By Rabbi Yisrael Zilberberg shlit"a of the International Organization dedicated to spreading the Torah of the Zerah Shimshon z"l
אִם יִהְיֶה נִדַּחֲךָ בִקְצֵה הַּשָּׁמָּׁיִם מִשָּׁם יְקַּבֶצְךָ ה' אֱלֹקֶיךָ וּמִשָּׁם יִקָּׁחֶךָ ("And if you will be cast off to the corner of the heavens, from there Hashem your G-d will gather you, and He will take you from there." 30:4).
Why does the verse seemingly repeat itself, first saying that Hashem will "collect" us, and then again that he will "take" us?
Says the Zerah Shimshon: We know that baseless hatred is the reason for two-thousand years in Exile, and if so the only way to be redeemed is through there being peace amongst ourselves. That being the case, let us explain the verse as follows: First Hashem will "collect" us, meaning that he will place peace amongst us, and then He will "take" us out, once and for all. May it be speedily in our days!
Story:
During the Communist takeover of Russia over one-hundred years ago, someone fired a shot, and the bullet landed right by the place where a certain Novardekor was sleeping, and he was saved by a thread. The next night, he went to sleep in the exact same spot! A person that lives with Hashem recognizes that only Hashem is running the world, and all that is "regularly" done can and should be done without any fear whatsoever.