Fear – Psalm 27:1

Psalm 27:1 NIV
“The Lord is my light and my salvation—whom shall I fear?
The Lord is the stronghold of my life—of whom shall I be afraid?”


David opens this psalm by asking a question that almost answers itself. If the Lord truly is his light, his salvation, and his stronghold, then fear no longer has a rightful place at the center of his life. This is not a denial that enemies exist or that danger is real. Other psalms make clear that David was well aware of threats, betrayal, and suffering. The difference here is perspective. Fear is no longer the controlling force; trust is.

The fear of the Lord that Scripture commends is not dread or panic. It is reverent trust—an acknowledgment that God alone has ultimate authority, power, and wisdom. That kind of fear actually displaces other fears. When God is seen rightly, enemies shrink to their proper size. Problems remain serious, but they are no longer ultimate.

David does not move immediately to strategy or solutions. His deeper desire is closeness with God—dwelling in His presence, worshiping Him, and finding joy there. That priority reframes everything else. Security is not found in frantic action or clever plans, but in communion with God.

For me, the temptation is often not fear itself, but self-reliance. When problems arise, it is easy to rush toward control, activity, and fixing. Yet this psalm calls for stillness before action. Trust precedes effort. Confidence flows from knowing who God is, not from how capable we believe ourselves to be.

Sometimes the most faithful response is not to grasp for answers, but to stop, re-center, and remember: the Lord is the strength of my life. Fear does not get the final word.