Notes of Faith January 16, 2025

Notes of Faith January 16, 2025

Foundation of Faith

Why are you cast down, O my soul? And why are you disquieted within me? Hope in God, for I shall yet praise Him for the help of His countenance.

Psalm 42:5

Today, most people don’t find themselves besieged by “an ungodly nation” (Psalm 43:1) or an actual “enemy” (Psalm 42:9). But that happened often in the Old Testament era and was probably the occasion for the writing of Psalms 42 and 43 (likely originally one psalm). Such an attack from one’s enemies led to the author admonishing himself to “hope in God,” instead of being downcast and disquieted over his situation.

Ps 42:5-8

5 Why are you in despair, O my soul?

And why have you become disturbed within me?

Hope in God, for I shall again praise Him

For the help of His presence.

6 O my God, my soul is in despair within me;

Therefore I remember You from the land of the Jordan

And the peaks of Hermon, from Mount Mizar.

7 Deep calls to deep at the sound of Your waterfalls;

All Your breakers and Your waves have rolled over me.

8 The Lord will command His lovingkindness in the daytime;

And His song will be with me in the night,

A prayer to the God of my life.

We may not face attacks from actual enemies, but we do find ourselves downcast and disquieted at times. The danger is that such emotions can move us from a foundation of faith to a feeling of fear. What we need in such moments is what the author of Hebrews called an “anchor of the soul” that keeps us moored in place. And what is that anchor? Hope: “This hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast” (Hebrews 6:19).

When you feel God has forgotten you (Psalm 42:9), put your “hope in God.” Let hope keep you anchored in Him by faith.

Hope is the foundation of patience.

John Calvin

When what we might think is the worst that could happen to us and feeling that God is nowhere to be found, remember…

Josh 1:5

I will be with you; I will never leave you nor forsake you.

Prov 3:5-6

5 Trust in the Lord with all your heart

and lean not on your own understanding;

6 in all your ways acknowledge him,

and he will make your paths straight.

God is and always has been faithful and trustworthy. Give your life to Him and He will give you eternal blessings!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 14, 2025

Notes of Faith January 14, 2025

Anchored on Hope

This hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast, and which enters the Presence behind the veil.

Hebrews 6:19

To keep a ship from drifting, you need an anchor. If it’s heavy enough, its weight will help keep the vessel in place. It may also dig into the sandy bottom, and often it hooks onto a rock on the seabed. In Mark 6:53, the disciples anchored their boat in the Sea of Galilee, and in Acts 27:29 the sailors threw four anchors into the sea and prayed for daylight.

We also have an anchor, but ours flies upward into heaven, behind the symbolic torn veil of the temple, and into the very presence of Jesus Christ. It grips the sure and certain hope that we have in Him: “This hope we have as an anchor of the soul.”

When we’re anchored in eternity, we can weather the storms of time. Whatever happens to us, we know our future. The Lord is already there, and He is preparing a place for us. That makes us sanctified optimists. Today, anchor your personality on the hope Christ offers. Let that stabilize your emotions and sustain your spirits.

When the waves of life threaten to overwhelm us, we need an anchor that will hold up in the strongest storm.

Ray Pritchard

Heb 6:13-20

13 For when God made the promise to Abraham, since He could swear by no one greater, He swore by Himself, 14 saying, "I WILL SURELY BLESS YOU AND I WILL SURELY MULTIPLY YOU." 15 And so, having patiently waited, he obtained the promise. 16 For men swear by one greater than themselves, and with them an oath given as confirmation is an end of every dispute. 17 In the same way God, desiring even more to show to the heirs of the promise the unchangeableness of His purpose, interposed with an oath, 18 so that by two unchangeable things in which it is impossible for God to lie, we who have taken refuge would have strong encouragement to take hold of the hope set before us. 19 This hope we have as an anchor of the soul, a hope both sure and steadfast and one which enters within the veil, 20 where Jesus has entered as a forerunner for us, having become a high priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek.

Being accepted by God means we must have been changed from sinner to forgiven and not for a specific sin but all sin, past, present, and future. We are cleansed by the work of God through Jesus Christ sacrifice, becoming sin on the cross and being punished by God in our place. We are no longer doomed to be separated from God for all eternity but promised the greatest of hope in Jesus for our eternal security in heaven with Him!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 12, 2025

Notes of Faith January 12, 2025

Never Too Busy to Pray

You can do more than pray after you have prayed, but you cannot do more than pray until you have prayed.

