The Art of Letting Go: A Christian Stoic Perspective

2,773 words, 15 minutes read time.

The Myth of Control and the Idolatry of the Grip

You think you are holding your life together, but you are really just strangling it. Your knuckles are white because you believe that if you let go of the wheel for even a second, the whole car goes off the cliff. This is the great lie of the modern age and the primary rot in your soul. You treat your plans, your kids, your money, and your health like they belong to you. They do not. When you try to own what you only have on loan, you turn into a slave to fear. True strength is not found in a tighter grip but in the steel-toothed resolve to open your hand and look at the sky. You are not the boss of the world, and every second you spend acting like the CEO of the universe is a second you spend in a dark room fighting a ghost that will always win.

Why Your Need for Certainty is a Spiritual Failure

The deep urge to know exactly what happens tomorrow is a form of pride that eats men alive. You want a map because you do not trust the One who made the road. In the cold light of reality, your worry does not add a single hour to your life or a single penny to your bank account. It only burns out your heart and makes you a burden to everyone around you. You call it being “prepared” or “responsible,” but it is really just a lack of faith wrapped in a suit and tie. A man who cannot let go is a man who thinks his brain is bigger than God’s will. This is the ultimate failure of the human spirit because it places your tiny, fragile ego at the center of the world. You are trying to play a part that was never written for you, and the weight of that role is crushing your chest every time you try to sleep.

The Violent Collision of Human Will and Divine Sovereignty

The old Stoics had it half right when they said we should only care about what we can control, but they missed the punchline. They thought the mind was the ultimate fortress, but the Christian knows that even the mind belongs to the Maker. When your will slams into what God has planned, you are the one who is going to break. You cannot out-think a storm and you cannot out-muscle a tragedy. The collision is violent because you are stiff and brittle instead of being fluid and submissive. You fight against the “what is” because you are obsessed with the “should be.” But “should be” is a fantasy that kills your ability to live in the truth. Submission is the only way to survive the impact. It is the act of looking at a wreck and realizing that even in the debris, there is a design you are too small to see.

The Problem: The High Cost of Holding On

Your body knows you are lying to yourself long before your mind admits it. When you refuse to let go, your biology pays the bill that your pride ran up. Science shows us that the human frame was never built to carry the weight of the future. Chronic worry keeps your system flooded with chemicals meant for escaping a predator, but you are using them to sit at a desk and fret about things that have not happened yet. This constant state of high alert grinds down your heart, ruins your gut, and clouds your brain. You think you are being a hero by carrying the world on your back, but you are really just a man breaking his own spine for a prize that does not exist. The data is clear: those who cannot release their grip on outcomes experience a massive spike in inflammatory markers and a total collapse of their immune response. You are literally rotting from the inside because you refuse to acknowledge your own limits.

Data on the Physiological Toll of Chronic Worry and Rigidity

The numbers do not care about your feelings, and they tell a brutal story of what happens when you try to play God. Research from major health institutions shows that the physical cost of mental rigidity is a shortened life and a dimmed mind. When you live in a state of constant “what-if,” your blood pressure stays in the red zone and your sleep becomes a shallow, useless rest. This is not just about feeling stressed; it is about the structural failure of your physical vessel. The stress hormone cortisol is supposed to be a tool for survival, but for the man who won’t let go, it becomes a slow-acting poison. It eats away at your bone density and shrinks the parts of your brain responsible for clear thought and memory. You are sacrificing your health for the illusion of safety, trading your actual life for the mere feeling of being in charge. It is a sucker’s bet that leaves you bankrupt in the end.

A Case Study in Paralysis: When Planning Becomes a Prison

Look at the ruins of any great project or personal life that ended in a heap, and you will find the fingerprints of a man who planned too much and trusted too little. Industry data reveals that the most common reason for catastrophic failure is not a lack of effort, but a refusal to pivot when the ground shifts. There is a specific kind of paralysis that happens when you become so attached to a specific outcome that you cannot see the exit ramp God has provided. You build a prison out of your own expectations and then wonder why the air feels thin. When the market turns, or the health report comes back dark, or the person you love walks away, the rigid man snaps like a dry twig. He has no “give” in his soul because he has spent years convincing himself that his plan was the only way forward. This rigidity is a death sentence in a world that is constantly in motion. You cannot navigate a changing sea if you have bolted your rudder in one direction.

