Notes of Faith June 28, 2024

Notes of Faith June 28, 2024

Can Only Christians Love Others?

Beloved, let us love one another, for love is of God; and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God.

1 John 4:7

In 1 John 4:7, the apostle John, who is known as the apostle of love, makes a shocking statement. Only the followers of Jesus, among all the people on earth, can truly love another person. He said that we should love one another, for this comes from God to those who are born again and have a relationship with Him.

Other people can experience and convey affection and compassion and attraction and physical intimacy. There can be non-Christian philanthropy and altruism. But the selfless agape love that characterizes God Himself can only be experienced and conveyed by those who know Him. If God abides in us, His love is being perfected in us (verse 12).

How are you doing with this assignment? The love that reflects Jesus compels us to do things for others without any expectation of something in return. It puts the needs and interests of others first. Ask God today to help you love others the way He does, and let’s show the world we are Christians by our love.

May the love of Jesus fill me as the waters fill the sea; Him exalting, self abasing, this is victory!

Kate B. Wilkinson

1 John 4:7-11

7 Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God; and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. 8 The one who does not love does not know God, for God is love. 9 By this the love of God was manifested in us, that God has sent His only begotten Son into the world so that we might live through Him. 10 In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins. 11 Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 27, 2024

Notes of Faith June 27, 2024

Your Whole Self

You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your strength.

Deuteronomy 6:5

In Jewish worship services, the Shema is the most important prayer. Shema is the transliteration of the first Hebrew word in Deuteronomy 6:4, translated as “hear”: “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one!” The entire prayer—Deuteronomy 6:4-9—was given as an instruction by Moses to remind the Israelites of the importance of ordering their lives according to God’s laws.

Deut 6:4-9

4 "Hear, O Israel! The Lord is our God, the Lord is one! 5 "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. 6 "These words, which I am commanding you today, shall be on your heart. 7 "You shall teach them diligently to your sons and shall talk of them when you sit in your house and when you walk by the way and when you lie down and when you rise up. 8 "You shall bind them as a sign on your hand and they shall be as frontals on your forehead. 9 "You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates.

When a teacher of the law asked Jesus which was the most important of the commandments, He quoted Deuteronomy 6:4-5: “Hear, O Israel...you shall love the Lord your God” with all your heart, soul, and strength. This commandment, Jesus said, is the first of all the commandments, no doubt because it is so all-encompassing. Heart, soul, and strength is another way of saying one’s whole self; love God with all your being. Paul’s exhortation to be a “living sacrifice” to God is the same idea (Romans 12:1).

Is there any part of your life today that doesn’t reflect love for God? Ask Him to make you sensitive to ways to love Him more.

A man’s spiritual health is exactly proportional to his love for God.

C. S. Lewis

John 14:15

If you love Me, you will keep My commandments.

Do you love Jesus? Then . . .

Pastor Dale

Notes of Fatih June 26, 2024

Notes of Faith June 26, 2024

When God Whispers Your Name

“I could have gone to college on a golf scholarship,” a fellow told me just last week on the fourth tee box. “Had an offer right out of school. But I joined a rock-and-roll band. Ended up never going. Now I’m stuck fixing garage doors.”

“Now I’m stuck.” Epitaph of a derailed dream.

Pick up a high-school yearbook and read the “What I want to do” sentence under each picture. You’ll get dizzy breathing the thin air of mountaintop visions. Yet take the yearbook to a twentieth-year reunion and read the next chapter. Some dreams have come true, but many have not. Why? Because something happens to us along the way.

Convictions to change the world downgrade to commitments to pay the bills. Rather than make a difference, we make a salary. Rather than look forward, we look back. Rather than look outward, we look inward. And we don’t like what we see.

If anyone had reason to doubt that God cared for his broken dreams, it was Moses. You remember his story. Adopted nobility. An Israelite reared in an Egyptian palace. A privileged upbringing. But his most influential teacher had no degree. His mother was a Jewess hired to be his nanny. “Moses,” you can almost hear her whisper, “God has put you here on purpose. Someday you will set your people free. Never forget, Moses. Never forget.”

