WEEKLY DEVOtionals

the fear of man vs. the fear of god

Pastor Frank Park | Founding and Senior Pastor

“The fear of man lays a snare, but whoever trusts in the Lord is safe.” - Proverbs 29:25

Fear is a powerful motivator. It shapes decisions, silences convictions, and sometimes dictates who we become. Scripture draws a sharp contrast between two kinds of fear: the fear of man and the fear of the Lord. One enslaves. The other liberates.

1. The Fear of Man: A Subtle Trap
The Bible calls it a snare (Proverbs 29:25). A snare is hidden. You don’t see it until you’re caught.

The fear of man sounds like:
  • What will they think of me?
  • What if I lose their approval?
  • What if obedience costs me influence, comfort, or reputation?

This kind of fear leads us to:
  • Compromise truth to keep peace
  • Stay silent when we should speak
  • Perform spiritually instead of living authentically
  • Lead for applause rather than faithfulness

At its root, the fear of man is mis-directed worship. We give people the weight that belongs only to God. We treat human opinion as ultimate. But people don’t have the shoulders to bear that kind of weight. Their approval shifts. Their praise fades. Their criticism stings and if you live by their acceptance, you will die by their rejection.

2. The Fear of the Lord: Holy Freedom
The fear of the Lord is not terror. Rather, it is reverent awe. It is seeing God as He truly is: holy, sovereign, righteous, and good.

Scripture says:
  • “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” - Proverbs 9:10
  • “Do not fear those who kill the body…Rather fear Him who can destroy both soul and body in hell.” - Matthew 10:28

To fear the Lord is to:
  • Take His Word seriously
  • Care more about God's approval than man’s applause
  • Live ultimately for the audience of One

When God becomes weighty in your heart, people become lighter in your mind. And when eternity becomes real, temporary discomfort loses its power.

3. How Fearing God Frees You From Fearing Man
1. It Reorders Your Priorities
If God is supreme, then obedience trumps approval. You stop asking, “How will this look?” and start asking, “Is this faithful?”

2. It Anchors Your Identity
If your identity is secured in Christ, human opinion cannot define you. At the cross, Jesus absorbed your rejection so you could live secure in the Father’s love. Look at Peter. Before Pentecost, he feared a servant girl and denied Christ. After being filled with the Spirit in the book of Acts of the Apostles, he stood before authorities and boldly proclaimed the gospel. What changed? His fear shifted. He feared God more than man.

3. It Produces Courage
Courage is not the absence of fear. It is the presence of a greater fear - The Fear of the Lord. When God’s holiness grips you, man’s threats shrink. Throughout Scripture, the most fearless people were the most God-fearing:
  • Daniel prayed despite the threat of lions.
  • Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego stood before a king and said, “Our God is able…but even if He does not…”

The world may misunderstand you. Culture may pressure you. Even friends may question you. But if God has spoken, that settles it.

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