Notes of Faith August 12, 2024

Notes of Faith August 12, 2024

Two Builders

Everyone who hears My words and obeys them is like a wise man who built his house on rock. — Matthew 7:24 NCV

Jesus once told a story about two builders. One was wise and one was foolish. The wise builder built his house on solid rock. The wind blew, the rains came, and the water rose up all around him. But that house didn’t fall. Because it was built on rock.

The other builder was not so wise. This foolish guy decided to build his house on the sand. Maybe it was easier. Maybe he didn’t have to travel as far for supplies. Maybe he liked the view. But when the winds blew and the rains came and the water rose up all around him, that house came crashing down.

What did Jesus mean by this story? Who are the builders? And what are the rocks and the sand?

The Rock is God.

The builders are you and me and everyone. We’re all building our lives. The question is, are we building our lives on rock or on sand?

The sand is the world. When we listen to the world and let it tell us what is important, that’s like building our house on sand. Because just like sand, the world is always moving and changing. If you count on being the best soccer player, the smartest kid in the class, or the most popular to make you feel important and special, then your house is sitting on sand. What if you sprain your ankle? What if you flunk the test? What if the cool kids decide someone else is more popular? The sand will shift, and your house will come crashing down!

The rock is God. If you let Him tell you why you are important and special, then you’ve built your life on rock. Because God never changes. Make Him the most important thing in your life, and no storm of life — no flunked test, no lost friend, nothing in this world — will be able to knock you down.

Lord, help me not to build my life on unimportant things. Teach me, instead, to build my life on You. Amen.

Excerpted from You Can Count on God: 100 Devotions for Kids by Max Lucado, copyright Max Lucado.

If the world would hear the truth of God from the beginning of their lives, still in the womb, parents speaking of God, praising God, worshipping God, children might be more likely to seek God, to know God, to live for God. Let us daily speak the truth, knowing that the plan of God for the salvation of those that belong to Him will take place, continuing to share the good news of God’s grace and mercy on mankind.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 11, 2024

Notes of Faith August 11, 2024

The Rock, the Road, and the Rabbi: Beginning the Journey

The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; His mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness. —

Lamentations 3:22-23 ESV

Before I (Kathie Lee) began my new job as co-host of the fourth hour of The Today Show in 2008, I felt the Lord tugging at my spirit with the words of Matthew 6:33: Kathie, seek first My kingdom and My righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.

I remember responding, “Lord, You know that’s what I am trying to do — put You and Your kingdom first in my life.”

Then I felt Him gently rebuke me: You’re not listening. I said to seek Me first!

“Lord,” I questioned, “do You mean first thing in the morning before anything else?” In my heart, I sensed His clear answer: Yes.

Wow. I already got up earlier than most — usually right before dawn. “Really, Lord?” I said. “Before I go into work?”

Yes. I felt Him tenderly remind me, As you begin your day, so goes your day.

So I began to wake up before 4:00 am and pray for an hour for my family members, friends, colleagues, world situations, and personal concerns. Then I would open the Bible and study God’s Word for an hour more, with my puppies and the birds outside my window as my only company.

As for God, His way is perfect: The Lord’s word is flawless.

— Psalm 18:30

This new discipline soon became the best part — and my favorite part — of the day. Changing my morning routine has changed my life. I began not only to study the Word but also to memorize as much as I could so that Scripture would become a living, breathing part of me. No textbook needed, no study guide necessary — just the pure, life-giving, sustaining Word of God settled deep in my soul.

One of my favorite verses is Psalm 18:30:

As for God, His way is perfect: The Lord’s word is flawless.

Friends, this is either a fact or a lie. There is no middle ground. This is why I have grown so passionate about learning what the Bible really says. If I am going to base my life on something, it has to be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help me, God! But how can we live the truth if we don’t even know it?

The word truth occurs in the Bible over 200 times. God places immeasurable value in it, and He longs for each of us to seek it, find it, and apply it to our lives. All too often we are so overwhelmed by technology, our personal dramas, and our endless ambition that we neglect to study God’s Word. Imagine how it breaks the heart of our heavenly Father, who loves us, when He sees us putting our energy into everything but the one thing that can bring us life.

Adapted from The Rock, the Road, and the Rabbi, copyright Kathie Lee Gifford.

The Word of God, our Bible, is “the Word of God”. Some argue that it has mistakes, errors, in it. In the original language that it was written it has no errors for it is “the Word of God”. As man has taken that original and translated it, added his thoughts and interpretations to it, errors have indeed been placed into it. The problem with some people, no, many people is that they place themselves or someone else, over the Scriptures. You are certainly not without error. The Pope is not without error. He is a sinful man just like the rest of us. Truth! God’s Word is truth. Jesus said God’s Word is truth! Come down off the throne that you have placed yourself on and listen to the only thing in the world that is absolute truth. If you struggle with something that is in the Bible, learn what it says in the original language. If you still don’t like what it says…understand this…it is truth. Many things in God’s Word are painful to me because they point out my sin or things in life that I find hard to agree with or endure. That does not make them untrue. God is true, cannot lie, is faithful, always loves, seeks those that love Him. There is truth to be found, not in the things of the world, and especially your own thoughts of what is right and wrong, for you are a sinful person in need of a Savior. Jesus is the only One who can bring you to truth! Seek Him and His saving grace and know truth! It will take you into eternal life with Him. Placing yourself on the throne of truth will lead you into eternal suffering and punishment for not allowing truth to penetrate your hardened heart. Believe in the Word of God. Read the gospel of John as he describes Jesus as the Word of God who took on flesh, died, rose on the third day, ascended into heaven and is coming again to receive those that believe in Him. Read the Word. Know the Word. Believe the Word. It is the only truth you can depend on for life and that eternal!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 10, 2024

