To reclaim that soul, we must understand that our worth is not something we negotiate with the people around us. It is a gift already granted. We find the blueprint for this kind of courage in Paul. We read this morning from Acts, chapter 17.
While Paul was waiting for [Silas and Timothy] in Athens, he was deeply distressed to see that the city was full of idols. So he argued in the synagogue with the Jews and the devout persons and also in the marketplace every day with those who happened to be there. Also some Epicurean and Stoic philosophers debated with him. Some said, “What does this pretentious babbler want to say?” Others said, “He seems to be a proclaimer of foreign divinities.” (This was because he was telling the good news about Jesus and the resurrection.) So they took him and brought him to the Areopagus and asked him, “May we know what this new teaching is that you are presenting? It sounds rather strange to us, so we would like to know what it means.” Now all the Athenians and the foreigners living there would spend their time in nothing but telling or hearing something new.Then Paul stood in front of the Areopagus and said, “Athenians, I see how extremely spiritual you are in every way. For as I went through the city and looked carefully at the objects of your worship, I found among them an altar with the inscription, ‘To an unknown god.’ What therefore you worship as unknown, this I proclaim to you. The God who made the world and everything in it, he who is Lord of heaven and earth, does not live in shrines made by human hands, nor is he served by human hands, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives to all mortals life and breath and all things. From one ancestor he made all peoples to inhabit the whole earth, and he allotted the times of their existence and the boundaries of the places where they would live, so that they would search for God and perhaps fumble about for him and find him—though indeed he is not far from each one of us. For ‘In him we live and move and have our being’; as even some of your own poets have said,‘For we, too, are his offspring.’“Since we are God’s offspring, we ought not to think that the deity is like gold or silver or stone, an image formed by the art and imagination of mortals. While God has overlooked the times of human ignorance, now he commands all people everywhere to repent, because he has fixed a day on which he will have the world judged in righteousness by a man whom he has appointed, and of this he has given assurance to all by raising him from the dead.”
As Paul walked through the streets of Athens, he was "greatly distressed." He saw a brilliant city pouring its energy into silent statues and empty rituals. We feel this same distress today when we realize how much of our lives are spent chasing things that cannot love us back—whether that is a perfect reputation or the elusive approval of a difficult person.
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Yet, Paul does not attack. Instead, he meets the Athenians where they are. He finds the one thing they admit they do not know—their altar to the "Unknown God"—and uses it as a bridge to explain who they truly are. He shows us that strength does not come from being the loudest person in the room, but from being the most deeply rooted in the image of our Creator.
This rootedness is exactly what the Athenians lacked because they were driven by a profound, systemic anxiety. Idols are the physical evidence of anxiety. When we lose our internal center, we try to build security on the outside. The Athenians were so anxious about their standing with the divine that they built a backup altar "just in case."
In a community like ours, that same anxiety manifests in "modern idols." We construct, for example, an Idol of Tradition, where a specific worship style or the color of the carpet becomes more sacred than the mission, because change makes us feel unsafe. We worship at the Idol of the "Nice" Culture, where we value a fake, superficial harmony over the honest truth, fearing that if we speak up, we will be cast out. We might even serve the Idol of Numerical Success, treating people like statistics to prove we are relevant.
These are social alarms that tell us it is "unsafe" to be our true selves. When we are gripped by this anxiety, we trade our God-given identity for a "false-self" that just reacts to the room.
Paul’s message cuts through this exhausted effort: God is not a deity to be managed, pacified, or bought with our performance. God is the one who provides the very life and breath we are currently using to worry. Our security doesn't come from fixing the room; it comes from realizing we are already held by the One in whom we live and move.
The Biological Conflict: Instinct vs. Image
This struggle to stay true to ourselves is actually wired into our biology. I invite you to hold up your hand, palm facing you. Tuck your thumb into the center and fold your fingers over the top. This is a model of your brain.
