Notes of Faith April 25, 2024

Notes of Faith April 25, 2024

Your Daily Wardrobe

But put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to fulfill its lusts.

Romans 13:14

“Putting on” the armor of God (Ephesians 6:11), while found only in Ephesians, employs imagery found throughout the New Testament: putting on clothing. We do that every morning as we prepare ourselves for the day. We dress ourselves in a manner that will carry us through the day depending on the tasks we have to accomplish.

Gal 3:26-27

26 For you are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus. 27 For all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ.

While Paul explains in detail what it means to put on the armor of God, we are also told to put on various things that provide similar spiritual protection. We are told to put on “the armor of light” (Romans 13:12), Christ (Galatians 3:27), the “new man” (Ephesians 4:24; Colossians 3:10), “tender mercies, kindness, humility, meekness, longsuffering” (Colossians 3:12), and love (Colossians 3:14). In essence, to put on the armor of God is to put on Christ Himself and all His attributes. Living each day in obedience and submission to the Lord Jesus Christ will find us totally protected against “the wiles of the devil” (Ephesians 6:11).

Begin each day by clothing yourself in Christ and His truth. In doing so, you will be clothed in the armor of God.

Those called Christians are a part of the body of Christ. The name represents who we are supposed to be…little Christs. May we grow daily in the knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ and yield to the Spirit within us to obey the Father as He did.

The Scriptures promise to make those who belong to God that they will become like Christ. Let the seed of faith planted within you grow and change you to reflect the glory of Jesus!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 24, 2024

Notes of Faith April 24, 2024

Everything, Everyone, Everywhere

Praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, being watchful to this end with all perseverance and supplication for all the saints—and for me.

Ephesians 6:18-19

The apostle Paul’s description of the Christian’s spiritual armor is beautifully crafted. But he concludes his description of the armor with an admonition which has nothing to do with a soldier’s armor for warfare: prayer. But even though prayer is not something we “put on,” we get Paul’s sense—that prayer is the key to being “strong in the Lord and in the power of His might” (Ephesians 6:10).

Phil 4:6

6 Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.

Because spiritual warfare can occur in every area of life, Paul writes that we are to pray “on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests” (Ephesians 6:18, NIV). This echoes his words in Philippians 4:6: to pray about everything. And to pray for “all the saints.” We can pray that God’s people everywhere would put on the armor of God and stand strong in the Lord—especially those, like Paul, who are called to spread the Gospel to those who haven’t heard.

When you pray for your own needs, pray also for God’s people everywhere to stand strong and spread the Gospel.

Faith cannot grow outside the environment of prayer.

J. C. P. Cockerton

Start your day with prayer. End your day with prayer. Pray about everything that takes place in your life during the day. This intimacy with God will give you peace in and through all things.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 23, 2024

Notes of Faith April 23, 2024

God Knows

Therefore do not be like [the unbelievers]. For your Father knows the things you have need of before you ask Him.

Matthew 6:8

You observe your child working diligently to put together a wooden puzzle—with growing frustration. But you don’t say anything. Finally, she turns to you and asks for help. You take the opportunity to remind her of your love for her and your willingness to help her with anything she might need. Then, together, you both complete her puzzle.

Recommended Reading:

Luke 12:29-31

People often ask, “If God already knows what we need, why do we have to pray and ask Him?” First, Jesus revealed the truth about God’s knowledge of our needs to warn His followers about going on and on in prayer—thinking we have to impress God with our many words (Matthew 6:7). Instead, He gave them a short prayer to pray as an illustration (Matthew 6:9-13). As that prayer indicates, Jesus wants us to come to God as “Our Father”—like a child who asks her father for help. God knows our needs but wants to enjoy our relationship of trust in Him, trust that is built through the conversation we call prayer.

Right now, God knows your every need. He is waiting for you to come and talk to Him.

Pray as you can; God knows what you mean.

Vance Havner

We can never pray too much. When we pray we are communicating with God, that is, when we stop talking and listen to hear God speak to us. There have been many sermons given and books written on prayer, but the best place to look for examples is in your Bible. We can see/read of people crying out to God for various reasons and also read the history of their lives showing how God answered their prayers. We must look at our own lives to see/hear how God is answering our prayers. Go to the throne of grace for anything/everything and know that God, your Father, loves you, and wants to give you what you need.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 22, 2024

Notes of Faith April 22, 2024

Longing for Normalcy

Childhood

I sat cross-legged on the living room floor captivated by the streaks of sunlight like rainbows at my grandparents’ house. My hands were raised, attempting to catch them, when my mom walked in with the letter from my stepdad.

