Notes of Faith December 15, 2024

Notes of Faith December 15, 2024

Between the Advents

Treasures in the Dark

by Katherine Wolf

Prepare for God’s arrival! Make the road straight and smooth, a highway fit for our God. Fill in the valleys, level off the hills, smooth out the ruts, clear out the rocks. Then God’s bright glory will shine and everyone will see it. Yes. Just as God has said. — Isaiah 40:3-5 MSG

We often forget that four hundred long, tumultuous years are compressed into the single page that bifurcates our holy scriptures into an old and new testament. Within the infinity of that blank page, God’s people waited and waited and waited in the deafening silence and weighty absence of prophetic words or divine appearances. I can only imagine how their once-helpful hope became heavy and burdensome, rather than buoying, as their faith faded in the long-expected Messiah. The ancient promises rang empty, their hope turned to shame, and their suffering bore out no redemption. Isaiah told them to prepare the way for the Lord, but it seemed that Lord had gotten sidetracked on the journey. The God who created and claimed them had abandoned them, by all accounts.

But, in His good timing, God hurled John the Baptist into time and space as the forerunner of their sworn Savior. John’s appearance was a thrill of hope that transformed their passive wait into an activated expectation.

There once was a man, his name John, sent by God to point out the way to the Life-Light. He came to show everyone where to look, who to believe in. John was not himself the Light; he was there to show the way to the Light. — John 1:6-9

John announced the flesh-and-bones manifestation of Christ in the person of Jesus. God graciously allowed Christ, who had already been suffusing God’s story since creation in many different forms, to live in the body of a person. Christ as and in Jesus — Immanuel — allowed humanity to experience, internalize, and empathize with God in an unprecedented way — as a friend, a teacher, a brother. A Man. The simple, surrendered, and selfless way of Jesus rescued humanity from the tyranny of self, and redeemed our suffering as an opportunity for refinement.

This initial advent of Jesus gave us the tools for building the Kingdom of God. Now we find ourselves in a second advent, another kind of intertestamental period in which we anticipate the consummation of God’s Kingdom — the lasting redemption of creation and restoration of humanity. But this time, we don’t have to wait in silence and or suffer in vain. We wait equipped with the example of Jesus, who used His earthly life to evidence how to leverage our suffering into endurance, our endurance into character, and our character into hope (Romans 5:3-5).

We are not the Light; we’re merely reflections of it.

Jesus perfectly endured the sufferings of a human life, as well as the cosmic sufferings of humanity’s scapegoat. He allowed the suffering to push him deeper into compassion, patience, meekness, humility, and hope in the love of our Good Father. He bore out that hope to its ultimate form: resurrection, the transcendence of death and darkness.

With this subversive alchemy, Jesus invites us to build the Kingdom of God not with empires or infrastructure, but with the unlikely mortar of suffering and the intangible stones of hope. Isaiah’s call to straighten the road, fill the valleys, clear out the rocks, and smooth the ruts has nothing to do with the terrain of a highway through a wilderness. Rather, his words are an exhortation to spiritual rehabilitation to prepare a home for Divine Love in the wilderness of our human hearts. Just as a highway cannot be cleared without back-breaking physical labor, our souls cannot be formed into more gracious, patient, and peace-filled shapes without first rubbing against the sharp edges of suffering.

As we inhabit the space between the two advents, the waiting weighs heavy. But we can wait well as Jesus’s current forerunners by emulating John, Jesus’s original forerunner, who used his life to bear witness to the Light. It is a great comfort to remember that we are not the Light; we’re merely reflections of it. When we put ourselves in places only meant for God, we will be crushed under the weight of expectations and burdens we could never begin to bear. We will not suffer perfectly or wait all that patiently, yet we have been sent by God to this time and space, these relationships and influence, for our good and His glory. And this is great news. God invites us to be necessary — indispensable even — to this greater movement of light in the darkness, and that should inspire us to do the things we think we cannot do.

As we bear witness to the Light and share our stories of grace in ordinary places to ordinary people, the waiting — and even the suffering — become oddly sacred.

