Notes of Faith October 28, 2023

Notes of Faith October 28, 2023

Prayer for Healing

So Moses cried out to the Lord, saying, “Please heal her, O God, I pray!”

— Numbers 12:13

Miriam had dared to speak ill of Moses. But Moses was not only her brother, he was a prophet of the Lord. God took this offense so seriously that He caused Miriam to be covered in leprosy. It certainly wasn’t always the case, but in this instance her illness was a direct result of her sinful actions.

Moses’ immediate reaction was to cry out to God on her behalf.

He prayed that Miriam would be healed of her affliction Moses expressed such humility in not only forgiving the original offense, but also pleading for the consequences of that offense to be removed from her.

Let’s pray for the healing of those around us.

How many of us have seen another individual dealing with the unpleasant ramifications of his or her behavior and failed to feel any compassion?

Perhaps we thought to ourselves, “Well, that’s what he gets,” or some such sentiment. Maybe we even fail to pray for our own healing because we feel that we deserve whatever it is that has happened to us.

There are two things that make all the difference when it comes to a seemingly undeserved healing. First, God is a merciful God, and His mercies are new every morning (Lamentations 3:23).

Second, prayer is a powerful thing. The prayer of a righteous man can accomplish much good (James 5:16). Let’s pray for the healing of those around us.

God of mercy, I pray for those around me, that they would know Your peace, healing, and love.

Excerpted from 100 Favorite Bible Prayers by Stacy Edwards, copyright Thomas Nelson.

We have several in our church family with serious illness, and many that could benefit from prayer and healing from a gracious and merciful God! You, too, may need prayer. Whether your need is repentance and forgiveness, or specific healing… I would love to hear from you and pray for you to our loving and merciful God. Join me in praying for others!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 27, 2023

Notes of Faith October 27, 2023

No Comparison

Sovereign God,

Help me to lead the life that You have assigned to me — and to be content. I need to beware of comparing my situation with someone else’s, feeling dissatisfied because of the comparison. I realize it’s also hurtful to compare my current circumstances with how things used to be or with fantasies that bear little resemblance to reality. Instead, I must make every effort to accept as my calling the life You have assigned to me. This perspective takes the sting out of painful, difficult circumstances. If You have called me to a situation, I know You’ll give me everything I need to endure it — and even to find some Joy in the midst of it.

Please train my mind to trust Your sovereign ways with me — bowing before Your mysterious, infinite intelligence. I need to search for You in the details of my day, all the while looking expectantly for good to emerge from trouble. I’m learning to accept things the way they are, without losing hope for a better future. And I rejoice in the hope of Heaven, knowing that indescribably joyful Life is my ultimate calling!

In Your supremely wise Name, Jesus, Amen

Let each person lead the life that the Lord has assigned to him, and to which God has called him. — 1 Corinthians 7:17 ESV

I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation. — Philippians 4:12

Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out! “Who has known the mind of the Lord? Or who has been his counselor?” — Romans 11:33–34

Help me remember that the difficulty of my circumstances is not a mistake.

Beloved Jesus,

Your Word tells me to sing to You because You have dealt bountifully with me. I confess that sometimes singing praises is the last thing I feel like doing, but that’s when I need it the most. You have indeed dealt bountifully with me — even when it doesn’t seem that way. I’ve been on an uphill journey with You, and I’m growing weary. I yearn for some easy days, for a path that is not so steep. But I realize it is the strenuous climbs that take me ever upward — closer and closer to the summit.

Help me remember that the difficulty of my circumstances is not a mistake. It’s a matter of Your sovereign will and — to some extent — my own goals. I desire to live close to You and to grow more fully into the one You created me to be. Pursuing these goals has put me on an adventurous trail where difficulties and dangers abound.

Sometimes I compare my life-path with those of people whose lives seem easier than mine. But I don’t fully comprehend the problems they face, nor do I know what the future holds for them. Instead of comparing my circumstances with those of others, I need to turn to You and listen as You instruct me, “You follow Me!”

In Your bountiful Name, Amen

I will sing to the Lord, because He has dealt bountifully with me.

— Psalm 13:6 NKJV

It is God who arms me with strength and makes my way perfect... He enables me to stand on the heights. — 2 Samuel 22:33–34

Jesus said to him, “If I want him to remain until I come, what is that to you? You follow Me!” — John 21:22 NASB

Excerpted from Jesus Listens Notetaking by Sarah Young, copyright Sarah Young.

Living life daily believing God has prepared every circumstance and experience for you will allow you to live in peace and security. Thinking about what ifs and whys only causes pain, anxiety, and suffering that need not be. Don’t worry, be happy, is not bad counseling if understood from the truth of God. Live your life in expectation of pleasing God and being blessed by God. Just like the apostle Peter, we are to follow Jesus and not compare ourselves to the circumstances of others.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 26, 2023

Notes of Faith October 26, 2023

Pillar of Fire and Cloud of Smoke

EXODUS 13 / JOHN 8:12–30

Again Jesus spoke to them, saying, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows Me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.” — John 8:12

Do you remember traveling on a road trip before using a map app on your phone?

If you can, there’s a high possibility you remember the days of printing turn-by-turn directions from MapQuest.com. Or before that, buying a printed road map or atlas! Oh, how far we’ve come!

Getting lost, missing exits, getting turned around... the confusion can leave us feeling so vulnerable.

It’s incredibly dysregulating and sometimes downright frightening to be lost. The Israelites most definitely felt this vulnerability and anxiety when they left Egypt. Yes, they were leaving the devastating hardships of Egypt, but every step took them deeper into the unknown. And the unknown can be a frightening place to willingly walk into.

God... where am I supposed to be going?

