When I choose to dwell on a worry, it will always get bigger in my mind. So if I want to change the way I think and renew my mind, then I’ve got to stop dwelling on my worries and meditate on God’s Word instead.
How to meditate? Well, if I know how to worry, then I already know how to meditate. Worry is when I take a negative thought and think about it over and over and over. On the other hand, when I take a passage of Scripture and think about it over and over and over, that’s meditation.
If I only contact with the Bible is when I hear it at church, I’ll have a weak grip on God’s Word, and it can easily be pulled out of my mind.
But if I hear God’s Word and also read it every day, then I’ll start to get a better grip. Then, if I hear it and read it and study it, I’ll get an even better grip. And then, if I hear it and read it and study it and start memorizing and meditating on it, I’ll have a solid grip on the Word of God.
I’ll struggle to hold tightly to God’s Word if I'm not doing all the important steps of Bible study.
Psalm 119:16 says, “Your laws make me happy. I will never forget your word” (GW). If I want to be happy, then following God’s principles will produce happiness. I remember those principles by hearing them, reading them, studying them, memorizing them, meditating on them, and then applying them to my life.
The Bible says in Psalm 119:35, “Make me walk along the path of your commands, for that is where my happiness is found” (NLT).
If I’ve been looking for happiness in all the wrong places, then turn around. God says happiness is found in the path of his commands.
In Summary:
This text reframes the concept of meditation by comparing it directly to worry, illustrating that both are simply the act of thinking about something over and over—one pulling me down, the other grounding me. True cognitive renewal and lasting happiness come from intentionally shifting my focus away from anxious loops and onto the principles found in Scripture. Building a resilient mind requires more than casual exposure; it demands a progressive, hands-on commitment to hearing, reading, studying, memorizing, and meditating on God's Word. Ultimately, happiness is presented not as a random feeling to chase, but as the natural byproduct of disciplined alignment with God's design.
Bottom Line:
Happiness is found by redirecting the mental energy used for worry into a disciplined, multi-layered engagement with God's Word.
Next Step:
Identify the specific worry that has been dominating my thoughts this week and select one specific verse or principle from Psalm 119 that directly counters it. Write that verse down on a card or my phone, and every single time that specific worry loops into your mind, interrupt it by reading and processing that verse instead—shifting my habit loop from passive worrying to active meditation.
