Prayer for Fear and Courage
When fear grips you, a simple prayer can steady your heart: name what frightens you before God, ask him to be near, and ask for the courage to take the next step. You do not have to feel brave to pray, and you do not have to hide the trembling. Scripture's most repeated command, "fear not," is almost always followed by a reason, and the reason is never that the danger is imaginary. It is that God is with you. You are not alone, and fear does not get the last word. The prayers below are meant to be prayed slowly, even in a whisper, exactly as you are right now.
Short prayers to pray when you are afraid
Fear rarely leaves room for long, composed prayers, and it does not need to. Each of these is short enough to pray in a hospital corridor, at a kitchen table at 3 a.m., or silently in a meeting. Pray one line at a time, and let the pauses be part of the prayer.
A prayer in the moment: God, I am afraid, and I bring my fear to you just as it is. Be near to me now, quiet my racing heart, and hold me until this passes.
A prayer for courage: Lord, I do not feel brave, but I trust that you are with me. Give me the strength to take the next small step, and go before me into what I dread.
A prayer for a fearful night: Father, as the darkness presses in, watch over me while I rest. Let me lay down my worries at your feet and wake to your mercy in the morning.
A prayer for someone you love: God, I am afraid for the one I love. Guard them, comfort them, and help me to trust them to your care rather than to my own fear.
More prayers for courage, drawn from Scripture and the church
When your own words run out, you can borrow words the church has prayed for centuries, or pray Scripture itself back to God. None of these require you to feel anything in particular. They are handholds, not performances.
An evening collect from the Book of Common Prayer (1662), prayed at nightfall for over three hundred years: Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, O Lord; and by thy great mercy defend us from all perils and dangers of this night; for the love of thy only Son, our Saviour, Jesus Christ. Amen.
A prayer drawn from Psalm 31:14-15: But I trusted in thee, O LORD: I said, Thou art my God. My times are in thy hand. Pray it slowly, and let "my times are in thy hand" cover the appointment, the diagnosis, the decision, whatever it is you cannot control.
A prayer before something you dread, such as surgery, an exam, or a hard conversation: Lord, you know what is ahead of me and you are already there. Steady my hands and my voice, give wisdom to everyone involved, and whatever comes, do not let go of me.
A prayer for a long season of waiting: God of patience, my fear is not one moment but many mornings. Meet me each day with enough courage for that day only, and teach me to leave tomorrow in your keeping, as Jesus taught.
A Scripture verse for fear
Scripture returns again and again to a single reassurance: God is present, and his presence is stronger than fear. One of the clearest promises is spoken to a people facing an uncertain future, exiles who had every visible reason to be afraid.
"Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dismayed; for I am thy God: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee; yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness." (Isaiah 41:10, KJV)
You can pray this verse back to God, resting on each promise in turn: he is with you, he is your God, he will strengthen, help, and uphold you. Notice that the verse never says the frightening thing is not real. It says something stronger, that you will not face it by yourself. Let the words carry the weight your fear cannot.
What Scripture says about fear
The Bible does not scold the fearful. It speaks to them, tenderly and often. These verses are worth keeping close; each can be prayed as well as read.
"What time I am afraid, I will trust in thee." (Psalm 56:3, KJV) Notice the honesty: the psalmist does not say if I am afraid, but when. Trust and fear can exist in the same heart at the same moment, and this one line holds them together.
"Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me." (Psalm 23:4, KJV) The valley is not avoided; it is walked through, accompanied.
"Be strong and of a good courage, fear not, nor be afraid of them: for the LORD thy God, he it is that doth go with thee; he will not fail thee, nor forsake thee." (Deuteronomy 31:6, KJV) These words were spoken to people standing at the edge of a future they could not see.
"For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind." (2 Timothy 1:7, KJV) Paul wrote this to a timid young pastor he loved, not as a rebuke but as a reminder of what the Spirit gives.
"There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear." (1 John 4:18, KJV) Fear is not argued away in Scripture; it is crowded out, slowly, by love, and the love that does the crowding is God's before it is ever ours.
How to pray when you cannot pray
Sometimes fear is so loud, or exhaustion so deep, that forming sentences is beyond you. The Christian tradition has always known this, and it has kept simple prayers for exactly these hours.
Try a breath prayer: a phrase short enough to fit inside one breath. Breathe in slowly on the first half and out on the second. Lord, be near. Into your hands. I trust in you. The oldest of these is the Jesus Prayer, prayed continually by Eastern Christians for well over a thousand years: Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me. Repeated gently, it asks nothing of your concentration and gives your fear somewhere to go.
Lament is also prayer. Nearly a third of the Psalms are complaints prayed directly to God, and he included them in his own book. "How long wilt thou forget me, O LORD? for ever? how long wilt thou hide thy face from me?" (Psalm 13:1, KJV). If what you have tonight is anger, protest, or tears, bring those. Honesty before God is not the opposite of faith; in the Psalms, it is what faith sounds like under pressure.
And when even a phrase is too much, silence in God's direction is enough. Scripture promises that the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groanings that cannot be uttered (Romans 8:26). You can simply sit, breathe, and let yourself be prayed for.
How and when to pray when fear rises
Pray the moment fear arrives, before it grows. You do not need the right words or a quiet room. A single honest sentence, spoken silently on a commute, in a waiting room, or in bed at night, is a real prayer that God hears.