His handwriting was barely legible. Dark marks smudged across the wrinkled notebook paper. I imagined him sitting on the edge of his cot, lips moving as he sounded out each word, stumbling over spelling, and erasing over and over.

He had committed armed robbery and was arrested on the same day I lost my two front teeth. I placed each tooth under my pillow and listened as the adults in the other room discussed what he had done and how many years he would serve behind bars.

I hugged my tattered Cabbage Patch doll and thought of the time I watched him get into a fistfight with his friend in a parking lot, knocking out his friend’s tooth. I wondered if the tooth fairy had given his friend a pair of shiny quarters. Initial shock gave way to quiet resentment when I saw his mug shot on the evening news and realized other people saw it too.

Later that year, we moved to my grandparents’ home permanently.

My stepdad’s letters kept coming. I worried endlessly that my identity was now rooted in something bad, unable to receive love, seemingly unforgivable. Glaring imperfections stood amid the squeaky-clean image of our new suburban life. I wanted a normal dad like everyone around us: a dad who went to work, loved baseball, and was not in prison.

I questioned whether these desires made me a bad daughter.

I had to learn that comparison would not bring healing but would instead push me further into the void of shame. And Jesus did not want me there.

I was loved by Him, and my family was rooted in His goodness.

Christ alone has the authority to tell you who you are, and He says you are loved.

Even though my family was messy and broken, I wanted everyone to know we loved, laughed, played, fought, and made amends. The suffering we shared and worked through refined me, instructed me in the ways of mercy, and taught me how to love others with compassion. The work of healing meant toiling away at the most tender scars on my heart by asking the Lord for His reminder that I was seen and loved.

Maybe you hold the hurtful moments of your childhood in this way: enduring the tension of caring for people who are imperfect, struggling not to view them through the lens of their most “unlovable” moments, contending with the lies that Christ sees you through the lens of your own so-called “unlovable” moments.

Let us contemplate today’s scripture verse:

As God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience. — Colossians 3:12

And as we pray, let our hearts focus on how we are chosen, holy, and beloved by God. Allow the love of God to fill you with peace. Set before Him your family and invite Him to pour out healing over the areas where their brokenness has hurt you and made you feel ashamed.

Christ alone has the authority to tell you who you are, and He says you are loved.

Maybe you feel the burden of the sins of your past, broken relationships, or times when you were overwhelmed and reacted in a way you deeply regret. As you reflect on being holy and beloved, I invite you to listen with your heart to the gentle voice of Our Lord who calls you forgiven and beloved.

No, we are not defined by our most broken moments. We are capable of forgiving and being forgiven, loving and being loved. We are rooted in our real identity as beloved daughters, never too wounded for the Savior of the world. He pours forgiveness from His own wounds to cover yours. God’s mercy cover every inch of your entire being held close to His heart and endlessly loved.

READING: COLOSSIANS 3:12–14

Have you felt defined by your most broken moments? Take this pain to Our Lord for comfort in prayer.

Is there someone in your life you judged or gossiped about because of what you learned about her family member or someone close to her? Take that to the person and take it to Jesus in confession.

Comparisons do not work in the presence of God. You exist because He made you and your relationship with Him determines your eternal destination. We have trials and tribulations with our earthly relationships and especially emotional ones, but they do not determine our eternal destination. Love God! Love others… and everything else will work in God’s plan and for your glory!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 21, 2024

Notes of Faith April 21, 2024

Ask God for More of God

Lessons for a Better Prayer Life

Article by Matt Smethurst

Pastor, Richmond, Virginia

If you had to choose five adjectives to describe God, would holy appear on the list? I trust so. Righteous probably would too. No doubt merciful or loving would be a shoo-in. But what about this divine descriptor: happy? Would that make your list?

It may sound somewhat strange, but God is happy. Happier than the happiest person you’ve ever known. Even before there was time, he was happy — infinitely happy within a triangle of love. From all eternity, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit (one God in three persons) delighted to share the joy of divinity with one another.

So, why did the triune God create the universe? Did he need something to complete him? No. Creation was an overflow of joy — not a filling up, but a spilling out. In extravagant generosity, the persons of the Trinity decided to share their boundless gladness with the work of their hands. You were made to be happy in a happy God.