—John Bunyan (The Golden Treasury of Puritan Quotations, 235)

On a lonely hillside in the dim light before dawn, a man sits by himself, praying. He rehearses the Scriptures, sings lines from the Psalms, praises God, and pours out his heart. An observer might imagine the man a monk or at least a devotee of the solitary, contemplative life — so desolate is the setting and so early the hour.

But not long before, a whole city had gathered around this man, begging for his attention. Even now, the city stirs again, remembering last night’s wonders and wanting more. And in a few moments, the man’s friends will find him and tell him of needs to meet, tasks to do, crowds to answer, people to see. He prays in the eye of a hurricane.

Rising very early in the morning, while it was still dark, he departed and went out to a desolate place, and there he prayed. (Mark 1:35)

Busier than a businessman, more sought out than a celebrity, wanted as a mother of many toddlers, and bearing a task as big as the world, Jesus prayed.

The Lord’s Prayers

The Gospels offer only a few glimpses into the routines of Jesus’s life outside his normal ministry. They show him traveling often. They show him eating at many different tables. They sometimes show him resting. But perhaps above all, they show him praying.

He prayed by himself and with others (Matthew 14:23; John 17:1). He prayed in crowded places and in quiet corners (John 11:41–42; Matthew 14:13). He prayed as a regular daily pattern and with spontaneous expressions of joy, grief, longing, and need (Luke 5:16; 10:21–24; 23:34, 46). The multitudes saw his public power; the disciples saw the life of prayer that made it all possible (Luke 11:1).

But such a prayer life did not come easily. How could it, when his popularity could make even mealtimes hard to come by (Mark 3:20; 6:31)? Jesus prayed as he did because he prioritized prayer — sometimes ruthlessly so. And in his prayer life, we find a model for our own.

Prioritizing Prayer

The idea of prioritizing prayer sounds wonderful — until prioritizing prayer means not doing something we would very much like to do. We can talk about prioritizing prayer all we want, but we don’t truly do so unless we regularly set aside second-best priorities, some of them pressing, to get alone with God. The life of our Lord provides the best illustration.

Sometimes, Jesus prioritized prayer over ministry. When Jesus prayed in the pre-dawn dark outside Capernaum, he could have been ministering. “Everyone is looking for you,” his disciples told him, even at that early hour (Mark 1:37). The needs were real and urgent: the sick needed healing, the wayward needed teaching, the lost needed saving. But first, Jesus prayed.

“When Jesus’s priorities competed, prayer didn’t lose.”

Sometimes, Jesus prioritized prayer over sleep. In the same story, he rose “very early in the morning” instead of sleeping very early in the morning, even though yesterday’s ministry lasted long after sundown (Mark 1:32–35). On another occasion, “he went out to the mountain to pray, and all night he continued in prayer to God” (Luke 6:12). Even more than his body needed sleep, his soul needed prayer.

Sometimes, Jesus prioritized prayer over planning or thinking. The all-night prayer time in Luke 6 came just before Jesus “called his disciples and chose from them twelve” (Luke 6:13). The decision of which twelve men to choose required careful thought and discernment. But more than any of those, it required earnest prayer.

Sometimes, Jesus even prioritized prayer over the people who were with him. “Now it happened that as he was praying alone, the disciples were with him” (Luke 9:18; 11:1). As we’ve seen, Jesus often prayed in solitude (Luke 5:16). But he needed to pray more often than he could get away. So, without ignoring or neglecting others, Jesus sometimes built a prayer closet right in the midst of company.

False and Tyrannous Urgency

Now, to be sure, ministry, sleep, planning, and people were all priorities for Jesus. All throughout the Gospels, he gives people his deep and undivided attention. His ministry bears the marks of careful planning (Luke 9:51). He sometimes sleeps while others are awake (Mark 4:38). And one time, while on his way “to a desolate place by himself,” he sees crowds in need and resolves to pray later (Matthew 14:13, 23).

On many days, Jesus probably fulfilled all these priorities (and more) without sacrificing any. And that’s a worthy ideal for us to strive for. But the lesson for our prayer lives is this: When Jesus’s priorities competed, prayer didn’t lose. When his schedule was pressed, he didn’t go prayerless. Ministry could wait, sleep could be shortened, and other priorities could take second place, but one way or another, he would pray. Even when circumstances stole his solitude, he either prayed in public or made sure he prayed later.

