Notes of Faith September 1, 2024

Notes of Faith September 1, 2024

Never Too Young to Testify

Raising Children Like Agnes of Rome

Article by Jon Hoglund

Professor, Bethlehem College and Seminary

I don’t believe anyone thought we took the name for our daughter, Agnes, from the then-recently released Despicable Me, but it often produced conversation. Among midwesterners, she inevitably hears, “Oh, I had a grandmother” — or great-grandmother — “named Agnes.” But few realize that the name has a distinctive Christian heritage, beginning with the early martyr Agnes of Rome.

In naming our daughter after a martyr, we were seeking to shape our (and her) imagination about the ideal Christian life. Agnes of Rome’s story, brief as it is, reminds us that gladly confessing Jesus as Lord and acknowledging our identity in Christ are the most important things about us. The martyr moment brings the good things of this earth into eternal perspective. Agnes shows the power of Jesus’s promise to the church in Smyrna — “Be faithful unto death, and I will give you the crown of life” (Revelation 2:10) — and asks if we really believe it.

Pure Lamb

Early authors often remarked that Agnes’s life matched her name. Agnes conveys a double meaning related to the Greek word for “pure” (hagne) and the Latin word for “lamb” (agnus). In Christian art, she is always depicted with a lamb, which makes her easy to spot in an old church or an art museum. She exemplifies a young unmarried woman who died for her Christian faith.

As with many martyr stories, Agnes’s death likely occurred during the “Great Persecution” around AD 304. The Roman emperor Diocletian feared the rising Christian population and sought to unify the empire after a series of insurrections and rebellions. He closed churches, arrested church leaders, and tested the loyalty of prominent Romans by making them offer a sacrifice to the gods or else face deadly consequences.

Among those brought to trial in Rome during the persecution was a twelve-year-old girl (or possibly thirteen) named Agnes. She came from a Christian family and was probably denounced because she refused to marry the son of a Roman official.

‘New Kind of Martyrdom’

We know Agnes from two texts in the late fourth century. The first is an inscription, which still exists, in a church honoring Agnes in Rome. Damasus, bishop of Rome (AD 366–384), comments on her courage amid the degrading humiliation of being exposed before the crowd: “Though of so little strength she checked her extreme fear, and covered her naked members with her abundant hair lest mortal eye might see the temple of the Lord.” Damasus emphasizes both her vulnerability and her steadfast conviction, indeed willingness, to die for Jesus.

The second witness is Ambrose (c. AD 339–397), bishop of Milan and mentor to Augustine. He delivered an address on January 21, 377, which he notes is Agnes’s “birthday” (her martyrdom day). If she died in AD 304, Ambrose was retelling the story 73 years after the fact, approximately our distance from the Second World War. He could have known people who had witnessed the event, so his story has substantial credibility.

“A young person is never too young to testify to Jesus Christ as Lord, Savior, and Treasure.”

According to Ambrose, after refusing an offer of marriage, Agnes said, “He who chose me first for Himself shall receive me. Why are you delaying, executioner? Let this body perish” (“Concerning Virgins,” 1.2.9). Ambrose praises her in the high classical style of preaching in that day: “She was fearless under the cruel hands of the executioners, she was unmoved by the heavy weight of the creaking chains, offering her whole body to the sword of the raging soldier, as yet ignorant of death, but ready for it” (1.2.7).

He marvels that one so young would die:

A new kind of martyrdom! Not yet of fit age for punishment but already ripe for victory . . . she filled the office of teaching valor while having the disadvantage of youth. . . . All wept, she alone was without a tear. (1.2.8)

In devotion beyond her age, in virtue above nature, she seems to me to have borne not so much a human name, as a token of martyrdom, whereby she showed what she was to be. (1.2.5)

That is, the double meaning of her name showed her to be a lamblike sacrifice and a pure virgin. She understood herself to be espoused to Jesus and so denied the claim of a human suitor.

Hagiography

One challenge in appropriating Agnes for today is that medieval Roman Catholic writers added substantial details to her story. For instance, The Golden Legend by Jacobus de Voragine (1275) records that the Roman prefect sent her to a brothel to be abused since she refused to recant and be married. God protected her so that when the prefect’s son approached her, he was struck dead. But Agnes prayed for the young man, and he immediately recovered. When she was sentenced to death in the fire, the flames parted so that she was unhurt. After failing to kill her in this way, the officials executed her with a sword.