From the start of the Israelites’ exit from Egypt, God kept His promise not just to lead His people, but to be with them every step of the way.

Read Exodus 13:17–18a. Take note of the words in verse 18a, especially

But God led the people around by the way of the wilderness toward the Red Sea.

How does it make you feel, reading that God intentionally led the Israelites into the wilderness?

It’s hard to understand why God would intentionally take the Israelites through such a desolate place like the wilderness. Maybe today you find yourself questioning God in a place you find yourself in.

God... why am I here?

God... where are You?

God... what am I supposed to be doing?

God... where am I supposed to be going?

The wilderness wasn’t God’s punishment because He didn’t care. It was where God took them because He knew something they didn’t.

God knew going the shorter journey through the land of the Philistines was a greater danger to them in the long run. If the Israelites faced the Philistines, their fear might have prompted them to turn back to Egypt. Or, they might have been tempted by the idolatry of the Philistines and turn towards false gods.

God was not unaware of the needs of the Israelites. And God is not unaware of your deepest needs.

The promise of God’s presence would carry the Israelites through what appeared to be their worst nightmare in the wilderness.

Read Exodus 13:21–22. What was the manifestation of God’s presence that went before them?

These manifestations served two important purposes:

... The pillars led the people in the direction that they should go.

... The pillars provided boundaries and protection for the people.

Let’s zoom in on the image here. The Israelites saw the tangible presence of God leading and guiding them day and night. Even though the Israelites cried out in complaints and weariness from the journey that felt purposeless to them, God’s presence continued to guide them.

Here is one of the challenges we face when experiencing unexpected pain and suffering: We can believe there is an underlying meaninglessness to what we’re facing. But through uncovering these details within the story of Israel in the wilderness, we see there is not a single moment of our hardship and hurt that is not used by God to bring forth a greater good and purpose.

God was not unaware of the needs of the Israelites. And God is not unaware of your deepest needs.

The question isn’t so much about the direction in which God is leading us — it’s about our obedience along the way.

Think about where you are today. What might obedience to God look like here?

The pillar of cloud by day and pillar of fire by night didn’t just lead God’s people; it also served as a protective boundary.

The people always knew how far ahead they could go. This clear boundary gave them a visible marking of what too far would be. Too far would simply be to step in front of the pillar of cloud or fire, putting them outside or ahead of the presence of God and the pace of His leading.

Have you experienced the Lord leading you or revealing a boundary to you? What did that look like?

Jesus is “the light of the world.”

JOHN 8:12

When Jesus says He is the “light of the world” in John 8:12, it is a promise of orientation and direction. Just like the pillar of cloud by day and pillar of fire by night provided direction for the Israelites, we have this same guide in the person of Jesus.

In the darkest moments of our life, when we feel unseen, disregarded or abandoned, we can remember that the Light shines in the darkness, and the darkness cannot overcome it (John 1:5). Wherever the Light of Christ is, there is hope. This isn’t just a good-sounding Christian slogan. This is truth. And sometimes it’s helpful to speak this out loud over whatever you are facing. Remember, lies flee in the presence of truth, just like darkness flees in the presence of light.

Jesus is “the way, and the truth, and the life.”

JOHN 14:6

Where there is the light, there is the promise of life. John 1:4 says,

In Him was life, and the life was the light of men.

In Jesus, we find the life all of humanity longs for. And we can also be assured that Jesus will guide us along our way through the Truth of His Word and His presence.

Jesus is the “good shepherd” who promises to lead His people.

JOHN 10:11; JOHN 10:27

Sheep depend on the care and protection of a shepherd, and we can depend on the care of Jesus as our Good Shepherd. Read the words of Jesus in John 10:27–28:

My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they will never perish, and no one will snatch them out of my hand.

This takes some humility to lean into His guidance, but we also need to grow attuned to the voice of Jesus so we can obey when He is speaking to us. In the hard, desolate places in our lives, it can feel like Jesus is absent. But if we take a moment to pause, be silent, watch, and really listen, we can both see the light of His presence and hear the comfort of His voice.

Excerpted from 30 Days with Jesus by Lysa TerKeurst and Joel Muddamalle, copyright Lysa TerKeurst and Joel Muddamalle.

Prov 3:5-6

Trust in the Lord with all your heart,

and do not lean on your own understanding.

6 In all your ways acknowledge him,

and he will make straight your paths.

1 Peter 5:6-8

Therefore humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you at the proper time, 7 casting all your anxiety on Him, because He cares for you.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 25, 2023

Notes of Faith October 25, 2023

Burying the Hatchet: The Offending Party

Every broken relationship has an offending party. True reconciliation calls for a repentant heart on their part, a change of mind, a turn-around, a going back to someone with an admission of wrong and a request for forgiveness. Paul framed it like this to Philemon:

I am sending him [Onesimus] — who is my very heart — back to you. — Philemon 12 NIV

Onesimus, the offending party, had become one “heart” with Paul. They were now more closely related as brothers in Christ through the blood of Jesus than to their own blood relatives who did not know Him. Since Christ had now transformed Onesimus’s life, he had no option but to go back and make things right. The Greek word for this repentance literally means “to change one’s mind.” Onesimus had a genuine change of mind about his past actions. He was not headed home to argue his case. He was on his way back to admit his wrong and hopefully bury the hatchet with Philemon. Some of us make this journey back, but when we arrive on the scene, we try to justify our past actions or even argue our case. Not Onesimus. He was taking responsibility.

