Notes of Faith December 8, 2022

Notes of Faith December 8, 2022

All Eyes on Jesus

Look at the Star

They went on their way, and the star they had seen in the east went ahead of them until it stopped over the place where the Child was. When they saw the star, they were overjoyed. — Matthew 2:9-10

Our senses are bombarded 24/7 by sounds and sights, especially during the Christmas season. Marketing companies compete, all trying to get our attention. They spend millions for what they’re selling and promoting, not to mention holiday parties, church programs, and school plays.

I wonder what I would have used to get the world to look at a tiny baby in a manger. How would I have drawn attention to an obscure stable behind some inn in an obscure Judean town?

When God wanted to get the attention of the nations of the world, He used a star. When the Magi came from the east to Jerusalem, they asked,

Where is the one who has been born King of the Jews? We saw His star in the east and have come to worship Him. — Matthew 2:2

This Christmas, be His star! Ask God to use you to draw the attention of others to the Baby in the manger.

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There is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus.

– 1 Timothy 2:5

The Only Way

This is how God showed His love among us: He sent His one and only Son into the world that we might live through Him. — 1 John 4:9

Do you think there is more than one way to God? Have you bought into popular opinion that seems to think you can pick and choose your religion — even make one up to suit yourself ? If this is the way you’re thinking, heed the words in

1 Timothy 2:5:

There is one God and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus.

The politically correct say Jesus was a good man, a well-meaning prophet, even a revolutionary! But the Bible says He is the only Mediator between God and man:

There is no other name under Heaven given to men by which we must be saved. — Acts 4:12

Jesus Himself said,

I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me. — John 14:6

Don’t allow political correctness to rob you of a relationship with the one true God. This Christmas season give God a gift He wants. Tell someone how to come to Him… through Jesus.

Excerpted from Fixing My Eyes on Jesus by Anne Graham Lotz, copyright Anne Graham Lotz.

Our minds should always be fixed on Jesus, the author and perfector of our faith! Seek Him not only at Christmas time, but every day of the year.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 7, 2022

Notes of Faith December 7, 2022

The Jesus I Need

Are you thinking what I’m thinking?

That given the events of the past years, Advent feels just a tiny bit misplaced?

Global pandemic.

Economic instability.

Racial tension.

Unending violence.

The call to quiet myself and once more prepare for the coming of Jesus feels like something better suited for a time of greater peace. What I need right now is to not wait on the Lord but experience the Lord. Like, yesterday.

You know what I mean?

And it’s not exactly the Jesus in a manger whom I really need, if I’m being honest. It’s the Jesus who walks on water and flips over tables and brings the dead back to life who I want rushing onto the scene. And yet, Advent calls me to wait and prepare and keep watch for a Savior who will enter the world in as fragile a state as possible: an infant entrusted to a poor and powerless couple.

Remind me again how this is Good News?

As is most always the case, to understand the story of Jesus we must first understand the story of the Bible. Ages before the birth of Jesus, the Prophet Isaiah told us exactly who this powerless infant would one day become.

For unto us a child is born, unto us a Son is given: and the government shall be upon His shoulder: and His name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, the Mighty God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace. — Isaiah 9:6

This is who Jesus will become, Isaiah says. But this is not who Jesus is at the beginning. He begins… as we all do… at the beginning. And even though that’s often not the Jesus we want, I think it might be the Jesus I need.

God is not afraid.

Because I don’t know about you, but it helps me tremendously to know that Jesus will not only come to have the world rest upon His shoulders but that He is brave enough to allow the world to bear down upon Him. Put another way:

yes, the world is terrifying, but the Good News is that God is not afraid.

How do I know that? Because Jesus could have arrived fully formed as the Mighty God and Prince of Peace. He is God and God can do whatever God wants to do. But God chose to come to us as a vulnerable child, which is just another way of saying He did what none of us would ever do. He let down every defense, ceded all strength, and offered Himself to the entire world.

Why? There are many good answers that could be given, but at least one of them must be that God wanted us to know that even though the world can be terrifying, God is not terrified, and thus we can choose to not be either.

Seen in this light, I am drawn more peacefully into the waiting season of Advent, eager to lean in close and gaze upon this Child who will save the world and trust that even though the story has yet to play itself out, the mere presence of the Baby lets me know that all, in the end, shall be well.

We talk a lot about love in our culture, and it appears to mean many things to many people. There is perhaps no greater example of love, in my opinion, than acts of bravery on behalf of another. The birth of Jesus Christ was a deliberate act of bravery meant to not only save but also inspire.

After all, the shepherds who came to see Jesus were poor people, just like Mary and Joseph. Men who had no hope that anyone in power would ever care about their existence. But as they stood there, gazing at the Child, they understood that God was not far away but near to them. They understood that God was with them, and if God was with them, then there was no place God would or could not be.

My prayer for this Advent is that you and I may also know this truth. That we may be brave enough to face this world with hopeful patience, trusting that the Child in the manger is exactly who Isaiah told us He would be.

Written for Devotionals Daily by Ryan Casey Waller, author of Depression, Anxiety, and Other Things We Don’t Want to Talk About.