This is hagiography, an expanded account of martyrdom that combines a historical core with additional (often invented) details to highlight the martyr’s heroism. We can see where the medieval authors creatively embellished Agnes’s story. While the motive may be commendable, we need to be content with the simpler accounts by Ambrose and Damasus, even if the details are not so vivid.

But what about the emphasis in all these sources on virginity? Agnes’s commitment to Christ was tested because of the advances of a non-Christian man seeking a wife. We do not know whether she refused marriage in principle or only refused to be married to an unbeliever. Either way, while we today may be hesitant to affirm the principled denial of marriage, it is important to see that the early church rejoiced in the newfound freedom of a sacred singleness exemplified by Jesus and Paul. To early church authors such as Ambrose, the refusal of marriage in this world pointed strongly to one’s belonging to Jesus Christ.

Regardless of Agnes’s exact motivation, we can agree with Ambrose that she refused the earthly good of marriage and accepted death (the end of all possibilities for good things on this earth) because she belonged to Jesus Christ. Despite the legendary facets added to this story, the main event continues to draw our attention: a twelve-year-old girl stood before a Roman official and confessed her faith in Jesus.

Not Too Young to Testify

Ambrose and others marveled at Agnes’s youth. Her story presses home that a young person is never too young to testify to Jesus Christ as Lord, Savior, and Treasure. And when they do so, especially in the face of opposition, they participate in the victory of Jesus over sin, death, and hell. When teenagers today confess that their decisions and actions are motivated by faith in Jesus, they demonstrate the courage and faith that overcomes the world (1 John 5:4–5). A confession of Jesus has more significance than any accomplishment — whether in school, sports, or society.

Note how Ambrose and Damasus remind us of Agnes’s physical vulnerability as a child and a woman but then show her indomitable trust in Jesus. When Augustine reflects on Agnes, he compares her to Hercules. He overcame the lion and Cerberus the three-headed dog, but “Agnes, a thirteen-year-old girl, overcame the devil” (Sermon 273.6).

C.S. Lewis knew that simple faith possesses great power against Christ’s enemies. The demon Screwtape seethes just thinking about a godly young woman like Agnes:

[She is not] only a Christian but such a Christian. . . . The little brute. She makes me vomit. She stinks and scalds through the very pages of the dossier. It drives me mad, the way the world has worsened. We’d have had her to the arena in the old days. That’s what her sort is made for. Not that she’d do much good there, either. A two-faced little cheat (I know the sort) who looks as if she’d faint at the sight of blood and then dies with a smile. . . . Looks as if butter wouldn’t melt in her mouth and yet has a satirical wit. The sort of creature who’d find ME funny! (The Screwtape Letters, 117–18)

We do not know if Agnes died with a smile or laughing at the impotence of the demons, but she did die confessing her Lord. And the demons shuddered.

Raising Our Children for What?

Lewis’s imaginative description brings Agnes home to us. Are we raising children whose highest aim is to testify faithfully to their Savior, the risen and exalted Jesus Christ? Would our daughters die with a smile, use satirical wit against a demon, and even look into the face of our greatest enemy and laugh because they are so secure in their faith?

Here is where martyr stories are so helpful. The picture that comes into our minds of a successful Christian life determines to a considerable extent what our own Christian life will look like — and the kind of Christian life we will hold before our children. Agnes provides such a picture.

There is fresh talk today about generational influence and stable households. By all means, it is a blessing to provide your grandchildren with a tradition of hard work and respect for family continuity. But this desire can so easily become a temptation to aim primarily at wealth, influence, and property. The martyrs, on the other hand, remind us that, whatever we build on earth, we must be ready to say goodbye to everything and give up control over our earthly future in a moment of witness. Christian parents will do no better than to pray that they and their children display the faithful confession of Agnes and the other martyrs.

Jesus’s promise in Revelation 2:10 — “Be faithful unto death, and I will give you the crown of life” — does not apply only to those who face imminent execution for confessing Jesus as Lord. The language of martyrdom provides a peg, a hook, on which to hang the rest of our Christian life and the culture of Christian life we are creating as a family and church. The brief account of Agnes does not tell us everything about the Christian life, but it does illustrate the extreme situation that should anchor our expectations of life in this world.