Notes of Faith August 10, 2024

Go for the Gold: Trials

In this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while, if need be, you have been grieved by various trials, that the genuineness of your faith, being much more precious than gold that perishes, though it is tested by fire, may be found to praise…Jesus. 1 Peter 1:6-7

Matthew Henry made several points about this passage. First, all Christians have something wherein they may rejoice, no matter what. Second, we may still go through several trials at once. Third, the trials are fires that solidify our faith. Fourth, a tried faith is more precious than tried gold. Henry said, “Gold is the most valuable, pure, useful, and durable, of all the metals; so is faith among the Christian virtues; it lasts till it brings the soul to heaven.”1

No one wants to face anxious moments or difficult days. The strain is something greater than we can bear alone. But we can lean on Jesus, cast our cares on Him, claim His promises, and let Him carry us through the burden. As our faith grows, so do our peace of mind and our praise toward Him.

Jesus Christ will appear again in glory, and when He does so the saints will appear with him…and the more they have been tried the more bright they will then appear.

Matthew Henry

1. Matthew Henry, “1 Peter 1:7 Commentary,” Precept Austin.

Every race or game that I have been privileged to participate in I have strongly desired to win. There were many failures along the way. But those failures produced learning for the future and success through training the mind and body. Our life in Christ is the most important race of all, and although we have trials in walking faithfully and still sin, we strive to reach for the gold, the prize for which we were called, to be Holy as Christ is Holy, and endure until we are taken to be with Him, made perfect and complete by Him…our earthly race is over and we are victorious in Christ! Run this race to win!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 9, 2024

Notes of Faith August 9, 2024

The Messiah Is on the Way

“A command will come to rebuild Jerusalem. The time from this command until the appointed leader comes will be forty-nine years and four hundred thirty-four years.” — Daniel 9:25 NCV

The Hebrew term for “appointed leader” means Messiah. Gabriel was talking about Jesus the Christ! This was a monumental announcement.

The angel mentioned two blocks of time — 49 years and 434 years, for a total of 483 years.

But, Max, I thought Gabriel was talking about 490 years? What about the remaining seven?

Great question. We will answer it soon.

When does the countdown for the 483 years begin? With the command to rebuild Jerusalem. Specifically, “Jerusalem will be rebuilt with streets and a trench filled with water around it, but it will be built in times of trouble” (v. 25 NCV). When was a command issued to rebuild the capital? And when was the city rebuilt “with streets and a trench in times of trouble”? How quickly can your fingers flip the pages of your Bible to the book of Nehemiah?

Nehemiah was a high-ranking exiled Jewish ruler who lived some 130 years after Daniel received this prophecy. He made a request to Artaxerxes to rebuild Jerusalem. The king agreed to permit and fund the project. According to

Nehemiah 2:1, the command was given in April of 444 BC.

We have a starting point! Flip the yearly calendar 483 times, beginning in 444 BC, and where do you land in history?

This question became the obsession of Sir Robert Anderson. In the late 1800s he was the chief of Scotland Yard, an English lawyer, and a serious student of the book of Daniel. He set out to determine the end date of the 483 years. This task was not as easy as one might assume. The Hebrew calendar is not like our calendar. It has 360 days instead of 365 and leap months instead of leap years. Then there was the tricky transition from BC to AD. Even so, his calculations led him to a most significant finding.1

Anderson determined that the 483rd year occurred during the Passover of AD 33; specifically on April 6, the very year and day that Jesus rode into Jerusalem on the back of a donkey.2 Our Savior fulfilled a prophecy that dated back 483 years!3

It’s no wonder that the multitudes were out in droves to welcome Jesus with palm leaves. They had read the prophecy of Daniel! They knew they were living in the days of fulfilled promise. The air was flush with Messianic expectation.

Gabriel’s forecast was so precise that Jesus had harsh words for those who missed it.

When He approached Jerusalem, He saw the city and wept over it, saying, ‘If you had known on this day, even you, the conditions for peace! But now they have been hidden from your eyes... you did not recognize the time of your visitation. — Luke 19:41, 42, 44 NASB, emphasis mine

Jesus criticized His antagonists because the “day” and “time” were theirs to expect, yet they were not paying attention. He had previously dispatched an angel to His beloved prophet Daniel. He issued His arrival date 483 years in advance. Yet, “His own did not receive Him” (John 1:11). They refused to recognize Him as their Messiah. Instead of crowning Him as king, they killed Him as a criminal.