Jesus’s example moves me to ask some hard questions:

How often do I let busyness — even the best kind of busyness — justify prayerlessness?

When was the last time I set my alarm earlier than normal to make sure I pray?

How often do I pause my planning or careful thinking to engage in the seemingly (!) unproductive act of prayer?

When my typical prayer time gets taken, how creatively and desperately do I find some way to still pray?

Many of us in the modern world live with a tyrannous and often false sense of urgency. Loud voices within and without tell us we have so much to do, that other people are depending on us, that perhaps tomorrow will afford more time for prayer. But if anyone had reason to heed such voices, it was Jesus. And he didn’t. In a ministry filled with urgent needs, urgent opportunities, urgent counsels, urgent dangers, he treated prayer as the most urgent priority of all.

What did he know that we don’t?

What Jesus Knew

Above all, Jesus knew himself, and Jesus knew his Father.

Jesus knew himself. “Without ceasing to be divine,” Donald Macleod writes of the Son of God, “he took on the qualities of human nature: createdness, finitude, dependence, ignorance, mutability, embodiedness, and even mortality” (The Person of Christ, 194). Jesus prayed because, even as perfect Man, he needed his Father. He needed wisdom in decision-making, fortitude in temptation, discernment in teaching, joy in sorrow, strength of soul in otherwise unbearable agony.

Do we know ourselves? As humans, we have all the needs Jesus had. And as sinners, we have so many more. So do we wake up knowing ourselves prone to wander without God — prone to speak corrupting words, follow foolish paths, waste precious time, and believe the devil’s lies?

Jesus also knew his Father. He knew him as the God who speaks stars into being, who scatters nations and sends plagues, who fills dying wombs with life and fells enemy armies as numerous as the sand on the seashore. He knew him as the God with power incomparable, wisdom unsearchable, compassion unimaginable, beauty beyond compare, and steadfast love better than life.

And he knew him as the God whose ear is open. He gives good things to his children (Matthew 7:11). He answers the asking, opens to the knocking, and leads the seeking to find (Matthew 7:7–8). He sees in all places and hears at all hours (Matthew 6:6). He knows what we need but still loves when we speak (Matthew 6:8). And though we may not understand his timing, he does not delay long toward his own (Luke 18:7).

If we know him, what busyness can keep us from him? And what urgency can speak louder than his invitation to draw near?

What Wonders Prayer Has Won

In a world of self-sufficient, godless efficiency, oh how many wonders prayer has won! By prayer, a few loaves and fish fed five thousand (Matthew 14:19), and Lazarus left the realm of the dead (John 11:41–42), and sorrow became a sanctuary of communion with God (Matthew 14:12–13, 23), and Peter’s faith did not fail (Luke 21:32), and words of forgiveness flowed from the cross (Luke 23:34), and the cup of agony was set down empty (Matthew 26:42), and frail and failing disciples were kept (John 17:11).

God wants us to run and build and work in this world, but not apart from prayer. Jesus knew as much. So, though busy, though sought out, though needed, though weighed down by a world of urgent responsibility, Jesus prayed. Will we?

Scott Hubbard is the managing editor for Desiring God, a pastor at All Peoples Church, and a graduate of Bethlehem College and Seminary.

Be honest…how much time do you really spend in prayer? It does not seem to be the priority that Jesus had. Why? Do we feel that we don’t need to speak to God the way Jesus communed with His Father? Let us endeavor to “pray without ceasing” as Paul said. Let us utter quick prayers, long prayers, asking for God’s will to be done, that our minds be given the wisdom of God, our decisions based on the Word of God. Let us learn what it means to walk with God in 2025!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 11, 2025

Notes of Faith January 11, 2025

Psalm 25 for 2025: Show Me Your Paths

Show me Your ways, O Lord; teach me Your paths. Lead me in Your truth and teach me, for You are the God of my salvation; on You I wait all the day.

Psalm 25:4-5

Isaiah 55:8-9 (nkjv)

8 “For My thoughts are not your thoughts,

Nor are your ways My ways,” says the Lord.

9 “For as the heavens are higher than the earth,

So are My ways higher than your ways,

And My thoughts than your thoughts.