Augustine concludes with encouragement: “Pray that you may be able to follow in the footsteps of the martyrs. It isn’t, after all, the case that you are human beings and they weren’t; not, after all, the case that you were born, and they were born quite differently” (Sermon 273.9). Indeed, Agnes’s story reminds us that all of God’s people can find the courage to confess Christ publicly based on a settled conviction that we belong to Jesus.

Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in Me shall live even though he dies. And he who believes in Me shall never die!” If you believe in the Lord Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, it is a must to proclaim the truth of who He is and what He has done to all who will listen and even those who will not. This is why we “believers” are still here after believing faith…to proclaim the truth to the world that others might come to Jesus in like faith so as to be saved.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 31, 2024

Notes of Faith August 31, 2024

Go for the Gold: Heaven

August 31, 2024

The construction of its wall was of jasper; and the city was pure gold, like clear glass. Revelation 21:18

We often speak of the golden streets of heaven (Revelation 21:21). But remember, the entire city will have a golden hue. The buildings are made from a kind of gold mined in heavenly mines, as it were, that shimmers with the sheer happiness that fills the place. The light of Christ will diffuse throughout the city, and our eyes will be transformed so we can see it all clearly and without discomfort.

Like athletes going for the gold, we should live in the light of that golden city. One day soon our trails and trials will end, our burdens will disappear, and our eyes will see our King in His golden splendor. The Bible says of heaven: “And there shall be no more curse, but the throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in it, and His servants shall serve Him. They shall see His face” (Revelation 22:3-4).

As you go through this day, anticipate a better country, that is a heavenly one, for He has prepared for us a city (Hebrews 11:16).

Our dear ones wait, who passed from sight, over on the golden shore; but there with them we shall unite, over on the golden shore.

Laura Newell

Revelation 21:14-21

New International Version

14 The wall of the city had twelve foundations, and on them were the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.

15 The angel who talked with me had a measuring rod of gold to measure the city, its gates and its walls. 16 The city was laid out like a square, as long as it was wide. He measured the city with the rod and found it to be 12,000 stadia[a] in length, and as wide and high as it is long. 17 The angel measured the wall using human measurement, and it was 144 cubits[b] thick.[c] 18 The wall was made of jasper, and the city of pure gold, as pure as glass. 19 The foundations of the city walls were decorated with every kind of precious stone. The first foundation was jasper, the second sapphire, the third agate, the fourth emerald, 20 the fifth onyx, the sixth ruby, the seventh chrysolite, the eighth beryl, the ninth topaz, the tenth turquoise, the eleventh jacinth, and the twelfth amethyst.[d] 21 The twelve gates were twelve pearls, each gate made of a single pearl. The great street of the city was of gold, as pure as transparent glass.

Hebrews 9:10

10 For he was looking forward to the city with foundations, whose architect and builder is God.

We are sojourners on this earth. This is not our eternal home. We wait with glorious expectation of the glory of the life to come that God has prepared for us, for those who love Him! NOTW

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 30, 2024

Notes of Faith August 30, 2024

Build Up, Not Tear Down

Let no corrupt word proceed out of your mouth, but what is good for necessary edification, that it may impart grace to the hearers.

Ephesians 4:29

The Greek word for “edification” is formed from two other Greek words: the word for house (oikos) and the verb to build (doma). When applied to a person, the word is best rendered in English as “edification” (note the root of edifice or building).

The question then is, how do we build a person? First, think of how we would tear down a person. By harsh criticism, negative comments, discouraging or disparaging words. So how would we build up a person? By encouraging words, helpful actions, motivational or nurturing speech—according to the needs of the moment. The goal is to “impart grace to the hearers,” which means to benefit the person rather than corrupt the person. When constructing a building, individual parts are added according to need: lumber, bricks, wire, plumbing, paint, and more. Each part plays a role in constructing the house. And speech can do the same thing by adding a timely and beneficial word that will add to a person’s growth and development.

Look for an opportunity every day to impart grace to someone by using timely and beneficial words.

Whatever moves the heart wags the tongue.