Let’s revisit the story from chapter 1 about the Prodigal Son, the greatest short story ever told by Jesus. The prodigal was the offending party. He skipped out on his dad and left home with his inheritance. After wasting it all, he “came to himself” (Luke 15:17). He changed his mind about the entire ordeal. This led to a change of volition, of will, as he said,

I will arise and go to my father. — Luke 15:18

And this resulted in a change of action when he got up and headed home.

Repentance is a change of mind that affects a change of will that results in a change of action.

And the father greeted the boy with open arms and a receptive heart that was void of retaliation or resentment. They buried the hatchet then and there. Onesimus, like the prodigal, was on his way home. He doesn’t send a word of apology back from someone else. This was personal. He was going back himself.

When we have relationships that are based upon the solid foundation of being properly related to our source, the Lord Jesus, we are not out to escape our past, get a pass, or run from our mistakes. But

a relationship with Him enables us to face our past, find a new beginning, and make wiser choices going forward.

Onesimus was headed home to Philemon to face the consequences of what he did and hopefully to make right his previous wrong.

This might be a different story today if Onesimus had sought counsel from some so-called professionals in the field today, instead of finding it in the wise counsel of the apostle Paul. Some today, after listening to his story, would have offered advice that said, “Look, forget about the past. You can find justification for what happened. Put it behind you. Go on with your life. Learn from your mistakes. Forget about Philemon.” And had he taken counsel like this, he would have lived out his days, as many do today, with something left unfinished and a dark cloud that always hung over his head. That is no way to live a positive and purposeful life.

In God’s economy, the way up is down, and the way down is up.

Often the way forward is back. Back — to admit I was wrong in ways I always insisted I was right. Back — to make the previous wrong right. This is one of the great paradoxes of the Christian life.

In God’s economy, the way up is down, and the way down is up.

Paul added an additional paradox to the equation that the way forward is back. He wrote,

I am sending him — who is my very heart — back to you. — Philemon 12 NIV

It was along these same lines of seeing that the way forward is back that Jesus said,

If you bring your gift to the altar, and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar, and go your way. First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift.

— Matthew 5:23–24

Do you see it? This is one of life’s great paradoxes — the way forward is back!

This is the actual point of frustration with many of us, although it is seldom recognized as such. That is, we try to move on, to go forward, but something is left undone, and we must first go back in order to go forward. It just may be that unless someone reading these words goes back, forward progress will be thwarted, and future days will be spent in relational cul-de-sacs, roundabouts, or worse, dead ends.

Only in Hollywood is such nonsense as “Love means never having to say you are sorry” successful. In real life, relationships do not succeed on that premise.

Those who enjoy profitable, long-term relationships know what it is to go back to say, “I am sorry. I was wrong. Please forgive me.”

Onesimus gives us hope. If you think your particular case is hopeless, look at his. There is always hope for anyone who will admit to being the offending party. When we do, we can join Onesimus in some pretty good company. Moses, the highly revered emancipator of the Jewish people, was a murderer. But he discovered the way forward was back. After forty years on the back side of a desert, he went back and delivered a nation. And what about King David? He was exhibit A of an offending party. He stole the affections of another man’s wife, got her pregnant, and even orchestrated her husband’s demise and death. But later, plagued with remorse and repentance, he discovered the way forward was back. If anyone should doubt the sincerity of his repentance, simply read the Fifty-First Psalm. And let’s not forget Jonah. He shook his fist in the face of God and His plan and later, while in the belly of a great fish, discovered the way forward was back. God gave him a second chance. Finally, no talk of the second chance would be complete without a mention of Simon Peter, the big fisherman. He did what he insisted he would never do. He denied he ever knew the Christ. But he, too, discovered the life-changing principle that the way forward is back. He went back, met Christ on the seashore in genuine repentance, and then did he ever go forward. Just read of his exploits in the book of Acts.

When we go back, God forgives. And then we can move forward to our greatest days. The way forward is still back.

Who is it that gets the ball of reconciliation rolling? Both sides must do their part. There must be a repentant heart on the part of the offending party and a receptive heart on the part of the offended party. Relational difficulties persist when we who are the offending party become blind to our own abuses and refuse to admit we were wrong. After a while of continuing to try to justify our actions, we actually begin to believe the lie. Consequently, too many of us live out our days with unfinished business.

The hatchet of broken relationships will never be buried until there is genuine repentance on the part of the offending party. The way forward is back!

Excerpted from The Connection Code by O. S. Hawkins, copyright Dr. O. S. Hawkins.

Repentance…not sure there are too many people living today that know and understand this word. A true turning from something toward something else. This is what is needed to have a relationship with God, for we are the one who offended, disobeyed, was an enemy. In any relationship we may need to be repentant, ask forgiveness and then we can truly move on and heal those relationships. May we come to God and by His grace be spiritually healed and given eternal life!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 24, 2023

Notes of Faith October 24, 2023

The Theology of Gratitude

Sometimes our fears and worries feel more like wolves circling us in the dark than little creatures nibbling away at our peace. In a world where we’ve been anxious over everything from the fragility of complex systems to the availability of hospital beds and baby formula, we need to nurture thankful hearts and minds full of gratitude.

To approach any situation, any dilemma, any frightening report “with thanksgiving” adds a dimension that melts away anxiety like winter’s ice on a sunny day. No matter our crisis or concern, there are always notable items for which we can be thankful, and finding them is critical to winning the fight. If we don’t find those items and thank God for them, we cannot overcome anxiety.

Gratitude is to worry what antibiotics are to an infection.

The old practice of “counting our blessings” is an effective modern treatment for what ails the mind. Giving thanks is essential to mental health.

I believe that’s what the apostle Paul learned as well. He seemed, by nature, high-strung and keyed up. But Paul had learned to weave the concept of “with thanksgiving” into the fabric of his thinking, and gratitude appeared incessantly in his writing.