And all of this has everything to do with your prayer life.

When Keller Discovered Prayer

Few people have taught me more about prayer than Tim Keller. He himself taught eloquently on the subject for decades before (at least in his estimation) he truly learned to pray. In a wide-ranging interview not long before his death, Keller was asked, “Looking back, is there anything you wish you had done differently in ministry?”

“Absolutely,” Keller replied. “I should have prayed more.”

In many ways, Keller’s Prayer: Experiencing Awe and Intimacy with God records experientially what he had long affirmed theologically. What happened is worth quoting at length:

In the second half of my adult life, I discovered prayer. I had to.

In the fall of 1999, I taught a Bible study course on the Psalms. It became clear to me that I was barely scratching the surface of what the Bible commanded and promised regarding prayer. Then came the dark weeks in New York after 9/11, when our whole city sank into a kind of corporate clinical depression, even as it rallied. For my family the shadow was intensified as my wife, Kathy, struggled with the effects of Crohn’s disease. Finally, I was diagnosed with thyroid cancer.

At one point during all this, my wife urged me to do something with her we had never been able to muster the self-discipline to do regularly. She asked me to pray with her every night. Every night. She used an illustration that crystallized her feelings very well. As we remember it, she said something like this:

“Imagine you were diagnosed with such a lethal condition that the doctor told you that you would die within hours unless you took a particular medicine — a pill every night before going to sleep. Imagine that you were told that you could never miss it or you would die. Would you forget? Would you not get around to it some nights? No — it would be so crucial that you wouldn’t forget; you would never miss. Well, if we don’t pray together to God, we’re not going to make it because of all we are facing. I’m certainly not. We have to pray; we can’t let it just slip our minds.”

For both of us the penny dropped; we realized the seriousness of the issue, and we admitted that anything that was truly a nonnegotiable necessity was something we could do. (9–10)

Tim and Kathy maintained this unbroken streak night after night for more than twenty years — all the way through until the end of his life. But it wasn’t just a nightly discipline that changed him. He also began reading and studying, searching for help:

Kathy’s jolting challenge, along with my own growing conviction that I just didn’t get prayer, led me into a search. I wanted a far better personal prayer life. I began to read widely and experiment in prayer. As I looked around, I quickly came to see that I was not alone. (10)

Spoiler alert: his quest ultimately led to deeper engagement with, and fresh appreciation for, his own theological heritage. From Augustine in the fifth century all the way to Martyn Lloyd-Jones in the twentieth, Keller realized anew he didn’t have to choose between robust theology and vibrant experience. His own tradition featured both. “I was not being called to leave behind my theology and launch out to look for ‘something more,’ for experience. Rather, I was meant to ask the Holy Spirit to help me experience my theology” (16–17).

Keller has enriched my own experience of God by helping me to meditate on his Word, marvel at my adoption, adore him for his character, and step into divine joy.

1. Meditate Your Way to Delight

Can you relate to the disconnect between theology and experience? I sure can. God is the most glorious and satisfying person in the universe — I know this, I preach this, I write articles about this — and yet, before the splendor of his majesty, my heart can feel like a block of ice. The reason is often quite simple: I haven’t slowed down enough to really warm my heart — to thaw it — before the fire of God’s Word. I merely glance over a passage and get on with my day.

That doesn’t work. We must slow down and linger over the words of life. Biblical meditation is the music of prayer and involves a kind of two-step dance: first, Keller says, we think a truth out, and then we think it in until its ideas become “big” and “sweet,” moving and affecting — until the reality of God is sensed upon the heart (162).

This doesn’t mean we are chasing an experience; it means we are pursuing a living God. Above all, prayer isn’t merely “a way to get things from God but a way to get more of God himself” (21). This is staggering. Despite our distracted, fidgety, wandering defiance, he beckons us in and — wonder of wonders — offers us himself. And this is precisely what we need, since hearts wired for intimacy were made to be swept up into the life of the Trinity (e.g., John 17:21; 2 Peter 1:4; 1 John 1:3). As Keller explains, “We can see why a triune God would call us to converse with him, to know and relate to him. It is because he wants to share the joy he has. Prayer is our way of entering into the happiness of God himself” (68).

2. Remember Why He Listens

Another key to unlocking joy in prayer is to marvel at the doctrine of adoption — the glorious truth that God not only acquits believers in heaven’s courtroom but also welcomes us, as it were, into the living room.