Story by story, witness by witness, hardship by hardship, grace by grace, we build the heavenly highway through the heart of humanity. For now, we illuminate the not-yet, already-here Kingdom by steadily reflecting the one true Light as best we can. Together, we’ll wait with baited breath and hope-thrilled hearts for Christ to be once, and forevermore, here with us.

Coming again, coming again. Maybe morning, maybe noon, maybe evening and may be soon! Oh what a wonderful day it will be…Jesus is coming again!

We celebrate the birth of our Savior, High Priest, and King of glory, God with us! Some day, perhaps today, He will return to set up His earthly Kingdom, fulfill all His promises prophesied in Scripture and live with His people forever! It is hard to be patient waiting for such a gift…but God’s timing is always perfect. And whether we meet Him passing from death to eternal life, or in the air when He comes to get His bride, the church, it will be the most glorious event that we have ever seen. Praise God from whom all blessings flow… May your days be filled with a close personal walk with God until you see Him face to face!

Merry Christmas!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 14, 2024

Notes of Faith December 14, 2024

NOEL—Ways to Celebrate the Season: Express Your Faith

I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the increase.

1 Corinthians 3:6

How can we best celebrate Christmas? Our weekend devotions focus on the word NOEL. The N stands for giving to the needy, the O for open your home. Today, let’s think about the E and learn to express our faith. There’s a recent phrase that’s become popular among Christians—“initiating Gospel conversations.” Whenever you find yourself with someone, even a stranger, look around for anything that will help turn the topic gently toward the Lord. Is the person wearing a cross around her neck? Does the message on his t-shirt lend itself to conversation? Do they have a discouraged look on their face?

Many people—not everyone, so be prepared!—will respond positively to a loving spiritual comment, especially at Christmas. Even a Christmas carol in the coffee shop can help you find a point of connection to discuss Christ. We’re not responsible for the harvest, only for the sowing and watering. Perhaps today the Lord will cause your path to cross with someone needing a word of encouragement, allowing you to initiate a Gospel conversation and express your faith.

If you love Christ, never be ashamed to let others see it and know it. Speak for Him. Witness for Him. Live for Him.

J. C. Ryle

2 Tim 1:3-14

3 I thank God, whom I serve with a clear conscience the way my forefathers did, as I constantly remember you in my prayers night and day, 4 longing to see you, even as I recall your tears, so that I may be filled with joy. 5 For I am mindful of the sincere faith within you, which first dwelt in your grandmother Lois and your mother Eunice, and I am sure that it is in you as well. 6 For this reason I remind you to kindle afresh the gift of God which is in you through the laying on of my hands. 7 For God has not given us a spirit of timidity, but of power and love and discipline.

8 Therefore do not be ashamed of the testimony of our Lord or of me His prisoner, but join with me in suffering for the gospel according to the power of God, 9 who has saved us and called us with a holy calling, not according to our works, but according to His own purpose and grace which was granted us in Christ Jesus from all eternity, 10 but now has been revealed by the appearing of our Savior Christ Jesus, who abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel, 11 for which I was appointed a preacher and an apostle and a teacher. 12 For this reason I also suffer these things, but I am not ashamed; for I know whom I have believed and I am convinced that He is able to guard what I have entrusted to Him until that day. 13 Retain the standard of sound words which you have heard from me, in the faith and love which are in Christ Jesus. 14 Guard, through the Holy Spirit who dwells in us, the treasure which has been entrusted to you.

Preaching the Word of God today! Do not be ashamed or afraid to speak the truth! Say merry “Christ”mas to those you greet during this holiday season. They may not yet have reason to celebrate the way we do. If God gives opportunity, then speak His name. Declare the Lord God sending His eternal Son into the world to save mankind from their sin! What greater gift could we receive? Let the generations hear, that they might come to faith and declare to the next generation the greatest joy of “Christ”mas! May you be blessed in your celebrations, giving thanks for the provision and love of God every day!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 13, 2024

Notes of Faith December 13, 2024

The Power of Praise

Then the shepherds went back again to their fields and flocks, praising God for the visit of the angels, and because they had seen the child, just as the angel had told them.