He spoke of it in theological terms, as though it were as important as any other doctrine.

This shows up clearly in his letter to the Colossians where, throughout its four chapters, we find Paul’s theology of gratitude — which, incidentally, had also become a habit of gratitude — on every page.

“We always thank God,” the apostle wrote in Colossians 1:3. Then down in verse 10, Paul commanded the Colossians: “Live a life worthy of the Lord and please Him in every way.” We do that by:

bearing fruit in every good work, growing in the knowledge of God, being strengthened with all power according to His glorious might so that you may have great endurance and patience, and giving joyful thanks to the Father, who has qualified you to share in the inheritance of His holy people in the Kingdom of light. — Colossians 1:10–12

Gratitude is to worry what antibiotics are to an infection.

Colossians 2 continues the theme:

So then, just as you received Christ Jesus as Lord, continue to live your lives in Him, rooted and built up in Him, strengthened in the faith as you were taught, and overflowing with thankfulness. — Colossians 2:6–7

Imagine you were a river. If thanksgiving were measured like water, would you be a dry gulch, a trickle, brimming at the banks, or overflowing at flood stage? How you and I answer that simple question says something about our mental health and our ability to manage our anxieties.

The next chapter of Colossians extends the connection between gratitude and peace of mind:

Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts... And be thankful... And whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through Him. — Colossians 3:15–17).

Then we come to Colossians 4, which commands,

Devote yourselves to prayer, being watchful and thankful. — Colossians 4:2

This theme isn’t just found in Colossians, of course. It runs like a stream from the first pages of Scripture to the last ones, and it’s interlaced into the Bible as fully as any doctrine. Dr. Al Mohler wrote, “Thanksgiving is a deeply theological act, rightly understood. As a matter of fact, thankfulness is theology in microcosm — a key to understanding what we really believe about God, ourselves, and the world we experience.”1

Albert Mohler, “Thanksgiving as a Theological Act,” November 23, 2016, AlbertMohler.com, http://www.albertmohler.com/2016/11/23/ thanksgiving-theological-act-mean-give-thanks/.

Excerpted from Calm Your Anxiety by Robert Morgan, copyright Robert J. Morgan.

We are getting closer to “Thanksgiving” when everyone seems to have their mind focused on giving thanks. But why are we not always in this state of mind? God’s love and provision for us is never-ending, always caring for and blessing even through trials and tribulations. Though it is difficult, my prayer for you and for me, is that we learn to give thanks to God in every situation, knowing that He is ultimately in control of all things, allowing things in our life for spiritual growth, learning to trust Him, grow in faith, recognizing the end result is to glorify God and our highest blessing in Christ.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 23, 2023

Notes of Faith October 23, 2023

Peace That Conquers

These things I have spoken to you, so that in Me you may have peace.

— John 16:33

Europe trembled as Hitler’s menacing armies annexed Austria and set their sights on Czechoslovakia. Attempting to appease the dreaded dictator, England’s prime minister Neville Chamberlain traveled to Germany and, on September 29, 1938, signed the infamous Munich Agreement. Upon his return, Chamberlain triumphantly announced, “I believe it is peace for our time.” Less than a year later, Germany had conquered Czechoslovakia and invaded Poland, and World War II had begun.

Was Jesus’ talk of peace like Chamberlain’s optimistic boast? After all, war, violence, hatred, and persecution still exist.

Yet when Jesus promised that He would leave us His peace, He did not ignore the reality of conflict in our lives.

That’s why He immediately followed by explaining,

In the world you have tribulation, but take courage; I have overcome the world.

— John 16:33

You will face adversity — indeed, you may be enduring some today. But when overwhelming circumstances arise that threaten to shake your tranquility, Christ promises that He will be your wise and victorious defender. He is more than able to triumph over whatever you could possibly face.

Jesus, thank You for being my defender and my peace in every situation. Amen.

When Jesus promised that He would leave us His peace, He did not ignore the reality of conflict in our lives.

His Personal Spirit

He will give you another Helper, that He may be with you forever. — John 14:16

Mystery often surrounds the person of the Holy Spirit — our understanding is often muddled about who He is and what He does. However, it is not possible to make progress in the Christian life apart from His presence. This is because the Holy Spirit is God’s personal representative here on earth, and His role is to be our Helper and Comforter. In Greek, this word is parakletos, and it suggests that He gives us aid much like a legal counselor or advocate would. He comes alongside us, giving us strength and encouraging support. However, if we do not recognize His presence, authority, and power, we can mistakenly believe and act like we are in this life alone.

Jesus knows how important His presence is with us. Therefore, the Lord in His great compassion and wisdom sent His Holy Spirit to teach, guide, and help us.

He instructs us in the truth and is our personal advocate before the throne of God. This is our peace and strength regardless of the circumstances — whatever we face, Christ faces it with us personally through the indwelling presence of His Holy Spirit.

Jesus, thank You for the enduring presence, wisdom, comfort, and power of Your indwelling Holy Spirit with me. Amen.

Excerpted from Trusting God with Today by Charles F. Stanley, copyright Charles F. Stanley.

Fear not, for I am with you always…Jesus.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 22, 2023

Notes of Faith October 22, 2023

Talkin’ to God

I love to talk to God, and I’ve never been shy about asking Him for a helping hand. Doesn’t matter if a problem is big or small, I talk to God about it. But Daddy saw it a different way. Back when I first started singing, Mama let me wear one of Daddy’s championship belt buckles. You can see it on the cover of my album Whoever’s in New England. At one point, when I came home from touring, I realized I’d misplaced it. Daddy overheard me tell Mama that I’d been praying I would find that lost belt buckle.