O Come Let Us Adore Him, Christ the Lord!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 6, 2022

Notes of Faith December 6, 2022

God’s Recipe for Revival

If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land. — 2 Chronicles 7:14

During a recent Christmas season, while I was passing through our kitchen where my wife was busy preparing the big family meal, my eyes fell on an old notecard that had yellowed with the years. Looking closely, I saw my mother’s handwriting on it. It was her old recipe for one of my favorite dishes. When done precisely as the directions said, it tasted exactly like my mother used to make it!

Within the heart of each of us is a longing for something more, a season of new spiritual refreshing, a personal revival, if you please. God has His own recipe for revival in our hearts. He has written it down for all of us: “If My people will... then I will hear from Heaven.” And when this recipe is followed precisely and put into practice, it will result in a new spirit reanimating us and enabling us to soar into spiritual regions some of us may have never known.

Much talk of revival is from man’s side, man’s viewpoint. Thus, it becomes man-centered. For a moment, let’s seek to transport ourselves and view personal revival from the throne of God. That is, from God’s viewpoint.

GOD’S DESIRE “If My people... then...”

God is waiting, willing, and longing to send a new spirit of revival to His people. However, He does not overrule our own will. Consequently, in a very real sense, while revival is always the sovereign work of Almighty God, it is also conditional. The Bible says, “If My people...” If certain conditions are met, certain results will follow.

God longs to send revival to us:

He is not willing that any perish. — 2 Peter 3:9

There is a very real sense in which personal revival is not a miracle. It is simply God’s promised response to conditions met by His people.

God is waiting, willing, and longing to send a new spirit of revival to His people.

GOD’S DESIGN “If MY people...”

Revival is conditional upon God’s own people. Hear His invitation: “If My people...” The real story behind any revival in history begins when God’s own people become convicted of neglect and begin to beseech the throne for a fresh wind of His Spirit. Reading the history of many great awakenings reveals that they usually begin with one man or one woman who becomes desperate for what the psalmist called “fresh oil” (Psalm 92:10).

God’s problem today is not with the lost but with His own people. Many are pointing to the decay of our culture as being the result of the decline of our moral fabric and the influence of secular, and often downright godless factors all around us. However, God reveals that the real issue is not with “them” but with “us.” Or, as Jesus once said, we should not try to get a small splinter out of someone else’s eye until we first remove the large beam from our own eye (Matthew 7:3–5).

God’s design for revival begins with His own people.

GOD’S DEMAND “humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways”

God’s demand begins with a call for His own people to “humble themselves,” to recognize and confess their need to seek Him in all things. The Christian must be on constant vigil to avoid the temptation of spiritual pride and self-centeredness. True humility involves a broken spirit before the Lord.

Second, God calls His people to pray. The word does not entail the mere recitation of prayers but an earnest calling out to Him. Too many Christians’ prayer testimonies can be summed up with four words from Ephesians 6:12 — “we do not wrestle.” Every true revival in history has been born and cradled in the place of prayer. We read of the early church that “when they had prayed, the place where they were assembled together was shaken; and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit, and they spoke the word of God with boldness” (Acts 4:31).

Next, God demands that we “seek [His] face.” He said to Jeremiah,

You will seek Me and find Me, when you search for Me with all your heart. — Jeremiah 29:13

If believers today spent as much time seeking His face as we do seeking His hand, we would be on the way to revival. Much of our own praying seems to be consumed with seeking something from His hand in the way of material or physical needs. Perhaps too little of our praying is consumed with simply seeking His face for personal revival.

God’s demand also includes turning from our “wicked ways.” Sin that is unconfessed and therefore unforgiven is the greatest obstacle to revival. As Solomon reminded us, “He who covers his sins will not prosper, but whoever confesses and forsakes them will have mercy” (Proverbs 28:13). Note that it is not enough to simply be sorry for and to confess our sins; we must also forsake them.

GOD’S DELIGHT “I will hear from Heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.”

God’s delight is to forgive and cleanse us of our sin. Why? So that we might appropriate all that the cross of Christ involves, so that, as far as we might personally be concerned, His death would not be in vain.

God delights more in healing our hearts and our homes than we do ourselves.

He is willing, waiting, and longing to be faithful because of conditions we are called to meet.

If my daughter and I had a misunderstanding or something had broken our fellowship, I would long for restoration. If she came to me in humility, asked for forgiveness, and looked lovingly into my face, how do you think I would react? Of course I would forgive her and welcome her with open arms and an open heart. No wonder the Bible reveals that our heavenly Father will do so much more for us! This great God, who sees a small field sparrow when it falls to earth, cares much more for you (Matthew 6:25–27, Matthew 10:29).

As you memorize this verse, meditate on the fact that personal revival, while it is God’s work, is also conditional: “If My people... then I will hear from Heaven.” God has a recipe for personal revival. Our part is not that difficult. It simply calls us to follow the directions.

Excerpted from The Joshua Code by O. S. Hawkins, copyright O. S. Hawkins.

My prayer is that you will take this to heart. There is not one of us who is perfect, who always does the will of God and should repent individually and seek the repentance of our people, the nation, the world.

Our entire Scriptures are written to the Jew first and then to the Gentile. But if we want to differentiate what was to the Jew and what was to the Gentile, we miss the glory of God calling the world that Christ came to save.

How can I trust the principals and character of God to promise me salvation if I would but believe, when I cannot believe without His gift of faith.

God does not change. His principals can be applied because He does not change. Though these verses in context were spoken to the Jew, the application is that if God’s people will do specific things, then the character of God brings His response to those things even in a different, yet similar circumstance.