The Root Cause: Misunderstanding the Nature of the Gift

The reason you cannot let go is that you have a warped view of what you actually own. You walk around acting like you built the earth you stand on and brewed the air you breathe. This is a fundamental error in your logic. Every single thing in your life—your sharp mind, your strong hands, the people who love you, even your very next breath—is a gift that was handed to you by someone else. You are not a builder; you are a tenant. When you forget this, you start to view the natural end of things as a personal robbery. You get angry at the sky when it rains on your parade because you think you bought the rights to the sunshine. But the Christian Stoic looks at the world and sees a vast collection of borrowed items. You cannot lose what you never truly owned, and once you realize that everything is a loan from the Creator, the fear of losing it loses its teeth. You can enjoy the meal without being terrified of the empty plate that follows.

The Christian Correction to Stoic Self-Sufficiency

The old Stoic masters thought they could reach peace through sheer brainpower and a cold heart. They believed that if they just toughened up their minds, they could stand alone against the world. They were wrong. Self-sufficiency is just another name for a different kind of prideful prison. The Christian knows that we are not enough on our own, and we were never meant to be. Our strength does not come from a hollowed-out heart that feels nothing, but from a filled-up soul that trusts the Father. You don’t let go because you are “tough”; you let go because you are held by something bigger than yourself. Stoicism without Christ is just a lonely man in a cold room trying to stay warm by hugging himself. Christianity takes that discipline and gives it a target. You don’t just “not care” about the outcome; you actively hand the outcome over to the only One who actually knows what to do with it. This isn’t weakness; it is the highest form of tactical intelligence.

Seeing Every Attachment as a Loan, Not a Right

If you want to stop the bleeding in your spirit, you have to change your vocabulary from “mine” to “ours” or “His.” Every morning you wake up, you should do a mental inventory of everything you value and acknowledge that you have zero legal right to keep any of it. Your career is a stewardship, not a throne. Your family members are souls entrusted to your care for a season, not extensions of your own ego. When you treat your life like a series of short-term loans, the sting of “letting go” vanishes because you were always prepared to return the items to the rightful owner. This mindset shifts you from a defensive, panicked posture to one of gratitude and readiness. You stop fighting the repo man and start thanking the Provider. This is the only way to live with an open hand in a world that is designed to take things away. You realize that the hand that takes is the same hand that gave, and that hand has a much better track record than yours does.

Actionable Fixes: How to Open Your Hands Without Losing Your Soul

If you want to stop the internal bleeding, you have to train your soul to stop flinching every time the world moves. This is not about a soft, passive surrender where you lay in the dirt and let life kick you. It is about a calculated, aggressive release of the things you cannot change so you can put all your fire into the things you can. You start by looking at your fears in the face and stripping them of their power. You do not hide from the worst-case scenario; you walk right up to it, look it in the eye, and realize that even if the world ends, your soul is anchored in something that cannot burn. You practice the art of being ready for anything by being attached to nothing but the Truth. This requires a daily, grueling discipline of the mind where you consciously identify your idols—those things you think you “need” to survive—and you hand them over before they are snatched from you.

The Practice of Premeditatio Malorum Through a Cruciform Lens

The Stoics used a trick called the premeditation of evils, where they would imagine everything going wrong to take away the shock of failure. As a Christian, you take this further. You do not just imagine the house burning down or the job disappearing; you see those things through the lens of the Cross. You realize that the worst thing that could ever happen already happened to the only innocent Man who ever lived, and God turned that execution into the greatest victory in history. When you look at your own potential disasters this way, they lose their fangs. You can imagine losing your wealth because you know your treasure is not kept in a bank. You can imagine losing your reputation because you know your name is written in a place where men cannot reach it. This is not being a pessimist; it is being a realist who knows the ending of the story. You walk through the dark valleys of your imagination and realize that even there, you are not alone, which makes you the most dangerous man in the room—a man who cannot be intimidated.