C. T. Studd

If we love people good thoughts will come to mind and “building up” words will be on our tongue. As followers of Jesus we should always strive to give mercy and grace even if that is not what we receive in return. Ask God for a heart of love, to be less bitter and selfish. He will provide all that you need.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 29, 2024

Notes of Faith August 29, 2024

Remove the Opportunity

“Be angry, and do not sin”: do not let the sun go down on your wrath, nor give place to the devil.

Ephesians 4:26-27

When rock climbers are ascending the sheer face of a mountain, they look for the tiniest place to lodge their toes—a place that gives them the opportunity to make progress. Climbers refer to such places—a ledge, crack, or outcrop—as a foothold.

Place, opportunity, and foothold are all English words used to translate Greek topos in Ephesians 4:27: “Nor give place [opportunity/foothold] to the devil.” Foothold calls to mind the expression, “Get a foot in the door”—when someone takes advantage of an opportunity for advancement. What is Paul discussing? How might we give the devil an opportunity for advancement in our life? By not dealing with anger quickly or by letting anger fester into bitterness. That’s why Paul says to deal with unrighteous anger by the end of the day. Jesus expressed righteous anger on occasion when defending God but never unrighteous anger. Unrighteous anger can only lead to sin if not resolved.

Unrighteous anger is self-centered; forgiveness is others-centered. When we forgive, we take away the devil’s opportunity to stir up trouble.

He who can suppress a moment’s anger may prevent a day of sorrow.

Unknown

Let us take every thought captive that we might not give Satan a foothold to lead us into temptation and sin. This is indeed hard work and every effort must be given to the battle of pursuing holiness and righteousness.

Love God! Love others!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 28, 2024

Notes of Faith August 28, 2024

Put Off, Put On

Put on the new man which was created according to God, in true righteousness and holiness.

Ephesians 4:24

In the Garden of Eden, God created a new man and woman according to His image “in true righteousness and holiness.” But righteousness and holiness were marred by sin. The story of redemption becomes the story of restoring righteousness and holiness in man and creation. We call the temporal restoration of righteousness sanctification and the ultimate, eternal restoration of righteousness glorification.

We find connections to the creation and re-creation story throughout Scripture. For example, 2 Corinthians 5:17 says, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.” The practical application of that truth is described in Ephesians 4:22-24 where Paul says to “put off” the old self of unrighteousness and sinfulness and “put on” the new self of righteousness and holiness. Putting off and putting on are our part, our responsibility, as “imitators of God” (Ephesians 5:1). Giving us the desire and power to do so is God’s part through the power of His Spirit.

We don’t start a new day in dirty clothes; neither should we live a new life with an unrighteous heart.

Everything in Scripture has in view the promotion of holiness.

AW Pink

We were created without sin although allow man the choice to obey or rebel against God. God provided a way to restore relationship with Him through His Son Jesus Christ. If we have faith in the work and person of Jesus, we also have the opportunity to pursue the holiness in which we were first created. I urge those of you who believe to pursue purity and holiness. Yes, we will fail. But our utmost attempts must be pure and holy not giving in to sin and corruption and destruction of our lives. You are loved by God who wants His best for you. You are loved by me and I want His best for you. Believe in Jesus and obey the truth of God that brings eternal righteousness and holiness!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 27, 2024

Notes of Faith August 27, 2024

The Old Man

Put off the old man with his deeds.

Colossians 3:9

The Bible tells us to “put off the old man.” What does that mean? It doesn’t mean tossing grandpa out the door. (Please don’t) It means we’re to turn away from the flawed traits we had before coming to Christ and from the corrupt nature we inherited from Adam.

Perhaps you’ve chosen to follow Christ, but you know there are some things you must toss out, some habits you must break, and some sins you must confess. You’re not alone. Paul was speaking to the Colossians and to all of us when he said, “Put off all these: anger, wrath, malice, blasphemy, filthy language out of your mouth. Do not lie to one another, since you have put off the old man with his deeds, and have put on the new man who is renewed in knowledge according to the image of Him” (Colossians 3:8-10).

You have a new nature—a Christly calling. If there’s an area of residual sin in your life today, ask God to help you toss it out of your life. You can do it in the power of Christ!

