
Reverend Ben Cooper's Podcast
Reverend Ben Coopers podcast, offers an inviting space for listeners to explore Christianity and spiritual growth with wisdom, humor, and a deep commitment to biblical truth. Through Rev. Ben's engaging conversations with guests, the podcast not only explores the timeless wisdom of the Bible but also tackles the pressing issues of life, faith, and hope in a way that is accessible, thought-provoking, and enriching. Whether you’re seeking spiritual nourishment, answers to life’s big questions, or simply a place to reflect on your faith, the Rev Ben podcast is a valuable resource on your journey.
In each episode, Rev. Ben guides listeners through profound theological reflections, personal stories, and practical insights drawn from the Bible and the broader Christian tradition.
Reverend Ben Cooper's Podcast
4. Jesus Faced Fear. - (PBC@04)
Did Jesus experience anxiety? The Garden of Gethsemane offers a profound, rarely discussed moment in the Bible where Jesus faced overwhelming fear. His soul was "sorrowful unto death" (Matthew 26:38), a deeply human experience that shows His struggle with anxiety as He anticipated the suffering that lay ahead. This moment of fear and distress is a key part of understanding Jesus' human nature and how He can relate to those who suffer from mental health struggles.
In this moment, Jesus’ dual nature—fully human and fully divine—creates a powerful tension. While theologically, Jesus is "the image of the invisible God" (Colossians 1:15), He is also deeply human and experiences the psychological distress that comes with fear. The Gospel of Luke 22:44 describes Him as sweating "drops of blood," a rare condition known as hematidrosis, which occurs during extreme emotional or physical stress. This medically documented response shows that Jesus truly understands human anxiety.
In the Garden, Jesus prayed earnestly to God, asking if the "cup" of suffering might pass from Him (Matthew 26:39). This shows Jesus' humanity, wrestling with the fear of suffering and the desire to avoid the pain ahead. But despite His fear, He ultimately chose obedience: "Not my will, but yours be done" (Luke 22:42). His surrender wasn't an easy acceptance but a surrender through agony, acknowledging fear while choosing love.
This moment offers great comfort for anyone struggling with anxiety today. Jesus, the Creator of the universe, knows what it’s like to face overwhelming fear and emotional turmoil. Whether it's dealing with relationship struggles, financial pressure, or health challenges, we can take solace in the fact that Jesus understands anxiety on a deeply personal level. He faced mental anguish in the Garden and chose to submit to God’s will, showing us the way to move forward in faith and surrender.
The "50-50 Garden" concept helps us see Jesus’ human and divine struggle—He was 50% human, fully experiencing the fear of suffering, and 50% divine, knowing the eternal consequences of His sacrifice. His obedient surrender in the face of anxiety reveals the power of perfect love to cast out fear (1 John 4:18). True peace doesn’t come from denying anxiety but from drawing near to the God who understands and walks through fear with us.
In your moments of anxiety or fear, remember that Jesus walked through the Garden of Gethsemane to show us the way. His example teaches us that we don’t have to hide from fear but can face it with faith, knowing that Jesus has already walked through the worst for our sake. By trusting in His love and obedience, we too can experience victory over fear.
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Speaker 2:Grab a cup of coffee, sit back, relax and enjoy. Thank you so much, wherever you are joining us at this moment in time, for this podcast and also for this written literature that we are producing. You know, as we look at stress, as we look at fear, as we look at doubt, that really powerful human emotion, and the title of this podcast and this chapter that we're in at this moment in time is Did Jesus Stress A very interesting subject. When you look at it, you know fear. This book and the, this series of podcasts that we're doing at this moment, the, the 10 series that we are doing, these uh long stretches, you know, and everything that's going on in this uh series of podcasting, you know, did Jesus interesting title.