Imagine going to your mailbox on January 1 and finding a large envelope. You open the envelope and discover a 2025 calendar. In the space allocated for each day you find the details of what will happen in your life that day.

Sound impossible? Even though you won’t receive such a calendar from God, you have a promise from Him that can put to rest your fears and doubts about the direction your life will take this year. Psalm 139:16 says, “You saw me before I was born. Every day of my life was recorded in your book. Every moment was laid out before a single day had passed” (NLT). That’s why we can pray, with the psalmist that God will show us how to walk in His ways and His paths—because He already knows what we need to do.

If you want to walk in God’s ways, in God’s truth this year, then ask Him to show you the steps you should take—beginning today!

God’s ways are behind the scenes, but He moves all the scenes which He is behind.

John Nelson Darby

Have you broken any New Year’s resolutions so far this year? How about your desire to walk closer with Jesus? Are you praying more? Are you reading God’s Word faithfully every day? Are you responding to the circumstances of life differently than you did in the past? We are created in the image of God, meant to be a reflection of His character. Let us pursue God in thought, words and deeds as long as we have breath in this life. His glory will be revealed to us both now and forevermore!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 10, 2025

Notes of Faith January 10, 2025

Letters to God

My heart is overflowing with a good theme; I recite my composition concerning the King; my tongue is the pen of a ready writer.

Psalm 45:1

British writer Julia McGuinness said, “Writing prayers down rather than speaking them out loud or voicing them in your head can be a powerful, patient act of worship…. The very act of writing may make you more mindful and attentive to what it is you want to pray.”1

If writing your prayers seems strange, remember the prayers we read in the Bible were written down, which is why we can still use them as our own. Also, many of our hymns are actually prayers, such as the lyrics, “Then sings my soul, my Savior God, to Thee.”

As we take time to write out some of our prayers, we discover areas of weakness that need to be strengthened and patterns of life that need to be corrected. We have a record of our prayers. When our minds feel unfocused, a pen and paper can help us concentrate in God’s presence.

Try writing out some of your prayers and think of them as letters to God. He knows how to read—and listen!

Written prayer brings a substance to our communications with God and is still totally portable. You can write prayers on whatever material is [at] hand…. wherever you happen to be.

Julia McGuinness

The bool of Psalms are songs and prayers. Consider Psalm 45:1-6

Ps 45:1-6

My heart is stirred by a noble theme

as I recite my verses for the king;

my tongue is the pen of a skillful writer.

2 You are the most excellent of men

and your lips have been anointed with grace,

since God has blessed you forever.

3 Gird your sword upon your side, O mighty one;

clothe yourself with splendor and majesty.

4 In your majesty ride forth victoriously

in behalf of truth, humility and righteousness;

let your right hand display awesome deeds.

5 Let your sharp arrows pierce the hearts of the king's enemies;

let the nations fall beneath your feet.

6 Your throne, O God, will last for ever and ever;

a scepter of justice will be the scepter of your kingdom.

My mother wrote her prayers for many years. I had/have boxes of yellow pads filled with prayers that contain mostly petitions for people…their needs and wants, for their spiritual growth. It was especially heartwarming to see my name often in my mother’s written prayers. We speak of praying for someone and they do not know that we actually take our request to God unless we do it while with them. But the written prayers are more likely to be kept and also likely to end up in the hands of those whose petitions were brought before the throne of grace. I have not done this as a regular practice, but believe it to have a powerful emotional impact on those who read them. Give it a try. Even a short prayer of praise and thanksgiving. You may read it at another time and be blessed by God for what is in your heart today!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 9, 2025

Notes of Faith January 9, 2025

Our Help in Ages Past

Remember that the Lord your God led you all the way these forty years in the wilderness.

Deuteronomy 8:2

In an old devotional book, this comment appears under Deuteronomy 8:2: “When anxieties disturb or troubles depress, do I remember God’s goodness in the past and how thus far He has brought me through every difficulty? And does the remembrance fill me with thankfulness for the past and courage for the future? When a new mercy meets me, do I see a Father’s love in it? And do I follow cheerfully where His providence leads?”

While our faith may be weak and our eyes dimmed by illness or discouragement, there is no missing what God has done for us in the past. We should look back and remember that He who was our help in ages past is our hope for years to come. He has led us all the way.

If you’re struggling today, take a moment to look back at a specific time when the Lord helped you. Then remind yourself that He is the same yesterday, today, and forever!