Gabriel told Daniel this would happen. Remember, the angel spoke of two blocks of time: 49 years and 434 years. It took 49 years to rebuild Jerusalem. What about the 434 years?

“After the four hundred thirty-four years the appointed leader will be killed; He will have nothing” (Daniel 9:26 NCV). True to Gabriel’s presage, Jesus was killed. It appeared He had nothing. No followers. No kingdom. He was dead and buried in a borrowed grave. What’s more, the city of Jerusalem soon fell under attack from the Romans. Gabriel augured that event this way: “The people of the leader who is to come will destroy the city and the holy place. The end of the city will come like a flood, and war will continue until the end. God has ordered that place to be completely destroyed” (v. 26 NCV).

This gloomy prophecy was fulfilled on August 6, AD 70. Titus of Rome destroyed Jerusalem, killed a million Jews, and tore the temple apart stone by stone.4

Do you not find this to be a stunning text?

Studying it led Leopold Kahn, a former rabbi, to become a Christian.5 Sir Isaac Newton said we could stake the truth of Christianity on this prophecy alone.6

Dr. Bill Creasy, a distinguished professor at UCLA, called this portent “one of the most extraordinary examples of long-range, specific prophecy in the Bible.”7

Dr. Mark Hitchcock, author of a five-hundred-page comprehensive book on end times, wrote: “The precision of this prophecy is staggering! I call it the greatest prophecy ever given. It stands as a monumental proof of the inspiration of the Bible.”8

Yet, the observant person has a question. Gabriel foretold 490 years. He explained the first 483 and then stopped. What about the remaining seven?

Tough Times Are Coming

That leader will make firm an agreement with many people for seven years. He will stop the offerings and sacrifices after three and one-half years. A destroyer will do blasphemous things until the ordered end comes to the destroyed city. —

Daniel 9:27 NCV

Wait a second. Who is “that leader”? What is this seven-year agreement? How can the ruler stop sacrifices after three and a half years if the temple has been destroyed and, consequently, the temple sacrifices have been discontinued? What just happened?

Here is what many other end-times students and I think: God stopped the 490-year countdown clock at year number 483.

When the Jews rejected their Messiah, God pressed pause.

There is a gap of time between years 483 and 484 — a hiatus between the events described in Daniel 9:26 and 27.

Why would I believe this? Because the events described in verse 27 have not happened. We have yet to see the moment in which offerings and sacrifices in the temple are disallowed. There is no temple currently. This is a yet-to-be-fulfilled prophecy that alludes to the final 7 years of the 490 years. That period will involve a rebuilt temple, its defilement, a treaty, and an evil despot. Maybe you’ve heard of him.

The Antichrist. He is the warmonger of the end times, the enemy of God, and the nemesis of the Jews. The phrase “leader who is to come” (Daniel 9:26 NCV) refers to him. He will be the pawn of Satan in a final, fatal, and futile attempt to overthrow the kingdom of God. He will enter a pact with the state of Israel. Under the terms of this treaty, Israel will either continue or begin the construction of the temple.

At first the Jews will be delighted with their new friend. The world will sigh with relief at the appearance of peace in the Middle East. Yet, midway through the seven-year treaty, the Antichrist’s true nature will be disclosed. He will tear up the agreement and seize the rebuilt temple. He will install his image and demand universal worship. He will impose his will on the world (Revelation 13:1–18).

Jesus Christ spoke of this moment:

So when you see standing in the holy place ‘the abomination that causes desolation,’ spoken of through the prophet Daniel — let the reader understand — then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains. — Matthew 24:15–16

This seven-year season of global struggle is often called the tribulation.

God will use this time of testing to purge and purify the nation of Israel and to populate the new Kingdom with people of faith. He will then declare His final judgment against the would-be world leader. Christ will come a second time to establish a Kingdom. Every eye will see Him (Zechariah 14:3–4; Revelation 1:7). Every knee will bow before Him. And the Son of Man will rule from Jerusalem. At that point the 490 years will be completed, and the millennium, the golden age, will begin.

1. Sir Robert Anderson, The Coming Prince (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregal, 1954), 122, 128; Renald Showers, The Most High God: A Commentary on the Book of Daniel (Westville, NJ: The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry, 1982); John F. Walvoord, Daniel—The John Walvoord Prophecy Commentaries, revised and edited by Charles Dyer and Phillip Rawley (Chicago: Moody Publishers, 2012), 279.

2. Harold W. Hoehner, Chronological Aspects of the Life of Christ (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1977), 47–65, 131.

3. David Jeremiah, The Handwriting on the Wall—Secrets from the Prophecy of Daniel (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson), 195.

4. Tyler Perry, “The Siege of Jerusalem in 70 CE,” World History Encyclopedia, May 2, 2022, https://www.worldhistory.org/article/1993/the-siege-of -jerusalem-in-70-ce/.

5. “Our Story,” Chosen People Ministries, https://www.chosenpeople.com/our -mission/our-story/; Jeremiah, Handwriting on the Wall, 185.

6. Isaac Newton, Observations Upon the Prophecies of Daniel and the Apocalypse of St. John (Cambridge, UK: J. Darby and T. Browne, 1733), see chapter 10, “Of the Prophecy of the Seventy Weeks.”