Active Submission as the Ultimate Form of Strength

Most people think submission is for the weak, but they are dead wrong. Letting go is a violent act of the will. It takes more muscle to keep your hands open when the wind is howling than it does to curl them into useless fists. Active submission means you show up, you work like a dog, you do your duty, and then you leave the results at the altar. You stop trying to manipulate people and events to fit your script. You act with total intensity in the present moment and then you step back and let the chips fall where they may. This is the ultimate form of strength because it makes you untouchable. If you do not need a specific result to be at peace, then the world has no hooks in you. You are free to speak the truth and do the right thing because you are not a slave to the consequences. This is the freedom of a soldier who knows the General is competent; you just do your job and trust the strategy even when you are standing in the smoke.

Conclusion: The Freedom Found in the Final Surrender

At the end of the day, you are going to let go of everything anyway. Death is the final “letting go” that no man can avoid. You can either spend your life practicing for that moment, or you can spend your life fighting a losing battle until your fingers are pried back by force. The Art of Letting Go is really just the art of living in reality. It is the realization that you are a small part of a massive, beautiful, and sovereign plan that you do not need to understand to be a part of. When you stop trying to own the world, you finally become free to enjoy it. You can love your wife, your kids, and your work with a fierce intensity because you are no longer trying to suck your identity out of them. You are no longer a starving man trying to eat a stone.

The peace you are looking for is not at the end of a successful plan; it is at the beginning of a total surrender. It is found in the simple, simple realization that you are not God, and that is the best news you will ever hear. You can breathe now. You can put the weight down. The universe will keep spinning without your help, and the One who keeps it moving loves you more than you love your own life. Open your hands. Look at the sky. Your knuckles have been white for far too long, and it is time to let the blood flow back into your fingers. Stand up, do your duty, and leave the rest to the King. That is the only way to live, and it is the only way to die.

Call to Action

The time for white-knuckled living is over. You’ve read the truth, and now you have a choice: you can walk away and keep trying to choke the life out of your circumstances, or you can finally drop the weight.

Take the first step toward a loose grip today.

Pick the one thing that has been keeping you awake at night—that one outcome you are trying to force through sheer willpower. Write it down on a piece of paper, look at it, and realize it was never yours to control. Offer it up, leave it on the table, and walk out of the room.

The world won’t end when you stop trying to hold it up. In fact, that’s exactly when your life truly begins.

Stand up. Open your hands. Do your duty. Leave the rest to the King.

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D. Bryan King

Sources

Disclaimer:

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.

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In this episode we discuss some of the rulers rise and fall in bible history and how this impacts us today.

The pages of scripture are filled with bible history of mighty kings and powerful kingdoms.

From the grandeur of King Solomon’s reign to the downfall of mighty empires like Babylon and Assyrias, this bible history carries valuable lessons that resonate across the ages.

The rise and fall of biblical kings and kingdoms offer insights into human nature, the consequences of power, and the importance of virtue and wisdom we will delve into now…

INTRO

**1. KINGS WHO ROSE TO POWER

Many biblical kings rose to power through divine appointments or divine intervention.

King David, a shepherd boy, was anointed by the prophet Samuel and later became one of the greatest kings of Israel.

Nebucanezzer, Saul, and king hezikah all had similar stories of rising to power with a sudden fall

Similarly, King Solomon succeeded his father David through divine selection.

King Solomon is renowned for his exceptional wisdom, which earned him a reputation as one of the wisest men in history. The Bible records the famous story of two women who brought a baby before him, each claiming to be the child’s mother. Solomon’s wise judgment to suggest cutting the baby in half to resolve the dispute, revealing the true mother’s love and compassion, became a symbol of his discernment.

