Notes of Faith March 27, 2024

Notes of Faith March 27, 2024

This is a little deeper study. I pray that it blesses your soul this morning or whenever you have opportunity to read it. This could be one of my sermons… it is quite long. Pastor Dale

In the Beginning, Paul

HOW THE APOSTLE APPLIES GENESIS 1–2

Article by Jonathan Worthington

Guest Contributor

Learning to read Genesis 1–2 through Paul’s eyes cuts through the stalemate of contemporary debates about the age of the earth and mode of its creation, for Paul turns readers’ attention instead to the glory of the triune Creator and the given goodness of what he has made. Paul applies creation theology to practical church issues, the nature of sin, the doctrine of bodily resurrection, and the glory of the created order as he calls Christians to worship their Creator in wonder, joy, and hope.

For our ongoing series of feature articles for pastors and Christian leaders, we asked Jonathan Worthington (PhD, Durham University), Director of Research at Training Leaders International, to explain how Paul interprets and applies Genesis 1–2 to the life of the church.

Creation. “In the beginning.” Genesis 1. Such words stimulate surprising passion in some who crave debating about “days” and “literal” and “science” with people they long to humble. Some good can come from these debates. Meanwhile, avoidance stirs in others, perhaps because of experiences with some from the former group.

For me, however, joy and hope emerge. Joy surges as I deeply engage the lovely Creator and his creation as expressed in Genesis 1–2. And hope rises mainly because I explore the beginning from an unusual angle — through someone else’s eyes.

Creation Through Paul’s Eyes

Picture a church infested with sexual sin. To help, the pastor brings up Genesis 1–2. The same church is tearing itself apart over disagreements about food and conscience. The pastor brings up Genesis 1–2 again. The members disagree about how men and women should act during gatherings. Genesis 1–2 again. Some demean others based on their “gifts.” Genesis 1–2. Some smirk with seeming sophistication at the idea of bodily resurrection. The pastor gives them a long talk about — yes, Genesis 1–2. Meet the Corinthian church and the pastoral apostle Paul.

Whenever I mention that I explore how Paul interprets and applies Genesis 1–2, I am immediately asked — almost without exception — “What did Paul believe about the ‘days’?” Paul doesn’t tell us. Rather than bogging us down in endless debates, looking at Genesis 1–2 through Paul’s eyes helps us form a more robust understanding of creation and its application to Christians in practical life struggles.

In this essay, we will focus narrowly on God’s creation of the world through Paul’s eyes. The apostle comments at least as often on God’s creation of humanity — image, dominion, male and female, dust, and more — but we will save those for elsewhere.1 God’s creation of everything is the context to understand humanity, so we will begin there — in the beginning. We will then focus on the phrases “let there be light” (Genesis 1:3), “and it was so” (first in used 1:7), “according to their kinds” (first used in 1:11), and finally “very good” (1:31). Why those phrases? Because as he pastored struggling Christians, Paul locked onto those phrases regarding God’s creation of the world.

‘In the Beginning’

“God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis 1:1). Is this a record of God’s first act of creation (with light his second),2 with “the heavens and the earth” referring to elemental matter or the bare structures of the two realms? Or is 1:1 a summary of all God does in 1:2–31, like a title with its mirrored conclusion in 2:1?3 This question is debated, but Paul does not help us answer the question.4 What Paul does reveal is a profound and applicable interpretation of God’s creation of “all things.”

From, Through, For

While writing 1 Corinthians (perhaps in early AD 55),5 Paul engages the believers’ disagreement about eating idol meat, challenging them about their interactions with saints whose consciences clash (chapters 8–10).6 Twice he introduces creation.

In 1 Corinthians 8:4, 6, Paul inserts the gist of Genesis 1 by packing prepositional phrases with a powerful metaphysical punch:

As to the eating of food offered to idols, we know that “an idol has no real existence,” and that “there is no God but one.” . . . For us there is one God, the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist, and one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom are all things and through whom we exist.

Some Corinthians were using monotheism to justify eating food sacrificed to idols (8:4). Paul agrees with their underlying monotheism, of course. In fact, toward the end of this complex argument, Paul outright states in 1 Corinthians 10:25–26 (quoting Psalm 24:1),

Eat whatever is sold in the meat market without raising any question on the ground of conscience. For “the earth is the Lord’s, and the fullness thereof.”

In Psalm 24, the earth and everything in it belongs to the Lord (24:1) because he created it (24:2). For Paul, because the Creator owns everything, it is truly — as an abstract idea — not wrong to eat what is sold in the market, regardless of its past associations. But for Paul, abstract theological truth is not all that the church needs, and he plants this seed at the beginning of his argument.

In 1 Corinthians 8:6, Paul points out that the one Lord God of the Shema — “the Lord [Yahweh or Kyrios in the Greek translation] our God [Theos], the Lord [Kyrios] is one” (Deuteronomy 6:4) — is the Father and Jesus.7 (And, of course, the Spirit too, though this context is not about the Spirit.) Paul writes that we have “one God [Theos], the Father . . . and one Lord [Kyrios], Jesus Christ” (1 Corinthians 8:6).

What is more, this one Lord-God created everything: all things are “from” the Theos (God the Father) and “through” the Kyrios (Jesus). Even we exist “for” this one Theos (Father) and “through” this one Kyrios (Jesus). This mysterious creational monotheism deeply affects our relational practices. For the Lord through whom everything (even we) exists is the same Lord who died — the Kyrios-Creator willingly died — for those with poor theology and thus weak consciences (1 Corinthians 8:11). Truly knowing the Lord God of creation — who includes the Lord who died for all believers — must affect how we treat others, even those who disagree with us,8 as well as how we formulate our theological opinions.

Creation Reflects His Glory

About a year after Paul wrote his meaty moral letter of 1 Corinthians, he wrote a massive missional letter to the Roman Christians (perhaps in AD 56). He sought to knit back together their ethnically torn communal fabric so that they could function as a sound and God-honoring trampoline to launch his mission further west.

With this aim, Paul quickly draws their eyes to the Creator in Romans 1:19–25:

What can be known about God is plain to [humans], because God has shown it to them. For his invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse. For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him. . . . [They] exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man and birds and animals and creeping things. . . . They exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever!

When Paul looks at creation and thinks about the Creator of everything,9 he does not debate the age of the earth. Rather, looking through Paul’s eyes, we immediately see the Creator’s own nature and value. In the beginning, God. God said. God made. God called. Paul’s eyes fix on the Creator’s eternal power, deity, imperishability, eternal blessedness, as well as how he alone deserves to be honored, thanked, venerated, and worshiped as he truly is. What is more, Paul considers that all humans, simply by looking at the things God has made, are morally culpable — “without excuse” — for not glorifying, thanking, venerating, and serving this God, and only this God, as he clearly deserves.10

Imagine a synagogue attendant handing Paul the scroll of Genesis to preach from chapter 1. Oh, the majesty of God that would be on high display, and the human moral humility demanded! And there is more.11 Don’t forget Jesus — Paul certainly doesn’t.