7. Bill Creasy, Daniel, 2nd ed. (recorded lectures), (UCLA: Logos Bible Study, 2014), Audible, 4.58.00, https://www.audible.com/pd/Daniel -Audiobook/B005FR6M8C.

8. Hitchcock, The End, 68

The Backbone of Biblical Prophecy

What Happens Next

Is your head spinning?

Let’s pause and get our bearings. Here is the chronology:

The Backbone of Biblical Prophecy

Do you see where we are on this time line? We live in “the church age” or “the age of grace,” which is the parenthetical period that sits between the Messiah and the tribulation.

You might be wondering, Why the gap? Why would God create this separate phase for the church age?

Here’s the answer: it’s a musterion. That’s the Greek word Paul used to describe this parenthetical period. A mystery. A secret God kept hidden in His heart.

Between the death of Christ and the final seven years of human history as we know it, God added a new age.

In reading this, then, you will be able to understand my insight into the mystery of Christ, which was not made known to people in other generations as it has now been revealed by the Spirit to God’s holy apostles and prophets. This mystery is that through the gospel the Gentiles are heirs together with Israel, members together of one body, and sharers together in the promise in Christ Jesus. — Ephesians 3:4–6

God inserted the church into history. The church age features a new society formed by Jew and Gentile, male, female, slave, free. You, other believers, and I find ourselves somewhere in this parenthetic era. To be clear, the final seven years are still to come. But they will be poisoned by history’s most evil despot.

The prophecy in Daniel 9 is so vital. It speaks of God’s timeline for history. It includes a precise prophecy about the Messiah and an early reference to the Antichrist and the remaining seven years on God’s prophetic calendar. Before we move forward on that timeline, let’s catch our breath and make three observations.

You Can Trust Bible Prophecy

I read about a psychic shop that went out of business. The sign on the door read: “Closed due to unforeseen circumstances.”

God has no unforeseen circumstances.

He told Daniel the Messiah would come after 483 years. Jesus did. God told Daniel the Anointed One would be killed. He was. God told Daniel the city of Jerusalem would be devastated. It was. These and dozens of other prophecies compel us to take God at His word.

The same pages that foretell prophecies down to the exact date are the pages that describe God’s love and devotion for you. You can trust God’s word.

You Can Be Prepared

Hard times are coming. The Antichrist, the tribulation, the abomination that causes desolation — these are foreboding events. But if you are in Christ, you won’t have to experience them. God will come for His church before the dark days begin. That event is commonly called the rapture. Jesus, with the power of a king and the kindness of a savior, will extract His children prior to the seven years of evil. (We will dedicate chapter 7 to unpacking this exciting event in greater detail.)

Will you be like those who missed the time stamp of Jesus in His day and refused to recognize Him as Messiah? Or will you be ready for the rescue?

You Can Have Security About the Ultimate Victory

Some years ago, I attended a San Antonio Spurs basketball game. It was the final game of the regular season, and it was unique because it did not matter. The Spurs had already won their division. They had already clinched the top seed in the playoffs. The game had no bearing on their standings. Whether they won or lost did not matter. Since they had already won the division, they could not lose, even if they lost.

The game was of little or no interest to the sports world. But it intrigued this preacher. I saw a sermon illustration waiting to happen. Christians occupy the same spot that the Spurs did. According to the Bible, we’ve already won. According to prophecy, victory is secure.

According to the message of grace and the death of Christ on the cross, no one can snatch us from our Father’s hand.

Yet, we still have a few contests before the final conquest. So how do we behave in the meantime? The Spurs were a good example. I’ve never seen a team enjoy a game more than they did that night. They were relaxed, confident, and happy. Because they were, they won the game.

That’s our strategy. Let’s keep our eyes on the little plane inside the big plane. In these last days show up, play hard, and be happy. After all, the victory is secure.

Excerpted from What Happens Next by Max Lucado, copyright Max Lucado.

I believe that we are living in the days shortly before the seven years of judgment on an unbelieving world and the return of Jesus Christ to earth and His setting up of His earthly kingdom and ruling it for 1,000 years. The signs of the times are clear and we should be ready, standing firm in the faith, holding fast to the truth of the Scriptures and continuing to preach the gospel until we are taken out of this world through death, or the Lord calling His church to meet Him in the air. Look up, for your redemption draweth nigh!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 8, 2024

Notes of Faith August 8, 2024

Spared by Mercy

But God, who is rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in trespasses, made us alive together with Christ.

Ephesians 2:4-5

When the scribes and Pharisees caught a woman committing adultery, they brought her to Jesus to see how He would deal with her. Punishments for adultery were strict under Jewish law, but instead of recommending the punishment she deserved, He forgave her and sent her on her way with an admonition not to sin further. What Jesus did was exercise mercy—withholding punishment that was deserved

(John 7:53–8:11).

Grace is bestowing favor or blessing that is not deserved, but mercy is canceling punishment that is deserved. Christians have received both. Though we deserved punishment for our sins against God, we received mercy because He “made us alive” in Christ. And though we don’t deserve God’s blessing, His grace is showered upon us through love, forgiveness, and favor of every sort. The result is that we are saved because of His mercy (canceling our punishment) and grace (awakening us to Christ through faith).