Speaker 2:Now, where can we find that Christ was in stress? Where do we look within the scripture, you know, fear. Did Jesus fear? Did he have anxiety? Did Christ experience the overwhelming presence of doubt, worry, fear? Where in the scripture do we find that Jesus Christ, christ, the son of the living god? Where do we find in this, this biblical interpretation of the word of god? Where do we find that jesus christ, the king of kings, the god of israel? And we have to look at that. Yes, we understand that jesus christ is the image of the invisible god according to the book of Colossians, chapter 1. And you have a look at that and you see that really, really clear there. It's so, so clear to see what is going on within that scripture Christ is the image of the invisible God. When you look at the scriptures, when you look at the power of the word of God, when you look at the enormity of the text and when you just grapple that word fear. What has your day been like today? Before you press on any further, what has your day been like? What you been completely wound right up. Have you frozen in fear today? Have you been doubtful? And the reference that we had just a moment ago was coming from the book of Colossians, 1.15. He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. So when you reference scriptures like that, we understand that Jesus Christ now Christology, before we go into the depth of fear, anxiety and, as we said, you know, did Jesus stress? Did Jesus have anxiety? Did Jesus fear? Did Jesus want to run from the situation? Did Jesus freeze in that situation?
Speaker 2:You know we have to do a bit of christology in our lives and christology is the simple fact and the terminology of studying jesus christ, christology. So, as we look at this chapter, that we're in chapter four in the book, if you're following it through the book or if you're just uh listening to this on the commute, or you're at home and you're listening to the audible uh part of this uh book that we're doing at this moment in time, fear, all about fear. But what does the Bible say about Jesus and fear? It's very few and far between the scriptures that we will actually find any text that is referencing it. So the only place that we can go to is that we have to go to the book of Matthew and if you have a Bible, it is well worth you turning the scriptures over.
Speaker 2:So the title of what we are in today, chapter four of the book and the fourth podcast in this series, did Jesus fear? Did Jesus stress? Did he have anxiety? What was Christ doing and where was he? What are you referring to, ben? I'm referring to the one place that you find Christ in a position of anguish and that is in the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 26, when he goes into the Garden of Gethsemane. So when you think about what the Garden of Gethsemane was representing and what it was about was representing and what it was about, we get a bit of a greater understanding, I would say, why Christ had this stress and this anxious thought.
Speaker 2:Now we have to dive into the scripture, you know, and whether you're in faith, whether you're out of faith, whether you're from a religious background, whether you're not religious, whether you're an atheist, whether you're a Bible-believing believer, whether you're from a different faith, whether you're an atheist, whether you're a Bible-believing believer, whether you're from a different faith, whether you're completely against the Word of God and maybe culture and whatever is going on in your life. You know, fear takes no prisoners. Fear attacks all human beings, of all colors, of all shapes, of all sizes, of all demographic. It does not pick on one trait of a person, it doesn't pick on one geographical place, it doesn't pick on one postcode, it doesn't pick on one color or one race. Fear attacks the majority of human beings anxiety and doubt and uncertainty.
Speaker 2:So when we look at the greatest human being that ever walked this earth, the greatest man that ever walked this earth and we have to reference him as a man because when he was in the garden of Gethsemane we understand through scripture and through Christology that he is fully Christ, fully God, fully Holy Spirit. We have to understand that this Christ that we are talking about is the deity. He is the image of the invisible God. I read out from Colossians, chapter 1, verse 15, christ is the image of the invisible God. So when we look at Christ in the garden of Gethsemane, we have to understand that he is carrying this stress and this emotion and this psychological pressure. What is he facing? Because when we look at this, we understand and we can tell what the future held for Jesus.
Speaker 2:But when Christ was in the garden, he was completely on his own. No one knew his future, no one really understood who he really was. The disciples were struggling in his identity of who is this Jesus? We understand that. They knew that it was Mary's son and Joseph the carpenter's boy. We get that through scripture, we understand that. But Jesus, jesus, who is this Jesus, jesus? So christology.
Speaker 2:So when christ was in the garden, he was in his complete humanity, he was completely a complete human being. In the garden of gethsemane he was a man and he was a human being. He was, you could say, outside of the deity, as in um. How can we put that? What is the best? What do you say? Outside of the deity, as in? How can we put that? What is the best? What do you mean? Being outside of the deity? He was outside of that realm of the spiritual. He was completely physical. He was the physical realm, he was flesh, he was blood, he was brains, he was organs, he was flesh, he was sinew, he had lungs, he had eyes, he had ears. He was fully, fully created as a human being. So when we look at this, christ is experiencing anguish, he is experiencing doubt, he's experiencing empathy, he's experiencing humanity, he's experiencing suffer, suffering. I should say he's experiencing a significant part of this. It was pivotal. It was a pivotal point in his life as a human being and as the king of kings and the lord of lords.