God’s ultimate goal for us…is that we be truly conformed to the likeness of His Son in our person as well as in our standing.

Jerry Bridges

Your must be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Read your Bible every day. Listen to God speak to your heart and mind and you will be conformed to the image of Christ in whose image you were created. This is a promise from God, if you will be obedient to His word. May you have a disciplined mind and attitude to hear and obey the truth that you might be blessed beyond your imagination through the love of God for you!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 26, 2024

Notes of Faith August 26, 2024

Knowing Jesus

That I may know Him.

Philippians 3:10

“Who is the most important person you know?” a man asked his friend. “I am,” came the reply. Perhaps there are better answers. Some would name a president or prime minister, a billionaire or movie star. But none of those answers are the best. The apostle Paul said, in essence, “I want to know Christ.”

Recommended Reading:

Philippians 3:7-11

The Amplified Bible Classic Edition renders that phrase like this: “[For my determined purpose is] that I may know Him [that I may progressively become more deeply and intimately acquainted with Him, perceiving and recognizing and understanding the wonders of His Person more strongly and more clearly].”

As Christians, we’re to give ourselves with intensity to knowing Christ Jesus. We’re to be passionate in doing so—not just in knowing about Him but in knowing Him personally and progressively, more deeply and intimately. Like every other relationship, we draw closer to Him through time spent in conversation. That takes prayer (when we speak with Him) and Bible study (when He speaks to us). That’s why we should open our Bibles every day and pray on a regular basis.

Make sure you don’t miss your regular meetings with the Lord!

It is in getting to know my Bible that I get to know Jesus.

Alistair Begg

No God, No Peace

Know God, Know Peace!

The apostle Paul used these words that I will repeat, “I beg you” to read your Bible that you might know Jesus, your Lord, God, Savior and King.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 25, 2024

Notes of Faith August 25, 2024

Our God Is Still Global

How to Remember World Missions

Article by Nick Whitehead

Guest Contributor

I hesitate to say this as a missions pastor, but I’m a pretty locally minded guy. I’m naturally inclined to pay attention to the people, places, and tasks at the tip of my nose. Faraway friends and places become far too easily out of sight, out of mind. I’m often more interested in the happenings of the city council meeting than the breaking world news on BBC.

Perhaps you resonate. Perhaps, like me, you are a nearsighted Christian trying to keep your eyes on what seems like a distant mission. You know God has called the church to make disciples of all nations, yet you have trouble connecting your daily life with this remote work. A host of important and immediate concerns push the peoples of the world to the periphery of your prayers and attention.

The church, by the very nature of her mission, is to be attentive to global gospel advancement (Matthew 28:18–20; Acts 1:8). But how can we stay excited about God’s work among all peoples? How might we keep the needs of the nations before our churches, our families, and our own souls?

Reflect on the Glory of God

First things first: we won’t be concerned with God’s globe if we aren’t concerned with God’s glory. Right thinking about the nations begins with right thinking about God. Believers don’t ultimately become world Christians by watching more news and spending more time in the ethnic food market. We become world Christians when we encounter the God who deserves and demands worldwide worship.

The psalmist summons the people of God to “declare his glory among the nations, his marvelous works among all the peoples” (Psalm 96:3). Why? “For great is the Lord, and greatly to be praised” (Psalm 96:4). The logic of these two verses is simple: God’s people are to proclaim his glory all over the planet because his greatness compels it.

God is so glorious — so deserving of worship — that the praise of one people group is simply not sufficient. Our God is not like the petty pagan gods of the nations who supposedly rule over limited parts of creation (like the rain god or the god of fertility). Rather, he reigns as King over all creation and all nations (Psalm 47:7–8). Therefore, it is fitting for the infinite depth of God’s greatness and beauty to be magnified by a diversity of worshipers. We appreciate the voice of a gifted solo singer, but there is something especially magnificent when a multitude of voices comes together in glorious harmony. Similarly, God shows off his supremacy by patchworking together a multiethnic quilt of people who are joyfully committed to his praise.

And when we see God as he truly is, it will grieve us to watch the nations run after worthless idols (Psalm 96:5). We will long to see a multitude of idolaters from every place on the planet exchange their images in order to join the everlasting song of the one true God.