Pondering this familial bond, and the intimacy it secures, has unparalleled power to nurture joy in drowsy hearts. The seventeenth-century minister Thomas Goodwin once recounted seeing a man and his young son walking along. Suddenly the father stopped, lifted up his boy, and said, “I love you.” The boy hugged his dad and said, “I love you too.” Then the father put him down and they kept walking. Now, here’s the question: was the child more legally a son in his father’s arms than when he was on the street? Of course not. But through the embrace, he vibrantly experienced his sonship.

This is what prayer offers us. The most ordinary believer in the world has access to “the most intimate and unbreakable relationship” with the Lord of the world. Just imagine, Keller says, what it takes to visit the president of the United States. Only those who merit his time and attention are granted entry. You must have credentials, accomplishments, and perhaps a power base of your own — unless, of course, you’re one of his children. That detail changes everything. Likewise, in prayer, we lean experientially — not just theologically — into the Father’s loving embrace (70).

Or as Keller put it in a sermon, in one of the most lovely images I’ve ever contemplated: The only person who dares wake up a king at 3:00 a.m. for a glass of water is a child. We have that kind of access.

3. Begin Your Prayers with Adoration

The pages of Scripture brim with summons to boldly approach our Father and lay our requests at his feet (e.g., Matthew 7:7–8; Philippians 4:6; Hebrews 4:16; James 4:2). Danger arises, though, when adoration becomes a mere afterthought — which reveals more about our self-absorbed hearts than we may care to acknowledge. Reflecting on the parable of the prodigal sons (Luke 15:11–32), Keller warns against an “elder-brother spirit” that robs our ability to enjoy the assurance of fatherly love. How might we detect if we’re succumbing to this danger?

Perhaps the clearest symptom of this lack of assurance is a dry prayer life. Though elder brothers may be diligent in prayer, there is no wonder, awe, intimacy, or delight in their conversations with God. . . . Elder brothers may be disciplined in observing regular times of prayer, but their prayers are almost wholly taken up with a recitation of needs and petitions, not spontaneous, joyful praise. (The Prodigal God, 72–73)

Though unsettling to admit, difficult things in life move us to petition far more readily than happy things move us to praise. One of the most practical “next steps” for your prayer life, then, is simply this: spend some unhurried time reveling in who God is. If you begin there — contemplating his character, gazing at his glory, praising him for his promises — then your heart will be ready to bring requests to his throne.

4. Pray to Get God Himself

God never promises to give believers all good things on our terms. What he promises, rather, is to work all things — even the bad — for our ultimate good (Romans 8:28). And when we don’t receive a good thing we want, we can rest in the knowledge that we already have the best thing. We have him. As Keller puts it, in God we have the headwaters of all we truly desire — even if a tributary of our joy goes dry.

And yet, God wants us to ask things of him. To protect us from pride and self-sufficiency, he rarely gives us what we want apart from prayer. But through prayer, our Father withholds nothing good from his children (Matthew 7:11). God delights to give himself in his gifts. Keller concludes:

Prayer is how God gives us so many of the unimaginable things he has for us. Indeed, prayer makes it safe for God to give us many of the things we most desire. It is the way we know God, the way we finally treat God as God. Prayer is simply the key to everything we need to do and be in life. (18)

The ability to converse with the King of the universe isn’t just an honor — it’s the glorious union of two disparate truths: awe before an infinite being and intimacy with a personal friend. Because we’re made to know a triune God — a merry, generous, hospitable community of persons — prayer is the furthest thing from a sterile concept or boring duty. It’s an invitation into unimaginable joy.

This is an old song that I think I heard my father-in-law sing many years ago in church…

More Of You, More Of You

I’ve Had It All But What I Need

Is More Of You.

Of Things I’ve Had My Fill,

But Yet I Hunger Still;

Empty And Bare,

Lord Hear My Prayer,

For More Of You.

I Have Searched All Around In The Husks That Abound,

But I Find No Nourishment There.

Now My Strength’s Almost Gone And

I Feel The Pull Of Despair.

But My Thirst Drives Me On, As I Stumble Along,

Over Ground, So Barren And Dry.

But The Streams Just Ahead, Living Water,

“Lord Fill Me!” I Cry.

More Of You, More Of You

I’ve Had It All But What I Need

Is More Of You.

Of Things I’ve Had My Fill,

But Yet I Hunger Still;

Empty And Bare,

Lord Hear My Prayer,

For More Of You.

