The battle over fear, to fear rightly, it's in the mind. In our trials, in our struggles and day to day, we are cognizant of the temporal, of how we feel, and so often we respond out of those feelings. How cognizant are we of the unshakable things? The things more real than what we see but just beyond our vision?
Had a good sermon today at Lifepoint on Wisdom, the beginning of which is the fear of the Lord. Prov 1:7. He defined the fear of the Lord in three ways.
1. Awe - and this awe may cause us to tremble and fall on our face but fills us with hope, stirs up something deep within us that will give everything for this One, stirs up all that is good and right and elevates us to a new and better place. 
In contrast with this, fear of earthly things can stir up terror. This feeling leaves us cowering, often paralyzed, anxious, distraught, crushing. Not the lightness and joy that Awe brings but a weight, a heaviness that can threaten to disable us and weaken us.
Eyes wide open rather than eyes closed/sheltered.
2. Holy. The Fear of the Lord causes us to cry "holy". To declare the goodness and altogether otherness of Him who sits on the throne highly exalted yet intensely loving and kind. It brings us to something far and above all circumstance. It calls to the deep within us and gives us longing and impetus to change, to see and bring about good, to partner with Him and desire to be more like Him.
Fear of earthly things is unholy - stirred up by the designs of dark and evil things, connotes things broken, taken advantage of, intents of wicked people or forces upon others.