Luke 2:20, TLB

We awaken weary to face the pressures and problems, and we feel our spirits collapsing. What do we do? Try shouting the words of Psalm 106:1: “Praise the Lord! Oh, give thanks to the Lord, for He is good! For His mercy endures forever.” The simple act of making the decision to lift one’s voice aloud and tell the air around you that you are praising God—well, that will help. A shout of praise can turn the tide of our day.

That’s what the shepherds did, though they weren’t depressed when they did it. They were full of joy! They went back to their lowly assignments among the sheep, glorifying and praising God for all they had seen that night—the angels, the manger, the Christ Child.

Whatever your condition or disposition—praise the Lord right now!

One of the most wonderful things about God is that He lives in our praise. He inhabits the praises of His people...! When we worship Him, it’s not like worshiping some cold and distant deity. He’s a loving God who wants to be with us. And when we worship Him, He is.

Stormie Omartian

Ps 150

150 Praise the Lord!

Praise God in His sanctuary;

Praise Him in His mighty expanse.

2 Praise Him for His mighty deeds;

Praise Him according to His excellent greatness.

3 Praise Him with trumpet sound;

Praise Him with harp and lyre.

4 Praise Him with timbrel and dancing;

Praise Him with stringed instruments and pipe.

5 Praise Him with loud cymbals;

Praise Him with resounding cymbals.

6 Let everything that has breath praise the Lord.

Praise the Lord!

All things are being worked out according to God’s plan. Yes, we still experience trials and tribulations in our lives, but God is using even those for His glory and our good! Let us give Him praise and revel in His compassion and grace, His very presence in our daily life. Know that He is, that He loves you and wants to have you with Him forever! Seek Him. Pursue Him, and you will find Him very near to you, waiting for you to call out to Him. Praise Him this day and every day!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 12, 2024

Notes of Faith December 12, 2024

Can’t Keep Quiet

Now when they had seen Him, they made widely known the saying which was told them concerning this Child.

Luke 2:17

When Robert Annan of Scotland gave his life for Christ, he immediately felt a burden for the lost. A stonemason by trade, he devoted his spare time to witnessing on the streets, often writing Bible verses in chalk on the sidewalks. He witnessed to everyone he met. He drowned at age 32 while saving a boy who fell into the river. Thousands attended his funeral, and afterward a man was seen on his grave, sobbing and saying, “I have been a very wicked man, but the grace of God, perhaps, will do for me what it did for Robert Annan.”

Mark 5:18-20

18 As He was getting into the boat, the man who had been demon-possessed was imploring Him that he might accompany Him. 19 And He did not let him, but He said to him, "Go home to your people and report to them what great things the Lord has done for you, and how He had mercy on you." 20 And he went away and began to proclaim in Decapolis what great things Jesus had done for him; and everyone was amazed.

When the shepherds left the stable on that first Christmas, they couldn’t keep quiet. They told everyone what they had seen. The disciples did the same after the Resurrection, saying, “We cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:20).

Witnessing means telling others what has happened to you. Let’s pray for spiritual excitement in telling others the wonderful things God has done for us. This season say a word for the Savior.

I love you, and my prayer is that your heart may be broken by the power and love of Christ and His cross.

Robert Annan

Everyone who comes to Christ in faith should not be able to keep quiet. But maybe even you would say that you are a Christian, that you believe in Jesus, and yet have never spoken to anyone of your faith, never proclaimed the truth of who Jesus is and what He has done for all mankind. Those who know Jesus have His Spirit living within them. How can any who proclaim to be saved because of Jesus remain silent day after day. How many days does any of us have. Our lives are meant to reflect the person of Jesus. Believer and follower of Jesus, pray fervently today that God would use you to increase the family of God by sharing the truth with family, friends, coworkers, doctors, grocery store clerks, anyone He and everyone God prompts us through His Spirit to speak with. He will draw them to Himself, to respond to the gospel of Jesus, to come to Him through the gift of faith that He supplies. Speak, speak often of the love, provision and promises of God in Jesus! You will be blessed beyond your greatest dreams!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 11, 2024

Notes of Faith December 11, 2024

The Eternal Son

Jesus said to them, “Most assuredly, I say to you, before Abraham was, I AM.”