What we all NEED is more of God!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 20, 2024

Notes of Faith April 20, 2024

Be Ready to Speak of Jesus

Evangelism as Spiritual Warfare

Article by Scott Hubbard

Editor, desiringGod.org

On my desk sits a book with a dark image on its cover: a Christian soldier stands alone, surrounded by spiritual enemies. Seven arrows and a spear aim at his heart; death and the devil draw close. The soldier has some armor and a shield, but he still looks desperate — outmatched, outmanned, and utterly aware of it. He folds his hands and looks to heaven.

As a portrayal of the Christian’s spiritual warfare, the image holds some merit. We live in “the evil day” (Ephesians 6:13). Lies fly toward us like invisible arrows as we engage “the prince of the power of the air” (Ephesians 2:2). We often feel besieged and beleaguered, tempted and tossed, pushed down and kept down. O Lord, we cry, deliver us.

If we imagine, however, the saints of Christ always defending, and never advancing, our idea of spiritual warfare needs a sharper blade. As Richard Lovelace writes, “In folk religion the posture of the Christian toward fallen angels is defensive; in Scripture the church is on the offensive, and the blows it receives from Satan come from a retreating enemy” (Dynamics of Spiritual Life, 136).

“We are, first and foremost, not a church attacked, but a church attacking.”

Our Lord Jesus did not commission his disciples to hunker down and protect themselves, but to launch the world’s most epic offensive (Matthew 28:19–20). We are, first and foremost, not a church attacked, but a church attacking. And so, among the spiritual weapons Paul hands believers in Ephesians 6:12–18, we find not only “the sword of the Spirit,” but also “as shoes for your feet . . . the readiness given by the gospel of peace” (Ephesians 6:15, 17).

Peace in our hearts, gospel on our lips, we are messengers of the triumphant Christ, the tide of war irreversibly on our side.

The Soldier’s Shoes

Some uncertainty surrounds the Christian soldier’s shoes in Ephesians 6:15. In Roman warfare (from which Paul seems to have drawn some of his imagery), a soldier’s shoes helped him to stand firmly under attack — and in context, Paul calls Christians to “stand” three times (Ephesians 6:11, 13–14). So maybe “the readiness given by the gospel of peace” means our readiness to stand immovable in the true gospel rather than being “tossed to and fro . . . by every wind of doctrine” (Ephesians 4:14).

On the other hand, Paul’s language here bears a striking resemblance to the prophet Isaiah’s description of the happy gospel messenger: “How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him who brings good news, who publishes peace, who brings good news of happiness!” (Isaiah 52:7). Iain Duguid notes that the words feet, good news, and peace appear closely together only three times in Scripture: Isaiah 52:7, Nahum 1:15 (an echo of the Isaiah text), and Ephesians 6:15. These shoes, then, seem made for more than standing firm: they’re made for marching.

Notice also the fury of the devil’s attacks in Ephesians 6. In this battle, flaming darts fly, swords maim, and helmets get tested. Only “the whole armor of God” will guard us (Ephesians 6:13). Consider, however: Upon what kind of church is the devil likely to launch such a full-throttled assault? Upon a calm and quiet church? Upon a church that keeps to its own business? Upon a church that shares the gospel only on Sundays and in small group?

Perhaps. The devil hates faith in Christ wherever he finds it. But his real dread is an advancing church. The feet he hates most are marching feet, tramping feet, feet whose forward steps thunder his coming doom (Romans 16:20).

“Wherever they go, Christian soldiers are willing, eager, ready to talk about Jesus.”

Just as Pharaoh didn’t mind the Israelites until they multiplied, the devil may not mind silent churches all that much. But he will unleash his powers to keep the front line from advancing, to keep the church of Christ from placing one more foot on his domain of darkness. He will bend back his bow against any man or woman who embraces Paul’s ambition: “[Pray] for me, that words may be given to me in opening my mouth boldly” (Ephesians 6:19).

Evangelistic Misconceptions

Paul’s description of the church’s evangelistic task corrects some common misconceptions.

First, Paul hands this armor to the whole church, not just its pastors and evangelists. Yes, the risen Christ has given “evangelists” to the church (Ephesians 4:11), those wonderfully restless saints who itch to speak of Jesus and seem to do so effortlessly. But Jesus gave such evangelists “to equip the saints for the work of ministry” (Ephesians 4:12), a work that includes speaking “the gospel of peace” (Ephesians 6:15). Some Christians are formal, gifted evangelists; every Christian is a messenger.

