Notes of Faith January 22, 2025

Notes of Faith January 22, 2025

A Balloon or a Helmet?

But let us who are of the day be sober, putting on the breastplate of faith and love, and as a helmet the hope of salvation.

1 Thessalonians 5:8

There’s a new Guinness World Records holder. David Rush appeared on the television show Live with Kelly and Mark and burst six-hundred balloons with his boxing gloves in the allotted time. But there’s someone even better at bursting bubbles and destroying dreams. It’s our enemy. He wants to deflate the biblical hope that sustains us. He punches us and takes the wind out of our optimistic faith. He often does it by luring us into some sin.

Recommended Reading:

2 Thessalonians 3:16-17

When our fellowship with God is strained by sinfulness, we feel hopeless, not hopeful. But we have an Advocate with the Father—Jesus Christ—who can again fill us with His Spirit, with hope, and with joy.

One of the most enduring lessons of faith is knowing how to come back to God in confession, repentance, realignment, and rededication. Ask God today to give you strength to act decisively in dealing with your sin so you may continue to have a heart filled with hope. Hope is not a balloon to be punctured but a helmet to be worn.

Hope for the Christian is a confident expectation of a guaranteed result.

Paul David Tripp

We are often distracted and lured into sin and lose the air in our hope and faith. But God is gracious and has already forgiven that sin if you are truly a follower of Jesus Christ! Confess, repent, and stand firm in what you know to be true and righteous. God is for you not against you. Who can stand against Almighty God?

You belong to Him and will win over sin and death!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 21, 2025

Notes of Faith January 21, 2025

Regaining Hope

My days are swifter than a weaver’s shuttle, and are spent without hope.

Job 7:6

The word hope occurs sixteen times in the book of Job, but most of the references are about how Job lost hope during his multiple tragedies. He said, “What strength do I have, that I should hope?” (Job 6:11) And he said, “He breaks me down on every side, and I am gone; my hope He has uprooted like a tree” (Job 19:10).

Any of us can lose hope when we’re having difficulties and not sure what God is doing in our lives. We can lose hope because others have mistreated us or even because of our own mistakes. When we’re feeling sorry for ourselves and sinking into discouragement, we’re letting the biblical quality of hope erode in our minds.

If this is true for you, read in the first chapter of 1 Peter about our “living hope” that comes from God’s abundant mercy (1:3), about the importance of resting our hope fully on God’s grace (1:13), and about projecting our hope forward in anticipation of Christ’s return (1:21).

Where there is no hope in the future, there is no power in the present.

John Maxwell

1 Peter 1:6-13

6 In this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. 7 These have come so that your faith — of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire — may be proved genuine and may result in praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed. 8 Though you have not seen him, you love him; and even though you do not see him now, you believe in him and are filled with an inexpressible and glorious joy, 9 for you are receiving the goal of your faith, the salvation of your souls.

10 Concerning this salvation, the prophets, who spoke of the grace that was to come to you, searched intently and with the greatest care, 11 trying to find out the time and circumstances to which the Spirit of Christ in them was pointing when he predicted the sufferings of Christ and the glories that would follow. 12 It was revealed to them that they were not serving themselves but you, when they spoke of the things that have now been told you by those who have preached the gospel to you by the Holy Spirit sent from heaven. Even angels long to look into these things.

13 Therefore, prepare your minds for action; be self-controlled; set your hope fully on the grace to be given you when Jesus Christ is revealed.

Our hope is an eternal hope! And though I pray that you and I never go through what was written for us in the book of Job in our Bibles, we all experience trials and troubles. Jesus said everyone will. But He also let us know that He overcame the world. As we follow Him we too, overcome the world and the things in it! Let us persevere and endure this world, looking forward in hope for that which has been prepared for us in Christ Jesus!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 20, 2025

Notes of Faith January 20, 2025

Eternal Inheritance

[You are born again] to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that does not fade away, reserved in heaven for you.

1 Peter 1:4

You Can’t Take It with You was a Pulitzer Prize–winning 1936 comedic play by George Kaufman and Moss Hart that became an Academy Award–winning movie in 1938. It is about a highly eccentric extended family whose curious members involve themselves in any number of complicated situations. On one occasion, the patriarch of the family tells a younger member to enjoy his wealth while he can since, “You can’t take it with you.”