The Exalted Image

Half a decade later (possibly in AD 61), Paul was in prison writing to the Colossians. They needed their eyes firmly readjusted. So, in Colossians 1:16, Paul mentions the creation of everything and its relationship to Jesus — the King, the beloved Son.

Virtually every phrase leading to Paul’s confession of creation in 1:16 highlights the royal supremacy of God’s beloved Son — the resurrected and enthroned King Jesus — and the saints’ inheritance in him (1:12–14). Continuing in the vein of Jesus’s reign, Paul writes, “He is the image of the invisible God” (1:15). Paul’s listeners might naturally think of Adam, the visible image of God who was to have dominion over God’s kingdom (Genesis 1:26–28).12 Adam even ruled as God’s son (see Genesis 5:1–3; Luke 3:38).13

Paul then calls the enthroned Jesus “the firstborn of all creation” (Colossians 1:15) — the chief inheritor with rights of authority.14 Though this would be another fitting title for Adam, God actually used a phrase like it for King David and his anointed descendant-kings: “I will make him the firstborn, the highest of the kings of the earth” (Psalm 89:27). This “firstborn” would even rule God’s kingdom as God’s son (2 Samuel 7:14; Psalm 2:7).

Depictions of King Jesus as the new Adam and Davidic king are glorious, but not surprising. The surprise comes in Paul’s next statement. King Jesus is these because

by him [en autō]15 all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities — all things were created through him [di’ autou] and for him [eis auton]. (Colossians 1:16)

At this point, while listening to Paul’s letter, a Colossian believer might think, “Wow — ‘like’ Adam and David in some ways, but infinitely better!” Another might respond, “Everything created by, through, and even for Jesus? That sounds fitting only for the one Lord God of Genesis 1!” Still another might add, “And of Isaiah 45:5–7!”

This human-King-divine-Creator, Jesus, is enthroned where our hope is laid up (Colossians 1:5). Surely nothing in Colossae or in all creation can hamper his blood-bought peace. It is worth pausing and worshiping Jesus, our King and Creator. But don’t pause indefinitely, for Paul has more light to shed on life under this Creator.

‘Let There Be Light’

Light often describes God in Scripture.16 It portrays “the glory of the Lord” (Isaiah 60:1; Ezekiel 1:26–28), specially seen in God’s face (Numbers 6:25) — the seat of relational knowledge. As the Lord talked with Moses face to face like a friend (Exodus 33:11), even Moses’s face mirrored God’s glory by shining visibly for a time (34:29–35).

“Even though Paul has a robust doctrine of the fall, he still sees creational glory everywhere.”

For Paul, Moses was the greatest figure in Israel’s fallen history. But he was not the goal. Even before the ages, God had wisely predestined Jesus for our glory (1 Corinthians 2:7). Moses’s glory, like Adam’s in the beginning,17 was a true glory (2 Corinthians 3:7–11); it was perfect (flawless) for what God intended Moses to be and do. But God never intended Moses’s glory to be the perfected (full and final) glory (3:7–4:6). Like Adam’s glory, Moses’s glory could even be considered “no glory” when compared to the surpassing face, mirror, and image of the preordained, resurrected King Jesus (2 Corinthians 3:10–11).

So, Paul shades Moses’s fading face from the Corinthians’ view and turns their attention to God’s brightness in the resurrected, Spirit-giving Jesus, the fullest and final “image of God” (3:12–4:5). And in 2 Corinthians 4:6, Paul lights a cosmic fuse: “The God who said, ‘Out of darkness light will shine’ shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ” (author’s translation).

For Paul, God’s two creations (original and new) are in some ways similar.18 It is the same God planning and doing both, after all. Genesis 1:2–3 says, “Darkness was over the face of the deep . . . and God said . . .” Paul writes, “The God who said, ‘Out of darkness . . .’” Genesis 1:3 says, “‘Let there be light,’ and there was light.” Paul writes, “Light will shine,” and “[he has] shone . . . light.”

Paul is far from the first to use light and darkness to challenge or encourage God’s people. The prophets often portrayed God’s judgment as his de-creation of light, removing the sun and moon of Genesis 1:14–19 and the light of Genesis 1:3,19 and his salvation as God’s re-creation of light, reinserting light and life into darkness and death (Isaiah 9:1–3). Indeed, in the very end we will be “enlightened” not by sun or moon but by “the light” that is “the glory of God,” for the Lord himself will be our “everlasting light” by his Spirit (Revelation 21:22–25; Isaiah 60:19–20).

As Paul calls the Corinthians back to the Speaker of light, he speaks of the light of God’s glory with an Isaianic accent,20 which adds a note of profound hope in God’s display of glory. For even “the god of this world,” who blinds unbelievers’ minds (2 Corinthians 4:4), cannot prevent the Creator from illuminating our hearts with Christ’s face (4:6).

‘And It Was So’

What God says, he does. The first divine words in the Bible are elegant in simplicity and powerful in effect (Genesis 1:3). God said, “Let there be light,” and light came about. After that first occurrence, Moses rhythmically impresses upon his listeners even the feeling of perfection with another six occurrences of “and it was so” — or, clearer, “and it came about in this manner” — making a perfect seven.

The Corinthian church needed a large dose of order and humility. Paul brings this perfectly (sevenfold) rhythmic aspect of the Creator’s character to bear on them in force in 1 Corinthians 15.

Some in the church doubted the bodily resurrection, and Paul promptly dispels that foolishness (15:12–34). He then focuses on two narrower questions. Here is Paul’s logic in 15:35–49 (with the places he mentions creation in bold):

In 15:35, Paul raises their further questions: “How are the dead raised? With what kind of body do they come?”

In 15:36–43, Paul gives a preface, saying (in effect), “How? Consider the Creator — don’t you know him? — how he has always structured fleshes, bodies, and glories exactly as he wanted in Genesis 1.”

In 15:44a, Paul gives his direct answer: “[In what body?] It is sown a soulish [psychikon] body;21 it is raised a Spiritual [pneumatikon] body” (author’s translation).22

In 15:44b–49, Paul gives his explanation, saying (again in effect),

Look at Adam’s body in Genesis 2:7. It was created “a living soul” (psyche), so Adam’s physical (created) body was a psychikon body. And look at how Adam’s created bodily “image” was passed to those in him (due to the creative principle in Genesis 5:3).

Compare the last Adam’s (Jesus’s) body in his resurrection. It was resurrected by “the Spirit” (pneuma), so Jesus’s physical (resurrected) body is a pneumatikon body. And the last Adam’s resurrected bodily “image” will be passed to those in him (due to the same creative principle).

In 1 Corinthians 15:36–38, Paul plants a seed that prefaces his answer to their questions about the mechanics of the resurrection:

Foolish person! . . . What you sow is not the body that is to be, but a bare kernel, perhaps of wheat or of some other grain. But God gives it a body as he has chosen, and to each kind of seed its own body.