Slow your breath as you pray, and let each exhale release a little of the tension. Praying a short line repeatedly, such as a phrase from Isaiah 41:10 or simply Lord, be near, can calm both body and mind when anxiety makes longer prayers feel impossible. Your body and your soul are not separate projects; a steadied breath and a steadied heart tend to arrive together.
Return to prayer as often as the fear returns. Some fears lift quickly; others take days, or keep company with a long illness, a court date, or a season of grief. Praying through them again and again is not a failure of faith but the ordinary shape of trust being built over time. Jesus himself prayed the same words three times in Gethsemane on the most fearful night of his life.
And when fear points to real danger or lasting distress, prayer and wise action belong together. Talking to a doctor or counselor about persistent anxiety is not a detour from faith. It is one of the ways God cares for people, and you can pray for courage to make that call too.
Praying with others, and over someone who is afraid
Fear isolates; prayer does not have to. If you can, tell one trusted person what you are afraid of and ask them, plainly, to pray for you. Being prayed for by name, out loud, often loosens what hours of private worrying could not. Jesus promised his presence in a special way where even two or three gather in his name (Matthew 18:20).
If someone you love is afraid, you do not need special words to pray over them. Sit beside them, and if it is welcome, rest a hand on their shoulder. Then pray briefly and simply: Father, be near to them right now. Quiet their heart, guard their sleep, and let them feel that they are held. Short is better than long; you are not preaching, you are keeping them company before God.
For a frightened child, simpler still: God, thank you that you are with us in the dark. Help us to feel safe, because you never sleep and you never leave. Praying the same short prayer each night gives a child words they can reach for when you are not in the room.
How different Christian traditions pray in the face of fear
Every branch of the church has faced fear, and each has kept a distinct habit worth borrowing.
Eastern Orthodox Christians reach for the Jesus Prayer, often with a prayer rope, letting the repetition settle the mind into the heart. Catholics have long prayed Compline, the church's night prayer, built around Psalm 91, and many find the rosary's steady rhythm carries them when concentration fails. Anglicans and Lutherans lean on the collects and daily offices of the prayer book, including the evening collect quoted above, so that on a fearful day the words are already provided.
Reformed Christians have historically prayed and sung the Psalms themselves, trusting that God's sovereignty means nothing frightening is outside his hand. Evangelical and Baptist believers often pray Scripture aloud and spontaneously, alone or with a friend, speaking promises like Isaiah 41:10 directly over the situation.
None of these approaches competes with the others. They are the same instinct in different accents: when fear rises, put ancient, sturdy words in your mouth and keep saying them until your heart begins to believe what your lips are praying.
Carry these prayers with you
Fear rarely warns you before it arrives, so it helps to have a few prayers ready before you need them. Keep one of the short prayers above where you will see it, write a verse on a card for your wallet or your mirror, or memorize a single line, such as Psalm 56:3, to reach for in the dark.
If you would like company in the habit, the Bosko app offers daily readings, a searchable Bible in many translations, and a guided prayer library rooted in the historic Christian traditions, so a steadying prayer is always within reach when fear finds you. However you carry them, carry them lightly: these words are not a charm against trouble but a way of walking through it with the God who says, again and again, fear not, for I am with you.
Frequently asked questions
- What is a good short prayer for fear?
- Try this: God, I am afraid, and I bring my fear to you. Be near to me and quiet my heart. It is honest, immediate, and easy to remember when anxiety makes longer prayers hard. Pray it the moment fear rises, before it grows, and as often as it returns; repetition is not failure but faithfulness. You do not need a quiet place or perfect words. A brief, honest prayer whispered wherever you are is a real prayer, and God hears it.
- Which Bible verse helps most with fear?
- Isaiah 41:10 is loved for good reason: "Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dismayed; for I am thy God." Other verses many people reach for include Psalm 56:3 ("What time I am afraid, I will trust in thee"), Psalm 23:4, Deuteronomy 31:6, 2 Timothy 1:7, and Philippians 4:6-7. Rather than just reading them, pray the words back to God slowly, resting on one promise at a time.
- What psalm should I pray when I am afraid?
- Psalm 91 is the church's oldest psalm for fear, prayed at night for many centuries: "He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty" (Psalm 91:1, KJV). Psalm 23 steadies those walking through dark valleys, Psalm 56 gives words for trusting while still afraid, and Psalm 27 begins, "The LORD is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?" If your fear needs to protest before it can trust, Psalm 13 is a faithful lament.
- How do I pray when I am too anxious to focus?
- Keep it very short and let your body help. Repeat one line, such as Lord, be near, or the ancient Jesus Prayer, Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, in time with slow breaths, one phrase as you breathe in and one as you breathe out. A single repeated phrase calms the body and needs no concentration. If even that is too much, sit quietly and let a groan or a tear be your prayer; Scripture says the Spirit intercedes for us when we do not know what to say (Romans 8:26).
- Can I pray for courage for someone else?
- Yes. Name the person before God, ask him to guard and comfort them, and entrust them to his care rather than to your worry. If you are with them, you can pray over them aloud, simply and briefly, perhaps with a hand on their shoulder if that is welcome; hearing themselves prayed for is often a deep comfort to a frightened person. Praying for others is also, quietly, a way of loosening your own fear.
- Does prayer replace getting help for anxiety?
- No, and it was never meant to. Prayer and practical care belong together, the way prayer and food, or prayer and medicine, have always belonged together. For persistent fear, panic, or anxiety that disrupts your life, pray and also reach out to a doctor or counselor. Seeking help is not a lack of faith; it is a wise and faithful response, and many people find that good care and honest prayer strengthen each other.