Speaker 2:The moment in the garden highlights the magnitude of Jesus. It highlights that he chose. He chose, he knew the way that he was going, because he is outside of that framework. He is fully God, fully King and he is fully Holy Spirit. So when we look at Jesus but at this moment in time we are looking at Jesus in his humanity and he was tempted in this garden what was he tempted with. Was it sin? He wasn't tempted with sin, he was tempted with a battle. And sometimes, as human beings, the battle of life can tempt us to find an escape from the situation. And so often when the battle of life and the battle of the garden of Gethsemane, when we know there is no choice, what does the garden experience do to us? It can make us stress. And Christ was fully, fully human being, he was the fully human Christ and he was tempted to what he was tempted to escape the situation. I like to call it the 50-50 garden. He was trying and he asked and he looked and he spoke very, very clearly. But here we see Christ experiencing extreme psychological pressure outside of the deity, outside of the kingship, outside of the kingdom, outside of this God role that was in the garden.
Speaker 2:When you understand that God was in the garden, in the image, when you look at the scripture, colossians, we have to reference one Colossians chapter one. You know again, colossians chapter one, verse 15, christ is the image of the invisible God. So not only do we have Christ, now we're going to step into a bit more of a depth, of a theological look, just for a second, and we don't want to come away from the understanding that we are talking about fear. We are talking about fear, we are talking about anxiety, but what we have to do is look at christ and as we look at christ and as you look and see and you read about jesus christ in the garden of, we understand through scripture that this is fully god, that this is fully. Now, there are many ways to look at this, but we look at it at the prime area, that this is Christ in full human skin, standing laying kneeling before the Father, kneeling before his Father.
Speaker 2:When you look at the complexity of this scripture, the theological depth of the garden of Gethsemane, what was trying to do? He wanted to escape. What he wanted to escape? Going to the cross, the crucifixion, he said, if it is possible. When you look at these scriptures I'm going to pick this reading up we're in the gospel of Matthew, chapter 26, and we're going to pick it up in verse 36, and it says that when Jesus came with his disciples to the place called Gethsemane, he said to them sit here for a while while, go over there and pray. He took Peter and the two sons of Zebedee with him and he began to be sorrowful and troubled.
Speaker 2:There is a very interesting part of this text that starts to open up the fabric of the detail of the magnitude that this is christ, this is god, this is, this is the power of the holy spirit in this garden. This is fully deity, fully man, fully king, fully god, experiencing fully God, experiencing the human emotion of sorrow and trouble. Then he said to them my soul. Now when he references soul, he says my soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death. Now we could spend hours just in the complexity and the drumbeat of that. My soul is filled so much and it is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death. Is that a suicide line that Christ is speaking about? It's a subject that we don't hear preachers preach. It's a subject that we don't hear the church teach on. But here we have fully god, fully man, fully king. But then we got to look out, look outside. We got to look at a different lens at this.
Speaker 2:The stress jesus felt can also be understood through the lens of his dual nature. What do you mean dual? I'm'm referring to that double whammy fully human and fully divine. We have to look at these two. I know I've labelled and laboured and put that pen mark and that dart on that. This is fully Christ, fully God. You know, when you look at that. But this is Jesus, fully human, his dual nature, two in one.
Speaker 2:When you look at this, this is fully human Jesus and this is the divine. This is the divine. This is the creator, this is the creator God. This is the holy God, this is the God. This is the king, god, this is the god, this is the king. This is the savior of the world, this is the great I am, this is the seven I ams. And he came down the staircase, he came all the way through the genealogy and you can study christ from from right, from genesis, chapter three, uh, all the way through where we start to see redemption, and it talks in Genesis, chapter 3, round about verse 15. It talks about enmity, that there is a redemption plan, but then we can go back another two chapters so we can go right back to the very beginning of Genesis, chapter 1, verse 3, where it says God said let there be light, and God created light. We don't have the time and we can't do this at this moment, but what I'm saying is that this Christ, the dual nature of Jesus, fully human, fully divine, for Jesus, for human, for fully God.
Speaker 2:God in the garden, having a human experience to the point of death. When you look at these scriptures, I actually love the fact that Jesus Christ has experienced the extremities of fear, sorrow, the overwhelmed feeling of sorrow, to the point of death. You, when you study, when you study what jesus went through and the, the only way that we understand what he was thinking is because we have the word of god from the garden onwards. But if you was one of those disciples sitting on the parameters, you would just fall asleep because you just thought jesus was just going into the garden of and praying, as he always did, because this was a common theme that jesus christ did. But at this particular point, no one on planet earth knew that jesus was about to experience the most brutality any human being could ever experience.