Ironically, Jesus suggested there is a way—in a manner of speaking—to “take it with you.” He said that instead of storing up wealth on earth where moth, thieves, and rust can ruin it, we should store up treasures in heaven where their value will never be diminished. (Matthew 6:20). Perhaps Peter was thinking of these words when he described the Christian’s eternal inheritance as “incorruptible and undefiled and that does not fade away.”

Because our living hope is in Christ, our eternal inheritance will likewise live forever. It is “reserved in heaven” for us.

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

Richard Sibbes

Matt 6:19-21

19 "Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. 20 But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. 21 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”

Life on earth is only a shadow of what eternal life will be. We who worship, follow and serve God, must continue to store up treasure in heaven until the Lord takes us from this life to the next! Praise God from whom all blessings flow!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 19, 2025

Notes of Faith January 19, 2025

Is Your Hospitality Christian?

Article by Tanner Kay Swanson

Guest Contributor – Desiring God

It’s no small secret that Christianity and hospitality go hand and hand. “Contribute to the needs of the saints and seek to show hospitality” (Romans 12:13). “Show hospitality to one another without grumbling” (1 Peter 4:9). “Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers” (Hebrews 13:2). Like a knock at the door or food on a table, hospitality suits faith.

But while Christians may know to show hospitality, we can be less clear on how to show distinctly Christian hospitality. We are “a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God’s own possession” (1 Peter 2:9) — and our homes are one (massive!) way to shout that our lives belong to the Father of light. So what makes for a Christian kitchen? A believer’s backyard? The ways we welcome should be noticeably different from the world. But how?

As my husband and I look to purchase our first house, we’ve dwelt on the question often. We want God’s character and commands, not our personality and preferences, to ground and shape our hospitality. To that end, consider how faith, love, and wisdom can help Christian homes communicate that they have chosen to serve the Lord (Joshua 24:15).

How Faith Keeps House

First and foremost, Christian hospitality comes from faith (Romans 14:23). We live by faith in the Son of God, who loved us and gave himself up for us (Galatians 2:20). Therefore, we keep our homes by faith in the Son of God, who loved us and gave himself up for us. It is no longer we who determine how to live in our homes — but Christ who lives in us.

And what would the Son have us do with our living rooms and basements, extra food and spare beds, except to use them to glorify the Father? Jesus would live in no other way: “I honor my Father” (John 8:49). “The word that you hear is not mine but the Father’s” (John 14:24). “I do as the Father has commanded me.” And why? Don’t miss this! “So that the world may know that I love the Father” (John 14:31).

What makes hospitality distinctly Christian? Faith in Christ, which cannot but love him and the Father who sent him. We seek to show hospitality, as God has commanded, because we want the world to know we love God. As John Piper might put it, Christian hospitality is a label reserved for those who know their home is not their treasure. Christ is. And because he is, they are determined to use their home in ways that show God, and not their home, as their treasure.

Now, how does Christian hospitality do that? We desire to magnify God in the ways we keep house — but what does that really look like? Even without a spiritual X-ray machine, alerting us to the heart’s intent, perhaps it’s still possible to identify Christian hospitality in practice. Reflect with me on how faith makes itself known.

Let Love Set the Table

If it is no longer we who determine how to live in our homes, but Christ who lives in us, and he would have us glorify God by loving God, we have another important question to ask: How does love for God act? Simply put, love for God loves:

You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets. (Matthew 22:37–40)

Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God. Anyone who does not love does not know God, because God is love. (1 John 4:7–8)

“Hospitality is an opportunity to prove that God is better than anything an unshared, ‘more comfortable’ home could ever afford.”

Love for others courses through every faithful attempt to live out the likes of Romans 12:13, 1 Peter 4:9, or Hebrews 13:2, or else our hospitality counts for nothing (Galatians 5:6). Lest we forget, the New Testament word for hospitality (Greek philoxenia) does not mean “regular, friendly hosts” but literally “love for strangers.” For we serve the greatest stranger-loving Host known to history: “God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). No wonder, then, that without love, each invitation of ours is a noisy gong, every conversation a clanging cymbal (1 Corinthians 13:1).

Hospitality with love is an entirely different story — every day, in fact. The ordinary ways we use our homes will matter in eternity, and those ways will differ from day to day, person to person, situation to situation, need to need. Because as believers seeking to make the best use of our homes (Ephesians 5:16), we let the good of others define “best” for us. Commenting on Christian time management, David Mathis says,

One way to make it practical is to schedule the time both for proactive good in the calling God has given us and reactive good that responds to the urgent needs of others. Learning to let love inspire and drive our planning likely will mean fairly rigid blocks for our proactive labors, along with generous margin and planned flexibility to regularly meet the unplanned needs of others. (Habits of Grace, 213–14)

Because of love, Christian hospitality is routine; because of love, Christian hospitality is also responsive. Our homes are headquarters for strategic labors; so too are they outposts, lying within arm’s reach of the battlefield.

