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Stress (Part 1) Series
Contributed by Benjamin Utomo on Jan 12, 2022 (message contributor)
Summary: According to Gallup Poll 2018, America is the 7th most stressed population globally. This sermon explains two kinds of stress, its causes, and what the Bible says about it.
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Today we'll continue our sermon series on "The Bible and Emotional Problems" on stress. According to Gallup Poll 2018, America is the 7th most stressed population globally after Greece, the Philippines, Tanzania, Albania, Iran, and Sri Lanka. Stress is responsible for more than half of the 550 million workdays lost annually because of absenteeism. An estimated 1 million workers are absent on an average workday because of stress-related complaints.
This is a "Stress Statistics for 2021": (https://medalerthelp.org/blog/stress-statistics/)
1. 80% of millennials are stressed about money.
2. 83% of Americans are worried about the future of the nation.
3. Nearly 25% of people report feeling extreme stress during the holidays.
4. 45% of college students seek counseling due to stress.
5. Around 70% of students are often or always stressed about schoolwork.
Understanding Stress
Stress is a normal human reaction that happens to everyone. The human body is designed to experience stress and react to it. When we experience changes or challenges (stressors), our bodies produce physical and mental responses to new situations.
Stress affects everyone. Everyone experiences stress from time to time. There are different types of stress—all of which carry physical and mental health risks. Physical symptoms of stress include aches and pains, chest pain or a feeling like racing heart, exhaustion or trouble sleeping, headaches, dizziness, shaking, high blood pressure, muscle tension or jaw clenching, stomach or digestive problems, difficulty having sex, and weak immune system. Stress can lead to emotional and mental symptoms like anxiety or irritability, depression, panic attacks, and sadness.
A stressor may be a one-time or short-term occurrence, or it can repeatedly happen over a long time. Some people may cope with stress more effectively and recover from stressful events more quickly than others.
Examples of stress include:
• Routine stress related to the pressures of school, work, family, and other daily responsibilities.
• Stress brought about by a sudden negative change, such as losing a job, divorce, or illness.
• Traumatic stress experienced during an event such as a major accident, war, assault, or natural disaster where people may be in danger of being seriously hurt or killed. People who experience traumatic stress may have very distressing temporary emotional and physical symptoms, but most recover naturally soon after.
Not All Stress Is Bad.
In daily life, we often use the term "stress" to describe negative situations, which leads many people to believe that all stress is bad for you, which is not valid. In the 1970s, an endocrinologist named Hans Selye created the term "eustress," a combination of two Greek words "eu" means "good" and "stress." Eustress, therefore, literally means "good stress," which is different from bad stress or "distress."
Eustress vs. Distress
The main difference between eustress and distress is the amount of personal control over a stressor. Distress occurs when a stressor cannot be resolved through coping mechanisms or adaptations. Eustress typically enhances one's functioning and may include responding to stressors with feelings such as:
• Increased meaning and hope
• Vigor and determination
• Excitement and anticipation
• Improved life satisfaction and well-being
• Resilience
On the other hand, when someone experiences a distressing event, it usually interferes with their ability to accomplish a job or task and quality of life.
The Bible and Stress
Does the Bible say anything about stress? In the original language of the Bible, we do not find the word "stress." The term "stress' as an emotional problem was created by Hans Selye in 1936, who defined it as "the non-specific response of the body to any demand for change." However, some modern English Bible translations use it. For example, New English Translation (NET) translated 1 Sam 1:15 as follows: "But Hannah replied, "That's not the way it is, my Lord! I am under a great deal of stress. I have drunk neither wine nor beer. Rather, I have poured out my soul to the Lord." KJV, ASV, DARBY: "I am a woman of a sorrowful spirit." ESV: "I am a woman troubled in spirit." CEB: "I'm just a very sad woman." MSG: "I'm a woman brokenhearted." NIV: "I am a woman who is deeply troubled."
I don't think the NET translation is wrong because Hannah is going through a lot of mental stress due to her barrenness and Peninnah's taunts. Verse 6 tells us, "And her rival also provoked her severely, to make her miserable, because the Lord had closed her womb."
NET and AMP also use the word "stress" in other verses. For example, Eccles 11:10 – "Banish emotional stress from your mind. and put away pain from your body; for youth and the prime of life are fleeting." (NET); 1 Thess 3:7 – "for this reason, brothers and sisters, during all our distress and suffering we have been comforted and greatly encouraged about you because of your faith [your unwavering trust in God—placing yourselves completely in His loving hands." (AMP); 2 Tim 3:1 – "But understand this, that in the last days dangerous times [of great stress and trouble] will come [difficult days that will be hard to bear." (AMP)