Speaker 2:Now, I said human being, but also he had the human pressure of going to the cross as a man, but also not just going as a man, but going as the savior of the world. But not just going as the savior of the world, actually going as the sacrificial lamb of god. He was the sacrifice and upon him everything was upon him sin, sickness, fear, doubt, every darkest, depraved sin that the world has ever conceived and looked at and done and experienced. Now, what we've got to remind ourselves, it was the history up to that point. It was the present at that point, and also it was the future, because the Bible says one sacrifice once and for all.
Speaker 2:So when we got Christ in the garden of Gethsemane, what we have, we have the full dual christ, we have the human jesus. And not only do we have the human jesus, we have this deity, and the deity is completely and absolutely surrendered to the will of the father. And what was the will of the Father? And what was the will of the Father? The will of the Father was for the Son to be the sacrifice, the lamb that was sacrificed. So Jesus knew, because Jesus was in the beginning. Jesus was in the beginning.
Speaker 2:So we have to get a bit of an understanding of why Christ was in so much anguish. So when we look at christ, he was experienced emotional stress, physical stress in the garden of gethsemane. This is the moment that is described in the, the gospels in the in matthew, chapter 26, 36 to 46, mark, chapter 14, 32 to 42, sorry. And also the Gospel of Luke, chapter 22, verses 39 to 46, we find this correlation of these Gospel writers writing about the anguish. It was occurring before his arrest, before the crucifixion, and the emotional intensity of the sense was quite profound.
Speaker 2:Jesus was in the garden, fully god, fully man, fully fully human being and full deity in the jewel. He was the jewel, he was the human jesus and he was the sacrificial lamb. So he knew. But there is a an area we could spend time looking at. Is that when jesus said, if it is possible. So when we look at that, jesus is looking for an escape.
Speaker 2:Yes, I've said it, that jesus christ, the savior of the world, was looking for a different route. He was deeply troubled, he was deeply distressed, he was overwhelmed with the, the suffering that he was going to endure, because he is the living word. And he knew, he knew in full deity what he had to do, because he was making this happen, because the book is about him, the book was written for him. He is the creator of heaven and earth. So what we have is that we have fully Christ, full deity, full savior of the world, the full human being, the man, christ Jesus actually going to the cross as the man, as the savior, but not just as the man. As the savior, but not just as the man, because we can't separate this. We have to look at him not just as the man but as the lamb, the sacrificial lamb, and he knew what the sacrifice was. He says my soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death when you at those words, those words you've got one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven. You've got 12 words my soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death. This indicates a profound sense of anguish and forbearing.
Speaker 2:He was stressed and in the gospel of luke, chapter 24 uh, sorry, chapter 22, verse 44, it says, and it said that jesus was in such agony that his sweat was like droplets of blood. Now science and the medical world tells us that this is a condition that actually exists. So this is not just a story. This is fact, this is medical fact, this is fact around the world, that in extremity of stress, in extreme stress and fear, you can sweat droplets of blood. So christ was in the garden, fully man, fully deity, and sweating, sweating droplets of blood. This suggests that this emotional torture and turmoil was so intense that it took a physical, taxing appearance on his body from the inside out, the extremity that he was going through we're not just talking about the, the stresses of general life that that jesus knew that he had to die. He had to say it is finished. He had to be whipped and beaten and spat upon and kicked and ridiculed and stripped naked and stripped bare and hung on the cross. He had to experience the brutal death of crucifixion. So now we can get an understanding.
Speaker 2:The title that we're in right now whether you're following us through a podcast or you're reading this as one of the chapters in the book on fear. Did jesus stress? Did jesus experience fear? Did jesus experience anguish? Yes, he did, and that brings comfort to me. That brings complete comfort to me knowing that Jesus Christ, the saviour of the world, your focus, your vision and absolutely everything. And he said if it is possible, yet not my will, your will be done.
Speaker 2:Jesus was looking for an escape. Jesus, in the Gospel of Luke, 22, 42, was looking for a place to escape the emotional torture, the emotional turmoil in the garden of gethsemane. Have you ever experienced a gethsemane moment in your life? Have you ever experienced a time in your life where you have been so fearful. It changes your vision, it freezes you stress and anguish. If you have a deeper look now, these podcasts are just a quick fired 30 minutes or so, just a quick chapter with just 4 000 words approximately in.