“Reba,” Daddy said, “don’t bother God with silly stuff like that. He’s got more important things to deal with.”

That really shocked me because I asked God about everything!

Later on, when I came home from touring, I called Mama. She told me that my nephew, Vince, and our neighbor’s son had found the belt buckle in the dried-up creek bed! It might seem like a small answer to prayer, but it was a huge reminder for me that prayer works.

There is nothing too big or too small to pray to God about. He can do the impossible. You just have to ask.

The main thing I try to stay consistent with in my life is my relationship with the Lord. He’s always been there for me. My faith has gotten me through the loneliest of times. He’s that rock, that fortress you lean on when things go wrong.

The best way for me to be still in my spirit is to go out for a long walk. I love being outside and looking at God’s creation. Watching the clouds go by and listening to the birds sing always fills me with peace. I felt the same way when I was a girl riding through the hills on our ranch. There’s just something about being alone in nature that helps me listen in a way I can’t in the middle of the hustle and bustle of my usual life.

One day back in 2014, when I was out walking, I said, “Okay, Lord. What do You want me to do?” and He said, “Pray for peace.” So I did. A few days later I was out walking again, and I asked again, “Lord, what do You want me to do?” and again He said, “Pray for peace.”

“Well, I’ve been doing that.” “Sing it,” He said.

So I started singing, “Pray for peace. Pray for peace.”

A while after that, I asked God what He wanted me to do with that song, and He said, “Record it.”

So we did. We recorded it and made a music video that included people from all over the world praying for peace. I was so moved to see the Lord at work in the lives of so many different people in so many different places. I don’t write a lot of songs, but when the Lord gives you such clear direction, you listen.

There is nothing too big or too small to pray to God about.

When I’m going through something tough, most of the time God just wants me to be still and listen to the instructions He’s giving. It’s about His time, not my time. His will, His way. Not mine.

Another time when I was out walking, trying to process through my divorce, I heard God say, “When something like this happens, just say, ‘Oh well.’” So that’s what I do. Or sometimes I tell Him, “Okay, Big Boy. I can’t handle this. This is way over my pay grade.” And every time, He shows up and takes care of me.

When tough times come, we have to recognize that this life is not our own.

Sometimes there is nothing we can do but get out of the way and let God take control. I have full faith that God is in control and that He is bringing better things into my life, even if I can’t see them yet.

God is always there when you need Him. You might find Him in church, or you may be like me and feel closer to Him out in His creation. Get out in nature and let all the things God has made show you the way. Faith is never far away, and at least for me, the best evidence that God is always with us is right outside. I hope these words will help you to be still and listen for Him. And I hope you’ll find in Him what I always have — love, strength, peace, and wisdom.

Talkin’ to God

There are many ways to pray to the Lord. Here are a few you can try if you’re feeling stuck about how to talk to Him.

Sing a song. The Bible talks about music an awful lot, and singing has always been part of the way we worship God. I love the praise-and-worship part of church and feel so close to Him when I’m singing.

Ask the Holy Spirit to take over. When you don’t have the words, the Holy Spirit does.

Recite the Lord’s Prayer. Let that be your starting point.

Get out into nature. Just be still. Listen for God instead of doing all the talking.

Read your Bible. Get into God’s Word and see what He tells you.

Ask someone else to pray with you. We all know a few prayer warriors we can ask to help us out if we need it.

Excerpted from Not That Fancy by Reba McEntire, copyright Reba McEntire.

Praying really should be simple. It is talking to God. Many people shout at God, cry to God, give lists to God, but few have a conversation with God. We need to listen to God … and the best way to do that is to read our Bible. This is God speaking and He wants us to do what He speaks to us in His Word. Take time today, maybe several times today, to talk with God. Be still, listen, let your heart understand His love for you and desire for your life. Then respond, by doing what God has called you to do!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 21, 2023

Notes of Faith October 21, 2023

The Use and Abuse of Scripture

How Christian Preachers Wield the Word

Article by David Mathis

Executive Editor, desiringGod.org

It was a long, shameful walk back to the hunting cabin.

For well over an hour, I had sat in the deer stand, happily reading and enjoying the quiet morning. Then I felt the loose bullets rattle in my pocket. I turned and looked. Oh no.

I had forgotten my rifle.

No choice now but to go back for it. The rest of the men in our extended family were tucked away in their own stands. They wouldn’t see me go back for my gun. But they would hear about it. Oh, would they. The cabin, teeming with our wives and children, would all too gladly report on my “hunt.” I could see pairs of eyes gawking through the window as I came up the dirt road. They gathered around and met me with barbs and laughter at the door.

Years later, I’m yet to live it down (and rightfully so). Now every fall we hear, “Remember the time Uncle David . . .”

Hunting Without a Rifle

I’m a terribly amateur hunter. I easily smile and chuckle about once forgetting my rifle. For me, the real joy in that quiet deer stand is unhurried Bible meditation and prayer. Getting the big buck is a distant second.

As a pastor, however, it would be a serious shame if I took the stand without my weapon. That is, if I entered the pulpit without the sword — without the staff, the wand, the scalpel for the most exacting of operations, the singular instrument of our holy calling. Without the Book, a Christian preacher is unequipped and incompetent. He is left, tragically, to preach his own ideas, his own preferences, his own lifehacks, his own self. When the act does not begin, persist, and conclude with faithfully delivering the message of another, it is, in reality, pretend preaching, not the real thing.

But with the Book in hand, with the Scriptures, with the word of truth about Christ and his work — and with the one weapon well-worn and cherished, internalized and rightly handled — the mere man, finite and fallen, is God’s man for the preaching moment. This blade, well-known and well-handled, can take the head off an evil giant, and perform the most delicate of surgeries on saints. With it, take to the pulpit with a holy and humble confidence. Without it, take a long walk back to the cabin.