All Jews have never listened to the Word of God. All Gentiles will never respond to the Word of God. But all people that belong to God are His, and can apply the truths of His character to change their own heart, to trust Him to change the world around them and truly bring revival. May God be praised and glorified in bringing those He has chosen to Himself. May we be obedient, humble ourselves and pray, seek His face, and turn from our wicked ways . . . He will hear and heal our world!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 5, 2022

Notes of Faith December 5, 2022

Jerry Waken, one of our elders at Community Grace Brethren, is in the arms of his Savior after leaving this earth this past Saturday.

Let Us Go to Bethlehem

Let us now go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has come to pass, which the Lord has made known to us. — Luke 2:15

It was a dark night… yet there was light! The Light of the world had come. Bethlehem almost missed it. No room. So the young, pregnant Jewish girl found herself without the decency of even a clean sheet or a simple cot. In her hour of labor, her bed was straw in a stable. And, when the babe was born, she herself, with trembling fingers, wrapped Him in cloths and laid Him in the feeding trough.

Down the hillside a group of shepherds had a surprise visit from Heaven. They rushed to the stable, found the babe, and returned “glorifying and praising God” (Luke 2:20).

Let’s become Bethlehem ourselves. We find in this little village a place of potential, providence, and privilege. The Lord longs for you to become a Bethlehem in your own right. That is, to awaken to the fact that you are a person of potential, providence, and privilege.

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Bethlehem Is a Place of Potential

But you, Bethlehem… though you are little among the thousands of Judah, yet out of you shall come forth… the One… whose goings forth are from of old, from everlasting. — Micah 5:2

Think of it. Of all the places for the Messiah to be born, God chose Bethlehem. One would have thought it might be in a much more prominent place, like Jerusalem. Bethlehem reminds us that in God’s economy the small shall become great, and the last shall be first. Bethlehem was a place of potential, and even though you may feel insignificant, like Bethlehem, so are you!

As the Lord looks at you, He doesn’t see you for what you are, but for what you could become. This is the message of Bethlehem.

God did not come to Caesar’s palace to be born, nor to Herod’s court. He arrived quietly, almost unannounced in a seemingly insignificant village.

God is reminding you today that in His eyes you have potential for greatness. See yourself as a Bethlehem. You, too, are a person of potential.

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The hopes and fears of all the years are met in Thee tonight.

Phillips Brooks

Bethlehem Is a Place of Providence

But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah,

Though you are little among the thousands of Judah, Yet out of you shall come forth to Me

The One to be Ruler in Israel,

Whose goings forth are from of old,

From everlasting. — Micah 5:2

Long centuries before His birth, the prophets foretold that Christ would be born in Bethlehem. But how? Joseph and Mary resided seventy miles north, in Nazareth. God put the whole world in motion to fulfill His Word. A decree went out from Caesar Augustus that everyone was to go to the place of their family lineage to pay taxes. So Joseph, because he was in the line of David, left Nazareth with his very pregnant wife on a long journey of inconvenience.

Many of the things in our lives that on the surface appear inconvenient, may just be the hand of God’s providence getting us to our own Bethlehem.

Bethlehem reminds us that what God promises, He performs — no matter what. Bethlehem is a place of providence, and so are you.

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Bethlehem Is a Place of Privilege

My little children, for whom I labor in birth again until Christ is formed in you.

— Galatians 4:19

What an awesome privilege to be the handpicked city to cradle the Son of God. Why Bethlehem? Why not Jerusalem, the seat of religious power? Or Rome, the center of political power? Or Athens, the center of intellectual power? God was sending a message.

The hope of our world is not in religion, politics, or philosophy. God privileged the little village of Bethlehem to send the message — the hope of the world is in a Savior!

This Christmas could become a Bethlehem moment for you. Like Bethlehem, you can awaken to a brand-new world. The same Christ born in Bethlehem can be born again in you. Paul puts it this way: “I labor in birth again until Christ is formed in you.” If you think Bethlehem is privileged to be His birthplace, what a greater privilege for Christ to be born in you.

Thinking of Bethlehem, Phillips Brooks wrote, “The hopes and fears of all the years are met in thee tonight.”

Excerpted from The Christmas Code by O. S. Hawkins, copyright O. S. Hawkins.

What would you have done had you been there? Would you have gone to see this indescribable gift? Would you have worshipped with the shepherds? Would you have brought gifts for the new-born King? We, who have heard the gospel and believed, have seen. We worship as did the shepherds and wise men. We have greater opportunity to serve today than they did without full understanding of why this child was given and what he would do, to redeem man and glorify God!

Come and see, worship, and serve the King of Kings with me until we meet Him face to face! Joy to the world!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 4, 2022

Notes of Faith December 4, 2022

God Makes Good on His Promises

I am here to-night to warn you that you have yet a chance and hope of escaping my fate. ~ The Ghost of Jacob Marley, to Scrooge

As the fifth and final stave begins, Scrooge is in his bed, repeating his promise to begin anew. The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come is gone. Scrooge is not lying dead in that graveyard. In fact, you could argue, the man has never been more alive, bouncing around his bedroom in glee.

He exclaims, “I am as light as a feather, I am as happy as an angel, I am as merry as a school boy. I am as giddy as a drunken man.”