Speaker 2:So we can never cover the complexity of fear and anguish and doubt and I don't think there's any author out there, I don't think there's anyone on this terra firma and on this earth in which we live that can actually come to the end of the subject of fear and anxiety and worry and doubt and actually come to the full stop and say we actually fully understand what fear is, because fear is an emotion that is very is, because fear is an emotion that is very, very difficult I would say almost impossible to measure. That the physical um suffering with fear and doubt, and not only that, the the spiritual side of it as well, the spiritual implicate implications, sorry, when you look at that, you know the overwhelming presence of fear. In the garden of Gethsemane we got to understand he was looking at what was before him and he was looking. And so often that we look ahead of our lives and what we see brings fear and stress and anguish, the lack of money, the fear of going to work, of college, of university, the fear of broken down relationships, the fear of of no food in the cupboard, the fear of of not being able to achieve, the fear of no hope, the fear of living, the fear of dying. So each and every one of us has these garden of Gethsemane experiences.
Speaker 2:But when you look at Christ, what was he? What was his garden looking like? He was going to carry the weight of the cross, and I'm not talking about just the physical carrying of the cross, because we understand that he handed that over, uh, to someone else to carry, but I'm I'm referring to the weight of the sin of the world. I can't even get there. I'm not even a theologian. I I can't imagine I could never get to that. Even a theologian, I can't imagine I could never get to that place. But the physical pain that he had to go through, he had to endure stuff that we could never even understand or even work out, the beatings and the scorning and, of course, the crucifixion and the spiritual burden, the spiritual burden of taking on the sins of the world. That's why he mentions the term the cup.
Speaker 2:When you look at the scripture, he says the cup that Jesus prayed about in Luke 22, 42, and Matthew. Actually it's in the gospel of Matthew, 26 and 39. It is the symbol of impending death. So when you look at that, the cup wasn't now the cup for us. The cup for us was and represents redemption. But the cup for Jesus has a very different face to it. The term, the cup that he speaks about, is literally speaking about if it is possible, can you take this cup from me? What he is actually saying and when we look at it in the language that we may present it, it's saying something like this If it's possible, can you take this impending death sentence from me? Because the cup was symbolic to what? God's judgment on sin. So when we look back at the carp in the garden, we look at it, maybe with a bit of a smile and a bit of a and a lot of hope going. Thank you, jesus.
Speaker 2:But jesus looked at that cup. Christ looked at that cup. He looked at that cup. Christ looked at that cup. He looked at that as the impending death that was coming towards him Every second, every moment. So fear and judgment and everything was on him. So when you look at this, did Christ have anxiety? Yes, was Christ overwhelmed with sorrow. Yes, the scripture tells with sorrow. Yes, the scripture tells us very, very clear the dual nature of Jesus. I love the fact that Jesus is fully Christ, fully deity, the stress that Jesus felt we would never be able to understand and, as we look at the lens, with two different viewpoints, the dual nature of jesus, fully human and fully divine. But he went. He went to the cross as the savior of the world, as as the living sacrifice, the emotional torture, the pain, you know every. Because he was looking at the, at the, at what was, at the forefront of what was coming. The cross, the cross represented death and he was tempted in the garden. He was looking for an escape. Is it possible that I can do this another way? Is it possible? But he actually answers his own question. If it is possible, take this cup from me, but not my will, but your will be done.
Speaker 2:There is so much to get from this and this is just a quick, fired 30 minutes, just a quick chapter on the title of did jesus stress? Did jesus fear? Did Jesus have anxiety? Yes, he did, to the point where his soul was overwhelmed with sorrow, to the point of death. When you look at the power, the power of Jesus, in this garden. Christ was in the garden of Gethsemane. How do we come to some form of conclusion? Can we put a full stop on this subject? We can't.
Speaker 2:The stress in the garden, jesus, stress in the garden of Gethsemane, is not just a moment of physical or emotional distress. It is the climax, it is the crescendo, it is the point of his spiritual battle. It wasn't just a battle in the garden of emotional torture and psychological, it was spiritual. Now that opens up another, another envelope. But it was the spiritual battle that he had to forego as well. In his humanity he wrestled the weight of the cross and the separation from the Father that he knew that this was going to be coming and the burden of sin that was upon him. But in his full divinity he chose obedience. He chose obedience, submission to God's will for the sake of humanity's salvation. So, jesus, the King of kings, kings, the lord of lords, the garden experience reveals the depth of jesus's love and the magnitude of his sacrifice. It also invites and it opens up the extremity and his response to suffering the challenge that faced, just like every one of us, the challenges that we face.