Put the Word to Work

As the apostle Paul ascends the mountain to that great “preach the word” peak in 2 Timothy 4:2, he charges his protégé and dear friend to use Scripture to fulfill his calling.

Use Scripture — that might sound strange. But this is not the use of exploitation or abuse. Rather, this is the use of attention, reverence, and trust. Take it up. Put it to work. God gave us his Book not to file it away on the shelf, but to use it. Read it, explain it, preach it. Repeat. And don’t dare pretend to preach without it.

All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable . . .

Scripture is profitable, beneficial, useful (to greatly understate it!) in the pastoral calling. With Scripture in hand, and in his mouth, the preacher is competent, capable, proficient for the various aspects of his calling — “for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness” (2 Timothy 3:16). But without it, he is incompetent, incapable, inept — no matter how elegant he sounds or what a “good communicator” he is.

How, then, might preachers today, both current practitioners and those who aspire, answer this timeless call to use the Book?

1. Handle It Privately

First, we hold it, touch it, taste it for ourselves, in private — and ideally for some years before regularly taking it into a pulpit. And then, once preaching, we continue to handle it privately in all the times and seasons we endure as pastors, and as Christians.

We learn to use Scripture to help others by using it to feed and restore our own souls morning by morning. First, we learn — over time, not overnight — how to handle Scripture for ourselves, leaning on God’s Spirit. He may be pleased to give early flashes of insight and sovereign protection from error, but he doesn’t make preachers without putting them to work and conditioning them for the long haul. The arc of good preaching is years in the making, beginning with understanding and applying God’s word rightly in our own minds and hearts and lives. The competent pastoral use of the word emerges not mainly from study sessions prior to public messages but from long-standing patterns of being conformed to God’s word in secret.

So, first, long before preaching, we quietly learn to handle God’s word for ourselves. We meditate on it and enjoy it — and enjoy God in it. We steep our souls in Scripture for years. We seek to know God’s word, as much as we can, inside and out, and have it take root, and bear fruit, in us.

2. Handle It Publicly

We then turn and make God’s word explicit in public teaching. In our sermons, we show God’s word to be our authority and driving inspiration — not our own ideas and opinions and observations and cleverness. We get our key insights from lingering in Scripture, and then we work to show our hearers where we got them. We don’t assume they will see it without our help, so we labor to make them see it for themselves.

Saturating a pulpit ministry in Scripture happens both directly and indirectly. Directly: by drawing attention to particular words and phrases, and quoting chapter and verse. Indirectly: by preparing and preaching from the kind of soul that is constantly shaped by Scripture over time, to think and feel in God’s cast of mind, rather than the world’s and our own.

3. Handle It Rightly

Now, when any modern man, in this age of the triumphant self, embraces the personal preciousness of God’s word and resolves to preach that Book, not his own thoughts and self, he has crossed the first critical hurdle. He becomes indelibly persuaded to handle the word, to use it at the heart of his preaching, and he does. This is a glorious start. The miracle has begun. Yet to fully instantiate the apostle’s vision in his final epistle, a second critical hurdle comes: rightly handling the word.

Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth. (2 Timothy 2:15)

That is, with a studied, steady hand, guide the word along a straight path. No distortive twists, no gratuitous incisions, no clever detours, no sleight of hand. With the skill of holy familiarity, take the blade from its scabbard, and wield it with precision, care, and self-control.

Handling Scripture rightly — that is, using it, without abusing it — can happen in countless ways, but here consider just two challenges among them.

UNDERSTAND TRULY

One, rightly handling means not cutting corners in the work of understanding what this text means (and does not mean). Study your passage for yourself long before you’re up against the deadline, and long before you check commentaries and other’s insights. Make time to steep in and ponder the text well before preaching it. And as you move from broad study to the narrow outline and presentation for this message, build your sermon on what you have seen for yourself, or can genuinely own as yours if another voice said it first.

APPLY DULY

Two, rightly handling entails not cutting corners in the work of appropriate application, which can be the more challenging labor for many of us. We will not be content to have the message remain distant, and not bridge the gulf from the biblical to the present world.

This too will require planning ahead, giving ourselves space, and having the patience to discover what this particular text really means for our church (and not). We will not content ourselves with preaching right ethics from the wrong texts. We will yearn to do justice to the particular passage in front of us. We won’t make a habit of or excuses for forcing square Scriptures into round pegs of application. If the desired application is not there, we’ll find a faithful way to address it, and apply the text and/or another text that genuinely addresses the felt need of the congregation. We seek to work with the grain of God’s Spirit, not against him.

Whom Does the Sermon Exalt?

We could consider other misuses. A preacher might use Scripture, but too sparingly, garnishing his own ideas with verses out of context. He may abuse Scripture when the moral burden of his sermon originates elsewhere, with Bible texts then artificially pressed into a subordinate role, to show God on the side of whatever cause. Scripture also may be in use technically and yet without fitting priority and centrality. Opportunities for error are endless.

Good and faithful preaching is not only science but art. It’s a lifetime skill learned over years and decades, not weeks and months. Make a list of all the possible requirements in Christian preaching (including appropriate focus and sufficient brevity), and no single sermon will check all the boxes. In the complexities of the art, and the diversities of biblical texts, and vast variations of congregations around the world and throughout history, producing one single litmus test for preaching is likely impossible. But perhaps one check would come close: Whom does the sermon exalt?