Even though Jesus was raised, what about those loved ones who die in Christ and have rotted away — unlike Jesus himself? “How” and “in what body” can they be raised? Well, have you considered the God of Genesis 1?23 Everything God did perfectly came about in the manner God wanted. As Paul words it, “God gives it a body as he has chosen” (15:38). So too in the resurrection (15:42).

‘According to Their Kinds’

Genesis 1:11 describes “plants yielding seed . . . each according to its kind,” a notion Moses rhythmically repeats a complete ten times. The Creator is completely wise in his organization. Paul writes that God gives “to each kind of seed its own body,” whether “of wheat or of some other grain” (15:37–38). Paul is not done with creation yet.

In 15:39–40a, Paul lets God’s sovereign wisdom with seeds and plants explain the whole cosmos:

Not all flesh is the same, but there is one kind for humans, another for animals, another for birds, and another for fish. There are heavenly bodies and earthly bodies.

If we look around with Paul’s eyes, wearing the same Genesis 1 lenses, we see all bodies “in heaven” and “on earth” as distinguished, each according to its own kind, each sovereignly given by God, each just as God wisely desired.24 And all this matters when we contemplate beloved Christians whose bodies are no more.25 What’s more, because of Genesis 1, Paul sees “glory” everywhere.

‘It Was Very Good’

We have already seen a few examples of how Genesis 1:1–2:3 uses rhythmic repetition to create not just the knowledge of God’s complete perfection but even its feeling:

“And God said” — ten times.

“And it was so” (or “and it happened in this manner”) — seven times.

“According to . . . kind” — ten times.

“Day” — fourteen times (two sevens).

“God” — thirty-five times (five sevens).26

God is thoroughly sovereign and wise in creation. Is he also good? Far too many people experience rulers with extreme power (sovereignty) and even extreme cleverness (a type of wisdom), but who are evil — and this is terrifying. This is not our Creator.

Six times, Moses records God’s evaluation of his own creative works: “it was good.” But Moses is not one to leave any repeated important phrase of Genesis 1:1–2:3 hanging incomplete,27 so he concludes God’s entire workweek with the seventh as a climax: “And God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good” (Genesis 1:31). Paul picks up on this goodness, and it is glorious.

Glory Everywhere

Even though Paul has a robust doctrine of the fall, he sees creational glory everywhere. By the time Paul gets to the issue of resurrection bodies in 1 Corinthians 15, he has already used the term “glory” with reference to creation in Genesis 1–2: a man “is the image and glory of God” and a “woman is the glory of man” (1 Corinthians 11:7–9). In 15:39–41, Paul cosmically extends such creational glory:

Not all flesh is the same, but there is one kind for humans, another for animals, another for birds, and another for fish. There are heavenly bodies and earthly bodies, but the glory of the heavenly is of one kind, and the glory of the earthly is of another. There is one glory of the sun, and another glory of the moon, and another glory of the stars; for star differs from star in glory.

I used to think Paul’s reference to “heavenly bodies” referred to angelic beings. And it is easy for us to assume that “earthly bodies” refer to something like purple mountains’ majesty. But Paul clarifies what he means by “heavenly bodies”: sun, moon, and stars. And Paul has just described the types of “earthly bodies” he has in mind: humans, animals, birds, and fish. These all have “glory.” Of course sun, moon, and stars have glory. But Paul also sees glory in animals, birds, fish — and, yes, even contemporary (and fallen) humans.

According to Paul, the physical things — bodies, fleshes — were created by God so exceedingly well and to be so exceedingly good that they (we) remain with “glory . . . glory . . . glory . . . glory . . . glory,” even despite all the groaning of creation under our wretched sin and mortality (Romans 8:19–23). How can our groaning and glory both be true? Our sin is awful. But because God gave us our bodies, fleshes, and glories just as he chose, even our personal and global sin and corruption cannot eradicate this beauty and value — this glory, this goodness.

Teaching the Next Generation

Six to ten years after writing that letter to the Corinthians, and after much suffering, Paul still saw God’s creation as good. In fact, Paul counsels his protégé Timothy that this high esteem of God’s creation has practical import for training others in Ephesus. Paul writes,

The Spirit expressly says that in later times some will depart from the faith by devoting themselves to deceitful spirits and teachings of demons, through the insincerity of liars whose consciences are seared, who forbid marriage and require abstinence from foods that God created to be received with thanksgiving by those who believe and know the truth. For everything created by God is good, and nothing is to be rejected if it is received with thanksgiving, for it is made holy by the word of God and prayer. (1 Timothy 4:1–5)

Teach about our Creator, Timothy. Teach about his good creation and what it implies for life.

God’s activity in Genesis 1 forces Paul to reject any teaching in the church that would diminish, whether in theory or practice, the goodness of what God did in creation. Yes, sin, corruption, suffering, and death have entered our world since God created all things exceedingly good — don’t forget that. But the fact that everything God created is good should still affect our actions and teaching now. That is who our good Creator is — be thankful and enjoy.

Applying Creation with Paul

Joy and hope come from reading Genesis 1 through Paul’s eyes and seeing how he applies it to struggling churches. And we have only scratched the surface.

There is a from-the-Father-ness of creation and a by-and-through-Christ-ness that should increase our corporate (and individual) glorifying, thanking, venerating, and serving of this one Lord-God as he deserves. There is even a direction to everything in creation: a for-the-Father-ness and a for-Christ-ness. And this should affect our treatment of fellow Christians, even those with whom we disagree.

We must embrace how damaging and evil and awful and ugly and violent and corrosive humanity’s sin is — including ours — and all the consequences of sin. But there is a type of wisdom and goodness built into the very fabric of creation — even into our own flesh and bodies — that God has sovereignly given that has not and cannot be eradicated. And this profoundly matters practically and relationally.

I pray that as you view the creation of the world through Paul’s eyes, such treasures as joy, humility, glory, and hope rise up in you and overflow to others.

Jonathan Worthington (PhD, Durham University) is vice president of theological education at Training Leaders International.

In reading God’s Word, if you get the beginning right, the right interpretation and understanding, everything else falls into place. Get the beginning wrong and there is no telling where you will end up in your doctrine and theology…there is strong probability that you will end up as an unbeliever and spend eternity in hell. Get Genesis right!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 26, 2024

Notes oof Faith March 26, 2024

Old Testament Fulfillments

MATTHEW 26:14-35

The events that led up to the crucifixion of Jesus directly parallel what was prophesied about the Messiah as the Suffering Servant in the Old Testament. But not only did Jesus fulfill Old Testament prophecy; others around Jesus did as well.