Moses didn’t.

The flame of justice grew hotter until it blazed.

Moses saw an Egyptian beating a Hebrew slave, and something inside him snapped. He lashed out and killed the Egyptian guard. The next day, Moses saw the Hebrew. You’d think the slave would say thanks. He didn’t. Rather than express gratitude, he expressed anger.

Are you thinking of killing me as you killed the Egyptian? — he asked in

Exodus 2:14.

Moses knew he was in trouble. He fled Egypt and hid in the wilderness. He went from dining with the heads of state to counting heads of sheep. And so it happened that a bright, promising Hebrew began herding sheep in the hills. From the Ivy League to the cotton patch. From the Oval Office to a taxicab. From swinging a golf club to digging a ditch.

Moses thought the move was permanent. There is no indication he ever intended to go back to Egypt. In fact, there is every indication he wanted to stay with his sheep. Standing barefoot before the bush, he confessed,

Who am I that I should go to Pharaoh and bring the Israelites out of Egypt? — Exodus 3:11

Why Moses? Or, more specifically, why eighty-year-old Moses? The forty-year-old version was more appealing. The Moses we saw in Egypt was brash and confident. But the Moses we find four decades later is reluctant and weather-beaten. Had you or I looked at Moses back in Egypt, we would have said, “This man is ready for battle.” Educated in the finest system in the world. Trained by the ablest soldiers. Instant access to the inner circle of the Pharaoh. Moses spoke their language and knew their habits. He was the perfect man for the job.

Moses at forty we like. But Moses at eighty? No way. Too old. Too tired. Smells like a shepherd. Speaks like a foreigner. What impact would he have on Pharaoh? He’s the wrong man for the job. And Moses would have agreed. “Tried that once before,” he would say. “Those people don’t want to be helped. Just leave me here to tend my sheep. They’re easier to lead.”

Moses wouldn’t have gone. You wouldn’t have sent him. I wouldn’t have sent him. But God did.

God said Moses was ready.

And to convince him, God spoke through a bush. (Had to do something dramatic to get Moses’ attention.) “School’s out,” God told him. “Now it’s time to get to work.” Poor Moses. He didn’t even know he was enrolled.

God puts us back in service to remind us that He cares for us.

When we make mistakes, He does not banish us to a spiritual junkyard. No, He salvages our mistakes because He cares for us. He removes the rust and grime, buffs out the scratches, and hammers out the dents in our frame until we are in working condition again.

God ain’t finished with you yet.

The voice from the bush is the voice that whispers to us. It reminds us that God is not finished with us yet. Oh, we may think He is. We may think we’ve peaked. We may think He’s got someone else to do the job. But if so, think again.

God began doing a good work in you, and I am sure He will continue it until it is finished when Jesus Christ comes again. — Philippians 1:6 NCV

Did you see what God is doing? A good work in you. Did you see when He will be finished? When Jesus comes again. May I spell out the message?

God ain’t finished with you yet.

Your Father wants you to know that.

This is what the Lord says... ‘I have summoned you by name; you are Mine’. — Isaiah 43:1

I can’t say that I’ve given a lot of thought to my given name. But there is one name that catches my interest. A name only God knows. A name only God gives. A unique, one-of-a-kind, once-to-be-given name. You may not have known it, but God has a new name for you. When you get home, He won’t call you Alice or Bob or Juan or Geraldo. The name you’ve always heard won’t be the one He uses. When God says He will make all things new, He means it.

You will have a new home, a new body, a new life, and — you guessed it — a new name.

To the one who is victorious, I will give some of the hidden manna. I will also give that person a white stone with a new name written on it. — Revelation 2:17

Isn’t it incredible to think that God has saved a name just for you? One you don’t even know? We’ve always assumed the name we got is the name we will keep. Not so. Imagine what that implies. Apparently, your future is so promising it warrants a new title. The road ahead is so bright a fresh name is needed. Your eternity is so special no common name will do.

