The Word calls us, with simplicity and pastoral authority, to cast all our anxiety upon Christ: "because He cares for you" (1 Peter 5:7). This is an active invitation — not a suggestion to deny fear, but a divine command to entrust the burden to the One who cares for us. Understanding that the call is total — "all your anxiety" — frees us from the temptation to segregate worries and trust only in some areas; He wants the whole, in every detail.
Practically, this means learning to name your anxieties, bringing them to the throne in prayer, and releasing the reins. Make this a daily exercise: write down what distresses you, read the Scripture that reaffirms God's care, speak with a brother or sister in Christ and, before God, pronounce the surrender. It is not magic, it is a discipline of trust: each act of surrender is a renunciation of the illusion of control and an affirmation of Christ's sufficiency.
Theologically, casting our anxieties on Him rests on the certainty that God is a caring Father and that this care is fulfilled in Christ, for the Lord knows the weight of suffering and is compassionate. The verb "has cared" speaks of continuous action — He cares now, in our daily life. This does not eliminate the struggles, but reorients our posture: we cease to carry them alone and walk under God's provident care, who sustains, guides, and gives peace amid tribulations.
Sister, do not be anxious; practice daily the surrender of your fears to the Lord and allow Him to work in you. When anxiety returns, repeat the gesture of trust: bring it, surrender it, trust. Go forward with courage and rest in the certainty that He cares for you; cast your anxieties upon Christ and live in the peace that only He gives.