N is for
Not
![]() |
For instance, elsewhere Luke reports that the religious authorities feared "the people." But from that fear the Lord grants the fearers no relief. Similarly we are told that the disciples fear the authorities. For that fear they are faulted, not comforted. Likewise when they are at sea in a storm, they fear drowning. For that they are rebuked. Yet when their master stills the storm, they suddenly face someone truly terrifying, "Who is this that even the winds and the sea obey him?" For that fear they are not rebuked.
Had Dr. King lived to tell, might he have told us what Jesus did say, that we are not to fear those who merely kill bodies but are rather to fear the One who "can destroy both body and soul in hell?" "Yes, I tell you, fear him," the Lukan Jesus adds for good measure. And Luke's gospel is supposedly the kinder, gentler of the gospels. It is the same Luke whose gentle Mary, in her Magnificat, sings of that One whose "mercy is for those who fear him." That mercy was reserved for the likes of her ("the angel said, 'Do not be afraid, Mary'") and for her "terrified" old in-law ("'Do not be afraid, Zechariah'") and for the "terrified" shepherds (the angel said to them, 'Do not be afraid'.") But then those folks were exceptional. They were fearers of God.
![]() |
| "Fear Not" by Wilhem Morgner |