So God has one reserved just for you. There is more to your life than you ever thought. There is more to your story than what you have read. There is more to your song than what you have sung. A good author saves the best for last. A great composer keeps his finest for the finish. And God, the author of life and composer of hope, has done the same for you.

The best is yet to be.

And so I urge you, don’t give up. And so I plead, finish the journey. And so I exhort, be there. Be there when God whispers your name.

The Heart of the Matter

God wants you to look forward instead of looking back.

God won’t be finished with you until Jesus comes again.

God has a one-of-a-kind name for you that only He knows.

God urges you to run the race and finish the journey

Memory Verse

Write out the words of 1 Corinthians 8:3 and memorize it. Reflect on what these words mean to you.

The Heart of Jesus

Much is made of Peter’s humorous outburst when Jesus washed His disciples’ feet at the Last Supper. Peter first insisted that Jesus should not stoop to scrub his toes, then begged him to wash his head and hands, too (see John 13:3–9)! But Peter wasn’t the only one whose sandals were removed and whose feet were doused.

Jesus gave this care to each one of the twelve, one at a time. He looked into the eyes of Thomas. He soothed the tired feet of Matthew. He poured the water over Judas’s feet. Andrew felt the Lord’s hands massage his soles. Bartholomew’s feet were toweled by his Teacher. James met his Master’s eyes over the basin. John returned Jesus’ smile as the water splashed. One by one. Jesus tends to His people individually. He personally sees to our needs. We all receive Jesus’ touch. We all experience His care.

Excerpted from Experiencing the Heart of Jesus for 52 Weeks by Max Lucado, copyright Max Lucado.

Max also wrote, “When God Whispers Your Name”, a most excellent book for someone looking back way too much. God calls and empowers the willing heart to respond to His call and go, do, whatever God puts before His chosen vessel. It is you! If you are a believer and follower of Jesus Christ, through God’s gift of faith, living in this neurotic and evil world, will answer His call to stand firm in what you know to be true…the Word of God! He speaks His love toward you and for all those created in His image, to repent, believe, and live righteously in truth and love.

John 5:17

"My Father is always at His work to this very day, and I, too, am working."

Let us work in this life until we meet our Savior and Lord who is still working!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 25, 2024

Notes of Faith June 25, 2024

Sure and Certain

Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see.

Hebrews 11:1, NIV 1984

The disciple Thomas had a hard time believing that Jesus had risen from the dead. But when Thomas saw Jesus, he believed. Jesus said to him, “Because you have seen Me, you have believed. Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed” (John 20:29).

We could wonder if the story of Thomas—and Jesus’ words to him—influenced the words of Hebrews 11:1 where faith is defined as being “sure” and “certain” of what we have not seen with our natural eyes. Hebrews 11 is a record of many people who believed God before they ever saw the fulfillment of His promise. Another translation states it this way: “Faith perceiving as real fact what is not revealed to the senses” (Hebrews 11:1, AMPC). What is the source of this kind of faith? Romans 10:17 says that “faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.” God’s faithfulness to His Word is the foundational evidence for our faith.

Faith begins with the promises of God. If you are hoping for something you cannot yet see, strengthen your faith by standing on the Word of God.

Faith rests on the naked Word of God; that Word believed gives full assurance.

H. A. Ironside

“Faith is the victory that overcomes the world.” Though that is a lyric from a great hymn, it is nonetheless truth. The gift of faith that God gives is our sure and certain hope in the truth of God Himself!

Eph 2:8-9

8 For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; 9 not as a result of works, so that no one may boast.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 24, 2024

Notes of Faith June 24, 2024

A Father’s day story that I just found. I felt I must share it with you even after this year’s father’s day…

The Strong Legacy of a Weak Father

Article by Jon Bloom

Staff writer, desiringGod.org

Father’s Day is a wonderful common-grace gift, an explicit reminder to fulfill a gracious obligation God has placed on us: “honor your father” (Exodus 20:12).

But for some fathers, this day is a painful reminder of ways they haven’t been able to fulfill all a typical father’s responsibilities, often due to circumstantial or physical weaknesses largely or wholly outside of their control. Which means that, for some, Father’s Day can seem to highlight more shame than honor.