John 8:58

When Christ was born, eternity invaded time. Jesus Christ is the eternal God the Son, the Second Person of the Trinity, who entered the lineage of humanity for the purpose of redeeming the world. When He arrived in Bethlehem, it didn’t mark the beginning of His life. He had always been, just as He will always be. He was alive before Abraham!

Douglas McCready in He Came Down From Heaven wrote, “The doctrine of Christ’s preexistence did not result from theological curiosity or speculation. As early as the first decade of the church, Christians saw preexistence as necessary for understanding Christ’s person and significance of human salvation.”1

This means God the Son loves you so much He temporarily vacated the throne in heaven, took upon Himself humanity, accepted death on the cross, and rose to give you eternal life. That’s worth a lifetime of hallelujahs!

The doctrine of preexistence reminds us forcefully that God himself has entered into our circumstance in order to redeem and restore his human creatures along with the rest of his creation. This is the truth that gives meaning and power to Jesus’ affirmation that God so loved the world that he sent his Son to save it.

Douglas McCready

1. Douglas McCready, He Came Down From Heaven (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2005), 11.

John 8:48-59

48 The Jews answered and said to Him, "Do we not say rightly that You are a Samaritan and have a demon?" 49 Jesus answered, "I do not have a demon; but I honor My Father, and you dishonor Me. 50 "But I do not seek My glory; there is One who seeks and judges. 51 "Truly, truly, I say to you, if anyone keeps My word he will never see death." 52 The Jews said to Him, "Now we know that You have a demon. Abraham died, and the prophets also; and You say, 'If anyone keeps My word, he will never taste of death.' 53 "Surely You are not greater than our father Abraham, who died? The prophets died too; whom do You make Yourself out to be?" 54 Jesus answered, "If I glorify Myself, My glory is nothing; it is My Father who glorifies Me, of whom you say, 'He is our God'; 55 and you have not come to know Him, but I know Him; and if I say that I do not know Him, I will be a liar like you, but I do know Him and keep His word. 56 "Your father Abraham rejoiced to see My day, and he saw it and was glad." 57 So the Jews said to Him, "You are not yet fifty years old, and have You seen Abraham?" 58 Jesus said to them, "Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was born, I am." 59 Therefore they picked up stones to throw at Him, but Jesus hid Himself and went out of the temple.

NASU

Truth is truth. There are those that do not believe that Jesus was and is the eternal God. That does not make it so. Jesus created all that is and will rule over all of that creation forever. We must praise the eternal God-Father/Son/Holy Spirit for knowing all things from beginning to end, for in love creating us in His image, for giving faith to believe in Him that brings salvation, redemption, and eternal life with our glorious Savior and God! Praise Him from whom all blessings flow!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 10, 2024

Notes of Faith December 10, 2024

A Fruitful Messiah

And all the people who were at the gate, and the elders, said, “We are witnesses. The Lord make the woman who is coming to your house like Rachel and Leah, the two who built the house of Israel; and may you prosper in Ephrathah and be famous in Bethlehem.”

Ruth 4:11

The prophet Micah referred to the town of Bethlehem as “Bethlehem Ephrathah” (Micah 5:2). Ephrathah was identified as “the father of Bethlehem” (1 Chronicles 4:4), and the Ephrathites were the dominant clan. Jesse, the father of King David, was an Ephrathite (1 Samuel 17:12). So the town of Bethlehem became known as “Bethlehem [of] Ephrathah.”

The name Ephrathah came from a word meaning “to bear fruit, to bring forth, to grow, to increase.” When the elders of Bethlehem confirmed that Boaz would take Ruth as his wife, they used the fruitfulness of Rachel and Leah, Jacob’s wives, as the image of fruitfulness they desired for Boaz and Ruth: “May you prosper in Ephrathah and be famous in Bethlehem.” They didn’t know that the fruit of Boaz and Ruth’s union would be the Messiah to be born centuries later in Bethlehem (Matthew 1:5).