The base of your palm represents the brainstem—the primitive core that manages survival instincts. The thumb tucked inside is the amygdala, the brain’s alarm system. Its only job is to scan for threats—including social threats like being criticized or excluded. Your fingers represent the prefrontal cortex—your "Thinking Brain." This is the biological home of the Image of God. One theologian calls this “holy tissue.” This is what Psalm 8 describes when it says God has "crowned us with glory and honor." This part of the brain allows us to choose a response based on our true identity and beliefs, rather than our panic.
But, when anxiety spikes, the amygdala - our body’s alarm system - takes over. Our brain mistakenly treats social tension as a life-or-death emergency. In these moments, we sacrifice our integrity by reacting without thinking; our survival brain impulsively surrenders our convictions just to lower the emotional temperature of the room. In that moment of stress, our Thinking Brain—the part of us that reflects our Creator—shuts down. We stop acting like humans made in God’s image and start acting like creatures just trying to survive.
Self-differentiation is the spiritual practice of moving from being a thermometer to being a thermostat. A thermometer has no internal identity; it only reflects the temperature of the room. If a room is anxious, the thermometer gets hot. But a thermostat is rooted in an internal setting. It knows the temperature, but it stays true to its own beliefs, eventually bringing peace to the environment around it.
In the Acts text, Paul says God marked out the "boundaries" of our lives. We must recognize these same property lines for our own souls. This is self-differentiation. It means knowing where you end and another person begins. It means not being caught up in another’s anxiety or trying to manage it because, in doing so, we neglect our own sacred ground. Psalm 8 asks, “What are mere mortals that you should be mindful of them?” The answer is that God has given us stewardship over our own lives. We are responsible to others, but we are not responsible for their reactions.
The Practice of the Breath
To help us maintain our identity in a heated moment, we need a mechanical delay—an intentional pause between the impulse to react and the act of responding. When we feel those physical signs of anxiety—a racing heart or a sick stomach—we need to create the space for our thinking brains - that holy tissue - to re-engage.
One way to do this is to practice using the gift of “life and breath” we read of in Acts. It’s why we are beginning each service over these six weeks with a breath prayer. By breathing a prayer for six seconds, we can tell our nervous system that we aren’t actually in physical danger. It provides that break that allows our holy tissue to kick back in and to anchor us in our identity as God’s beloved, created in God’s image. Let’s do it again. Inhale for three seconds saying these words to yourself: “I am enough.” Then exhale for three seconds, saying to yourself, “In God.” This delay allows our thinking brain to resume control so that we are no longer merely reacting emotionally, but are responding from the very image of God that is woven into our DNA.
Jesus was the most differentiated person to ever live because he was the most perfectly rooted in his Father. Like Paul standing in the Areopagus, Jesus could move through a crowd of desperate, demanding, or angry people and feel deep compassion for them without ever being consumed by their anxiety. He did not "fuse" with their panic or their expectations. He knew exactly whose he was, and that celestial anchor allowed him to remain exactly who he was.
We must remember that we are not defined by how "nice" we are or how well we pacify a stressed-out world. You are defined by the Divine Breath that sustains you at this very second. The Psalmist reminds us of our true stature: we have been made just "a little lower than God," crowned with a glory and honor that the world did not give and cannot take away. There is a spark of the divine within your very biology—that "Holy Tissue" of the thinking brain designed to reflect the wisdom and peace of your Creator.
May we have the grace to honor that divinity within us. When the pressure rises and the room grows tense, let us pray for the discipline to take those six-second pauses. In that brief silence, we aren't just catching our breath; we are reclaiming our soul. We are stepping back from the survival instincts of the animal and stepping into the "glory and honor" of being the very offspring of God.
Let our prayer be for the strength to pause, to breathe, and to remember: you are not a reaction to the people around you. You are a sanctuary of the Living God. When you stop to remember whose you are, may you find the courage to be the person you were created to be.
God grant it. Amen.
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