In short, Scrooge realizes he is a redeemed man. Perhaps it came when he prayed, as the narrator tells us, a “last prayer to have his fate reversed.” For whatever reason, he has, indeed, been given a second chance and his thankfulness gushes forth in unbridled joy. “Oh Jacob Marley! Heaven, and the Christmas Time be praised for this! I say it on my knees, old Jacob; on my knees!”

No matter how dark the night, you are never without hope when you trust in the Light of the World.

It’s significant that he first mentions Marley. Given all that’s happened to Scrooge with the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Yet to Come, Marley’s visit to Scrooge might easily be forgotten. But remember what he had said? “I am here to-night to warn you that you have yet a chance and hope of escaping my fate.”

Now that chance and hope have proven true. That possibility has turned into a reality. That promise has been fulfilled.

Promises are cheap these days. Politicians make them to get elected and break them once they’re in office. Advertisers make them to get you to buy a product that doesn’t live up to its billing. People vow in front of friends and family to love their chosen one despite whatever comes their way, then leave that person for someone else when the waters get choppy.

But God’s promises come with no such capriciousness.

— Romans 8:38–39

In other words, no matter how dark the night, you are never without hope when you trust in the Light of the World.

Say what you will about the Ghost of Marley; it pulled through in the clutch. Made good on the promise. Delivered the goods. The Spirit tells Scrooge, in essence, It’s too late for me, but it’s not too late for you. You don’t have to wear these chains that I do. You can escape my fate.

Promise.

Excerpted from 52 Little Lessons from A Christmas Carol by Bob Welch, copyright Bob Welch.

The promises of God bring abundant life on earth and eternal life with Him in heaven! Trust in the promises!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 3, 2022

Notes of Faith December 3, 2022

Searching the Night for a Light

by Max Lucado

So all this was done that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Lord through the prophet, saying: “Behold, the virgin shall be with child, and bear a Son, and they shall call His name Immanuel,” which is translated, “God with us.” — Matthew 1:22-23

On the night when Jesus was born, I wonder if Joseph ever prayed, “Father, this all seems so… bizarre. The angel you sent? Any chance you could send another? If not an angel, maybe a person? Some company would be nice. Even a shepherd would do.”

Perhaps he did. Perhaps he didn’t. But you probably have.

You’ve stood where Joseph stood. Caught between what God says and what makes sense. You’ve done what He told you to do only to wonder if it was Him speaking in the first place. You’ve stared into a sky blackened with doubt. And you’ve asked what Joseph asked.

You’ve asked if you’re still on the right road. You’ve asked if you were supposed to turn left when you turned right. And you’ve asked if there is a plan behind this scheme.

Things haven’t turned out as you thought they would.

Each of us knows what it’s like to search the night for a light. Not outside a stable, but perhaps outside an emergency room or on the manicured grass of a cemetery. We’ve asked our questions. We’ve questioned God’s plan. And we’ve wondered why God does what He does.

The Bethlehem sky was not the first to hear the pleadings of a confused pilgrim.

If you are asking what Joseph asked, let me urge you to do what Joseph did. Obey. That’s what he did. He obeyed when the angel called, when Mary explained, and when God sent.

Yes, your sins are forgiven. Yes, your name is written in Heaven. Yes, death has been defeated. And yes, God has entered your world.

He was obedient when the sky was bright… and when it was dark.

He didn’t let his confusion disrupt his obedience. He didn’t know everything. But he did what he knew. He shut down his business, packed up his family, and went to another country. Why? Because that’s what God said to do.

What about you? Just like Joseph, you can’t see the whole picture. Just like Joseph, your task is to see that Jesus is brought into your part of the world. And just like Joseph, you have a choice: to obey or disobey. Because Joseph obeyed, God used him to change the world.

Can He do the same with you?

God still looks for Josephs today. Men and women who believe that God is not through with this world. Common people who serve an uncommon God.

Will you be that kind of person? Will you serve… even when you don’t understand?

No, the Bethlehem sky was not the last to hear the pleadings of an honest heart. And perhaps God didn’t answer every question for Joseph. But He answered the most important one. “Are you still with me, God?” And through the first cries of the God-child the answer came.

“Yes, Joseph. I’m with you.”

Through the small face of the stable-born Baby, He says yes.

Yes, your sins are forgiven. Yes, your name is written in Heaven. Yes, death has been defeated. And yes, God has entered your world.

Immanuel. God is with us.

Excerpted from In the Manger by Max Lucado, copyright Max Lucado.

Suffering through a great physical test at this time, but filled with joy because of Jesus birth, death, resurrection, and anticipated 2nd coming!

For those of you who have not heard, Jerry Waken entered into the presence of his Savior this morning. Please pray for the family as they prepare a memorial service planned for Saturday December 10, at 4pm. Pray for Darlene as she will be left behind to trust in her Lord and Savior just as Jerry did, but now more difficult without her husband of so many years. May we as the church gather around her to meet every need the Lord gives us opportunity. Give thanks, for He is good!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 2, 2022

Notes of Faith December 2, 2022

Jesus: God in the Flesh

The Word became flesh, and dwelt among us, and we saw His glory, glory as of the only begotten from the Father, full of grace and truth. — John 1:14

It is not usually an easy transition to go from thinking God is a distant, supreme being to realizing that in Jesus, the world has seen and interacted with the Lord of all Creation. I have found that whenever I talk about the divinity of Christ, people have questions about what I mean. I recall being seated at a luncheon one day and a lady said, “For over sixty years I went to church, and I heard about Jesus. I thought I knew about Him. Until one Sunday when I turned on the In Touch program. All of a sudden, I realized I didn’t really know who He was at all. Is Jesus really God?”

