- Home
- Subject Studies
- Stress
This week we've learned how to wage war against Goliath, wherever and whomever he may be. Let's close with one of the most powerful statements of faith ever preached.
We're fighting Goliath this week, wherever and whoever he is in your life.
When you're up against Goliath, you can fight in your strength and lose. Or you can fight in God's strength and win.
Yesterday we began thinking about the folly of fighting your Goliath in your strength.
In times like these most of us feel more like David than Goliath. As we'll learn this week, that's not a bad place to be.
Do you ever feel like a young boy with no training, no background, no credentials, sent to fight a warrior who stands over nine feet tall? Ever feel like David against Goliath?
We live in the most hectic, fast-paced, stressed-out culture in history. Our society is changing more rapidly than ever before. Sociologists speak of these days as "whitewater" times.
The apostles were honest with their new converts: "We must go through many hardships to enter the Kingdom of God" (Acts 14:22). Jesus warned us, "In this world you will have trouble." But then he said, "Take heart! I have overcome the world" (John 16:33).
The tyranny of the urgent
- By Dr. Jim Denison
- Published 09/30/2005
- Stress , Priorities , Issue of the Week
We are working on average 20 percent more hours per week than we were in 1973. But the quality of our lives is not improving; in fact, it is suffering. Recent studies report that 60 percent of successful professionals suffer from chronic stress and depression. 48 percent of top corporate executives report that their lives are empty and meaningless.

Stress