Speaker 2:So we could use the analogy of the garden of Gethsemane with a situation at work. I've got to go into the garden, I've got to go into the workspace. I'm in a relationship which is extremely stressful. I'm in a job that's extremely stressful. I'm in a career, I'm in a situation, I'm in a lifestyle, I'm in education, I'm in this, I'm in that, I've got this. So every one of us, to a degree, has a garden of gethsemane.
Speaker 2:So the analogy and the power of this story and I don't use the word story like the world uses the word story I'm referring to as a, as a biblical fact that jesus christ, the savior of the world, fully god, fully man, the dual side of him, the human and the deity, experienced stress and his soul was overwhelmed.
Speaker 2:He was full of sorrow and he was troubled. He said my soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death. This is Jesus. I love the fact that this scripture is real. I love the fact. Now, when I have overwhelming experiences of stress and fear and doubt, I know that our Christ has experienced a greater level of stress. There is no one on earth that has experienced fear as much as christ. There is no one on earth that has experienced the depth and the trauma of life, like jesus, because what we look at, we look at the physical stuff that is before us. Jesus wasn't looking at the physical realm as much. He was looking what was beyond the cross, and what do I mean beyond the cross, on the other side of the cross, that the human race could not see and we cannot grasp the battle in the spiritual realms.
Speaker 2:That is a different podcast completely. So, wherever you are and however you are listening and you might be reading this on on chapter through chapter four you might be listening to this on on this series of of of our podcast that we're doing over on fear. You know, I just want to pray for you now and the simple, simple prayer is Lord, through our Garden of Gethsemane, experience, help me to say, not my will, your will be done, because when I get close to God, the Bible says perfect love drives out all fear. God is love. So if you are experiencing the extremities of fear, doubt, anguish, if you are troubled, get close to God, because God knows the other side of the human race of fear and doubt, he knows the anguish, he knows the pain that we're going through. So if you are in the garden of Gethsemane. At this moment in time, I want to encourage you to stand up and to keep walking and to trust, because the Bible says perfect love drives out all fear. How do I get this perfect love? In a fearful experience, when my soul is overwhelmed, I get into the word of God.
Speaker 2:I read the scripture, I read and if you are struggling tonight, this morning, if you are struggling this evening, whatever your time zone is around the world, whenever you capture this audible podcast or whenever you read this chapter, I want to encourage you to open up to the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 26, and read from verse 36 and take it all the way down to 46 and read what christ went through and do a study on it. Do a study, do some expository, sermonizing in your own home, at work, wherever you are, in your van, sitting at life school, wherever you are. Study what Jesus went through in the garden of Gethsemane and when we understand what he went through, I believe our hearts will smile again. So, if you are experiencing the extreme ends of stress and fear and doubt and anguish and the overwhelming feeling of fear, get close to God, get close to the creator of heaven and earth. How do I get close to him, it is through the Bible, through the 66 books. Read every word of God and get God's word in your spirit, get it in your heart, get it in your mind.
Speaker 2:And as we come to a close of this chapter, as we come to the close of this podcast, the Bible says perfect love drives out fear. The love of God is over you, the power of the Holy Spirit is within you. The extremities of fear, the extreme psychological pressure of living, of dying, of the uncertainty of the future. Get close to God. Worship God because God is love, and God will drive away fear because his love is perfect. God bless you, wherever you are. We thank you for listening to our podcast. We thank you for buying our literature and reading this book on fear. So, wherever you are across the world, do not let fear conquer your life. Let the love of god set you free.
Speaker 1:May god bless you in the mighty name of Jesus Christ. Amen is a continuous one, and your questions and thoughts are important. You can send us a text or an email and we will get back to you, so, wherever you are around the world. Thank you for listening to our podcasts and radio ministry. For more information about our ministry, please find us on pastorbencoopercouk. Please support us with prayer. Also, you can sow a financial seed into this ministry. You can also leave us a legacy to support and continue the work of this radio ministry. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and share it with others who might benefit. Until next time, stay blessed, thank you.