Judas betrayed Jesus for 30 pieces of silver (Matthew 26:14) which was the equivalent to the price of a slave (Exodus 21:32). Zechariah wrote about this exact price in his Messianic foreshadowing (Zechariah 11:12-13). Thirty pieces of silver was not a very large sum of money in that era, and in Matthew, Jesus’ story provides a stark contrast to the verses preceding his betrayal (Matthew 26:6-13). While Mary went to great expense to anoint Jesus with precious oil, giving to Jesus what was probably her entire dowry (and therefor her entire future), Judas turned against Jesus for a relatively small price.

Great is the cost of devotion, but cheap is the price of betrayal.

After the description of Judas’ betrayal, Matthew transitioned to the preparations of the Passover meal. The Passover was celebrated in remembrance of God freeing His people from Egypt (Numbers 9:2). However, for believers, Jesus completely transformed the way the meal was celebrated. It is now in remembrance of God freeing His people from sin and death through Jesus. In honoring old traditions, Jesus also created new traditions for believers to follow today. During this Passover celebration, Jesus represented the very fulfillment of the Passover’s promise of deliverance from sin, ushering in a new covenant to replace the old covenant. This new covenant had been promised in the Old Testament multiple times (Jeremiah 31:31-34, Ezekiel 34:25-31, Ezekiel 37:26-28), and Jesus finally fulfilled it.

In addition to Judas and Jesus, Peter and the rest of the disciples also fulfilled Old Testament prophecies. While Peter’s denial was a blatant betrayal of Jesus, it is important to remember that Peter was not the only disciple to avoid being associated with Jesus after His arrest. None of the other disciples had the courage to follow Jesus on that night; they all hid, which Jesus referred to by quoting Zechariah 13:7 (Matthew 26:31). After Jesus’ resurrection, ever the Good Shepherd, Jesus brought His flock back together (Matthew 28:16-20), as He will again in the last days (Acts 2:17-21).

Excerpted from The Jesus Bible, copyright Zondervan.

The Word of God, our Bible, from beginning to end, is all about Jesus! It reveals God to us, just as Jesus and His life on earth revealed God visually to those around Him. Being in the Word of God, reading, studying, meditating, will draw us close to the One who gives life and that eternal. READ the WORD of GOD!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 25, 2024

Notes of Faith March 25, 2024

Christ Lives in Me

When Dr. R. G. Lee, the late, great preacher, first went on a Holy Land pilgrimage, he, along with his tour group, came to Golgotha, the place of the crucifixion. Lee, moved with emotion, ran ahead of the crowd. When the others arrived at that sacred spot, they found him on his knees, with tears streaming down his cheeks. “Oh, Dr. Lee,” one of them exclaimed, “I see you have been here before.”

“No,” he replied. Then quickly correcting himself, he said, “Yes, I have. Two thousand years ago.” Then came the words of Galatians 2:20:

I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me.

As our Lord hung on the cross, the crowd saw only one man on the center cross. But the Father saw not just Christ but you and me and all others who would put their faith in Christ. When we come to Jesus, God takes our old life from us (“I have been crucified with Christ”) and puts a new life in us (“Christ lives in me”).

The Christian life is not a changed life. It is an exchanged life.

You give Christ your old life, and He puts it away in the sea of His forgetfulness. And He gives you a brand-new life, a new life in Christ. It is an awesome thought: “Christ lives in me.”

The Christian life is not a changed life. It is an exchanged life.

CODE WORD: LOGO

We love to identify with things. Certain logos tell the world the brand of clothing we are wearing. We proudly show our school colors and logos. Look at your key ring. Most likely it bears the logo of your automobile. When you look at a logo today, let it remind you of the privilege you have to identify with Jesus Christ. Let others see Him through the “logo” of your life and lips today.

PASSION PROCLAMATION

I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me. —Galatians 2:20

Lord, speak through my mouth today; look at others through my eyes; live through me today so those with whom I come in contact will see You in me for Your glory. In Jesus’ name, amen.

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

This is the foundation of the Christian faith…to receive forgiveness of our sin and be given eternal life through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The life we now have, we live by faith in the One who died for us. Let us live this new life to bring glory and honor to His name!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 24, 2024

Notes of Faith March 24, 2024

Could This Be the Son of David?

Jesus’s entrance into Jerusalem is not a quiet affair. He is met by crowds of people who begin spreading garments on the road. According to 2 Kings 9:13, it was not uncommon for people to lay their garments in the road for a leader to ride over. They did this as a sign of their respect and to indicate their submission to his authority.1 Additionally, branches were cut and spread onto the garments that lined the streets. John 12:13 names the branches as “palm branches,” which were symbols of salvation for the Jews. And salvation was the word on their minds and on their lips. Collectively, the multitude cried out,

Hosanna to the Son of David; blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord, Hosanna in the highest!

The Hebrew word hosanna is a plea for salvation: “Save us now!” The people were at the right place, but for the wrong reasons, participating in the wrong feast day. Palm branches, cries of hosanna, and shouts of “blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord” are all elements associated with the Feast of Tabernacles.2 But this was the Passover, a celebration of a different kind.

Hosanna in the highest!

The title the people spoke, “Son of David,” was a common messianic title. It indicates that the people believed Jesus to be the Messiah they had been waiting for.3 The shouts of hosanna allude to Psalm 118:25-26:

Save us, we pray, O Lord! O Lord, we pray, give us success! Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord! We bless you from the house of the Lord.

Simply by saying hosanna, the people were declaring to God that they were tired of their oppression, through with their corrupt leaders. They were asking for liberty, for victory.

Unfortunately, the bystanders were not interested in salvation from their own sins, but in salvation from the Romans. What the crowds missed was an understanding of why Jesus had come. He had not come to offer them a military victory over Rome. He came to establish a heavenly kingdom on earth and to conquer the age-old enemies of Adam’s children — sin, death, hell, and the grave.

Jesus was fighting a cosmic battle, bringing rebellious children back into the family of God by making peace with God, not war on Israel’s current national enemies.

In case we are tempted to judge them for their short-sighted focus on freedom from Rome, we should consider how common it is to look for human leaders to deliver us from our own problems. A quick look at American politics will show that we are no different from the Jews in this regard. We would be wise to refrain from throwing proverbial stones at the Jewish people for their misunderstanding of Jesus’s ministry! In fact, they had good reason to think the way they did. Many prophecies of the Old Testament point to a messianic time of vengeance aimed at Israel’s enemies. The people were understanding the scriptures correctly; the Messiah will come at some point to bring judgment. But He had another mission to accomplish first. God’s own people needed to be saved from the consequences of their sin.

1. Kings 9:13 (CSB) states, “Each man quickly took his garment and put it under Jehu on the bare steps. They blew the ram’s horn and proclaimed, ‘Jehu is king!’”

2. See Leviticus 23:33-40 for a detailed outline of the elements incorporated.

3. The Pharisees proved this in Matthew 22:41–42. 


Excerpted from The Forgotten Jesus by Robby Gallaty, copyright Robert Gallaty.