Of course, the fact that Jesus Christ is God is the foundational truth we celebrate at Christmas: the incarnation of the Lord God Almighty becoming flesh in the Person of Jesus in that stable in Bethlehem. Yet, it is understandable that people have trouble reconciling the fact that Jesus is fully divine while also being completely human. After all, the manner by which the Lord is presented to us in the Old Testament is awesome for sure — He is the eternal, everlasting, almighty, living God; the Great I Am; the Most High Sovereign of all that exists, who is absolutely holy, infinite in power, and unfailingly faithful.

We often learn about Him in the Old Testament by His Hebrew names, Elohim, Adonai, El Shaddai, and Yahweh Yireh — titles that are beautiful and powerful, but somewhat distant and mysterious to us. Yet Jesus is so kind, loving, and approachable. He is the Good Shepherd, the Great Physician, and the Lamb of God. Whenever we read about Him interacting with others, He is so relatable, down to earth, and compassionate — always sacrificially willing to teach, heal, and redeem.

The obvious question is how can Jesus and the Father both be God when we understand them as distinct? How can the powerful hands that forcefully carved the mountains and canyons be the same that gently touched the eyes of the blind man to restore his sight? Scripture reveals that the Almighty is Trinity — one God, yet three Persons: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. We use the term persons because each has a unique role and expression in the Godhead. Though the three Persons of the Trinity are all fully God, they are not three deities. Rather, together they are one God, operating in perfect union and communion in one essence.

It is true Jesus was completely human, but the wonderful, supernatural mystery is that He was also wholly divine. Believing this is absolutely essential for your faith. He is both the One who set the holy standard for salvation and the One who fulfills it on our behalf. And Jesus does this because as fully God and fully man, He is the only One who can.

Whenever we read about Him interacting with others, He is so relatable, down to earth, and compassionate — always sacrificially willing to teach, heal, and redeem.

But what we need to understand is that Jesus came to reveal the true nature of God the Father to humanity. Jesus is the radiance of His glory, the exact representation of His nature. In other words Jesus shows us what it looks like when our divine, all-powerful, incomprehensibly awesome God interacts with us on a personal level. Christ said it Himself:

He who has seen Me has seen the Father. — John 14:9

When you look at who Jesus is throughout Scripture, you are observing that the Lord is a God of mercy, loving-kindness, holiness, justice, wisdom, redemption, healing, and power in bodily form. And when you know who He truly is, you understand why He is worthy of all honor, glory, and praise.

Some people say they’re Christians but don’t acknowledge the divinity of Christ. They think He was simply a good teacher, philosopher, social reformer, or healer. I want to be crystal clear on this matter: you can believe all of these wonderful things about Jesus, but if you do not accept that Jesus Christ is God the Son and that He is the only One who can save you from your sins, then you do not actually know Him.

The Jesus who reached out to others in Scripture is the same God in Heaven who calls to you, offering love, redemption, wisdom, guidance, and healing no matter what you’ve done or what you face. Therefore, take time today to appreciate Him for who He really is.

A Moment of Reflection

Look up and write out what we learn about Jesus in the following verses:

Hebrews 1:1–3

Colossians 1:15–20

How does understanding who Jesus is impact what you are facing today? Is there anything He cannot handle?

Spend time praising God for who He is.

A Gift for Today

The kind, loving, and approachable Jesus is the all-powerful, all-knowing, ever-present God — and He is always willing to help you, guide you, teach you, heal you, and redeem you.

Christ, by highest Heav’n adored, Christ, the everlasting Lord:

Late in time behold Him come, Offspring of a virgin’s womb.

Veiled in flesh the Godhead see,

Hail th’ incarnate Deity!

Pleased as man with man to dwell, Jesus our Immanuel.

Hark! the herald angels sing,

“Glory to the new-born King!”

1. “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing,” original lyrics by Charles Wesley, hymnal.net, accessed March 4, 2022, https://www.hymnal.net/en /hymn/h/84.

Excerpted from The Gift of Jesus by Charles F. Stanley, copyright Charles F. Stanley.

Praise God for who He is, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, a triunity of God! The Son, Jesus, who came to save, redeem, glorify and bring glory to God, IS God!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 1, 2022

Notes of Faith December 1, 2022

Angels We Have Heard on High

Many images accompany Christmas — fun and frolic, snow and decorations, laughter and family gatherings — images so ingrained in most people’s minds that they find it difficult to imagine the holiday any other way. Yet, in truth, Christmas only recently became the festive holiday we now cherish. For almost fifteen hundred years, the observation of the birth of Jesus was not recognized on every street corner but left to divinely called men who led a hard and demanding life, toiling in poverty and serving people who understood little about the most elementary facets of Scripture and the life of the soul. Yet these men stayed the course and left their fingerprints on every church of every denomination in the world today.