Second, Paul has in mind proactive, not merely reactive, evangelism. Christians who follow Jesus faithfully may indeed attract notice and even questions, and our gospel shoes make us ready for such moments (1 Peter 3:15). But the feet of God’s messengers are “beautiful” precisely because they “bring good news” (Isaiah 52:7), not because they offer it when asked. Such shoes send us to people and places we never would have approached otherwise. They spur us to cross oceans or cross streets, strike up words with strangers and ask bold questions, invite over neighbors no one else would.

Third, faithful evangelism relies far more on will and desire than it does on methods. No doubt, methods can be helpful in evangelism. But methods cannot create a desire to share Christ where it doesn’t already exist. So, in Ephesians 6:15, Paul fastens upon the Christian soldier’s readiness: “As shoes for your feet . . . put on the readiness given by the gospel of peace.” Wherever they go, Christian soldiers are willing, eager, ready to talk about Jesus.

With Christ Our Captain

Perhaps, like me, you need help putting on these shoes. I can think of two recent situations where I was not ready and missed a wide-open opportunity to speak a word about Jesus. On many days, I find myself far more ready to work, rest, read, play, eat, or even do chores than to say “Jesus” to a friend or neighbor. How, then, might we become more ready to speak the gospel of peace?

“Every faithful word you speak has the authority of the King behind it. Every hill you see will one day wave his flag.”

In some ways, simply meditating on that word readiness might begin to shape our daily prayers and plans. Ready Christians, or Christians who want to be ready, have a habit of praying, “Lord, give me opportunities to speak of you today — and give me the courage to take them.” They also have a habit of putting themselves in places and among people where opportunities are likely to arise.

But the most stirring thoughts come from remembering the kind of spiritual battle we’re fighting — and what Captain we follow.

He Came and Conquered

Consider, first, the Captain you follow. Unlike some, he does not issue commands from the back of his army. Nor does he hide himself among his troops, like some Ahab wearing another’s robes (1 Kings 22:30). No, before he ever handed us shoes and called us to go, “he came” (Ephesians 2:17). He came and preached peace. He came and made peace. He came and became our peace (Ephesians 2:14–15, 17). He rode not just at the head of the army, but alone, utterly alone — our solitary Victor, high and lifted up.

And now, his every call comes with a promise: “Behold, I am with you always” (Matthew 28:20). The shoes he hands us are an invitation to run in his beautiful footsteps, to publish the peace he won, and all along the way, to know a fellowship with him that comes only as we advance his cause.

He Will Fill the Earth

Then, second, look to where your Captain leads. When Paul mentions the “rulers” and “authorities,” the “cosmic powers” and “spiritual forces of evil” in Ephesians 6:12, he surely means for us to see them as fearsome enemies. But he also means for us to remember what he wrote in chapter 1, where he tells us that Jesus, our risen Lord, is now seated at the right hand of the throne of God, “far above all rule and authority and power and dominion” (Ephesians 1:21). He is, moreover, “head over all things,” with the church as “his body, the fullness of him who fills all in all” (Ephesians 1:22–23).

Christ, our exalted and unassailable Captain, already holds dominion over every foe. Their time is short, their days numbered. His kingdom has already spread to a degree terrible for our enemy to see. And the spreading must continue. His kingdom will advance until the gates of hell lie fallen beneath the feet of the triumphant body of Christ.

And so, J.I. Packer writes to every trembling evangelist,

You are not on a fool’s errand. You are not wasting either your time or theirs. You have no reason to be ashamed of your message, or halfhearted and apologetic in delivering it. You have every reason to be bold, and free, and natural, and hopeful of success. (Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God, 116)

Every faithful word you speak has the authority of the King behind it. Every hill you see will one day wave his flag. Don’t imagine, then, Christian, that you are a soldier simply on defense. Yes, take the whole armor of God; shield yourself from assault. But put on your shoes as well — and pray and run and speak beneath the banner of your advancing King.

Scott Hubbard is Managing Editor for Desiring God

Read the end of the book…Christ wins, we win! The battles are difficult but the war is already won in Jesus. Fight on good soldier and continue to glorious victory.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 19, 2024

Notes of Faith April 19, 2024

Don’t Be Fooled!

But [Jesus] answered and said, “It is written, ‘Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God.’”