I imagine Father’s Day might have had that effect on my own father. You see, Dad suffered from a humiliating affliction, a mental illness that took a significant emotional, relational, and sometimes economic toll on our family. His affliction was, in certain ways, our affliction — a fact of which he was all too painfully (and no doubt shamefully) aware.

But Dad was an honorable man — more than he probably knew. And I’d like to share why, both as a way to honor my father’s memory and as a way to encourage fathers who battle shame over ways their weaknesses have limited their fathering capacities. Because our weaknesses, if we steward them as faithfully before God as we’re able, can reveal greater, more spiritually significant strengths than those our afflictions steal from us (2 Corinthians 12:9).

Background of My Boyhood

My most vivid early memory of my father is seeing him running over the crest of a hill to rescue me.

One spring day when I was three years old, my good mother sent me out in a jacket to play in the backyard. When I came back in, she noticed I was lacking my jacket, so she sent me back out to retrieve it. I, however, being three, quickly forgot about the jacket when I saw the path, one that wound off through an adjacent meadow leading to . . . where? Some wonderful Land of Oz? It seemed like a good idea to find out. So, off I merrily went.

All I recall of the journey was that the meadow path shortly gave way to grassy hills, and the Oz I discovered was just some strange houses bordering a busy, loud highway. Just when I realized that there’s no place like home, I also had the frightening realization that I had no idea how to get back there. I was lost and alone and little. All I could think to do was to sit down and cry.

I don’t know how long I was gone, but it was long enough for my mother to search in vain for me, begin to panic, and call my father at work — and for him to come home and join the search (which by that time also included a policeman).

My cries had turned to despairing chest heaves when I looked up and saw the beatific form of my father cresting a hill, running toward me. Daddy! In my (emotionally enhanced) memory, there’s a golden glow around him. The man who loved me most, the man I loved most in the world, had left everything to find me and bring me home — the best place in the world. I was flooded with joy inexpressible.

That memory captures my father as I knew and viewed him as a child. He seemed larger than life. His presence (even when absent) permeated the atmosphere of my world and filled it with a unique brightness.

The background of my boyhood,

The apple of my eye,

The meaning of my manhood,

The sun in my young sky,

The shelter in your sovereignty I felt with you close by:

You were my young world.

Meaning of My Manhood

To most, Dad wouldn’t have appeared extraordinary. He wasn’t a prominent leader, didn’t have a socially prestigious job, and wasn’t physically imposing. But when I was young, he wasn’t ordinary to me. To me, Dad was the paragon of manhood.

I remember how he stood straight and exuded an unpretentious confidence when he walked. I remember his big, strong, calloused hands. He wasn’t an excessive talker, but when he spoke, he looked people in the eye and treated them with dignity, honesty, and good humor — laughing easily. And when he gave his counsel, it was measured and wise.

He taught me what it meant to work hard through instruction and example. Throughout my childhood, Dad got up at 2:00 in the morning to drive downtown to the Emrich Baking Company, load his truck, and deliver baked goods to scores of restaurants and hospitals. A couple of times, I rode his route with him. Few things are as wonderful as the smell of a bakery in the early morning and spending the day with a father you deeply love and admire.

Dad taught me how to skate, throw a baseball and football, and play golf. I can still see his graceful swing and how the ball would sail off the tee, landing way down the fairway. If at all possible, he attended my hockey, baseball, and football games and even coached some of my teams. He taught me to compete hard and show my opponents respect.

But of all the ways he shaped me, two were most formative. The earliest one was how dearly Dad loved my mother. When he was well, I never heard him utter an unkind word to or about her. And he would by no means tolerate us kids showing her disrespect.

Then, when I was about nine years old, Dad experienced a spiritual renewal. His faith in Jesus became noticeably more vibrant. He studied his Bible more earnestly, prayed more openly, and became more engaged in the life of our church. It’s hard to overstate the profound and lasting impact this had on me.

The resolution in your walk,

The strength in your hand,

The easy laughter in your talk,

The poise in your stand,

The power of your presence my respect would command:

You filled my young world.