Praise God for His sovereignty! He rules over everything He created. His will is going to be accomplished. We whine about many things but the Lord brings His glory to those who obey and follow Him. We must know Him, trust Him, and wait patiently for the Scriptures to be fulfilled. Judgment will take place on the enemies of God. Don’t be one of them. Recognize your sin, your disobedience and rebellion against God. Turn from your sin. Repent and ask forgiveness and it will be granted by His grace. Pursue the life of holiness and righteousness of Jesus. All things are in His ultimate power and rule. Even so, Lord Jesus, come quickly!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 23, 2024

Notes of Faith March 23, 2024

The Death of Jesus

Jesus did not come just to perform miracles and teach about the Kingdom. In fact, Jesus says the main reason He came to earth was to die (John 12:27).

Without Jesus dying for the sins of the people, there would be no good news.

As Jesus approaches the final days of His ministry, He begins to speak to His disciples about His coming death:

We are going up to Jerusalem... and the Son of Man will be delivered over to the chief priests and the teachers of the law. They will condemn Him to death and will hand Him over to the Gentiles, who will mock Him and spit on Him, flog Him and kill Him. Three days later He will rise. — Mark 10:33–34

The disciples have a difficult time understanding what Jesus means until He shows them more clearly during His last meal with them. At this final meal, Jesus shifts the focus of the meal to speak about Himself and what is soon to come. Before passing out the bread, Jesus says to them,

This is My body given for you; do this in remembrance of Me. — Luke 22:19

And before passing around the cup, He says to them,

This cup is the new covenant in My blood, which is poured out for you.

— Luke 22:20

Jesus is telling them that by being broken in His death for them, He is like the Passover lamb. Just as God delivered His people from slavery by the blood of the lamb, Jesus will deliver His people from sin by His own blood. Those who believe in Him are saved by His broken body and poured-out blood. But this sacrifice is different, because it establishes the new covenant promised by the prophets.

Those who believe in Jesus will be saved and brought back to God forever.

Under pressure from the religious leaders, one of the disciples, Judas, betrays Jesus and hands Him over to be arrested. Jesus is placed on trial, and while no valid charge is brought against Him, the crowds persuade the governor, Pontius Pilate, to have Him crucified.

Jesus is stripped of His clothes, beaten and flogged, and forced to carry His cross to the place of His crucifixion. He undergoes the worst form of torture and death known at the time as His hands and feet are nailed to a wooden cross.

But in His death, Jesus is not only being rejected by men. He cries out from the cross,

My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me? — Matthew 27:46

In His final breath, Jesus cries out,

It is finished. — John 19:30

On the cross, Jesus was not merely dying the death of a sinner. He was dying for the sins of the people, being separated from God and paying the full price for their sins in their place.

The Resurrection of Jesus

When Jesus took His final breath and gave up His spirit, it felt like the disciples had suffered their worst defeat. Their beloved Teacher had spent years proclaiming that He was the promised Savior who had come to rescue them and the promised King who had come to reign over a new Kingdom. But how could He be a Savior when He could not save Himself? And how could the King reign over an eternal kingdom when He had been defeated?

On the first day of the next week, two women who were Jesus’ disciples went to visit His tomb. But instead of finding a stone covering the tomb, they were shocked to find it open and an angel sitting on the stone.

Do not be afraid, for I know that you are looking for Jesus, who was crucified. He is not here; He has risen. — Matthew 28:5–6

Soon, Jesus appears to the women, and eventually to all of His disciples, in a resurrected body, turning their sorrow over His death into inexpressible joy. Just as He had promised, Jesus had carried their sins and defeated death. But He could not remain with them forever. Jesus was returning to the Father, and the disciples would now have a new mission as His witnesses to the world.

The infograph “Did Jesus Rise from the Dead?” was adapted from J. Warner Wallace, Cold-Case Christianity: A Homicide Detective Investigates the Claims of the Gospels (Colorado Springs: Cook, 2013).

Excerpted from A Visual Theology Guide to the Bible by Tim Challies and Josh Byers, copyright Tim Challies and Josh Byers.

The Creator, Sustainer, Messiah, and King was put to death on “Good Friday”, but we could call it black Friday, for there was a dark foreboding of evil filling the air. And yet, this was the plan of God from before the foundation of the world, to save mankind through faith in the person and work of Jesus on the cross. All sin was placed on the One who knew no sin. Believers in Jesus know the pain of their own sin but for ALL sin to be placed on Jesus which caused separation between the Father and the Son…there is no greater suffering! Do not ask me to explain this: I will be asking God about it when I see Him face to face. Jesus agreed to this plan to redeem mankind before man was created, had sinned, or He had taken on flesh to reveal God to us. The wonder and majesty of God we will not know for some time, but we do know what Jesus did, is doing in our lives, making us more like Himself day by day, and what He promises to do in giving us eternal life with Him, made perfect, no more sin, tears, sorrow, pain…only the joy and blessing of being with our Lord and Savior forevermore!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 22, 2024

Notes of Faith March 22, 2024

Restore My Soul

In Pursuit of Personal Revival

Article by Scott Hubbard

Editor, desiringGod.org

It all happened so slowly, so silently. Each step seemed so small, and even so reasonable in the moment. You didn’t pack up and run like the prodigal son. But somehow, when you look back, you find yourself farther from God than you thought you were.

Maybe you overheard someone praying with simple, childlike love for Jesus, and you can’t even remember the last time you prayed like that. Maybe months have passed since you have woken up and wanted, really wanted, to read your Bible. Maybe corporate worship has become a mere habit, a hollow sound, a form of words without wonder. Maybe you just committed some sin, or entertained some thought, you couldn’t have imagined a year ago.

Maybe you know exactly how you got here: a subtle worldly compromise, a Christless relationship, a slow but deep neglect, a secret sin unconfessed. Or maybe you struggle to trace the path you walked from there to here. You just know that you are not where you once were.

And now, perhaps, like that son in the far country, you think of your Father. You remember home. You wonder if you could find your way back.

‘He Restores My Soul’

At one time or another, all of us in Christ find ourselves in need of returning to Christ. Maybe we’ve wandered from him only for a few days or a week, or maybe we’ve allowed months or more to pass. Either way, our feet have strayed; our love has waned; our zeal has cooled; our eyes have dimmed. We love Jesus less today than we did yesterday. We need renewal.

Yes, but how? What road will lead us back to our Father’s house, back to the land of our first love? We might begin by remembering a line from David’s most famous psalm:

The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.

He makes me lie down in green pastures.

He leads me beside still waters.

He restores my soul. (Psalm 23:1–3)

Our Lord Jesus specializes not only in saving the lost, but in restoring the saved. He calls himself shepherd, the good shepherd, and as such he does not rest easy while one of his dear sheep wanders from his fold. And therefore, however far we feel from Jesus, and however unable to see the paths back to him, he knows how to restore our souls. He can bear us on his shoulders and bring us home.

And when he does, he often carries us along four restoring paths.