Matthew 4:4

Imagine it’s your first day at work in a new corporate job. A fellow employee greets you and gives you some free employee guidance: park your car wherever you like, take your lunch hour whenever you get hungry, dress however you like, and come and leave on your own schedule. Once you go through new employee orientation, you realize you were duped—all the previous advice was wrong. But how were you to have known? You didn’t know any better.

Something similar happened to Adam and Eve in the garden (bad advice) and later to Jesus in the wilderness. Jesus was approached by Satan three times with temptations (Matthew 4:1-11). But unlike the new employee, Jesus knew better—He had read the “handbook”! With each temptation—based on a twisted rendering of God’s words—Jesus answered with the truth from Scripture. Knowing he was defeated, the devil left Him alone (Luke 4:13).

The only way to defeat the lies and counterfeits of Satan is to know the truth. Begin or continue your daily intake of God’s Word in order to tell truth from error.

So the real question confronting you now is: How can you afford not to be in God’s Word.

Howard Hendricks

The Word of God is truly the word(s) of God! We can hear Him speak to us, reveal Himself to us, and give us truth for living a life pleasing to Him. We must be in the Word! Open it now, or as soon as you are able and not only read but listen to what God has to say to you!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 18, 2024

Notes of Faith April 18, 2024

The Spiritual Battlefield

And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.

John 8:32

Paul’s image of the believer’s spiritual armor in Ephesians 6:10-17 clearly suggests the activity of warfare. And warfare suggests there will be captives. But in spiritual warfare, there are no physical conflicts or captives. Indeed, Paul says elsewhere that our battles are not in the physical realm as worldly battles are

(2 Corinthians 10:3). So whom or what are we fighting? And whom or what do we take captive in order to win?

It has been rightly suggested that spiritual warfare takes place “between the ears.” That is, in the mind. That’s where history’s first spiritual battle took place. In the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve had to weigh Satan’s words against God’s words and make a choice—the activity of the mind. They should have done what Paul says we should do: take “every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ” (2 Corinthians 10:5). We must weigh every thought. If it is a lie, or dishonoring to God, we capture that thought and subdue it with the truths of God’s Word.

We can only find victorious freedom by knowing God’s truth (John 8:32).

Every good [spiritual] warrior constantly asks himself this question: What does the Bible say about this?

Stu Weber

Take every thought captive…sounds impossible, but the Spirit of God lives within the believer in Jesus and has the power of God to do the impossible! We have many decisions that it seems we don’t even think about, just act or react, rather than allow the Spirit to be our guide in truth and righteousness. This takes discipline and practice to prove effective in what we say we believe. The ultimate battle is already won. Who’s side are you on?

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 17, 2024

Notes of Faith April 17, 2024

HEAR: The Voice of God

At thirteen, I attended a Jewish friend’s bar mitzvah. It was a joyous occasion with an elaborate feast following the ceremony. Though outwardly extravagant, the bar mitzvah signified the coming of age for this adolescent. He was now a full-fledged member of the Jewish community, with all the privileges and responsibilities that came with it.

In Hebrew, bar mitzvah means “son of commandment.” As one subject to the law, my friend was now obligated to observe the Torah, the first five books of the Old Testament. He studied diligently, memorizing significant parts of the law in the weeks and years prior to that day. At the ceremony, he read from the written Torah while also giving an oratory discourse on the law.

Since the time of the patriarchs, the oral Torah was passed down from generation to generation before finally being written down. For Jews, listening to the law was vital to committing it to memory. They listened to every statute, law, and legal interpretation with keen ears. Not only did the Jews hear the law but also they were subject to it.

In the Old Testament, God appears as a burning bush, a cloud by day, and a pillar of fire by night. While revealing Himself, He speaks to Adam and Eve, Cain, Noah, Abraham and Sarah, and Moses. Though not always seen, God is heard by those He speaks to.

Sometimes God’s followers responded with an abundance of faith. On other occasions, they disregarded His voice. In Genesis 2:17, God instructs Adam not to eat fruit from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. Yet Adam and Eve cannot resist the allure of that fruit. Their cardinal sin leads to the fall of humanity.

In Exodus 3 and 33, God speaks directly to Moses. Having seen the misery of His people in Egypt, He calls Moses to deliver the Israelites from Pharaoh. At first, Moses is reluctant to obey. He offers various excuses, vehemently protesting his calling.

As the Lord’s anger rises, Moses finally responds in faith. He leads the Israelites from exile to freedom. Though he never entered the promised land, it is extraordinary to witness the transformation of his relationship with God. Early on, Moses is distant and afraid to encounter the living God. But in his final years, he listens to God’s voice as if speaking to a friend (Ex. 33:11).