Monks were and still are solitary men, dedicating every ounce of their being to the Lord and giving up their own families to serve the family of God. Their voices were often the only ones who told of the birth of Christ and their lives the only example of Christian faith. Even to those who knew them, monks were mysterious figures. Their world was one of sacrifice, their sense of duty second only to their humble spirit. Yet from this spirit and life came one of the most beautiful and soaring carols of Christmas.

Much like the lives of most monks, “Angels We Have Heard on High” is a song steeped in great mystery. Unlike other carols whose writers are unknown but whose origins can be clearly traced to a certain time or certain place, this song seemingly appeared out of the air. Because the first to sing “Angels We Have Heard on High” lived in nineteenth century France, many believe that it must have originated there. In fact, most sources today call it a French carol.

Yet even that assumption is often called into question by songologists. What can be stated with absolute certainty is that this Christmas song must have been penned by a person who had a professional knowledge of the Bible and an incredible gift for taking Scripture and reshaping it into verse. This fact, combined with the use of Latin in the song’s chorus — making it a macaronic carol — seems to indicate that a monk or priest from the Catholic church was more than likely responsible for writing “Angels We Have Heard on High.”

Angels we have heard on high, Sweetly singing o’er the plains, And the mountains, in reply, Echoing their joyous strains.

Chorus: Gloria in excelsis Deo, Gloria in excelsis Deo.

Shepherds, why this jubilee? Why your joyous strains prolong? Say what may the tidings be, Which inspire your heav’nly song?

Chorus

Come to Bethlehem and see Him whose birth the angels sing; Come, adore on bended knee Christ the Lord, the newborn King.

Chorus

See within a manger laid, Jesus, Lord of heav’n and earth! Mary, Joseph, lend your aid, With us sing our Savior’s birth.

Chorus

Gloria in excelsis Deo,

Gloria in excelsis Deo.

Because the first published versions of the song used French for the verses, many have naturally assumed that its writer was a priest from France. Yet there is evidence that at least part of this great Christmas hymn was sung before Christianity took deep root in western Europe. A portion of the carol was used in early Christian church services even before the Roman Empire adopted Christianity as the state religion.

“Angels We Have Heard on High” was first published in 1855 in the French songbook Nouveau recueil de cantiques, and records indicate that the song had been used in church masses for more than fifty years before that publication.

During those five decades the lyrics were coupled with the melody that is still used today. Except for the verses translated into languages other than French, today the song is sung just as it was a hundred and fifty years ago. Yet for maybe a thousand years or more before that, monks probably sang this same song as they celebrated the birth of the Savior. The story may well be as old as the church itself.

The song’s four verses embrace the angels’ visit to the lowly shepherds and the shepherds’ response. For many biblical scholars, the angels coming to men who worked menial jobs in the fields and informing them of the birth of the Son of God symbolizes that Christ came for all people, rich or poor, humble or powerful.

The angels’ words in Luke 2, “Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people,” paired with Jesus’ own parables concerning shepherds and their flocks, symbolizes that it would be the common man and not kings or religious leaders who would first carry the story of Jesus’ life to the masses.

But while the shepherds’ story of why they came to see the babe in the manger is easily identified in all the stanzas, for many who sing this old song, the chorus is an enigma.

“Gloria in excelsis Deo” means, in English, “Glory to God in the highest,”

a phrase that played an important part of worship at church masses dating back to 130 A.D. During that period, Pope Telesphorus issued a decree that on the day of the Lord’s birth all churches should have special evening services. He also ordered that, at these masses, after the reading of certain Scripture or the conclusion of specific prayers, the congregation should always sing the words “Gloria in excelsis Deo.”

Historical church documents reveal that monks carried this executive order throughout the land and that by the third century it was a practice used by most churches at Christmas services.

It can be argued that if the chorus was written within a hundred years of Christ’s birth, the roots of “Angels We Have Heard on High” might go back to someone who actually knew Jesus when He walked on earth. Though unproved, it is a very interesting and inspiring idea and ties into the selfless image of a called member of the clergy bringing faith alive in order to spread the message of Jesus Christ’s birth, life, and death.

Another facet of this carol that would seem to tie at least its chorus to the very early Catholic church is the range of notes found in the chorus. While most modern carols move up and down and cover at least an octave and a half, thus testing the upper or lower limits of the average singer, the phrase “Gloria in excelsis Deo” barely moves at all. In addition, the melody used by the song never strays more than one octave and the verse moves through only six notes. This simplicity seems to tie the melody to early chants used by monks and taught to their congregations.

Webster defines a chant as “singing or speaking in a monotone to a hymn-like repetitive melody.” Using this approach, important elements of worship were passed on from person to person and generation to generation in the oral tradition. In a day when few read words — much less music — chants helped keep the gospel alive among the common people.

Of all the carols born in the chanting tradition, “Angels We Have Heard on High,” was one of the easiest and least challenging, despite the fact that the word “gloria” covers three measures and hits almost twenty different notes. Unlike others, which failed to inspire as they taught, this song lifted hearts while telling the story. It embraced the spirit that a called man of God would have felt as he gave up everything to serve his Lord.

So why has this carol of unknown origin remained so popular for so long? Though the tune may be considered monotonous, when the simple text is read it becomes obvious that few Christmas songs so fully describe the joy that the world felt when a Savior was born in Bethlehem. The lyrics don’t just ask the singer to lift up his or her eyes and heart in wonder and observe the beauty of what God has given the world, they demand it. There can be no doubt that whoever wrote “Angels We Have Heard on High” not only believed the words found in the Bible, but relished that belief.

