I found this coffee mug as I was looking for new things for my kitchen. The color matched perfectly with our newly repainted walls, and so I thought, “What the heck!” In the cart it went, and soon it was on its way home with me.
The funny thing is–I don’t drink coffee. No one in our household does. I’ve got a cupboard full of coffee mugs that I routinely weed out. I don’t even drink tea, though I have begun to enjoy it more. So it was rather interesting that I bought myself a large coffee mug. As I examined it again, at home, I found the words speaking to me even though it was the color that had sold me on it:
Trust your dreams
As I looked for a place to display it, it settled nicely into my new coffee station. Again,
the irony of having a coffee station doesn’t escape me, but we do have a lot of guests who enjoy a warm cup of coffee from time to time when visiting. The words on the mug, resting in its new home. visually sparked a thought for me.
We’ve been in this house for a long time, and as with all houses that are well lived in, the paint and decor have begun to show their wear in many rooms. I haven’t had a particularly strong urge to change things until I came across a blue that I saw while out one day. I walked by it again and again…a cereal bowl. Not needing another bowl, I couldn’t quite understand why it was drawing my attention until I realized it was the color that was captivating me.
Needless to say, the bowl became my color swatch. From there, a sample was brought home, and put up on the wall in no time. And unlike prior times where I would put up multiples patches of colors to compare, this one sat, alone, on the wall as I watched for how the lighting might change it throughout the day and night.
With most projects, you find an impetus for change and it grows from there. Since we were going to paint the walls, well, we needed to paint the ceiling. Because we were painting the ceiling, it seemed right to change out the light fixtures that we had always wanted to change. And what the heck, since we were changing things, why not add a tile back splash to the kitchen counters like we had wanted for some time?
With only a color for the wall, things began to weave and take shape, though I really had no other thoughts about the change. Browns, blues and gold became the palette that showed itself to me in all sorts of ways. New fabrics and metals came with new bar stools and lighting. I found myself sewing basic window dressings and hanging up new and old picture frames that refreshed this treasured living space. Before I knew it, and with a little trepidation, the “dream” of change had begun to take more shape. All the while, I wondered what it would look like when it was finally done. I pondered whether people would like it. Would they fail to understand the tie in of light touches of gold and the blending of the browns that had fallen into place? Deep down, would they see this vision, my new borne “dream”, the way I was?
Along the way, when all that could be seen were bits and pieces, I would occasionally hear my husband cautiously say, “I am not so sure about that.” I would smile and say, “Let’s see how it plays out. We can always return it.” As everything finally came into its proper place and the last finishing touches were put on, I found myself in love with what had come to be. My husband, smiling, repeatedly shared just how much he, too, loved the new look. Those who walked into the kitchen remarked how amazed they were with it–love radiated from their tones and words. More than once, we were asked if we had installed new cabinets, which we hadn’t. People were impressed by the change the color alone had made. Those few changes had a big impact on the warmness and draw to this place we love and “live” in much of the time.
It was there, as I stood looking at the words on the mug I had bought, that I realized how easy it is to let the fear of change prevent dreams from coming true. Trust your dreams implies moving forward, not letting fear stop dreams from coming to fruition. For some, it might be fear of failure that holds them back. For others, it might involve fear of rejection. Still some might fear that it will be too hard to push through and bring about the needed change. All these hesitations drawing us back into the status quo.
“Don’t change. You’ve got it good.” “This dream isn’t necessary.” “No one else thinks it needs to be done.” “What will it really matter?”
Those little nagging thoughts that hold down dreams, and without mercy, seek to devalue such aspirations as worthless. That discouraging inner voice that strives to defeat the need for change with taunts of failure and vice, dread and scoffing. As movement begins in aspiration and inspiration, waves of questioning and doubt cascade into the free flow of forward motion sending it backwards, if only for a moment.
You see, the key thing about fears is knowing that we were designed to have them. Fear, in and of itself, is not worthless. God knew what He was doing when He programmed us to have them. We just might need to outrun something that can harm us motivated largely by the fact that we are afraid of it. The feeling of alarm may be the one thing that saves us at an inopportune moment. Fear has a purpose that gets our attention and, in healthy cases, is trying to protect us. It is a protective warning system that should draw us away from things that can harm, hurt or destroy us.