We might ask, in the end, does the preacher himself look best? Do the hearers feel themselves raised up above all? Or is Jesus supremely exalted? Preachers, young and old, who aspire to use Scripture rightly, in their devotions and in their pulpits, can scarcely ask themselves enough, Who is supreme in this sermon?

Every believer is a witness and preacher that God uses to exalt Jesus! Let our lives be such that in every circumstance we exalt our Lord and Savior!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 20, 2023

Notes of Faith October 20, 2023

Stop Giving CPR to Dead Situations

Baggage is only baggage when you carry it. Think about that. You have the power and control to release it and move on. ~ RTK

God is not a God of chaos and confusion. You keep RSVP-ing to the drama you’ve been invited to, so trouble keeps finding you. But miracles happen when you move. You can continually allow your past to dictate your present and your future, or you can determine it’s a new season, a new day.

When you make that decision, you’ll have to let go of those people and situations that helped facilitate your downfall.

You need to move some people from your VIP section of life to the balcony. Oh, you can still love them, just love them from a distance.

Quit labeling yourself with the things you’ve gone through and what people have said about you.

Just because you were divorced doesn’t mean you have to call yourself a divorcée, or just because your spouse passes away, you don’t have to label yourself a widow or widower, and just because you’ve lost your job, you don’t have to label yourself unemployable. You don’t have to allow others to label you either.

The prodigal son may have left home and returned broke and weary, but even though the world still labels him the prodigal, he was forgiven by his father and retained his position as a son. He had spent his entire inheritance, but his father made sure he was cared for the rest of his life.

Rahab may have been a prostitute when she protected the two spies sent by Joshua who were scoping out the land; however, when Joshua conquered Jericho, Rahab and her family were protected (Joshua 2; 6:23–24). Rahab eventually married Salmon and gave birth to Boaz, who later married Ruth. Even though this woman is in the lineage of Jesus Christ, people still label her “Rahab the harlot.” She did not live out her label. She changed her situation and became a godly wife and mother.

God raised up a harlot to become the great-great-grand-mother of King David. If you ask, “How could God possibly use a sinner like me?” I would introduce you to the woman who had been labeled a prostitute and was able to change her circumstances. She is not remembered for her sin but for the transformation of a family line from sinners to saints. The words prodigal and prostitute are undoubtedly repeated so that you and I will know that whatever we have done, God will forgive us as we come to Him in faith.

People may have labeled us but we are covered by the blood of Jesus.

You are not what you’ve been through — that was only a season you walked through. But if you keep labeling yourself by the messes from your past, you will remain broken and trouble will keep returning again and again. You will be stuck in the same cycles for the rest of your life.

For a new season to break out in your life, you will need to make the decision to change and then to take a few steps:

Decide — Change occurs when you decide you will not live one more day imprisoned in your pain and you turn your life over to God.

Define — It is then important for you to define how and why you became entrapped so you can deal with the pain. Be honest with yourself and allow God to work in you. Remember, He is a gentleman and is waiting for your invitation.

Detox — Detox by renouncing any unclean spirit that has tried to attach itself to you through people, places, and things. Often we allow outside influences into our lives without even realizing it. Spiritual toxins can be taken in by scrolling on social media, through stressful environments, gossip, actions that we allow, decisions that determine our altitude, and so forth. Just like we can detox physically, it’s possible to detox spiritually. Focus on your values and begin living an authentic life, which means being true to who you were created to be. Get rid of the clutter or junk in your life in order to make room for a simplified version of you. Love yourself and begin to see that you were created specifically for this time and season. This will set you free to begin a new walk with God.

Delete — After detoxing, repent of the life you have lived and the wrong decisions that caused you to become broken. Let go of those things that have caused you distress and allow the process of elimination to become your friend.

Discipline — Discipline creates habits, habits become routines, and routines become who you are consistently. When you live a disciplined life, you will make small sacrifices in the present to create a more peaceful life in your future. Permanent results sometimes come with temporary discomfort.

This sounds so simple, doesn’t it? It is, if you no longer allow brokenness from the past to inhabit your present.

Choose to close all doors you have opened that allowed havoc into your life and into the lives of those you love.

Closing doors means ending all access points, opportunities, and gates that the enemy could use to reenter your life. This may include relationships, associations, environments, deliberate breakups, and unforgiveness. You need to make sure certain people understand the relationship is over. Let them know you are now on a different path of life with Jesus.

One of the hardest decisions for me was becoming disciplined as a true follower of Jesus Christ. It’s one thing to declare you are a Christian and another thing to live a life that is an example of the Christian faith. To be like Jesus means you have no problem saying that you are sorry when you have failed others. That was a big deal for me when I began my new walk with Jesus Christ at the age of thirty-six.

I cannot blame my bad decisions on my family. I had been raised in a pastor’s home, and my parents lived true Christian lives. I really had no excuse for being so immature at such a mature age. I just did not like anyone telling me how to live, so I chose to live my life unlike anyone else in my family. My ex was also from a pastor’s home, so we had no excuses for the life we chose together. I am so thankful that God gave me chance after chance to put my life in order after I failed Him so many times. I, to this day, am amazed at how He always came through for me right on time.

I think about the three years of healing and deliverance it took me to totally surrender and allow God to be Lord of every aspect of my life. Did it have to take three years? Absolutely not! I was one stubborn girl who refused to allow anyone to dictate her life decisions. Even today, I cannot tell you the reason I would not allow anyone to instruct me in the ways of the Lord. I question myself as to why I could not simply ask God for forgiveness and then forgive myself for all the things I had allowed. I think about the apostle Paul and his journey. He made some profound statements that brought me deep solace during times of distress:

I want to do what is good, but I don’t. I don’t want to do what is wrong, but I do it anyway. — Romans 7:19

If this prolific writer — trained in the best of schools, a member of the Sanhedrin court, and even in the lineage of Benjamin — had a problem controlling his flesh, it gave me solace that God would be with me, too, as I made my journey of self-denial. After reading about Paul’s life, I realized that everyone who has ever walked on this earth, except Jesus Christ, has one thing in common: we have all messed up.