Devastating Weakness

However, there was a shadow that followed Dad throughout his adulthood. There were these strange, brief, episodic seasons when, for inexplicable reasons, this normally even-keeled, loving, kind, honest, patient, hard-working man suddenly began speaking and acting completely out of character. For a short time, he became a different person. These episodes were then followed by a bout of stubborn depression. Dad was left as confused and disturbed by these episodes as everyone else was.

“Don’t underestimate the powerful influence a debilitated father can have on his children.”

Until age fourteen, I was blissfully unaware of this shadow, since its last emergence occurred when I was too young to remember. But in 1979, when Dad was 47, the mysterious malady struck again with devastating effect. Suddenly, he began to descend into madness. He stopped sleeping. He made bizarre declarations about God, the universe, and people he loved. He hallucinated, turned suspicious, and, for the first time in my memory, said harsh things to my mother.

Dad had to be hospitalized, and his illness was finally diagnosed: manic depression (later renamed bipolar disorder). He was placed on numerous medications, which mercifully helped stabilize his moods, but which also dampened aspects of his gregarious personality.

Dad was never quite the same again. His illness and its treatments significantly limited his capacities to concentrate and engage socially as he had before. He had to push himself to participate in the activities he had previously enjoyed so much — and that we had enjoyed with him. He found it hard to trust his own mind, and having been humiliated in front of his family, friends, church community, and coworkers, he found it difficult to take initiative in the ways he had before.

Strong Legacy of a Weak Father

But Dad’s weakness caused different strengths to manifest in him, ones that I now view (as an adult and a father myself) as even more honorable than the ones I perceived as a child.

I watched Dad persevere in suffering. Only those who have experienced severe depression understand the indescribable darkness he battled. My own experiences of depression (low grade compared to his) have increased my respect for him greatly. He battled valiantly. I know at times he fought the temptation to end it all. But he didn’t surrender. Out of love for God, his wife, and his family, he endured.

I watched Dad resist self-pity. I never heard him complain. When I would ask him how he was doing, he was humbly honest about difficulties he faced, but never in a way that telegraphed self-pity or solicited mine.

I watched Dad model faithfulness. He did not reject or express bitterness toward God because of his affliction. When his health permitted, he faithfully continued to worship at his local church. And I have priceless memories of Dad expressing his longings for heaven, when he would at last be whole and free to enjoy all that God prepared for those who love him.

And I saw in Dad — and Mom — deeper dimensions of what it means to love. Among the most beautiful things I’ve ever witnessed is the steadfast covenant love Dad and Mom extended to each other over the three decades following that devastating episode in 1979. Both suffered due to Dad’s illness, each in different ways. Life and marriage did not turn out as they envisioned when they married in 1954. But they stayed together, for better and worse, in sickness and in health, and determined to love each other, which at times called for steely resolve, desperate prayers, and deep faith in Jesus.

Mom in particular lived out a beautiful sacrificial love for Dad, tenderly caring for him for the rest of his life. And Dad loved her for it. Few had the privilege to see what a wonder this was. I was privileged beyond measure.

I Remember

Life is hard. Brains can be just as defective as hearts, hands, legs, and livers. Dad, like many fathers, suffered in ways beyond his illness. He suffered the indignity of losing the capacity to be the kind of husband, father, and grandfather he wanted to be.

But his formative impact on me by no means ended when the worst of his affliction struck. His example of perseverance, faithfulness, and love are just a few of the ways he continued to shape my character and prepare me to face my own bewildering afflictions.

Though the days of childhood have now long since passed by,

I still see you clearly in my memory’s eye,

And I remember, Dad,

I remember . . .

The constant love I felt from you,

The disciplining grace,

The ear I told my dreaming to,

The pleasant, patient face,

The faith that did not die despite the dark of your disgrace:

You shaped my young world.

In June 2010, one last disease brought Dad’s earthly sojourn to an end. Now he knows fully what he knew only in part (1 Corinthians 13:12). Now he is whole and free to enjoy all that God prepared for him. The lyrics I’ve woven throughout are from the song I wrote and sang for his funeral. I wish I would have written and sung them to him before he died.