Because of the mercy of God, we are saved. Look for ways to be merciful to others as God has been merciful to you.

The name Jehovah carries majesty in it; the name Father carries mercy in it.

Thomas Watson

We do not make it through a single day without the grace and mercy of God! Give Him praise and worship Him for His great love for you. I pray that we may endure this dark world waiting patiently for the light of God to return and claim that which belongs to Him…you and me!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 7, 2024

Notes of Faith August 7, 2024

No Longer Dead

And you He made alive, who were dead in trespasses and sins, in which you once walked.

Ephesians 2:1-2

It is often said that Christianity is different from all the world’s religions in one critical regard. All the other religions are man’s attempt to reach God, whereas Christianity consists of God reaching out to man. In religion, man is reaching up to heaven to find God. In Christianity, God is reaching down to earth to find man.

What is the basis for this distinction? It is found in Ephesians 2:1: “And you He made alive, who were dead in trespasses and sins.” First, mankind is spiritually dead apart from Christ. Spiritually dead people have no interest in seeking after the one, true God or the ability to understand spiritual truth (Romans 3:10-18). Second, God took the initiative in imparting life to spiritually dead people. Without God taking that initiative, we would have remained spiritually dead in our sins. We have been saved by grace, not by our own religious efforts to be approved by God (Ephesians 2:8-9).

If you belong to Christ, you are no longer what you once were thanks to the regenerating power of the Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:11). Thank Him for the new life you have received by grace.

Unless you live in Christ, you are dead to God.

Rowland Hill

Gal 2:20

20 "I have been crucified with Christ; and 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 up for me

Praise God for His plan of salvation and redemption. We were judged and condemned in sin, nothing to look forward to but separation from God, tormented forever… “But God”… sent His Son into the world, to die for the world, that the world might be saved and redeemed through believing in Him.

May we live a life that gives proof that we are living in Christ. Christ in us the hope of glory!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 6, 2024

Notes of Faith August 6, 2024

Let the Church Be the Church!

I recently viewed a podcast on YouTube hosted by a man who announced he was going to point out and highlight a significant number of the worst pastors and churches in America. I kind of cringed at the prospect of his bold assessment, but curiosity compelled me to view his presentation. I’ll not mention his name or the name of his podcast. I don’t know him, and though I’ve now watched about three of his podcasts, I don’t have enough context to recommend or discourage viewing.

I do know this however; I found myself in agreement with his opinions on the worst pastors/churches in America. He didn’t build his case on his own prejudices and opinions. He simply showed clip after clip of well known pastors in their well known mega churches saying and proposing statements and ideas that were completely contrary to sound biblical exegesis (interpretation).

In other words, he basically let them “hang themselves” by their own words.

Even as I share this I can imagine there may be some who might think I should not bring up this kind of controversy. We all know the saying, “If you can’t say anything good about anybody, don’t say anything at all.” But that’s precisely the point! The church it seems, in many corners, has taken a vow of silence.

Issues, about which scripture is crystal clear, now have pastors and leaders of major denominations walking on egg shells at their national councils and conventions. Discussions and debates ensue regarding what the church’s position should be on any number of dilemmas that are eroding our culture and attacking our doctrinal foundations.

We seem to be living in “upside down world” in case you haven’t noticed. And far too often and in far too great a degree, the church huddles in the perceived safety of its ecclesiastical norms, and sings more loudly, “Victory in Jesus!” while the culture as well as the church suffers significant defeats.

(I use the word church, lower case c, in the general sense, herein referring to the organized, denominationalized entity which may function within the realm of the true Church, or body of Christ, but at times and in ways, often does not.)

It is said that in Nazi Germany, some churches sang more loudly as trains filled with the cries of Jews, passed closely by on their way to the death camps.

Unthinkable? America is guilty of the same. In Eric Metaxas’ book, “Letter to the American Church”, he addresses this very issue.

“Because the German church had for too long adopted a wrong interpretation of Romans 13, i.e. ‘Let everyone be subject to the governing authorities…’ in Germany, the German church largely fell in line, as though standing against the wicked tyranny of Hitler was obviously and unavoidably wrong. When God looked to His church to stand against the great evil that had come upon Germany and that would devastate much of the world and murder millions, they balked, using as their chief excuse an outdated application of Paul’s words from two millennia before. They felt religiously justified in doing nothing, and the unprecedented evil results of their pious inaction would make the world gasp. Indeed, the world gasps to this day, as it struggles to take in how it is possible that a nation ostensibly Christian could have in any way allowed such things to take place. But what about us? Haven’t we in America swallowed these same lies, and haven’t we similarly silenced from speaking and acting boldly against what we see happening in our own time…?” (Eric Metaxas)

In Chapter 11 of his book (Chapter title- “Be Ye Not Political”) Metaxas goes on to explain how our fear of being deemed “political” within the church setting, pressures us into being silent about things that are clearly moral, ethical, and spiritual.