Read with Global Glasses

The theme of God’s glory among the nations permeates the pages of Scripture. As you work through your Bible-reading plan, take note of how many passages relate to God’s promises for the nations. When we read with global glasses, we discover that Christ’s commission in Matthew 28 is not the start of God’s heart for the nations but the extension of his ancient redemptive plan.

We see in the first pages of Scripture that God intended to fill the earth with people who image him rightly (Genesis 1:26–28). Even after the fall, God remained committed to blessing all the families of the earth through his promised offspring (Genesis 12:3). Throughout Israel’s history, God revealed that this particular ethnic group would be the means by which he saves all nations (1 Kings 8:43, 60; Psalm 67:2; 72:8–11; 96:1–13). And when Israel failed, the prophets left us with the hope of a coming Davidic King who would bring salvation to the ends of the earth (Isaiah 49:6).

At the end of the Gospels, this messianic King spilled his blood to purchase a people from every tribe and tongue. Then he recommissioned his new people (the church) to fill the earth with disciples of Jesus, which begins to unfold in the remaining books of the New Testament.

“We won’t be concerned with God’s globe if we aren’t first concerned with God’s glory.”

As you regularly open the Scriptures with your family, small group, or church, draw attention to the global references along the way. Don’t let your kids miss the fact that Romans is a missionary-support letter. Remind your small group that Philippians is a missionary thank-you note. Draw your church into the eschatological excitement of Revelation 7, when we will worship the slain but risen Lamb alongside brothers and sisters from every tribe and tongue and people and nation.

Personalize the Needs of the Nations

How do we move from scriptural awareness to real-life application? Many believers have begun to pray for the nations using resources like Operation World, Joshua Project, or (the more recent) Stratus Index. As valuable and informative as these are, the content they provide may feel theoretical and impersonal to some of us. If you are anything like me, the data can paralyze you. Should I pray for the Kanura tribes of Nigeria or the Kahar of India? Do I focus on the unreached, the unengaged, or the persecuted?

If the overwhelming amount of information discourages you, I’d encourage you to shift your attention to peoples and places to whom you have a natural and specific connection. In other words, personalize the global needs. Instead of trying to blanket the whole globe in prayer, familiarize yourself with one region of the world that you, your family, or your church have some personal ties to or interest in.

Consider rekindling friendships with foreign believers whom you crossed paths with at some point. Did your family ever host an exchange student? Has your church cared for a particular immigrant population? Leverage these connections and capitalize on modern technology to revive relationships, and see how this might lead to more inspired involvement in the missionary cause.

Another way to make global missions personal is to simply reflect on the cultures or places that interest you. Were you fascinated by the people group you read about in a recent missionary biography? Do you frequently eat a particular ethnic food? Do you enjoy entertainment or art from someplace where the gospel has never gone? If you are already interested in these people and places, let Great Commission objectives infuse that fascination.

And remember, the nations are at your doorstep. You may not be able to travel much overseas, but in our globalized age you likely have many nationalities represented in your neighborhood. Look for opportunities to interact with and learn about them. Expose your family to different foods, languages, cultures, and worldviews. Taking these steps will give you a more practical understanding of the difficulty of missions and will fuel your prayers for God to open “a door of faith to the Gentiles” (Acts 14:27). But be warned: this may be the pathway God uses to draw you overseas. I have friends whose relationships with Somalis in their neighborhood eventually compelled them to engage in full-time ministry in the Horn of Africa.

Commit to Gospel Partnerships

When all is said and done, however, the most practical way I’ve found to make missions feel like “a small world after all” is to partner with brothers and sisters doing gospel work among the nations. The more specific and personal the subject, the more excited I am to pray and be involved. I regularly intercede for a little church in Higuito, Costa Rica, because a dear mentor and friend is a pastor there. I stay tuned into gospel work in the Arabian Gulf because God has stitched my heart to a brother and his family who labor there.

I would have to forget these friends in order to lose sight of the nations and churches they serve. My commitment to these partners keeps me tethered to God’s mission in the world. So, consider the dear ones you know serving overseas, and devote yourself to their ministry. Contribute financially. Encourage them regularly.