But I do remember. I remember how he ran over that hill to rescue his frightened, lost little boy. I remember how profoundly he filled and shaped my young world. But even more profoundly, I remember the strengths that manifested in him because of his weaknesses. His influence didn’t die when he no longer was able to be what he was when I was young. And it didn’t die when he did. I am still learning from him. My admiration and respect for him has only increased as I’ve aged.

To fathers who have suffered in ways that seem to have robbed them of being the kind of father they desperately wish they could be, and who perhaps experience Father’s Day as a painful (or shameful) reminder, I say this: Don’t underestimate the powerful influence a debilitated father can have on his children. Remember, even in the worst of times, that God’s grace will be sufficient for you — in ways you may not yet see and perhaps may not live to see. Steward your weaknesses as faithfully as you’re able. For there are dimensions of God’s power that manifest most clearly to fallen people, like me, through your weakness (2 Corinthians 12:9).

Jon Bloom (@Bloom_Jon) serves as teacher and cofounder of Desiring God.

I am sure that we can all think of weaknesses in our father. Yet if there was a heart of love from father to child, any weakness was forgiven. Earthly fathers are certainly not perfect but most try to protect and provide the needs of their family. I pray that God is still teaching you through your earthly father to follow your Heavenly Father.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 23, 2024

Notes of Faith June 23, 2024

God Owns It All

His divine power has given to us all things that pertain to life and godliness, through the knowledge of Him who called us. — 2 Peter 1:3

Consider for a moment your possessions. Actually, we can possess nothing — no property and no person — along the way. It is God who owns everything, and we are but stewards of His property during the brief time we are on earth. Everything that we see about us that we count as our possessions only comprises a loan from God, and it is when we lose sight of this all-pervading truth that we become greedy and covetous.

When we clutch an object or a person and say, “This thing is mine,” we are forgetting that we can’t take it with us. This does not mean earthly riches are a sin — the Bible does not say that. The Bible makes it clear that God expects us to do the best we can with the talents, the abilities, the situations with which life endows us. But there is a right way and a wrong way to acquire money and a right way and a wrong way to achieve power.

Choose God’s way and hold possessions lightly.

A Christian View of Materialism

For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil, for which some have strayed from the faith in their greediness, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows. — 1 Timothy 6:10

The Christian attitude should prevail in the matter of economics. Jesus said a man’s life does not consist in the abundance of the things he possesses. Money is a good slave but a bad master. Property is to be used, enjoyed, shared, given, but not hoarded. Paul said that the love of money was the “root of all… evil” (1 Timothy 6:10). Covetousness shackles its devotee and makes him its victim. It hardens the heart and deadens the noble impulses and destroys the vital qualities of life.

Beware of covetousness in every phase and form! All of us should keep ourselves from it through vigilance, prayer, self-control, and discipline. Life is not a matter of dollars and cents, houses and lands, earning capacity and financial achievement. Greed must not be allowed to make man the slave of wealth.

The Christian, above all others, should realize that we come into life with empty hands — and it is with empty hands that we leave it.

Do you feel money is more your servant or your boss?

Excerpted from Peace for Each Day by Billy Graham, copyright Billy Graham Literary Trust.

You will enjoy most the things that you have been given with others. Do not build storehouses that will not endure but rather give to those in need and receive blessing as you give it. Life is short and the relationships that we create and build are the things that make us truly rich. Invest the truth of Jesus in the lives of others and your investment can bring eternal riches.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 22, 2024

Notes of Faith June 22, 2024

Stressing Out

I have told you these things, so that in Me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world. — John 16:33

Do you ever feel overwhelmed? Stressed out? Like you could use a hug? We all do, sometimes. You might lose a game, your homework, or your phone. You might run out of time with a long list of things you still need to do. People you care about might let you down or leave. Some days you ache inside or feel super jittery.

Jesus completely understands.