Could we look upon our entire life and take in all its changes by a single glance, every step would be seen to have been guided by God’s mercy.

Tyron Edwards

Heb 13:5-8

5 ,,, for He Himself has said, "I WILL NEVER DESERT YOU, NOR WILL I EVER FORSAKE YOU," 6 so that we confidently say,

"THE LORD IS MY HELPER, I WILL NOT BE AFRAID.

WHAT WILL MAN DO TO ME?"

7 Remember those who led you, who spoke the word of God to you; and considering the result of their conduct, imitate their faith. 8 Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever

1. Our God, our help in ages past,

Our hope for years to come,

Our shelter from the stormy blast,

And our eternal home:

2. Under the shadow of your throne

Your saints have dwelt secure;

Sufficient is your arm alone,

And our defense is sure.

3. Before the hills in order stood

Or Earth received her frame,

From everlasting you are God,

To endless years the same.

4. A thousand ages in your sight

Are like an evening gone,

Short as the watch that ends the night

Before the rising sun.

5. O God, our help in ages past,

Our hope for years to come,

Be thou our guard while life shall last

And our eternal home.

God has always been there for you and me…and will always be there. His grace, love, and mercy never cease. Trust in the Lord and you will find peace even in the worst of circumstances. His will, His plan is perfect and unfolding each day toward eternal peace and glory!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 8, 2025

Notes of Faith January 8, 2025

The Word Is the Sword

And take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.

Ephesians 6:17

There are two Greek words in the New Testament that are translated into English as “word.” One is logos—“word, message, speech, argument, book.” The other is rhema—“word, saying, thing, remark.” Generally speaking, we might think of logos as the Bible and rhema as a verse in the Bible. Both are the Word of God—one the whole, the other a specific part of the whole.

When Paul describes the Christian’s spiritual armor and notes the “sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God,” the Greek word he uses for “word of God” is rhema, not logos. In other words, he pictures going on the offensive in spiritual warfare by using specific parts of the Bible: promises, teachings, sayings. Think of how Jesus defended Himself against Satan’s temptations in the wilderness (Matthew 4:1-11). Three times Satan tempted Him, and three times Jesus rebuffed the temptation by quoting a verse from Deuteronomy. That’s the way to use the sword of the Spirit, the rhema of God.

Take the sword of the Spirit everywhere you go by committing the promises and teachings of Scripture to memory.

The Bible is a disturbing book, a hammer, a fire, and a sword.

Vance Havner

Matt 4:1-11

4 Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. 2 And after He had fasted forty days and forty nights, He then became hungry. 3 And the tempter came and said to Him, "If You are the Son of God, command that these stones become bread." 4 But He answered and said, "It is written, 'MAN SHALL NOT LIVE ON BREAD ALONE, BUT ON EVERY WORD THAT PROCEEDS OUT OF THE MOUTH OF GOD.'"

5 Then the devil took Him into the holy city and had Him stand on the pinnacle of the temple, 6 and said to Him, "If You are the Son of God, throw Yourself down; for it is written,

'HE WILL COMMAND HIS ANGELS CONCERNING YOU';

and

'ON their HANDS THEY WILL BEAR YOU UP,

SO THAT YOU WILL NOT STRIKE YOUR FOOT AGAINST A STONE.'"

7 Jesus said to him, "On the other hand, it is written, 'YOU SHALL NOT PUT THE LORD YOUR GOD TO THE TEST.'"

8 Again, the devil took Him to a very high mountain and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory; 9 and he said to Him, "All these things I will give You, if You fall down and worship me." 10 Then Jesus said to him, "Go, Satan! For it is written, 'YOU SHALL WORSHIP THE LORD YOUR GOD, AND SERVE HIM ONLY.'" 11 Then the devil left Him; and behold, angels came and began to minister to Him.

Jesus used the Word (specific Word of God) to defend as well as attack those coming against Him. We too, can use the Word of God, if we know it and use it against the enemies coming against us. I pray you are in the Word of God today.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 7, 2025

Notes of Faith January 7, 2025

The Living Word

For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.

Hebrews 4:12

Perhaps you have purchased a self-help book but haven’t opened it because you don’t want to receive what it will say. Some people can be hesitant when it comes to reading the Bible or praying to God for direction for the same reason. We’re not ready for the answer we might get.