One of King Solomon’s most significant accomplishments was the construction of the First Temple in Jerusalem. The temple became the central place of worship for the Israelites and a symbol of their religious devotion. Its construction was a testament to Solomon’s dedication to God and marked a pivotal moment in the history of ancient Israel.

Solomon is traditionally attributed as the author of three biblical books: Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and the Song of Solomon (Song of Songs). Proverbs is a collection of wise sayings and practical advice, Ecclesiastes explores the meaning of life and the pursuit of happiness, while the Song of Solomon is a poetic depiction of love and desire.

1 Kings 4:32

He also spoke 3,000 proverbs, and his songs were 1,005.

During King Solomon’s reign, the Kingdom of Israel experienced a period of unparalleled prosperity and trade relationships with distant lands. His strategic alliances and commercial ventures brought rare and valuable goods to his kingdom, contributing to its opulence and international reputation.

Other kings, however, ascended to the throne through ambition and human cunning.

King Ahab of Israel, for example, attained power through a marriage alliance but led his kingdom astray by embracing idolatry and disregarding divine guidance.

So we see a theme of how these kings came to their power. Some came to power through divine intervention, some hard work, and some by more evil ways.

**2. WHAT WERE THE KEYS TO THEIR LASTING RULE? *

The stories of King Solomon and King Hezekiah underscore the importance of virtue and wisdom in leadership.

Solomon, renowned for his wisdom, is best known for his fair judgment in the famous “Wisdom of Solomon” story. On the other hand, Hezekiah’s humility and devotion to God led to a remarkable period of prosperity and protection for the kingdom of Judah.

Both King Solomon and King Hezekiah were renowned for their wisdom and discernment. Solomon’s exceptional wisdom and insight helped him make wise decisions and resolve disputes fairly, gaining the admiration of his subjects. Similarly, Hezekiah’s faith in God and reliance on divine wisdom guided his decisions as a king, earning him the reputation of a just and righteous ruler.

Both kings recognized the importance of maintaining a strong spiritual foundation for their kingdoms. Solomon’s early commitment to God and dedication to building the First Temple helped solidify the religious identity of Israel. Hezekiah, on the other hand, initiated religious reforms by purging idolatry and encouraging proper worship of Yahweh, strengthening the spiritual resilience of Judah.

Both Solomon and Hezekiah undertook ambitious construction projects that showcased their commitment to strengthening their kingdoms. Solomon’s construction of the First Temple and his grand palace demonstrated the nation’s wealth and power. Hezekiah’s visionary engineering project, the Siloam Tunnel, secured Jerusalem’s water supply during a siege, highlighting his concern for the well-being of his people.

4. Trade and Diplomacy: Both kings engaged in successful trade and diplomacy to enhance their kingdoms’ prosperity and stability. Solomon’s shrewd trade policies and diplomatic relationships brought wealth and valuable resources to Israel. Hezekiah formed alliances through marriage with neighboring kingdoms, ensuring political ties and security in the region.

Both Solomon and Hezekiah displayed unwavering faith and reliance on God. Solomon sought God’s guidance and wisdom, while Hezekiah’s trust in divine intervention during the Assyrian invasion led to the miraculous defeat of the enemy, preserving Jerusalem’s safety.

Both kings faced external threats to their kingdoms. Solomon maintained a strong and well-trained army, acting as a deterrent against potential invaders. Hezekiah’s faith-driven response to the Assyrian invasion demonstrated his trust in God, resulting in the miraculous victory and the preservation of Jerusalem.

We see here that both King Solomon and King Hezekiah were remarkable rulers in ancient Israel who displayed wisdom, faith, and leadership in different ways. Their accomplishments, reforms, and commitment to their respective kingdoms left a lasting legacy and continue to inspire individuals to this day.

**3. WHAT WERE THE CONSEQUENCES FOR THESE KINGS?

The rise and fall of biblical kings also serve as cautionary tales against hubris and disobedience. King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon’s pride led to his downfall, as he was humbled by God and reduced to madness until he acknowledged God’s sovereignty.