But, as with all things, you can have both good and bad…
“Those who cling to worthless idols [fears] forfeit the grace that can be theirs.” Jonah 2:8
Friends, God does not say in this verse that fear is entirely wrong. Instead, He qualified fear with the word “worthless”. That is important to note because if you think that in this life you should never be afraid, you will likely get hurt when you shouldn’t have. Remember, fear has a purpose–by design–and is not inherently wrong. What is wrong with fear is when we engage in believing and following the ones that are worthless.
Worthless means “having no value; having no value of character or virtue; having no dignity or excellence.” Noah Webster, 1828 American Dictionary of the English Language. Ah, God is now helping us to understand better by going a little bit deeper into what fears are wrong. The fears that will scream for us to cling to them, the ones that will be most tempting to believe, will be those that truly have no value, no truth to them. By embracing such fears, your character will not be changed; there will be no virtue gained by staying in place. You will add no dignity to yourself nor your life nor to the live of others. You will stay in mediocrity instead moving towards and striving for excellence. Those worthless fears will say:
“Stay here. Trust me. It is not worth it. Change is too hard, and fleeting at times, but you can trust me to guide you to staying safe.”
Now, let’s go a little further and look at another word: value. In the definition of worthless, we are told that when something is worthless, it has no value. Why not seek to understand what value truly means? To see whether it can shine a light by helping us determine how to measure whether our fears truly have worth?
Value stems from the Latin word, “valor”, which means “to be worth”. Id. In the definition of good ole’ Noah Webster, Noah tells us that “[t]he real value of a thing is its utility, its power or capacity of procuring or producing good.” He goes on to remark that things can have an estimated value as well as a real value. Value also can be measured by price, worth, high rate, importance, and import. Id. To understand whether our fears have worth, we must determine with accuracy whether this fear is producing any true good. We must not believe fears on only their face value; we must truly examine them and their claim of right in our lives.
Can we now glean better that there are fears that have worth, i.e., value, and fears that do not? God does not say in Jonah 2:8 that those who cling to fears forfeit grace. He instructs us, instead, to measure our fears by their worth. For it is when we hold fast to these type of worthless fears–that have no true value–that we lose something that will be better for us. Whatever that may be lies in the grace that is waiting on the other side of the wall of our fears.
In the synonyms for worthless, listed at dictionary.com, you will find some interesting words–words that can describe how we might feel when under the direction of fears that do not produce good:
abandoned, empty, futile, good-for-nothing, inconsequential, ineffective, inferior, insignificant, meaningless, miserable, no good, pointless, poor, sterile, trivial, unessential, unimportant, waste; fawning, groveling, humiliated, low, miserable, outcast, servile, submissive; failed, unproductive; common, disgraceful, dishonorable, lowly, mean, offensive, shameful, sorry.
Ask yourself this, can you identify fears associated with any of those words? When you read them do you feel any physical or emotional trigger inside of you? A desire to look away, shrug off, or stuff down; to dismiss or say it was no big deal as a memory pops forward. Can you trace that back to a fear or the moments it impacted?
Now ask yourself, how many times did that fear lead you to those feelings or reactions rather than protecting you from them? If more times than not, it led you to feeling miserable because it wouldn’t let you participate in happiness, meaningless because you stayed put, a good-for-nothing because you did nothing, pointless because you never tried, trivial because your fear has removed your self-worth or worth to society, humiliated because you feel like you should have or shouldn’t have, outcast because you are afraid to take part or are afraid you are not wanted, submissive because you are fearful to take a stand, unproductive because fear says there’s just too much to do, disgraceful because fear held you back from doing right, offended easily because fear says you are not as good as they are, ashamed because you are afraid you have no worth, sorry because you are afraid you have messed up yet again…then my friend, my estimation is that you are clinging to a fear that is worthless.
It is not you who holds no worth; it is the worthless fear that has no value.
There is good waiting to be released from the bondage that such fear holds back. There is value in pushing past those useless fears and embracing the grace that awaits on the other side. There are dreams God wants you to trust in, even the simplest ones, if only you would become willing to let go of that which unnecessarily constrains you …
Trust God with your fears; don’t let them be the predominate influence in your life. Examine them; find if they are truly adding goodness and value to your days and moments. And when you find that they aren’t, choose Him over the fears that are holding you back. It is where you will find grace in fullest measure and where your worth will become better known to you, for your value will no longer reside in your worthless fears. Rather, your courage and strength to face the truth of what you fear will become worth more than you can possibly measure.

“Those who cling to worthless idols forfeit the grace that could be theirs. But I, with a song of thanksgiving, will sacrifice to you. What I have vowed I will make good. Salvation comes from the Lord.” Jonah 2:8-9