Ultimately, it is the sensitive retelling of the angel-shepherd story that carries this song and has made it one of the world’s most popular Christmas carols. As Kenneth W. Osbeck wrote in his devotional book, Amazing Grace, “The Bible teaches that angels are the ministering servants of God and that they are continually being sent to help and protect us, the heirs of salvation.”

“Angels We Have Heard on High” speaks of the incredible, special relationship between Heaven and earth, God and man, like few songs ever have. It embraces one of the most important elements of faith just as the shepherds embraced the Good News they were given two thousand years ago.

The mystery of who wrote this song points back to the lives of all those who are called to spread the gospel, to keep the story alive, to provide a means for people everywhere to hear and know the message that came to earth on that first Christmas. One of those nameless servants wrote this song to share the story with others. Though he has long been forgotten, what he believed is alive in not only his song but in hundreds of millions of souls around the world. His prayer has been answered: the angels are still heard, the Savior still welcomed, and the soul still stirred.

Excerpted with permission from Stories Behind the Best-Loved Songs of Christmas by Ace Collins, copyright Andrew Collins.

I love music, especially so many of the Christmas carols. We worship and preach as we sing these beautiful carols. I pray you love them as I do, and will sing them at every opportunity during this Christmas season.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith November 30, 2022

Notes of Faith November 30, 2022

The Universal Ache of Waiting – Our Advent

Watching NFL with my boys on Sunday afternoon tells me much about the world. The boys toss the football in the backyard during halftime commercials, and I observe the messages the world wants to feed me. Laughter! Parties! And weeks spent on white sand, treading in cerulean blue waves – the best of life, right? We are conditioned to think that life is mostly easy, interrupted by random and spontaneous spats of hard.

Except, a quick survey of friends down the street (and those in other states) reveals that these days have been the inverse: a lot of hard interrupted by random, spontaneous spats of reprieve.

And so much of that hard is … the waiting.

Waiting on a marriage to heal, a prodigal to return home. Waiting on financial stability, the healing of a parent or a babe, an empty womb… as many as there are friends in my life, there are the waiting rooms.

Perhaps all of us need a reorientation around a life spent waiting.

Advent means: He is coming, and He has come. Both.

We find ourselves in the one season a year during which we can practice staying in the tension of His presence and His not-yet but promised coming. We're invited into this same tension every day in each of our waiting rooms, but underneath the snow resting on twinkle-lit evergreens and the scent of pine that floods your senses as you enter your neighbor's home, there are the whispers of advent: while we wait on God… God is here.

Twelve years of my infertility ended on October 24, 2013. After that, I thought I'd experienced all I needed to know about waiting on God.

For those long years that I didn't wear stretchmarks but carried gifts to friends' baby showers and paid hospital visits – watching newborns sleep in their tired mama's arms – and brought meals to first-time moms, I thought that all the aches that surfaced during that wait were unique to that wait.

I felt anxious – why not me, God – and angry and overlooked. I spent my life telling many that God was good, yet in private I wondered why His goodness must have run short for me. The waiting room surfaced questions about God, insecurities about myself, and fears about the future I never had before I discovered my broken womb.

In the waiting, I felt squirrely; surely there were steps I should be taking, methodologies that would end this. I lived shadowed, celebrating others' light-and-bright moments and yet aching for what was my darkness.

So, when that October 24th came, and my wait was over, I passively assumed I'd given my time there.

Phew. Done.

I didn't know then that life is a series of long stints in the waiting room, interrupted occasionally – sometimes rarely – by October 24th's. I didn't realize then that the people of God are formed in the waiting, and that part of growing into a more significant experience and understanding of God would mean that I would wait again. And again. (And again.)

Each of these times, some of the same aches would surface. All… so that God might reach me.

The sides of myself that I can more easily ignore when I'm not waiting move from the haunting shadows into the light of God's exposure when I wait. Anxiety is right in front of me. I'd wake up to future-casting fear and irritation with my life. The wait is uncomfortable because *I* am uncomfortable. Who I am in the waiting room puts an edge on the wait.

You see, God gifts us our own “advents” that reveal our darkened places so that He might show our weak sides – the side that needs to be cradled.

I've learned how to be held in the waiting.

Isaiah 9:2 reads:

The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; those who dwelt in a land of deep darkness on them has light shone.

We resist the darkened, shadowed parts of ourselves – noticing them, naming them, spending more than a few seconds looking their way – but He doesn't.

My God turns my darkness into light. — Psalm 18:28

My three-year-old started talking about the Christmas tree in June. "I want to see the lights on the Christmas tree." Each night in December, she'd pad in her footie pajamas out to the balcony next to her bedroom and stare at the tree, lit up against the shadows of our great room. Her knuckles wrapped around the spindles, and her nose pressed through the spaces in between, transfixed. Of course, she still remembered it in June. The juxtaposition of light against darkness is brilliant to the ones who will notice… to the toddlers whose entire life plan is observation.

We resist the darkened parts of ourselves when we feel strong, and life is on time – but when they come out into the light, they remind us that we are still children. We still need to be held. Our greatest life craving is to be received in all our complexity and mess.

Better than the backyard barbeque and the breath-catching vacation by the sea, and even the happy family circling around the Christmas tree in December – the life we're sold every day as the best life – are the days of being a child, held secure against the uncertain world around us, transfixed by the light against darkness.