The Bible is not like any other book. It is not just a collection of words and pages, like a self-help book, but is a book that is “living and powerful.” When we open the Bible, the Holy Spirit uses the words of Scripture to reveal things to and about us that can change our life. It can reveal (discern) “the thoughts and intents of [our] heart.” The question is, are we ready to see and know what the Spirit may show us about our life?

When you open the Bible, pray: “Lord, open the eyes of my heart that I may see and receive what Your Word will reveal to me.”

The written Word of God has the seal of the living Word of God (Jesus).

John H. Gerstner

Seek God. Pursue God. Cry out to God. Listen for God. He speaks in your prayers, through His Word, through godly men and women. He loves you more than any other and wants you to come to Him, give your life to Him, live your life for Him, and you will be eternally blessed!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 6, 2025

Notes of Faith January 6, 2025

A Training Manual for Life

All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped for every good work.

2 Timothy 3:16-17

When a soldier is in training, field manuals explain how to carry out assigned duties. The same could be true for a person training to enter another profession. Books and manuals represent the learned experience and knowledge of those who have come before; they save us time and mistakes in our own endeavors.

From a practical point of view, we can think of the Bible as a field manual for the Christian life—and even for life in general in terms of relationships, finances, morals, family, and more. Paul summarized for his young pastoral protégé Timothy the benefits of the Bible and the results. The benefits are that the Bible contains doctrine, guidance, correction, and instructions in righteousness. The results are that we become “complete, thoroughly equipped for every good work.” The goal of any training manual is to equip one to do the work—whatever the profession.

Are you becoming better at good works? Read your Bible daily with a view toward becoming more mature as a follower of Christ.

The quest for excellence is a mark of maturity.

Max Lucado

2 Timothy 2:21

Therefore, if anyone cleanses himself from what is dishonorable, he will be a vessel for honorable use, sanctified, set apart for the master's use, prepared for every good work.

We must be found daily in the Scriptures to grow toward maturity in Christ! Can you be so found? If not, likely you are not growing as you could. Do not let Satan fool you into believing you do not need to be in the Scriptures daily. Read, meditate, and speak often with your Lord and Savior that you may indeed become more like Him. Praying for you as God brings you to my heart and mind. Share you life story with me and I will pray more fervently and specifically for you.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 5, 2025

Notes of Faith January 5, 2025

How Healthy Is Your Soul?

Six Questions for a New Year

Article by Scott Hubbard

Managing Editor, Desiring God

“I will cool you insensibly, by degrees, by little and little.”

At the end of one year, on the cusp of another, I remember the words that once haunted the soul of seventeenth-century pastor John Bunyan (1628–1688). He imagined the devil skulking nearby, not as a raging dragon but as a patient and calculating snake, as one who waits “until an opportune time” (Luke 4:13).

“What care I,” the tempter says, “though I be seven years in chilling your heart if I can do it at last? Continual rocking will lull a crying child asleep. I will ply it close, but I will have my end accomplished” (Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners, 44).

The devil uses many weapons in his assault against our soul, but one of the most overlooked is simply time. We are changeable creatures in a long war, called to “resist the devil” not for a day or a week or a year but a life (James 4:7). And spiritual health yesterday does not guarantee spiritual health today.

So, at the end of a new year, on the edge of another, let’s stop to take some spiritual vitals. How healthy is your soul?

Six Questions for the Soul

Bunyan is not the only one who would call us to take heed. Strewn throughout Scripture, prophets and apostles, wise men and the God-man all urge us to watch ourselves, pay attention to ourselves, and stay awake “lest we drift away” (Hebrews 2:1). Unless we keep our hearts “with all vigilance” (Proverbs 4:23), they will not be kept.

To get started, we might focus our attention on six of the most important areas of the Christian life: our heart, our habits, our hope, our enemies, our friends, and our neighbors.

1. Your heart: Do you desire God?

Proverbs exhorts us to keep our heart with all vigilance because “from it flow the streams of life” (Proverbs 4:23). If this fountain is polluted, all is polluted. If the heart is lost, all is lost. And at the center of a healthy heart — its strong beat and lifeblood — is deep desire for God. “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart” (Deuteronomy 6:5).