King Saul’s disobedience and failure to follow God’s commands ultimately cost him his kingdom. His tragic demise serves as a reminder of the consequences of disobedience and the importance of obeying divine guidance. King Saul’s downfall began with his disobedience to God’s specific instructions regarding the Amalekite people. God had commanded Saul to completely destroy the Amalekites and their livestock as a punishment for their previous actions against the Israelites. However, Saul spared the Amalekite king, Agag, and kept the best of the livestock, which led to God’s displeasure.

One of the key factors in Solomon’s fall was his departure from the exclusive worship of Yahweh, the God of Israel. Influenced by his many foreign wives, he allowed the worship of their gods, leading to the introduction of idolatry within the kingdom. Additionally, Solomon formed political alliances through marriages with foreign princesses, which further influenced him and compromised his devotion to God.

**4. HOW DID GOD INTERVENE WITH ALL THESE KINGS?

The stories of biblical kings and kingdoms reveal God’s sovereignty and His involvement in human affairs. Throughout history, God intervened in the rise and fall of empires to fulfill His divine plan. The fall of Babylon to the Persians and the eventual restoration of the Jewish exiles to Jerusalem exemplify God’s judgment and His commitment to His people.

Throughout the Bible, there are numerous instances of God’s intervention with the kings of various nations. Here are some notable examples:

1. **King Saul**: God intervened in Saul’s life by choosing him as the first king of Israel. He also provided him with the Holy Spirit to empower him to rule effectively. However, after Saul’s disobedience, God withdrew His favor, leading to the rise of David as the next chosen king.

2. **King David**: God’s intervention with David was evident throughout his life. God chose David, the youngest son of Jesse, to become the great king of Israel. God also helped David defeat Goliath, the Philistine giant, through his unwavering faith. Despite David’s moral failings, God continued to support him and promised that his lineage would have an everlasting kingdom.

3. **King Solomon**: God appeared to Solomon in a dream and offered to grant him any request. Solomon humbly asked for wisdom to govern his people justly, and God granted him unparalleled wisdom, making him renowned for his discernment. This divine wisdom enabled Solomon to make wise decisions during his reign.

4. **King Hezekiah**: When King Hezekiah faced an invasion from the Assyrian king, Sennacherib, he sought God’s intervention through prayer. God answered his prayers and sent an angel to defeat the Assyrian army, sparing Jerusalem from destruction.

6. **King Nebuchadnezzar**: In the book of Daniel, God intervened with King Nebuchadnezzar, the Babylonian ruler, by humbling him after his prideful behavior. Nebuchadnezzar experienced a period of madness until he acknowledged God’s sovereignty and power.

8. **King Belshazzar**: In the book of Daniel, God intervened during King Belshazzar’s feast by writing a mysterious message on the wall, warning of the kingdom’s impending downfall, which came to pass that very night.

These examples illustrate how God’s intervention with the kings of the Bible shaped the course of history and impacted the destiny of nations. God’s guidance, blessings, and judgments played a significant role in the lives of these rulers and in the unfolding of biblical events.

**5 WHAT ARE SOME LESSONS WE CAN TAKE AWAY FROM THIS TODAY?

The rise and fall of biblical kings and kingdoms offer invaluable lessons for us today. Humility, wisdom, virtue, and obedience to divine principles are crucial attributes for leaders seeking to make a positive and lasting impact. We must remember that their actions have consequences, and their decisions can shape the fate of nations and communities.

In conclusion, the rise and fall of biblical kings and kingdoms present a rich glimpse of human history, offering profound lessons for humanity. These ancient tales remind us of the importance of virtue, wisdom, and divine guidance in leadership. They serve as reminders of the consequences of hubris and disobedience and emphasize the significance of recognizing God’s sovereignty in shaping the destiny of nations and individuals alike. As we study these historical accounts, we gain insights into the complexities of human nature and the timeless wisdom that continues to guide us through the ages.

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Bible Gateway passage: 1 Kings 4:32 - English Standard Version

He also spoke 3,000 proverbs, and his songs were 1,005.

Bible Gateway