It’s up to us, however, to determine that we are sick and tired of the mess and want positive change to affect every area of our lives. Under the fake smiles, the made-up exterior, and the Christian lingo, we are on the same playing field. We mess up, get up, start over, try again, then mess up again. But the key is to get back up!

Failure is not failure unless you stop moving.

I know everyone doesn’t struggle with alcohol, drugs, promiscuity, or gambling, but we all struggle with sin in some form. When Paul said that every time he wanted to do good, he did wrong, it gave me such peace. If Paul could finally figure this Christian walk out, then so could I. We all suffer from the “I can’t help its.”

I know that God has a preordained plan for those who choose Him. One of my favorite scriptures will always be Jeremiah 1:5:

I knew you before I formed you in your mother’s womb. Before you were born I set you apart and appointed you as My prophet to the nations.

I can’t even explain how much this scripture ministered to my spirit as I was reflecting on my past and wondering how God could ever want to use a stubborn, rebellious girl like me. He assured me again and again that He loved me despite me.

Excerpted from You Gotta Get Up by Real Talk Kim, copyright Kimberly Jones.

Satan loves to use our past to knock us down, make us feel unworthy, unloved, useless to God. But God says that in Christ, those that believe in Him and follow Him, are loved so much that He calls us His children, and gives us an eternal inheritance with Christ. We must not let Satan, others or even ourselves believe the past controls the future. We are made new in Christ! We are being made like Him in this life and will be perfectly glorified like Him in eternity! Live your new life, giving glory to God for His love, and provision for you in Christ.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 19, 2023

Notes of Faith October 19, 2023

Late-Night Prayer Sessions

Emily Ley’s new book Near the Night is a perfect read especially for those of us who struggle with sleep. These meditations on God’s peace and rest will help you turn off your worries and remember God’s goodness.

Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. — Philippians 4:6 NIV

Every day for a year, I woke up at 2:42 a.m. It was this weird occurrence that had no rhyme or reason, but it happened at exactly the same moment and kept me awake for at least an hour. My life those days was a blur of diapers, baby schedules, conference calls, and “Please advise ASAP” emails. I wasn’t alone for more than a few minutes once the kids went to bed because I’d pass out as soon as my head hit the pillow.

In the beginning, I mentally thumbed through the pages of the proverbial book of Things I Am Worried About, Didn’t Finish, Forgot to Do, or May Never Do that lived in my head. I need to change the oil in my car. I wonder if Brady has a cavity? That ache in my elbow is back... could it be (insert terminal illness)? I should cook more meals at home. My children may grow up to be totally damaged because I don’t love to cook.

Every night was a “beat myself up” session. But then I started bringing those things up in prayer rather than ruminating on them. And things started to change. Instead of loathing those interruptions at 2:42 a.m., I gave my worries to God. I wondered if He was giving me that inner 2:42 a.m. alarm as a blessing. I began to fall back to sleep, waking up with a more peaceful heart; and eventually, the 2:42 a.m. inner alarm disappeared.

What have you been anxious about lately? During times of high stress, bring your thoughts to God.

In peace I will both lie down and sleep; for You alone, O Lord, make me dwell in safety. — Psalm 4:8

A Prayer for Your Dreams

Oh, taste and see that the Lord is good! Blessed is the man who takes refuge in Him! — Psalm 34:8

Tonight, I hold you in prayer and wish you an evening of rest and rejuvenation. I pray your dreams are whole and intact, that they’re as lovely and calming as the sound sleep that finds you.

May their colors be vivid and beautiful, like art come to life. May the cast of characters be beloved friends, lost to the sands of time, and family venturing back to this side of Heaven, just for a night. May their voices be soft, and may the background music be soothing. I pray your dreams are filled with mended fences, blooming friendships, and hopes come to life. Or back to life.

And most of all, I pray each one brings a smile to your face when you wake — a reminder of the sweet and the good in years past, and a hope for the days to come.

Are your dreams reminding you of a worry or a hope you’ve pushed deep inside your heart? Is something rising to the surface, interrupting your rest? Give God the good and the worrisome before you head to sleep tonight.

Scriptures for Your Evening

The Lord is your keeper; the Lord is your shade on your right hand. The sun shall not strike you by day, nor the moon by night. The Lord will keep you from all evil; He will keep your life. — Psalm 121:5-7

In peace I will both lie down and sleep; for You alone, O Lord, make me dwell in safety. — Psalm 4:8

If you lie down, you will not be afraid; when you lie down, your sleep will be sweet. — Proverbs 3:24

I lay down and slept; I woke again, for the Lord sustained me. — Psalm 3:5

He will not let your foot be moved; He who keeps you will not slumber. Behold, He who keeps Israel will neither slumber nor sleep. — Psalm 121:3-4

Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. — Philippians 4:6-7

Excerpted from Near the Night by Emily Ley, copyright Emily Ley.

I pray that most of you do not have trouble sleeping and getting a good night’s rest. But there have been nights when I, like Emily, wake up, and cannot go back to sleep, because my mind is racing with things to do, problem issues to be dealt with, relationships that need work, non-stop brain activity. Not the right time for this to take place. I, too, started taking these things to God, asking that I be given time to rest, to sleep, and be better able to deal with the things of everyday life…during the day. God is good! And has always answered those prayers, bringing a restful sleep, even though the issues did not disappear. What a great God!

Pastor Dale