What, then, does your desire for God look like right now? With David, has “the beauty of the Lord” become your “one thing,” the chief of your prayers and the cream of your pleasures (Psalm 27:4)? Would you say with Asaph that God himself is your heaven and that earth holds no rival to him (Psalm 73:25)? Can your heart sing with Paul of “the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord” (Philippians 3:8)?

God made us to hunger and thirst for him (Psalm 42:2), to faint and yearn for him (Psalm 63:1), to feel his absence like death and his presence like resurrection morning. He made us to desire him.

Of course, our delight in God rises and falls throughout this fallen life. Not even the most mature saint lives with a continual sense of God’s nearness. But as Don Whitney writes, “It’s one thing to long for a sense of God’s presence while not experiencing it, and another to live routinely with no awareness of his absence” (Ten Questions to Diagnose Your Spiritual Health, 61).

So, do you desire him — either with joy over his nearness or with grief over his seeming distance? Or has your heart grown cold to the one whose steadfast love is better than life (Psalm 63:3)?

2. Your habits: Do you draw near to God?

Typically, the health of our heart today reflects the health of our habits in recent weeks and months. A cold heart often betrays a closed Bible. A numb heart often tells of a neglected prayer life. And so our habits today prophesy the future state of our heart.

Public habits (like regular fellowship and corporate worship) are crucial for keeping the heart. But private habits may call for even closer attention because of how easily we can omit them without others noticing. No one sees whether we meditate on Scripture or visit the prayer closet or fast, and therefore no one sees whether we don’t. But so often, these private habits, these secret resolves, build the walls that keep our hearts.

Consider, then, the last month or two. How often (and with how much pleasure) have you prayed to “your Father who sees in secret” (Matthew 6:6)? How regularly (and with how much delight) have you meditated on his life-giving instruction (Psalm 1:2–3)? How familiar or foreign is the testimony of Robert Murray M‘Cheyne (1813–1843), who once journaled, “Rose early to seek God, and found him whom my soul loveth. Who would not rise early to meet such company?” (Memoir and Remains, 23).

3. Your hope: Do you live heavenly minded?

Near the heart of our faith lies the hope that one day soon, we will live with God in a world without end. We will shed this mortal body for one immortal, these tears for songs of joy, this thorn-cursed land for “a better country” (Hebrews 11:16). We will awake to the face our souls were made to see, whose gaze will slay our remnant sin and fill our hearts to breaking with happiness (1 Corinthians 13:12; 1 John 3:2).

“A cold heart often betrays a closed Bible. A numb heart often tells of a neglected prayer life.”

Such we declare by faith. Do we also declare it by life? Would anyone, catching a smile on our face, ask the reason for our joy and hear the answer “heaven”? Does the weight of coming glory put our pain into perspective, such that we groan without grumbling and lament without losing hope (2 Corinthians 4:16–5:2)? Do we marry and buy and sell and laugh and mourn as if “the present form of this world is passing away” (1 Corinthians 7:31), as if the life we know now will soon crash upon the shores of eternity?

The heavenly minded are known by their stubborn joy in sorrow, their modest expectations for this world, their stability in societal chaos, and their willingness to risk and sacrifice like heaven will make up for every lost comfort here.

4. Your enemies: Do you let nothing dominate you?

Christians may have human enemies (Matthew 5:44), and we certainly have demonic enemies (Ephesians 6:12), but our most dangerous enemies are neither human nor demonic, but fleshly (1 Peter 2:11). We wage a war within, with armies of “deceitful desires” attacking territory that Christ has reclaimed (Ephesians 4:22).

As we study these enemies, Paul’s response to the Corinthians may focus our eyes where we don’t think to look:

“All things are lawful for me,” but not all things are helpful. “All things are lawful for me,” but I will not be dominated by anything. (1 Corinthians 6:12)

Often, the enemies that cost us most dearly appear lawful, at least at first. They aren’t black-and-white evil, but dangerously gray. Christian freedom assures us that we can venture here without guilt; our conscience becomes accustomed to the arrangement. We can watch these videos, follow these influencers, have this many drinks, notice this person’s beauty, post these thoughts online, spend this much time scrolling, or indulge these fantasies of a different life.

Each of these may be lawful and innocent — and each may eventually dominate us, leading either to a painful fall or a lukewarm life. If we wonder whether any activity, pleasure, or line of thought holds undue sway over us, we might ask ourselves, Could I give this up for the next year? If the answer is no, or if the answer is yes in our head but no in our heart, then we are no longer dealing with something lawful. We are dealing with a dominator, an enemy dressed in innocence.