And the fruitfulness of Ephrathah continues today as Christ is “the firstborn among many brethren” (Romans 8:29).

May we, the spiritual fruit born of Christ, scatter the seed of the gospel, and be fruitful, some producing 30, 60, or 100 times the fruit planted in us.

Seek the blesser, not the blessing, the Giver, not the gift!

Be a blessing to someone this Christmas!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 9, 2024

Notes of Faith December 9, 2024

The House of Bread

Has not the Scripture said that the Christ comes from the seed of David and from the town of Bethlehem, where David was?

John 7:42

The most popular name for cities and towns in the United States is Washington. Eighty-eight times, the nation’s first President has been memorialized in city names.1 So when someone says they are from Washington, it’s completely legitimate to ask, “Which one?”

The same question might have been asked in biblical times if someone said they were from Bethlehem since there were two. One was in the north in the Galilee region (Joshua 19:15). The other was six miles southwest of Jerusalem in the land of the tribe of Judah. Bethlehem in Judah was the home of the family of Jesse, one of whose sons, David, became the second king of Israel. Thus, Bethlehem was eventually known as the “City of David.” When Caesar instituted a census, Joseph—a descendant of David—took his pregnant wife, Mary, to Bethlehem to register. While there, Jesus was born, fulfilling the prophecy of Micah 5:2.

In Hebrew, Bethlehem meant “house of bread.” How fitting that the One who was the Bread of Life was born in the “house of bread” (John 6:48).

The hinge of history is on the door of a Bethlehem stable.

Ralph W. Sockman

1. “Most Common City Names in the US,” World Atlas.

Luke 2:15

15 When the angels had gone away from them into heaven, the shepherds began saying to one another, "Let us go straight to Bethlehem then, and see this thing that has happened which the Lord has made known to us."

God reveals Himself to mankind! Jesus said, “If you have seen Me, you have seen the Father.” We may not have seen Jesus with our physical eyes but we have seen Him with our spiritual eyes! We know God through the faith given us to believe in Jesus…who He is, and what He has done, is doing and promises to do. Faith is the Victory that overcomes the world!. Be blessed this Christmas season as you focus on what really matters…your relationship with God!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 8, 2024

Notes of Faith December 8, 2024

He Came to a World Without God

O Immanuel

O come, O come, Immanuel,

And ransom captive Israel

That mourns in lonely exile here

Until the Son of God appear.

Rejoice! Rejoice! Immanuel

Shall come to thee, O Israel.

From Adam and Eve onward, the hope of God’s people has rested on a coming. We are a waiting people, a yearning people, a people who know we need rescue and know that only “the coming one” can bring it (Hebrews 10:37).

“Behold,” the prophet said, the angel told, “the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and they shall call his name Immanuel” (Matthew 1:23). They shall call him God with us.

Land of Lonely Exile

At the heart of the human condition lies a deep and unshakable loneliness. We may find ways to mask the feeling, but however many people or pleasures surround us, we are by nature a lonely people on a lonely planet. For whoever and whatever is with us, we are nevertheless “without God in the world” (Ephesians 2:12).

Without God: like body without soul, tree without sap, family without father or mother, earth without sun. The words flash like the sword at Eden’s eastern gate: though with friends, with money, with job, with marriage, with pleasure, with power, with plenty — this one without ruins all. We are inescapably lonely without God. We are spiritually lost.

The hymn calls it our captivity, our lonely exile in a land “under sin” (Romans 3:9). We are like Israel in Egypt or the people of God “by the waters of Babylon” (Psalm 137:1) — but far worse, for our Pharaoh follows us wherever we go, and the rivers of our banishment run through our very soul. Without God, we are in exile everywhere.

Our home does not lie across a Red Sea or a wilderness but across the infinite chasm carved by human sin. So we live and die in a land of lonely exile, us without God. Unless, somehow, one should come named Immanuel, God with us.

