Beyond "Just Pray More": A Christian's Guide to Understanding Anxiety
Anxiety can be a very confusing issue for a Christian. On one hand, we feel shame because we believe — or have been told — that we simply need to trust God more. On the other hand, our culture often convinces us that anxiety is merely a nuisance to be medicated away.
Now, I'm not saying we shouldn't grow in our trust of God, or that prescription medication is never appropriate. But anxiety is too often treated as an isolated physical or spiritual problem, rather than as a response of our whole, integrated being — one that encompasses the spiritual, physical, emotional, and relational parts of who we are.
I believe God created the anxiety response to warn us that something may be threatening, prompting us to react with a fight, flight, or freeze response. If you have been conditioned through stress or trauma to perceive your environment as unsafe, your body will instinctively shift into an anxious, hypervigilant state.
The brain doesn't distinguish between real and perceived danger — it simply senses that it needs to stay on high alert to protect you.
Anxiety can also surface when blood sugar levels drop, when caffeine intake is excessive, or when social media overstimulates the mind. Insufficient serotonin production, imbalanced stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline, critical nutrient deficiencies, or a disrupted methylation process can all contribute to anxiety as well.
We address anxiety best through both proactive and reactive approaches. Proactively, we can address nutrient deficiencies, reduce social media consumption, embrace healthy boundaries to manage stress, and evaluate our responses to the circumstances or people that tend to increase our anxiety.
Reactively, we can lean into breath prayers in moments of anxious feeling. For example, inhale while silently saying, "The Lord is my shepherd" — then exhale with, "I shall not want." Choose any scripture that brings you a sense of calm.
We can also picture Jesus present with us right now, beside us, reaching out His hand and inviting us to focus on Him for just this moment. Pray out loud, telling Him your fears — without expecting the anxiety to instantly disappear. There is room for both Jesus and your anxiety — they are not mutually exclusive, as so many Christians have been led to believe.
Anxiety does not have to be your enemy. It is there to help you recognize a need. Will you take the time to listen to what it's trying to tell you?