But how can so many of our churches be failing in areas that are so biblically obvious? “Biblically obvious” is the operative term here. I have been asked many many times throughout the years, by many pastors who wanted me to weigh in on the question, “What’s the greatest need in the church today?”

My response was always the same: “The greatest need in the church today is sound biblical preaching and teaching, and dependence on the power and presence of the Holy Spirit.”

You might say, “But you didn’t mention Jesus! ”Proper exposition of God’s Word will always lead you to the foot of the cross and the name of Jesus. The Holy Spirit IS the Spirit of Christ! (Romans 8:9; 1 Peter 1:11)

Proportionate to shallow or errant exposition of God’s Word, and a failure or hesitancy to embrace the power and presence of the Holy Spirit in our churches, is the encroachment of the world into our ecclesiology and the ineffectiveness of our churches in influencing the culture.

Are you part of a sound Bible preaching/teaching, Spirit-led church community? Do you pray for your pastor and church leaders? Do you come prepared to worship on the Lord’s Day? Do you serve your local body in some capacity, if you are able?

All these things and more matter if we hope to make a difference in our culture, and in our time! Remember when we were little kids in church singing, “This little light of mine, I’m gonna let it shine!”

Every Christian and every church should subscribe to this verse: “Let your light shine before men in such a way that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father who is in heaven” (Matthew 5:16).

We as Christians (the true Church) are to be living examples of a risen Christ, indwelt by the same power which raised Him from the grave!

Every local church should be a viable representation of the kingdom of God on earth! Let the church be the Church!

In Christ,

Dallas Holm

Many of you may not know this man. I have used his writings before in these daily devotional thoughts. Those of you that do not know him well should look him up, listen to his music, find his thoughts and teachings on the word of God and enjoy getting to know him.

I agree wholeheartedly that the Church must “be” the Church. She must stand firm in the truth and speak truth to a dark, deceived and damned world! Let us pray to grow stronger in faith and devotion to Christ each day. We ARE the Church. Let us make sure that we ACT like it.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 5, 2024

Notes of Faith August 5, 2024

God’s Inheritances

[I pray] that you may know what is the hope of His calling, what are the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints.

Ephesians 1:18

In his latter years, a grandfather tells his grandson that in his will he is leaving the young man a piece of property. But then he says something unexpected: “This property is your inheritance, my gift to you. But I also want you to know that you have been my inheritance; you have been God’s gift to me.”

The apostle Paul uses both senses of inheritance in Ephesians 1. In verses 13-14, he says the Holy Spirit is the “guarantee of our inheritance”—our eternal life with God which is His gift to us. But then in verse 18, Paul speaks of “His inheritance in the saints.” In some mysterious way, God sees us, His saints, as His eternal inheritance. Just as the grandfather found pleasure and joy in the life of his beloved grandson, so God “takes pleasure in His people” (Psalm 149:4).

On days when you find it hard to take pleasure in your behavior or potential, know this: You are God’s inheritance, a source of pleasure and joy forevermore

(Psalm 16:11).

An inheritance is not only kept for us, but we are kept for it.

Richard Sibbes

Col 1:9-12

9 For this reason also, since the day we heard of it, we have not ceased to pray for you and to ask that you may be filled with the knowledge of His will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding, 10 so that you will walk in a manner worthy of the Lord, to please Him in all respects, bearing fruit in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God; 11 strengthened with all power, according to His glorious might, for the attaining of all steadfastness and patience; joyously 12 giving thanks to the Father, who has qualified us to share in the inheritance of the saints in Light.

NASU

Some have said that when you die you take nothing with you…but the one who passes on his faith to the generations behind him will be blessed with the inheritance of God’s grace in his children and grandchildren for all eternity. There is no greater gift than to know that your those in your family have been chosen by God, given faith to believe, and will be with you and our Savior Jesus Christ forever!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 4, 2024

Notes of Faith August 4, 2024

Does God Delight in Me?

His Pleasure in (Imperfect) Holiness

Article by Scott Hubbard

Managing Editor, desiringGod.org

If we could distill God’s will for his people into a simple prayer, we may do no better than an often-repeated plea from Robert Murray M’Cheyne: “Lord, make me as holy as a pardoned sinner can be made” (Memoir and Remains of Robert Murray M’Cheyne, 159).

How often does such a prayer find its place upon your lips? How deeply does such a desire shape your hopes and plans? If the longings of your heart could speak, would any of them cry out, “Make me as holy as I can be”?

God’s desire for our holiness burns through the Scriptures like a purifying fire. Paul would have us think so: “This is the will of God, your sanctification” (1 Thessalonians 4:3). Peter would have us think so: “As he who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct” (1 Peter 1:15–16). Hebrews would have us think so: “Strive for peace with everyone, and for the holiness without which no one will see the Lord” (Hebrews 12:14).

And in a hundred other ways, God would have us think so. Our holiness delights him (Psalm 40:6–8), pleases him (1 Thessalonians 4:1), rises before him like a fragrant offering (Philippians 4:18), elicits his approval and praise (Romans 2:29; 12:1). If you want to please a holy God, be as holy as you can be.

