I grew up in North Omaha delivering papers for the Omaha World Herald. By the time I was twelve, I had learned how to balance two heavy Sunday bags around my neck while riding my bike. It was not graceful, but it worked. After finishing my route, I would head to Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church, where I served as an altar boy. Sundays ended with a big family dinner and then a walk to the Beacon Theatre. That is where I met “The Creature from the Black Lagoon,” and I would argue that he made a lasting impression. On the walk home, we debated which monster would be worse, but the Creature always won in my mind. At night, I would pull the covers over my head and pray, reminding myself that nothing and no one was more powerful than God. It was a simple kind of theology, but it was enough to get me through the night.
That childhood fear has a way of growing up with us, just changing its costume. The monsters look different now. They have names like cancer, heart attack, and loss. They show up in professional struggles, family tensions, and quiet worries that keep us awake longer than we would like to admit. I say this carefully, because I still find myself imagining worst-case scenarios with remarkable creativity. Israel faced something similar when Babylon overtook them. Their fears were not imaginary. Their “Creature from the Black Lagoon” was real and powerful. Yet in Psalm 74, they reminded themselves of something greater. They prayed, “It was you who split open the sea… you broke the heads of the monster in the waters… you crushed the heads of Leviathan.” They looked back to what God had done to steady themselves in what they were facing. Sometimes faith begins by remembering.
The New Testament brings that same truth into sharper focus through Jesus Christ. Paul writes, “If God is for us, who can be against us?” (Romans 8:31). That is not a denial of danger but a declaration of God’s greater power. Jesus Himself calmed storms and confronted forces that terrified others, showing that nothing stood outside His authority. He told His disciples, “In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world” (John 16:33). The presence of fear does not disappear, but it is reframed. Through Christ, the monsters lose their final word. What once seemed overwhelming is placed under the authority of a Savior who has already overcome.