5. Your friends: Do you practice the one-another commands?

In Christ, we are no longer by ourselves — no longer independent or autonomous or unattached. We are members of a body (1 Corinthians 12:12), stones in a holy structure (1 Peter 2:5), siblings in a family (Ephesians 2:19). We are our brother’s keeper, and our brother is ours.

The one-another commands in the New Testament sketch our familial callings; they are the code of God’s household. As we obey them, we not only live out our identity in Christ but also become channels of God’s grace to each other. The one-anothers are one of the primary ways God matures his children and keeps them till glory.

We might capture the thrust of these commands under five heads:

Have Christ’s humble mind (Philippians 2:3; 1 Peter 5:5).

Offer Christ’s impartial welcome (Romans 12:16; 15:7; 1 Peter 4:9).

Speak Christ’s tough and tender words (Colossians 3:16; 1 Thessalonians 5:11; Hebrews 3:13).

Show Christ’s practical love (1 Thessalonians 5:15; 1 Peter 4:10; Galatians 6:2).

Give Christ’s forgiving grace (Ephesians 4:2, 32).

As you remember the last year in your local church, can you think of specific Christians who are more holy, more Christlike, because of your presence in their life? Have you given your pastors reason to lead “with joy and not with groaning” because of the ways you have cheerfully followed their lead (Hebrews 13:17)? Have you spoken any words bracing enough to bring back a wandering soul?

6. Your neighbors: Do you make Christ known?

Finally, consider the world outside yourself and the church. Survey your neighborhood, your city, your campus or workplace, and the nations where Christ has not yet been named. The last command Jesus gave us was to “make disciples” (Matthew 28:19). Do we?

No doubt, rhythms of evangelism and disciple-making will vary across our life stages. Personally, I can testify that making Jesus known looks different as a father of young children than it did as a college student. But no life stage exempts us from the grand adventure of the Great Commission. Nor can a genuinely Christian heart rest satisfied on the sidelines of God’s kingdom advance.

So, has your Christian life run into the predictable ruts of churchly activity, or do you still know the thrill of following Jesus to people and places you would never approach otherwise? Do you still look strange to a world estranged from God — speaking strange words, hosting strange neighbors, taking strange risks for the sake of his name? And even in the midst of a busy life — with little kids or elderly parents or heavy work demands — do you nevertheless yearn to somehow make Jesus known?

Toward a Warmer Heart

The more tender among us might finish these questions feeling freshly discouraged or even condemned. The accuser of God’s children knows how to turn self-examination into an exercise in self-damnation. But the point of searching questions is not to dig ourselves into a pit of misery — not for those who belong to Jesus.

Richard Sibbes writes, “If we have this for a foundation truth, that there is more mercy in Christ than sin in us, there can be no danger in thorough dealing” (The Bruised Reed, 12). We can dare to deal honestly with our sins because Jesus has already dealt mercifully with us. And so he always will.

So no, the purpose of these questions is not to condemn, but rather to expose any area where we have cooled insensibly, by degrees, by little and little. And therefore the purpose of these questions is to draw us nearer to the Lord who has warmth enough to melt our coldness, if only we bring ourselves close to him.

Where, then, have you grown cold? In heart, in habits, in hope? Toward your enemies, your friends, your neighbors? Take that coldness to Jesus Christ. Receive “the abundance of grace” he has to offer (Romans 5:17). And then consider how you might recover a warmer spirit and walk more closely with him this year.

Scott Hubbard is the managing editor for Desiring God, a pastor at All Peoples Church, and a graduate of Bethlehem College and Seminary.

I am being cooled insensibly at present…it has been growing colder through this passing polar vortex storm to the point where the outside temperatures will feel below 0! It is certainly pretty, with white covering everything, but the ice that is forming is felling trees and could down power lines. If we lose power we have no heat…no fireplaces, just central heat. We will have to huddle together and use a generator for what little power it can provide to keep food fresh and keep us warm. Hoping to make it back to California sometime this week and the 70 degree temperatures they are experiencing! What a thrilling life God gives us to enjoy! Don’t let Satan blow out the fire that is within you. Spread the truth of the Word of God and stay kindled with that which you know to be true. Be faithful to the end and the reward will be great. Praise God for His bountiful treasure!

Pastor Dale