Jesus Our Immanuel

Now, in one sense, Israel knew their God as Immanuel before the angel spoke to Mary. Moses wouldn’t leave Sinai unless God went “with us” (Exodus 33:15–16). In desperate moments, the people remembered that “the Lord of hosts is with us” (Psalm 46:6). The temple in particular stood as a precious sign of God’s presence with his people.

But the temple also stood as a trembling testimony of God’s distance from his people. The altar, the doorway, and the veil triple-locked God’s presence in the Most Holy Place from even the most upright of Israelites. Only one person could enter that Most Holy Place — “and he but once a year” (Hebrews 9:7).

In the deepest sense, then, God’s people were exiles even in Israel; they were lonely even in the promised land. However far west they went, they still lived east of Eden, for the angels embroidered on the temple’s veil still “turned every way to guard” the garden we once knew (Genesis 3:24; Exodus 26:31).

“At the heart of the human condition lies a deep and unshakable loneliness.”

We needed something more. We needed a temple “not made with hands” but having hands (Mark 14:58). We needed a Most Holy Place made human, a sanctuary with skin on, a veil born from a virgin. We needed a temple that John could lay his head upon and that Thomas could touch (John 13:23; 20:27). We needed Immanuel to enter the land of our exile. And we needed him to die like we exiles deserve.

And so he did. Jesus came, God with us, to restore relationship through ransom. He came to be Immanuel on the cross, crying out, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Matthew 27:46). There Jesus embraced our captivity — and took captivity captive. There he entered our exile — and ended it from the inside.

The Son of God came to be with us so that he might experience all that it means to be without God — and so that, on the other side of that loneliest of exiles, our loneliness might come to an end as we say, “My God, my God, why have you welcomed me?”

Alone, Yet Not Alone

At the heart of the human condition lies a deep and unshakable loneliness. But at the heart of the Christian condition lies a deep and unshakable presence. Our sense of exile may linger, and we may feel, at times, the ache of old loneliness. But if we could read the secret script upon our heart, it would no longer say, “without God,” but rather “the beloved of Immanuel.”

Once, we were alone even when most surrounded; now, we are surrounded even when most alone. As Jesus told his disciples, “You . . . will leave me alone. Yet I am not alone” (John 16:32). Alone, yet not alone. So we are too in Christ, for the parting gift of Immanuel was to put another Immanuel in our hearts, the Spirit who is God with us and even God in us (John 14:17).

So even when we feel alone, we are not alone. Our captivity is over, our lonely exile ended. For Jesus, our Immanuel, has come.

He came into this world of sin,

Made flesh and blood his dearest kin;

He died, that he might take us in,

And keep us till he comes again.

Scott Hubbard is the managing editor for Desiring God

God has always been with us from before the world was created. God taking on flesh and dwelling with us brings Him even closer. Ponder and wonder about your God being with you wherever you go. He is near and never leaves. May you be blessed in you walk with God today!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 7, 2024

Notes of Faith December 7, 2024

Ways to Celebrate the Season: Open Your Home

When Jesus was born, there was no vacancy in the inn, but later many people opened their homes to Him. He attended a wedding in Cana in John 2. Peter’s home became His headquarters in Capernaum. In Matthew 9, Jesus dined in the home of Matthew, who became the author of the first Gospel. Mary and Martha entertained our Lord in Luke 10, and Simon the leper held a dinner for Him in Matthew 26. Jesus visited Jairus’ home in Luke 8, where He raised a little girl from the dead. On the night before His crucifixion, our Lord enjoyed the hospitality of a home with a large upper room. Three days later He sat down for supper with a family from the village of Emmaus (Luke 24).