We become more fully ourselves during the Advent wait – held by God (because we're so weak that we just have to be) while waiting on God.

The Lord is good to those who wait for Him (Lamentations 3:25) – there are parts of His goodness that we will only know when we wait.

Advent: while we wait on God … God is here.

Written for Devotionals Daily by Sara Hagerty, author of Adore.

Advent waiting – Kingdom glory waiting . . . indeed we are waiting for the fulfillment of God’s plan and during the wait all things are not sunshine and roses. But God, (my favorite words in Scripture) is always with us through all trials and tribulations of life. And Jesus overcame the world! So shall we – good reason to wait on God.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith November 29, 2022

Notes of Faith November 29, 2022

My Answer Is Yes

And when God was ready, an angel flew down

To a young girl named Mary, in Nazareth’s town.

But she’d never seen angel, or fairy, or elf,

And she gasped when she saw him, in spite of herself.

The angel said to her, “Do not be afraid, Mary. God is very pleased with you. You will become pregnant and give birth to a Son. You must call Him Jesus. He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High God. The Lord God will make Him a King like His father David of long ago.” — Luke 1:30-32

The warm scent of freshly baked bread filled the little home in Nazareth. As Mary lifted the loaves from the oven and set them aside to cool, a different scent seemed to fill the air. It was as if someone had opened the door and stepped into the room. Mary turned around and gasped in surprise. An angel was hovering, right there — right in front of her. Mary shook her head and closed her eyes. But even with her eyes shut tight, she could hear the angel softly whispering her name.

“Mary, Mary. Don’t be afraid. God is with you.”

Mary slowly opened her eyes and tried to make sense out of what she was seeing and hearing. The angel was bathed in soft, silvery light and its wide wings were shimmering in the early evening shadows.

“Who are you?” Mary whispered. “And why are you here?”

“I’m Gabriel,” the angel answered. “And God has sent me with a special message for you. You will have a child, Mary — a Son. You are to give Him the name Jesus. He will be God’s own Son. And He will be a King.”

Mary shook her head in disbelief.

“How can that possibly be? I’m not even married yet, and I’m so young!”

“Nothing is impossible with God,” Gabriel said softly. “Even Elizabeth, your relative, is going to have a baby. And everyone said she was too old. Don’t worry. God will work everything out. For now, you just need to say yes.”

Mary’s heart skipped a beat. She could feel God’s Holy Spirit dancing in the room and shining in the shadows. She looked at the angel and nodded slowly. As Gabriel faded away and flew back to Heaven, Mary sank to her knees in prayer.

“I’m here, God.” she whispered. “I’ll do as you say. I’ll be the momma of your Son. My answer is… yes.”

Nothing is impossible with God.

Prayer

Dear God, thank You for Mary who was so brave and trusted You. When I need to be brave, help me remember that You are with me.

What the angel told Mary — how could it be true?

That she’d be a momma? Elizabeth too?

She would go to her cousin, she’d leave straight away,

And see what Elizabeth might have to say.

Elizabeth's Story

One day Zechariah… was serving as a priest in God’s temple… Then an angel of the Lord appeared to Zechariah. The angel was standing at the right side of the incense altar. When Zechariah saw him, he was amazed and terrified. But the angel said to him,

Do not be afraid, Zechariah. Your prayer has been heard. Your wife Elizabeth will have a child. It will be a boy, and you must call him John.” — Luke 1:8-13

Elizabeth lay in her bed in the darkness and stared up at the stars outside her window. Zechariah, her husband, lay fast asleep at her side. She could hear his gentle snores. But Elizabeth couldn’t sleep. She lay awake, full of wonder and joy, thinking about the day when she would hold her baby in her arms.

Smiling in the darkness, she put her hand on her tummy, and prayed for this child, this miracle, growing inside her. “Thank you, God,” she whispered, “that I will be a momma.”

It had been several months now since an angel had visited Zechariah while he was on duty in the temple and told him the unbelievable news — Elizabeth would have a baby. It was something they had prayed and prayed about for years. But who would have ever thought that they could have a baby now, when they were so old? But it was true! Elizabeth could feel the baby in her tummy as he kicked his legs. “We’ll meet you soon, John,” Elizabeth whispered.

As she closed her eyes, Elizabeth thought, for the hundredth time, about what the angel had told her husband… how her boy would be a joy and a delight, not just to her and Zechariah, but to many, many people.

The angel had said that her son would be filled with the Holy Spirit and have a special mission in life. His job would be to get people ready to meet the Lord and to prepare their hearts for Him.

Elizabeth didn’t really know what all that meant, but it sounded like the Lord, the Messiah, the special one from God, was also going to be born soon.

As Elizabeth drifted off to sleep that night, she couldn’t help wondering who the momma of the Messiah might be. Little did Elizabeth know that she was about to find out…

Excerpted from 'Twas the Season of Advent by Glenys Nellist, copyright Glenys Nellist.

This time of year spiritually is second only to the sacrifice of God’s Son during Passover. What a great time to worship and give thanks and to remind us of what our heavenly Father sacrificed in sending His Son into the world to seek and save that which was lost. Praise God from whom all blessings flow, but the greatest of these is the gift of His Son Jesus!

Pastor Dale