off of it. Peace
grows where trust grows.
We often
think, “If I just knew why this is happening, I’d feel better.” But God
offers something better than explanations—He offers Himself. Paul writes: “And
the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts
and your minds in Christ Jesus.” (Philippians 4:7). This is peace that
doesn’t depend on answers.
Overthinking
is exhausting because it places us in a role we were never meant to fill—our
own savior, protector, and provider. When we try to mentally control every
outcome, we carry burdens that belong to God. We don’t need to figure
everything out because God already has. He sees the path ahead, knows the
outcome, and holds the details we strain to understand. Our job is not to solve
the future; it’s to trust the One who stands in it.
Whatever we
focus on grows. When we fixate on the problem, it expands. When we fix our eyes
on God, His presence becomes larger in our awareness. Isaiah says it again: “You
will keep in perfect peace those whose minds are steadfast, because they trust
in you.” Peace isn’t the result of mental mastery—it’s the fruit of
spiritual focus.
We spend so
much energy trying to secure what hasn’t happened yet. We analyze, predict, and
rehearse every scenario, hoping to avoid pain or guarantee success. But the
future is not a puzzle God asked us to solve. It’s a place He has already
prepared. Overthinking often springs from the fear of making the wrong move,
but God doesn’t expect flawless navigation—He expects faithful following. “The
Lord directs the steps of the righteous.” (Psalm 37:23)
The future
is not a problem to decode; it’s a promise to walk into. God never asked us to
be strategists of the unknown. He asked us to trust Him. “For I know the
plans I have for you…” (Jeremiah 29:11). Notice the emphasis: He
knows. We don’t have to. The future is not a riddle in our hands—it’s a plan in
His.
When God
gives a promise, it’s not an invitation to stress but an invitation to trust.
Abraham wasn’t given a map—only a direction: “Go… to the land I will show
you.” (Genesis 12:1). God didn’t give him details; He gave him Himself. And
that was enough. The beauty of God’s
promises is not only what He prepares but that He walks with us as we enter
them. The future is secure because the God who holds it never changes.
One of the
most comforting truths in Scripture is that God’s promises are never delivered
from a distance. He doesn’t simply point us toward a destination and say, “Good
luck.” He goes with us. He goes before us. He surrounds us. His promises are
not just about places—they’re about presence.
When God
leads, He doesn’t hand us a map; He offers us Himself. His promises are rooted
in relationship. That’s why He told Moses: “My presence will go with you,
and I will give you rest.” (Exodus 33:14). The promise wasn’t merely a land
flowing with milk and honey. The promise was "my presence will go with you".
Blessings,
opportunities, open doors, and answered prayers are wonderful. But the greatest
gift is that God doesn’t send us into them alone. He accompanies us into every
new season, every unknown, every challenge.
Even the most beautiful future would feel overwhelming if we had to face
it without Him. But with Him, even uncertain paths become safe.
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Pastor Godwin, FBC Danvers

Thank you Pastor! I am printing this to keep close by and passing it along.
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