1. Remember

Remember . . . from where you have fallen. (Revelation 2:5)

Personal revival often begins when we remember how far we have fallen, just how far we have wandered. And by remember, I mean really remember. Ponder the past. Relive former, more spiritually alive times in your life. Feel the sorrow of first love lost.

Do you remember the way you once treasured God’s word in your heart like so much gold and silver? Do you remember how prayer felt sweet as honey on your tongue? Do you remember how you hurried to arrive at corporate worship lest you should miss some song, some part of the sermon? Do you remember telling others about Jesus not from guilt but from the natural overflow of your joy? Do you remember how you once fasted with freedom; gave your time and money with a happy, open hand; killed your sin with radical resolve; and heard the name of Jesus as the most wonderful sound in all the world?

“Our Lord Jesus specializes not only in saving the lost, but in restoring the saved.”

We may feel tempted to run from such remembrance, to pretend all is well for fear of facing how much we’ve lost. But don’t run, and don’t pretend. If there is sorrow here, Jesus has promised to sweeten it. Painful remembrance is often our first step toward home. And if we humble ourselves under the comparison of us then and us now, God pledges to make us the special objects of his reviving love:

Thus says the One who is high and lifted up, who inhabits eternity, whose name is Holy: “I dwell in the high and holy place, and also with him who is of a contrite and lowly spirit, to revive the spirit of the lowly, and to revive the heart of the contrite.” (Isaiah 57:15)

The only spirits God revives are lowly spirits; the only hearts he restores are contrite hearts. And so often, the fruits of lowliness and contrition grow from the soil of honest, unflinching memory.

2. Return

Return, faithless Israel, declares the Lord. I will not look on you in anger, for I am merciful. (Jeremiah 3:12)

There is, no doubt, a sick kind of remembrance, a kind that leaves us more lost than we were before. Some, forgetting God’s mercy, remember themselves right into a pit of despair. They recall home from the far country, but they don’t dare to hope that their Father is waiting for them, ready for them, scanning the horizon with ring and robe in hand. And indeed, we would have no reason to hope unless God himself told us not only to remember, but to return — unless he said, again and again to his lost children, “Come home.” But he does.

Note how God speaks to his wandering people in Jeremiah 3:12. They have not yet done anything to reform themselves. They are, in his eyes, “faithless Israel,” their faithlessness having driven them far from him. But he will not allow their faithlessness to become a reason for staying far from him. “I will not look on you in anger,” he says, wooing, “for I am merciful.” However far we’ve wandered, we find in God a mercy far deeper than our faithlessness.

He gives only one condition for his welcome: “Only acknowledge your guilt, that you rebelled against the Lord your God” (Jeremiah 3:13). Only confess. Only repent. Only own your sins without excuse and receive the blood of Jesus. And then believe that whatever faithlessness has led you far from God, he still says gladly through Jesus, “Return, O faithless children, declares the Lord; for I am your master; I will take you” (Jeremiah 3:14).

3. Remove

Remove the evil of your deeds from before my eyes. (Isaiah 1:16)

True remembrance plus faithful return does something deep in a soul. As with the godly grief the apostle Paul describes, we feel a renewed “indignation . . . fear . . . longing . . . zeal” (2 Corinthians 7:11). Freshly forgiven in Christ, and now no longer wandering, we rise like men and women newly alive, ready to remove whatever we have allowed to take us from God.

Revival brings a kind of holy violence to those it touches. In the Old Testament, we read of revived kings like Josiah taking hammer and torch to the idols throughout Israel (2 Kings 23:4–20). In the New Testament, we read of a more spiritual, but no less real, violence. The saints of Christ still know how to handle hammer and torch, toppling and burning idols of heart and life that have stood all too long.

We should beware at this point of a common danger that threatens the Spirit’s restoring work. Even as we labor to remove idols — habits and hobbies, entertainments and relationships, websites and apps — we can nevertheless fall short of removing all. Like the Israelites who left some enemies in the land, or like the kings who allowed the high places to stand, we can rest satisfied with half-reformations, quasi-revivals, near-renewals.

In all likelihood, such partial measures will only leave us in need of revival again, and probably sooner than we think. Don’t hesitate, then, to smash and burn your once-loved foes. Every swing of the hammer clears more space for Christ. Every piece of scorched ground becomes a garden where the Spirit’s fruit can grow.

4. Restore

Do the works you did at first. (Revelation 2:5)

Ultimately, the work of soul restoration belongs to God. “He restores my soul,” not I. But as he restores us, he also grants us to play a part in the restoration process. Just as King Josiah not only cleared the land of idols but also reinstated the Passover, so we not only remove sins but also restore those holy habits we have long neglected. We “do the works [we] did at first” (Revelation 2:5).

Such restoration has been God’s purpose from the beginnings of his dealings with us. Every painful removal was meant to make way for something better. When God brings personal revival, he inevitably brings with it a closer, holier walk with him, a fellowship with him on his “paths of righteousness” (Psalm 23:3). And oh, how great is our joy!

Then the Bible becomes hallowed ground again. Then the door of our prayer closet becomes a doorway to heaven again. Then sermons become feasts again, and evangelism becomes a privilege again, and offenses become overlookable again, and God’s people become again “the excellent ones, in whom is all my delight” (Psalm 16:3). Then we see that our God is not only the God who saves, but the God who restores — who delights to restore, who restores beyond all that we could ask or imagine.

Scott Hubbard is an editor for Desiring God.

Life has troubles for everyone. Knowing God, trusting God, drawing close to God is not always the place people turn for answers to life’s troubles. But God chooses to draw those that He loves and continues to seek, even pursue us, to bring us to Himself. There is no greater love than the love of God for the Bible says that God is love! We all could use restoration. We wander like sheep away from the path of truth and grace, seeking a greener pasture. God comes, finds us, and takes us back into His fold and continues to care for His beloved children. Remember, Return, Remove, Restore!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 21, 2024

Notes of Faith March 21, 2024

God’s Steadfast Love for the Single Parent and Their Child

Behold you are pregnant and shall bear a son. You Shall call his name Ishmael [meaning “God hears”], because the Lord has listened to your afflication.”…

You are a God of seeing… Truly here I have seen Him who looks after me. — Genesis 16:11, 13 ESV

Maggie squeezed her eyes shut, then opened them slowly, hoping to read a different result. Committed to celibacy until marriage, she gave in to temptation one time with a guy she didn’t even want to date. Now, at age twenty-four, she found herself staring at two pink lines on a pregnancy test.

To complicate matters further, Maggie was in seminary, having just started her first full-time job as a youth minister discipling teens at a church in California. Maggie not only had to tell her boss (her pastor!) she was pregnant, she also had to tell her impressionable students and their parents that she had slept with a man and the consequences included a child.

But Maggie already loved that child. Because she knew Jesus loved her so deeply that he secured her pardon for sin on the cross, she felt confident in bringing this child into the world and raising him, even as a single mother. What she did not know was how her church would respond.