Holiness and Its Hoaxes

Before we consider why holiness makes God happy, ponder for a moment what we even mean by holiness. Like many familiar Bible words, holiness can get lost in a haze of abstraction. And over time, if we’re not careful, we may come to associate the word with images or ideas at odds with the real thing.

Some, for example, may hear holiness and (perhaps subconsciously) think bland or boring. Holiness belongs in a museum or antique shop, hushed and stuffy. True holiness, however, knows nothing of blandness and cannot abide boredom. Scripture speaks of “the splendor of holiness,” of holiness as “glory and beauty” (1 Chronicles 16:29; Exodus 28:2). As Sinclair Ferguson writes, holy people shine with something of God’s own brilliance:

“To sanctify” means that God repossesses persons and things that have been devoted to other uses, and have been possessed for purposes other than his glory, and takes them into his own possession in order that they may reflect his own glory. (The Holy Spirit, 140)

True holiness is breathtakingly beautiful. It participates in God’s own glory — a glory bursting with life and majesty.

Others may hear holiness and think mainly of religious ritual: food laws and temple sacrifices, perhaps, or a devotion to churchly routines. But such was the mistake of many Pharisees — those punctual, precise, “worshiping” bundles of corruption (Matthew 23:25–28). True holiness pierces to the deepest parts of a person; it touches and transforms “spirit and soul and body” (1 Thessalonians 5:23). Holiness is a hand that plucks the heart’s hidden strings, filling all of life with heavenly melody. It is not smoke arising from the altar, but faith and love arising from the soul (Psalm 40:6–8).

Then, finally, some may hear holiness and wonder what relevance it holds to daily life. Maybe holiness seems like a cloud: miles above the ground and impossible to grasp. But true holiness has everything to do with everyday life. When Jesus and his apostles call us to holiness, they address our thinking and speaking, our eating and drinking, our spending and saving, our working and resting. Even on the most ordinary day, there never comes a moment when “be holy” doesn’t mean something practical. Holiness embraces and dignifies our daily doings.

And such holiness — beautiful, deep, broad — makes God happy.

God’s Complex Pleasure

Depending on your personality and theological background, the thought of our holiness pleasing God may raise some questions. Some, especially lovers of the doctrine of justification, may wonder, Doesn’t God already delight in me? And others, especially the sensitive and scrupulous, may ask, How could God ever delight in me?

Doesn’t God already delight in me?

For some, the idea that our holiness delights God seems to undermine (or at least sit in tension with) justification by faith alone. Doesn’t God’s delight rest on Christ’s perfect holiness now reckoned to me through faith? Doesn’t he call me “holy and beloved” before I obey (Colossians 3:12) and even after I sin (1 Corinthians 6:11)?

These questions press us toward a helpful distinction. At one level, God has an unshakeable delight in his people because we are united to “his beloved Son” (Colossians 1:13), our holy Savior who remains the same yesterday, today, and forever (Hebrews 13:8). We are in Christ — wrapped in his righteousness, sanctified by his purity — and therefore fully approved in God’s sight. And yet, above this foundation of God’s unchanging favor, we really can please him more or less, depending on how we live. We can grieve the Spirit or gladden him (Ephesians 4:30); we can delight God Almighty or displease him (Ephesians 5:9–10).

The image of fatherly discipline in Hebrews 12 brings these two kinds of pleasure together. All discipline implies some degree of displeasure or disapproval. At the same time, all good discipline springs from deep love. “The Lord disciplines the one he loves” (Hebrews 12:6). Beneath the displeasure of God’s discipline is his deep and unchanging fatherly affection.

Because he loves us, he responds to our displeasing sins with discipline — and by discipline, he makes us more pleasing. He gives us the security of his everlasting approval in Christ — and amazingly, he also gives us the dignity of becoming the kind of people who will hear his “well done.”

How could God ever delight in me?

Others ask a different question about God’s delight. They understand why holiness pleases God, and they would love to know themselves pleasing before him. But they can’t seem to imagine their holiness — their small, stumbling holiness — ever being pure enough to please him. Maybe in heaven they’ll delight God, but how could they do so now?

I feel the force of the question. Our sins are still many, our present imperfections run deep, and mixed motives taint even our best deeds. This side of heaven, God can always disapprove of something inside us. So it can feel safer to simply take refuge in the righteousness of Christ and wait till we’re perfect to believe ourselves pleasing. But that would be a great mistake.

“God is happy with our holiness because the heart of true holiness is happiness in God.”

If we, though trusting in Jesus and seeking to follow him, doubt that God could delight in our holiness, we need to reckon with how often God uses the language of pleasure to describe his posture toward his partly sanctified people. He says brotherly love pleases him (Romans 14:18), sharing with others pleases him (Hebrews 13:16), praying for kings pleases him (1 Timothy 2:3–4), a child’s obedience pleases him (Colossians 3:20), even that we can be “fully pleasing” to him (Colossians 1:10). And in each of these examples (and many more), he is not lying. The holy, holy, holy God is astoundingly, wonderfully pleasable.