If you aren’t acquainted with any missionaries or national ministers, ask your church leaders whom they would recommend getting to know. Though it can feel costly to invest in someone who may soon move halfway around the world, strive to build lasting relationships with members of your church who are considering long-term work overseas. Committing to these people will make remote missions feel local, and these partnerships will keep gospel ministry in distant lands at the forefront of your mind and near to your heart.

Nick Whitehead is the Pastor for Global Outreach at The North Church in Mounds View, Minnesota

Our God is the God of the Universe that He created, and no, I don’t believe in creatures on other planets. The Bible speaks of angels, demons, that once were holy angels, and the only thing created in the image of God…human beings. All people of the world are created in His image. All babies in the womb are created in His image. We are made to bring glory to God and should spend our lives doing so. May our hearts and minds give God all glory, seek to bring God glory and especially pray for that which is created in His image all over the world to make His name glorious. Praise the Lord!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 24, 2024

Notes of Faith August 24, 2024

Prayer and Power

Now to Him who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that works in us.

Ephesians 3:20

The apostle Paul’s letter to the Ephesians has two parts: doctrine (chapters 1–3) and application (chapters 4–6). Paul summarized the first half in Ephesians 3:20-21 by reminding them of two topics he addressed earlier: prayer and power.

In Ephesians 1:17-18, Paul mentioned that he was praying for the Ephesians to know God better and to know the hope of their calling, their inheritance, and God’s power. In case the Ephesians thought that those goals were too lofty for them to ever attain, he reminded them in 3:20 that God is able to do even more than we ask for—“exceedingly abundantly” more. Why? Because it is His “power that works in us.” Paul chose the best words he could in praying for the Ephesians, but then told them that God is able to do even more than he or they could ask for because of His great power at work in their lives.

Pray as best as you are able, then know that God is able to do even more than you ask or imagine according to His power in you.

Christianity is the power of God in the soul of man.

Robert B. Munger

2 Corinthians 9:8-10

8 And God is able to make all grace abound toward you, that you, always having all sufficiency in all things, may have an abundance for every good work. 9 As it is written:

“He has dispersed abroad,

He has given to the poor;

His righteousness endures forever.”

10 Now may He who supplies seed to the sower, and bread for food, supply and multiply the seed you have sown and increase the fruits of your righteousness,

NKJ

Over my years of following Christ as a believer, I have learned to pray more and yet continue to be amazed at the work of God that can be seen clearly if people would be more observant…and believe. I have tried to be a man of prayer, and thought that I was not doing enough. But God knows my heart, the love for man that He put there and the caring thoughts that I have for His created people, wanting them to repent and turn and come to Him for forgiveness and salvation in faith believing in Jesus, He came to earth, lived a perfect life, died as a sacrifice for the sin of mankind, then defeated death by rising from the grave on the third day and lives forever that we too, might have eternal life by believing in Him.

Come to Jesus! Share the truth of Jesus! There is no other name by which we can be saved!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 23, 2024

Notes of Faith August 23, 2024

It’s Not Eating!

When He ascended on high, he…gave gifts to his people.

Ephesians 4:8, NIV

A wife asked her husband to set the dinner table, but, inspired by their pastor’s recent sermon, he said, “Sorry, that’s not my spiritual gift.” She asked what his gift was. “Eating,” he said, to which she replied, “Well, if you want to exercise your spiritual gift, you’d better set the table!”

Recommended Reading:

Ephesians 4:7-13

Do you have a spiritual gift? The biblical answer is yes. Romans 12:6 says, “We have different gifts, according to the grace given to each of us” (NIV). A spiritual gift is a special ability to do certain works for God with power and with pleasure. It’s His way of enabling us to serve Him. The best way to discover your gift is by asking yourself what you most enjoy doing in the service of the Lord.

Jesus gives spiritual gifts to each one of us when we’re saved. Someone said that our talent and ability is God’s gift to us and what we do with it is our gift to Him. Pray today for God to show you how you can best use your gifts to serve Him in humility.

God distributes His gifts for His purposes and for the good of His people.

Jay Adams

All believers gifts work together for the glory of God! I like the first part of this devotion… Our anniversary is Sunday, 45 years, and I too, have a gift for eating. But I don’t mind at all setting the table for my bride!

Let’s all use our gifts and bring great glory to God!

Pastor Dale