God Sees Hagar

If we ever wondered how God feels about the lonely single parent, the story of Hagar is our answer. This single mother figures prominently in the life of the great patriarch Abraham. Brought from Egypt as a slave for Abraham’s wife Sarah, Hagar lives at the very heart of the establishment of God’s covenant with His own people.

When Sarah endures about ten years without holding the promised child in her arms, she conceives instead a plan to make God’s promise come true: let Abraham impregnate the young slave girl. According to custom, the child of the slave will belong to Sarah.

Consider Hagar’s predicament. She is forced to sleep with her boss, who is not only married but also old. Her mistress sees her as an incubator for God’s promised child, a child she plans to take from Hagar and raise as her own. To Abraham and Sarah, Hagar is not a person but an instrument to carry out their personal agenda. It’s no wonder Hagar treats Sarah with contempt when she does conceive. She finally has some clout in this lopsided triangle.

Sarah responds to Hagar’s insolence by complaining to Abraham, who abdicates responsibility for his unborn child, giving Sarah free rein to do whatever she likes with Hagar. Sarah “deals harshly” with her, to the point that Hagar flees to the wilderness.

The angel reveals to Hagar a God who knows, sees, and hears her and her unborn baby.

In this moment, Hagar is as vulnerable as a person could possibly be. She is a woman in a culture that does not value women. She is a slave, and a foreign one at that. She is penniless and pregnant, with no resources and no support. The people who were supposed to take care of her have made her life unbearable. She is not even part of the chosen race that God will establish through Abraham. No one is coming to help her; no one cares.

Were it not for Abraham’s God, Hagar and her unborn child would have died alone in the desert. No one would ever have known her name.

The angel of the Lord met Hagar at a spring in the desert on the road to Shur and said, ‘Hagar, slave of Sarai, where have you come from and where are you going?’ — Genesis 16:7-8 GNT

Hagar does not know Abraham’s God. She likely worshiped Egypt’s pagan idols if she had any faith at all. Incredibly, the angel of the Lord comes looking for her. Her insignificance in the eyes of the world does not render her insignificant in God’s sight. She is an outsider in every possible way, and yet he calls her by name and declares her situation, “Hagar, servant of Sarah…”

The angel invites her to talk with him. The question he asks her echoes God’s question to Adam in the garden: “Where are you?” He cares about her history (“Where have you come from?”) and her future (“Where are you going?”). When Hagar admits she is running away from Sarah, the angel instructs her to return to her mistress.

That must have been a hard word for Hagar to hear. Her situation with Abraham and Sarah won’t be easy. But the angel’s encounter with her meets a need much deeper than a desire for ease or comfort. The angel reveals to Hagar a God who knows, sees, and hears her and her unborn baby. This God is willing to be personally involved and provide for both of them, even naming her son Ishmael, meaning “God hears.” The angel tells her that the boy will be a “wild donkey of a man,” at odds with everyone around him, but Hagar’s boy will live (16:12).

Let’s not miss how astounding this encounter must have been for Hagar. Despised and alone, she is filled with despair so great that she has run away to near-certain death in the desert. There she is met with a heavenly being who knows the intimate details of her life yet treats her with dignity and compassion. This changes everything. She can go back to Sarah, harsh treatment and all, confident that Almighty God has His eye on her.

God’s provision will not mean an easy life, but as part of Abraham’s household, she will have protection for her boy. Every time she calls her son in to wash up for dinner, she will be reminded that “God hears!”

Excerpted from God’s Grace for Every Family by Anna Meade Harris, copyright Anna Meade Harris.

We do not hear and do the things that God commands as our perfect Father. That is called sin. Sin brings consequences. For the believer and follower of Jesus that means discipline will come from a loving Father. God’s love is shed abroad on all people for each one is created in His image. Though the lineage of Ishmael would fight to destroy the people of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, God loves them and wants them to come to faith in Him and receive salvation, eternal life, and freedom from judgment. We must look on all people as those God created and loves, pray for them and seek God’s desire for their eternal life…easy to say…hard to do.

Love God. Love others.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 20, 2024

Notes of Faith March 20, 2024

God Turns Gloom into Good

Last year during a speaking engagement in Tupelo, Mississippi, I checked out of my hotel and started my truck. It roared like a motorcycle with no muffler. During the night somebody had stolen my catalytic converter. I had to leave my truck behind, rent a car, deal with insurance, and send somebody back to fetch my truck. After all that, the vehicle still wasn’t working right, so I left it at the dealership while on another trip.

When I returned, I used a ride-sharing app to take me to the dealership for my truck. As I sat in the back seat, I noticed a Bible in the seat pocket. I asked the young driver about it. He said it had belonged to his dear, departed aunt, and he liked to keep it close to remind him of her. I told him he should read it. I shared some verses I’d read that morning in my own Bible.

He listened with unusual interest, so I explained from Scripture how to have a relationship with God through Jesus Christ. By the time we got to the dealership, he wanted to pray, asking God for salvation — which he did.

That’s when I understood why the Lord had allowed someone to steal my catalytic converter — it had set off a chain reaction that led to the young man’s salvation.

Bad things happen all the time, but what if you knew that every gloomy thing would lead to glorious results under the guiding providence of God?

That’s what Paul told the Philippians. They were distressed at all that had happened to him — the loss of his fourth missionary journey, his imprisonment in Caesarea, his shipwreck on Malta, and his looming trial in Rome. But Paul wasn’t gloomy in the least. He said:

Now I want you to know, brothers and sisters, that what has happened to me has actually served to advance the gospel. As a result, it has become clear throughout the whole palace guard and to everyone else that I am in chains for Christ. And because of my chains, most of the brothers and sisters have become confident in the Lord and dare all the more to proclaim the gospel without fear.

— Philippians 1:12–14

This is the Philippian version of Romans 8:28, which says,

And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose. — NKJV

Problems can last a long time, but they can’t last forever as God’s promises do. We live in a world of catastrophes and calamities, and none of us knows what will happen next. Without God’s oversight, our futures are like scraps of paper scattering in the wind. But under His oversight, they’re like pages of hope indelibly written by grace. The Scriptures teach we have a God who turns problems inside out — all our perils and perplexities...

What if you knew that every gloomy thing would lead to glorious results under the guiding providence of God?

In Christ, we have an ironclad, unfailing, all-encompassing, God-given guarantee that every single circumstance in life will sooner or later turn out well for those committed to Him.

Perhaps something has happened to you that has taken the wind out of your sails, the bounce out of your step, the twinkle out of your eye, and the joy out of your heart. Our circumstances must bow before Jesus. We may not be able to control them, and chaos may seem to reign. But the Savior who turned water into wine and death into life can bring about a mutation, a transfiguration, a reversal, an evolution of our circumstances. The Savior can turn our circumstances into His servants for the advancement of His kingdom.

This is part of redemption.