Roots of His Approval

If we ask why such imperfect holiness pleases God, we might give several answers. We might remember that our present holiness is nothing less than the emerging character of Christ in us (2 Corinthians 3:18), his image rescued and renewed (Romans 8:29) — and God loves the glory of his Son. We might also remember that our holiness is the fruit of the Holy Spirit (Galatians 5:22–23) — and just as in the beginning, God regards the creative work of his Spirit as “good,” indeed “very good” (Genesis 1:31).

Or we might remember, as Richard Sibbes writes, that God is able to take a long view of our holiness, seeing today’s small step as part of a much bigger and more beautiful picture:

Christ values us by what we shall be, and by what we are elected unto. We call a little plant a tree, because it is growing up to be so. “Who has despised the day of small things?” (Zechariah 4:10). Christ would not have us despise little things. (The Bruised Reed, 17)

Today’s edifying speech, purity of thought, self-denying service, prayerful yearning toward heaven — these are acorns becoming oaks, buds about to bloom, mustard seeds destined to outgrow and outlast the thorns and thistles of our sin. And so they please him.

Yet we can dig still deeper.

Happiness at the Heart

At bottom, we might say that God is happy with our holiness because the heart of true holiness is happiness in God. God made the world so that people like us would find our greatest joy in him and so glorify him as the Greatest Joy in the world— the treasure in the field, the pearl of infinite price, the fairest among ten thousand (and far more). And if we could peel back the layers of a truly holy life, we would find a heart that pulses with such pleasure in God.

People growing in holiness have felt, with Paul, something of “the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord,” a worth that makes us more ready to suffer than to sin (Philippians 3:8–10). With Jeremiah, we have left sin’s broken cisterns, drunk deeply from the fountain, and now refuse to leave (Jeremiah 2:13–14). With John, we have taken up the commandments of God and said, with a cry of joy, “Not burdensome!” (1 John 5:3). And with David, we have tasted and seen that God is good (Psalm 34:8) — his presence the height of joy, his right hand the province of pleasures forevermore (Psalm 16:11).

Such holiness is beautiful, a flicker of the love between Father and Son, the aroma of heaven’s atmosphere. Such holiness is heart deep, filling our innermost parts with rivers of living water. Such holiness is broad, spreading over life as comprehensively as the waters cover the sea. And such holiness makes God happy.

So, if we want to distill God’s will for his people into a simple prayer, we may do no better than M’Cheyne’s striking line: “Lord, make me as holy as a pardoned sinner can be made.” And as we pray, we’ll know what we mean deep down: “Lord, make me as happy in you as a pardoned sinner can be made.”

Seeking to be that for which we were originally made just makes sense. We were made to be holy and walk with God! We will be made holy and walk with God! Not striving against our sinful desires, not seeking the holiness that God desires makes no sense at all. Let us love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength for the life that He us gives belongs to Him.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 3, 2024

Notes of Faith August 3, 2024

Go for the Gold: God’s Word

Ps 19:7-11

7 The law of the Lord is perfect, restoring the soul;

The testimony of the Lord is sure, making wise the simple.

8 The precepts of the Lord are right, rejoicing the heart;

The commandment of the Lord is pure, enlightening the eyes.

9 The fear of the Lord is clean, enduring forever;

The judgments of the Lord are true; they are righteous altogether.

10 They are more desirable than gold, yes, than much fine gold;

Sweeter also than honey and the drippings of the honeycomb.

11 Moreover, by them Your servant is warned;

In keeping them there is great reward.

NASU

An Olympic gold medal is mostly silver. It’s only gold-plated. That’s not true for the Word of God. Every single word is pure gold. In other words, every word has total integrity. Every verse shines. Every chapter is of utmost value.

Psalm 119 says, “The law of Your mouth is better to me than thousands of coins of gold…. Therefore I love Your commandments more than gold” (verses 72, 127).

As of this writing, a single ounce of gold is worth more than $2,000. If you consider every verse in the Bible an ounce of gold, the Bible in your hands is worth more than 70 million dollars. Anything so priceless should be greatly treasured, deeply appreciated, and constantly handled. Take time to read it, to study it, to learn it, to obey it, and to share it. Whenever you grip your Bible, you hold a treasure in your hands.

The Bible our guide, far more precious than gold, the half of its glories have never been told; its wonderful words for the old and the young, the grandest e’er spoken by poor mortal tongue.

Franklin D. Barnes

The actions of the International Olympic Committee and the country of France have been despicable toward man and blasphemous toward God. But the hard work of righteous athletes should not go unrewarded, including our attention and applause. Our Bibles are more precious than any earthly reward because they are the very words of God and speak to us truth and life. The world speaks lies and death from the mouth and heart of Satan, who many appear to be turning to and following today. The Bible proclaims that this world will get worse in its deception and lies and attempt to live without God, worshipping the same desire as Satan. They will be judged and destroyed eternally. Let us pray that they might be awakened to truth and turn from darkness to light, turn from the God of this world, Satan, repent of their wicked ways, and follow the God of light, Jesus the Savior of the world! Read your Bible! Listen to it on your phone or other devices! Know the truth! Be obedient to the truth and you will live eternally with God in all His glory! May I be blessed to see you there and walk with you and Jesus, forever!

Pastor Dale