Throughout the Scriptures, hearing is instrumental to faith. Only when we hear the voice of God can our lives be transformed.

Similarly, Abraham responds in faith each time he hears God’s voice. When the Lord calls him to take Isaac to the land of Moriah and sacrifice him as a burnt offering, he does so without hesitation. Abraham carries forth the command that most of us would never think of doing in faith. Because of this, the Lord blesses him and promises him offspring as numerous as the stars in Heaven and the sand on the seashore (Genesis 22:17).

Throughout the Scriptures, hearing is instrumental to faith. Only when we hear the voice of God can our lives be transformed.

John compares the people of God to sheep who recognize their shepherd when He speaks (John 10:27). For him,

Whoever is of God hears the words of God. — John 8:47

Yet when God speaks, we don’t always recognize His voice. Even the prophet Samuel heard God’s words as a boy and yet did not recognize Him. When the Lord calls him, Samuel runs to the priest Eli and says, “Here I am, for you called me.” Yet it is not Eli who calls. God speaks to Samuel three times before Eli instructs Samuel that God is calling him (1 Samuel 3:1–10).

How can we differentiate God’s voice from the world’s chatter? The first step is pursuing God with our whole hearts. The Lord shares this simple truth in

Jeremiah 29:13:

You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart.

Only the greatest of devotion allows us to hear and understand the longings of loved ones.

Second, we must renew our minds. In Romans 12:2, Paul urges us,

Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.

Sometimes God speaks through audible words that vibrate the tympanic membranes and hair cells in our inner ears. At other times, he communicates directly to our minds through the Holy Spirit. When we constantly renew our minds with the Word of God, we develop the psyche of Christ.

Finally, we need to set aside time to listen to God.

For the eyes of the Lord are on the righteous, and His ears are open to their prayer. — 1 Peter 3:12

By devoting time to prayer, we prepare our senses to receive the Lord’s communication. Listening leads to the expectation of response. In those moments, we become friends of God, like Moses.

Excerpted from Faith Embodied by Stephen Ko, copyright Stephen Chii-Ming Ko.

Some people say they hear from God about you…be very careful if YOU did not hear from God according to what these people tell you. I have not experienced anyone hearing from God audibly from heaven, but we can hear Him through the Scriptures, His Word, that He has given us. He can speak through others that tell or remind us of His Word. Being in His Word and being silent in prayer, not always doing the talking, makes it possible for us to hear God’s Spirit within us. He will guide us to truth and God’s will for everything we need. Remember that listen and silent use the same letters… maybe we need to be silent so that we can hear.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 16, 2024

Notes of Faith April 16, 2024

Tuesday, April 16

Strength in Numbers

And let us consider one another in order to stir up love and good works, not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as is the manner of some, but exhorting one another, and so much the more as you see the Day approaching.

Hebrews 10:24-25

The roadway of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco is suspended from two massive cables. Each of the two cables is three feet in diameter. Each cable consists of 61 bundles of steel wire, each bundle containing 452 wires, bringing the total number of steel wires in each cable to 27,572.1 To the observer, it appears the roadway is suspended from two large cables, but in reality, it is suspended from 55,144 tiny wires bundled together.

Recommended Reading:

Acts 2:42-45

There is strength in numbers, a truth promoted by the apostle Paul when he used the human body as an illustration for the Body of Christ. Each cell in the human body is like an individual in the Church. The faith of one member is multiplied exponentially when combined with the faith of all. Whether one wire in a cable, one cell in a body, or one believer in the Church—all are important.

Make sure you are an active part in strengthening the Body of Christ by meeting regularly with others.

There is no insignificant member in a church.

Michael J. Wilkins

1. “Design and Construction Stats,” Golden Gate Bridge. Highway and Transportation District.

Eccl 4:9-12

9 Two are better than one because they have a good return for their labor. 10 For if either of them falls, the one will lift up his companion. But woe to the one who falls when there is not another to lift him up. 11 Furthermore, if two lie down together they keep warm, but how can one be warm alone? 12 And if one can overpower him who is alone, two can resist him. A cord of (55,144) strands is not quickly torn apart.

NASU

Jesus said He would build His church, His body, and it is meant to be together, serving one another, caring for one another as our physical body does, but of infinitely greater spiritual strength and value for daily living!

Pastor Dale