How did Paul’s adversity serve to advance the gospel? In two ways. First, he was chained to soldiers twenty-four hours a day. He always seemed to be on good terms with the soldiers protecting him, and he shared his message with them. They were a captive audience — not only did he speak to them directly, but they heard his conversations with others and they listened as he prayed.

The imperial guard was made up of about ten thousand of Rome’s best soldiers. They served under the direct command of Nero to protect him, to provide a police presence in Rome, and to do his bidding throughout the empire. Paul’s converts among these soldiers took the gospel to far-flung regions he could never have gone himself.

What appeared to be Paul’s tragedy was really God’s strategy.

Second, Paul’s circumstances had a bracing effect on the church. We can see how this works, can’t we? When you read of the courage of a Christian facing persecution in an oppressive land — when they stand bravely for Christ despite threats and intimidations — doesn’t it encourage you to be bolder and more outspoken in your faith?

Gloomy thoughts come from the way we interpret the happenings of our lives. Paul knew that every single circumstance was under the providence, the sovereignty, and the control of Jesus Christ, who had turned an occupied tomb into an empty grave. He knew that everything worked together for the good of those who love God and are living according to His purposes. He could even see some of the benefits God was bringing about.

The things that happen to us have a divine way of actually turning out for our good and for the furtherance of the gospel. In His own way and time, the Lord reverses adversity, overrides misfortune, and dismantles the devil’s schemes.

He will do this for you.

1. Orison Swett Marden, Everybody Ahead: Or, Getting the Most Out of Life (New York: Frank E. Morrison Publisher, 1916), 310–312.

2. Andrew Brunson, God’s Hostage (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2019), 208.

3. The last word of the verse is my own paraphrase. The niv uses the word “wasteland.”

4. Frank Laubach, Prayer: The Mightiest Force in the World (Burtyrki Books, 2020), 12 and passim.

5. Words by Joel Hemphill

Written for Devotionals Daily by Robert J. Morgan, author of Whatever Happens: How to Stand Firm in Your Faith When the World Is Falling Apart.

Rom 8:28

28 And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose.

We may not know why the bad things happen or how things will glorify God but He has promised that all things will lead to His glory. Let us trust and be available to be good stewards of God’s grace toward us being ready at all times to share the reason for the hope that is within us!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 19, 2024

Notes of Faith March 19, 2024

Butterflies: A Story of Rebirth

If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new. — 2 Corinthians 5:17

Rebirth can be a difficult concept to understand, but the lovely little butterfly offers a picture of what takes place when Christ comes into a human heart. The caterpillar’s metamorphosis provides a wonderful illustration of a believer’s spiritual transformation:

The caterpillar or larva is in the feeding phase. It eats the leaves in its world just as we feed on the ideas of the world around us.

At the chrysalis or pupa stage, the caterpillar appears lifeless. Jesus’ lifeless body was taken down off the cross and placed in a tomb. A believer’s chrysalis stage is when we die to sin.

The caterpillar emerges from its cocoon, transformed into a completely new creature. Similarly, we who recognize our sin, confess it, receive God’s forgiveness, and accept Jesus Christ as our Savior and Lord are transformed into new life in Him.

The butterfly does not return to the caterpillar state; nor can it return to the pupa phase. When a butterfly emerges from its cocoon, it flies — something it couldn’t do before! The butterfly also drinks sweet nectar instead of gorging on leaves.

God has transformed you into a new creation.

Are you a new creation in Christ still trying to gorge on leaves? If so, do you find them choking you? Are you a new creation in Christ still trying to crawl back inside the cocoon to live as you once lived? Even if you could go back in time, leaves would no longer nourish you, and the torn cocoon would no longer protect you. Why? Because God has transformed you into a new creation. Now you have the blessed privilege and opportunity to soar in His power and do His work on this planet. So spread your wings into their full, beautiful glory. It’s time to fly.

Lord Jesus, at times I want to return to the cocoon, and at other times I want to gorge on the world’s ideas and values. Thank You for the beautiful reminder of the butterfly that never turns back to an earlier stage of life. Thank You, too, for this lovely symbol of both Your resurrection and my transformation.

Excerpted from Devotions from the Garden by Miriam Drennan, copyright Thomas Nelson.

Every believer in Jesus has been transformed, given new life in Him! Our battle is trying to live the old life with our new spiritual nature. Paul says that we will fight this battle while in the world, until the Lord Jesus takes us out of this world. Pray that you might “fly” in this world with the power God has given you to live for Him. You have the living God within you (the Holy Spirit), and know His desire for your everyday decisions and choices, what you think about, the words you choose to say, how you treat others, etc. Let your new life reflect the glory of God as you make those decisions and choices.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 18, 2024

Notes of Faith March 18, 2024

Living in His Light

When Jesus spoke again to the people, He said, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows Me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.” — John 8:12

You will have dark days. Days when a friend breaks your trust and your feelings are hurt, and you have no idea what to say. Days when depression feels heavy, like it’s weighing you down. Days when everything seems to be going wrong.

But there is good news.

Jesus is light.

He’s brighter and lovelier than anything you can imagine and more powerful than any dark thing you’re facing. Jesus promises that if you follow Him, you’ll have the light of life. That might mean Jesus will give you the right words to speak to your friend or a safe place to go when things feel overwhelming. Or maybe He’ll provide a surprise that cuts through your darkness like a fluffy kitten jumping on your lap or your mom making your favorite meal or a snow day. Sometimes Jesus lights up a way out of an unhealthy situation and toward a healthy one. Jesus offers you better and brighter and wants you to live in His wonderful light.

Walk into a dark room and turn on the light. Notice the difference it makes. Ask Jesus to light up your life, to add brightness to anywhere that’s dark.

The night is nearly over; the day is almost here. So let us put aside the deeds of darkness and put on the armor of light. — Romans 13:12

“Every morning when you wake up, new baby nerve cells have been born while you were sleeping that are there at your disposal to be used in tearing down toxic thoughts and rebuilding healthy thoughts,” says neuroscientist Dr. Caroline Leaf.1

Isn’t that so cool? Every day is a new opportunity to put aside dark thoughts, negative thoughts, hurtful thoughts, and to replace them with healthy, positive thoughts.

How do you do it? You can start by reading a list of five wonderful, true things about you and your life each morning. Maybe that could be “I’m stronger than I give myself credit for.” Maybe it’s a skill you’re good at or a certain way you know you’ve been blessed. “Math comes easily to me.” Or “God has given me a safe home.” Do this before you turn on social media. Before you talk to someone who brings you down. Before you let negative self-talk tell you something bad about yourself. This shuts down dark thoughts and arms your thought life with light.

Caroline Leaf, Switch on Your Brain: The Key to Peak Happiness, Thinking, and Health (Baker Books, 2013), 24.

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

You have been transformed by the living God within you. You are a new creation in Christ! Darkness flees from light. Let the light of the world flow from you to all of those around you that they also might see by the light of God and come to know the truth…Jesus came to save that which was lost in darkness!

Pastor Dale