Luke 24:28-35

28 And they approached the village where they were going, and He acted as though He were going farther. 29 But they urged Him, saying, "Stay with us, for it is getting toward evening, and the day is now nearly over." So He went in to stay with them. 30 When He had reclined at the table with them, He took the bread and blessed it, and breaking it, He began giving it to them. 31 Then their eyes were opened and they recognized Him; and He vanished from their sight. 32 They said to one another, "Were not our hearts burning within us while He was speaking to us on the road, while He was explaining the Scriptures to us?" 33 And they got up that very hour and returned to Jerusalem, and found gathered together the eleven and those who were with them, 34 saying, "The Lord has really risen and has appeared to Simon." 35 They began to relate their experiences on the road and how He was recognized by them in the breaking of the bread.

If you knew Jesus would visit your house, you would prepare for Him. Although He cannot now physically come, we are able to serve Him by inviting others needing help, encouragement, provisions, or fellowship.

Jesus always blesses the homes He enters—and He will bless your hospitality this season too.

Show hospitality to a stranger today!

C. S. Lewis

Robin and I often invite people over for special times, events, and seasons. But we have been blessed by having a stranger/acquaintance use our home for a place to sleep between work shifts. We were blessed to have work associates of our children live in our home and enjoyed their lives blending with ours. We were blessed to have international college students share our home as a place to live while attending CSULB. We remember, love, and pray for all of these people and still have contact with some of them. We appreciate God’s work in our lives through these experiences and hope that we will continue to be blessed with many more opportunities. May you consider praying for such opportunities to be blessed by God for someone in need of a meal or a night’s stay and be an influence of the grace of God in your life to them! You could even be blessed by inviting family and friends into your home! Give thanks for the blessing before it comes!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 6, 2024

Notes of Faith December 6, 2024

Ominous Notes

Behold, this Child is destined for the fall and rising of many in Israel, and for a sign which will be spoken against (yes, a sword will pierce through your own soul also), that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed.

Luke 2:34-35

When Jesus was a month old, His parents took Him the five miles from Bethlehem to Jerusalem, where they ascended the steps up into the temple area to dedicate Him to the Lord. To their surprise, they were greeted by two elderly people who had been looking for the Messiah—Simeon and Anna. Simeon took the child into his arms and uttered a prophecy over Him, but one sentence had an ominous note. He warned Mary a sword would pierce her soul.

Luke 2:25-35

25 And there was a man in Jerusalem whose name was Simeon; and this man was righteous and devout, looking for the consolation of Israel; and the Holy Spirit was upon him. 26 And it had been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not see death before he had seen the Lord's Christ. 27 And he came in the Spirit into the temple; and when the parents brought in the child Jesus, to carry out for Him the custom of the Law, 28 then he took Him into his arms, and blessed God, and said,

29 "Now Lord, You are releasing Your bond-servant to depart in peace,

According to Your word;

30 For my eyes have seen Your salvation,

31 Which You have prepared in the presence of all peoples,

32 A LIGHT OF REVELATION TO THE GENTILES,

And the glory of Your people Israel."

33 And His father and mother were amazed at the things which were being said about Him. 34 And Simeon blessed them and said to Mary His mother, "Behold, this Child is appointed for the fall and rise of many in Israel, and for a sign to be opposed — 35 and a sword will pierce even your own soul — to the end that thoughts from many hearts may be revealed."

We wish our lives contained no ominous notes! We dread days of bad news, and we all fear moments when a “sword” pierces us. But Mary trusted God, and she lived through her moments of pain to see her Son resurrected from the dead.

Life sometimes has ominous notes, but God always ends with a melody of victory! Trust Him with all the notes of your life.

Trust in His unfailing love—love that moved Him to send a Savior from heaven to restore and rescue you. God’s plans for your life will not be thwarted.

Louie Giglio

As a pastor and parent, I have this simple failure. I dread when the phone rings, (but I always answer), that what I will hear is bad news, any trouble in someone’s life. And yet I also know that God graciously gave me these situations through His love for me and those that are calling. I do not know of anyone in my experience that has lived an ominous free life. How we respond is what is most important. God will lead us through every event, ominous catastrophe, serious trouble, and we will move onward in our walk with Christ! Not even death can win the victory! Let us learn from our ominous times, knowing the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are with us, meeting every need, toward eternal perfection!

Pastor Dale