He experienced all kinds of trouble while He was here on earth. God made you, loves you, and understands exactly what you’re going through. Jesus offers you peace. He knows hard stuff will come your way, but He promises to help you overcome it. That could be with something as simple as a hug or something more complex like the right prescription or therapist.

You can have peace in Jesus, because all the awful, painful, challenging things of the world — Jesus has overcome them all.

Step into His arms. Lean into Him. Breathe in His peace.

Draw a peace sign. In each of the four openings write something you’re worried about or overwhelmed by. Turn each thing over to Jesus. Ask Him to take control of whatever’s going on. Then draw a cross over each of the things and breathe in the peace and help Jesus is offering.

You can talk to God anytime, anywhere, about everything.

And pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests.

— Ephesians 6:18

God calls you His child, His friend, His beloved.

Those are all words we use to describe a relationship we have with someone. And when we’re in a relationship, we talk to the other person. Kids and parents talk to each other. Friends chat with each other. People who love each other communicate. You talk to someone to let them know how you’re feeling, what you expect, what’s going on in your life, to share a story, to ask for help, or to get encouragement.

If you believe that Jesus is your Savior, then you’re in a relationship with God. He wants you to talk to Him. That’s all prayer is.

You can talk to God anytime, anywhere, about everything.

God wants you to talk to Him about the test you’re stressed about and your current mood and the new kid in your group. God wants you to thank Him, ask His opinion, and share with Him how you feel. There isn’t anything you can’t talk to God about. The Bible says you can talk to Him (pray) on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. Why not start now?

Dear Jesus, thank You for wanting to talk to me, for wanting to hear from me about everything, for being a safe place I can go with all my problems and emotions.

Excerpted from 5-Minute Devotions for Teens by Laura L. Smith, copyright Laura L. Smith.

Prayer is communication with the God who created us, loves us, provides for us, and wants the very best for us! Prayer is a foundational truth and practice of the faith that we have been given. If you have not yet done so today, stop, and take a moment to spend with God. If you need more time with Him, all the better. Then, continue this practice tomorrow, and develop it until it becomes “praying without ceasing,” when you are in communication with the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, at all times, day or night. This will become part of who you are and who you were meant to be!

Pastor Dalae

Notes of Faith June 21, 2024

Notes of Faith June 21, 2024

The Voice

My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me.

John 10:27

On April 9, 1860, a French inventor recorded a ten-second snippet of the song “Au Clair de la Lune” on what he called a phonautograph. It was the first time the human voice had ever been recorded. Oh, don’t you wish we had a recording of the voice of Jesus Christ? One day we’ll hear those clarion tones, but even now, His words reverberate through the Bible, through history, and into eternity.

When Jesus cast out demons in Mark 3, we see that even the most ferocious demons fled at the word of Jesus. When He spoke the words, “Peace, be still!” in Mark 4:39, the wind and the sea instantly calmed. He told Pontius Pilate in John 18:37, “Everyone who is of the truth hears My voice.” When He comes at the Rapture, it will be with a shout; and when He comes to end the Battle of Armageddon and usher in His Kingdom, the voice from His mouth will be like a sword to defeat His enemies (Revelation 19:15).

How wonderful to experience the power of Christ’s voice today every time we open our Bibles and listen with our hearts.

A voice, a heavenly voice, I hear! Arise, O soul, come and draw near.

Johan Wallin

Ps 29

Ascribe to the Lord, O sons of the mighty,

Ascribe to the Lord glory and strength.

2 Ascribe to the Lord the glory due to His name;

Worship the Lord in holy array.

3 The voice of the Lord is upon the waters;

The God of glory thunders,

The Lord is over many waters.

4 The voice of the Lord is powerful,

The voice of the Lord is majestic.

5 The voice of the Lord breaks the cedars;

Yes, the Lord breaks in pieces the cedars of Lebanon.

6 He makes Lebanon skip like a calf,

And Sirion like a young wild ox.

7 The voice of the Lord hews out flames of fire.

8 The voice of the Lord shakes the wilderness;

The Lord shakes the wilderness of Kadesh.

9 The voice of the Lord makes the deer to calve

And strips the forests bare;

And in His temple everything says, "Glory!"

