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What would Jesus say to the person who cannot sleep at 3 a.m.?In the third book of the WWJS series, Metheon turns to one of the defining struggles of our time, anxiety. Not with a command, not with a platitude, but with the full weight of what Jesus actually said - and did, and felt - in the face of fear.From the Sermon on the Mount to the garden of Gethsemane, from the storm on the lake to the upper room on the night of the betrayal, this book walks through the Gospel accounts with honesty and theological depth. It examines why "do not be anxious" is the most misread command in the Gospels, what the birds and lilies are actually teaching, and what it means that Jesus himself was "perilypos"- overwhelmed with grief - in Gethsemane, sweating blood, asking the Father to let the cup pass.This is not a book that tells anxious people their faith is insufficient. It is a book that tells them the truth: that Jesus knows this specific darkness from the inside, that the peace he offers guards rather than performs, and that the practice of casting anxiety on God is exactly that - a practice, not a single decision.Drawing on African philosophy, the Ubuntu tradition, the prophetic call for justice, and the most current understanding of anxiety as both a spiritual and embodied condition, *WWJS: What Would Jesus Say About Anxiety Today* offers the one thing most books on anxiety in faith contexts do not: an honest reckoning with what he actually promised, and what it costs to receive it.For readers navigating anxiety, for pastors seeking a better theological framework, and for anyone who has ever prayed for the cup to pass.