10 The Lord sat as King at the flood;

Yes, the Lord sits as King forever.

11 The Lord will give strength to His people;

The Lord will bless His people with peace.

If we will read our Bibles, the Word of God, if we will fervently pray, if we will listen to the godly men and women God places around us, we will hear Him speak to us. God is always with us and has promised to never leave or forsake us. Use all of the resources that you have been given to communicate with the One who loves you most!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 20, 2024

Notes of Faith June 20, 2024

Saying vs. Knowing

If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear. But certainly God has heard me; He has attended to the voice of my prayer.

Psalm 66:18-19

Why are witnesses in a courtroom required to swear to tell “the whole truth” when they testify? So that what they say is true matches up with what they know to be true. If they are found to be lying—saying one thing but knowing another—they can be convicted of perjury and suffer serious penalties.

Isa 1:13

13 "Bring your worthless offerings no longer,

Incense is an abomination to Me.

New moon and sabbath, the calling of assemblies —

I cannot endure iniquity and the solemn assembly.

Isa 1:15

15 "So when you spread out your hands in prayer,

I will hide My eyes from you;

Yes, even though you multiply prayers,

I will not listen.

A judge and jury cannot see into a witness’ heart or mind to tell whether or not the truth is being presented. But God can. In the Old Testament, there were clear warnings about coming before God in prayer while hiding sin in one’s heart. That is, attempting to act holy in prayer while being unholy in practice. In such cases, God turns a deaf ear to the prayers (Proverbs 15:29; 28:9; Isaiah 1:15; 59:1-2). And the same is said in the New Testament (1 Peter 3:12). The first step in prayer is confession leading to cleansing.

When you pray, ask the Holy Spirit to reveal anything that would hinder your prayers.

Prayer will make a man cease from sin, or sin will entice a man to cease from prayer. John Bunyan

Do not lie is one of the “Ten Commandments” and the consequences of breaking this commandment without repentance are eternal. If we do not confess sin, we do not have a pure heart and likely are not a true Christian. The Holy Spirit within the true believer would convict of his sin bringing about a true repentant heart and confession of his sin. Asking God, the Holy Spirit to reveal sin helps us to break free from the chains and shackles that keep us from God and from living a life pleasing to God. Let us pursue truth and grace like never before…to be pleasing in His sight now and for all eternity!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 19, 2024

Notes of Faith June 19, 2024

All You Had to Do...

You lust and do not have. You murder and covet and cannot obtain. You fight and war. Yet you do not have because you do not ask.

James 4:2

How many times have we heard or said these words: “All you had to do was ask”? What keeps us from asking? Fear of being denied, not wanting to impose or intrude, or thinking we are asking for too much?

The apostle James pointed out the same irony in his epistle: “You do not have because you do not ask.” In his case, his words were a rebuke to his readers because they were using carnal means for getting what they wanted or needed instead of asking God (James 4:1-2). And when they did ask, God didn’t provide because their motives in asking were worldly (James 4:3). Jesus talked about asking God in a more positive light: “So I say to you, ask, and it will be given to you.... For everyone who asks receives” (Luke 11:9-10). And don’t just ask once; the Greek form of “ask” is literally “keep on asking.”

If you need something today, bring your request to God—with confidence you will receive His answer (Hebrews 4:16).

Most Christians expect little from God, ask little, and therefore receive little, and are content with little.

A.W. Pink

Luke 11:9-13

9 "So I say to you: Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. 10 For everyone who asks receives; he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks, the door will be opened.

11 "Which of you fathers, if your son asks for a fish, will give him a snake instead? 12 Or if he asks for an egg, will give him a scorpion? 13 If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!"

James 4:2-3

You do not have because you do not ask. 3 You ask and do not receive, because you ask with wrong motives, so that you may spend it on your pleasure

When we do ask, we ask for the wrong things, earthly pleasures, rather than spiritual maturity. When we ask for things of God, He gladly answers those prayers because they are righteous and holy requests.

Matt 6:33

33 But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.

Pastor Dale