Most of us tend toward one expression of hospitality over another. Some prefer signing up for meal trains; others, sending out last-minute dinner invites. Usually, we’re the schedulers, the preparers, the planners, or the person who means it when he says, “I’m just a phone call away.” If we’re not careful, our hospitality could start to look a lot like an ad on a cereal box: Your life. Your home. Your way.

The Christian life couldn’t fly beneath a more contrary banner. We have been bought with a price infinitely more precious than our mortgage loans or monthly rent (1 Corinthians 6:20). This life is not our own; neither are these homes. And so we set ourselves on using them God’s way — and he commands us to glorify him by pouring ourselves out in love for others.

That’s why hospitality — whether at a moment’s notice or after several days’ worth of preparation, done on behalf of friends at church or neighbors in need — is no mere inconvenience to Christians. Hospitality is an opportunity to prove that God is better than anything an unshared, “more comfortable” home could ever afford. Could there be a more loving way to set the table?

Don’t Leave Wisdom at the Door

Finally, faith-wrought love doesn’t neglect circumstances or ignore giftings as we seek to show diligent, flexible hospitality. Believers are not mindless go-getters; we are prayerful wisdom-seekers (James 1:5), people intent on doing good works with an eye to both the Bible and life. If a homeschool mom, college roommate, new pastor, and a woman in a wheelchair all tried to extend the same kind of hospitality — well, they simply couldn’t! And they need not, because Christian hospitality doesn’t thrive on just faith and love, but also wisdom.

When we come across commands to show hospitality, we do well to remember that God isn’t calling us to obey him just today, but also tomorrow, on into next spring, and over a lifetime. We should aspire to obedient, long-lasting hospitality — and longevity is one of wisdom’s many specialties (Proverbs 3:16; Ecclesiastes 7:12). Wisdom considers how to apply undying truth to everyday life, asking questions simultaneously of Scripture and context. For example:

If wisdom starts with (and is sustained by) the fear of the Lord (Proverbs 1:7), do we have personal habits in place that, as we seek to feed others, allow our own souls to be fed on God? Do we prioritize sitting at our great Host’s table (Psalm 23:5) over setting our own?

To whom do the Old and New Testaments call Christians to show hospitality? Given the current season of our life — with these responsibilities and those difficulties, that opportunity and this ability — how can we faithfully welcome those whom God calls the church to welcome?

Across the Bible, is hospitality an inherent good, or does its true virtue stem from its use as a means to something — to Someone — more satisfying than the choicest drinks and most delicate foods (John 4:13–14; 6:35)? How can we begin to better use our homes as signposts, where sin-battered souls are impressed not ultimately with the way we host, but with the God who saves?

Wisdom loves to wonder about bearing abundant and abiding fruit, to the praise of God and for the good of others.

And as she goes about answering, so too wisdom loves to humbly pray alongside Wisdom himself: “Father . . . not my will, but yours be done” (Luke 22:42). If our hospitality would be distinctly Christ-ian, then we must take our cues from Christ. In him we find the only Man ever able to follow God’s commands from complete faith and with real love, every day of his life. May our hospitality, compelled by Christ’s witness and empowered by Christ’s Spirit, be guided by what Christians value most: our God.

When it comes to open doors and ready tables, any person in the world can host according to his or her own will. Only Christians can show hospitality according to the Father’s.

I don’t believe that we do this well. There is fear in letting someone into our homes that we call a stranger, even if they attend our church. Robin and I have been blessed with the courage to have people in our home to share a meal or even live with us overnight, or for years as the Lord led us. This is indeed a sacrifice, but God blessed us with each opportunity. He is blessing us with opportunity in our home in Kentucky. We have three young people living in our home that we pray God us using us to meet their needs. We also pray that God uses us to draw them to Himself, that they might know Him, come to Him and be saved! Though this is not something that everyone choses to take part in…there are dangers and loss of things possible, we have experienced protection and faithfulness of God during our attempts at hospitality. May you be blessed as well in your opportunities to bless God and be blessed by God!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 18, 2025

Notes of Faith January 18, 2025

Psalm 25 for 2025

Keep His Commandments

All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth, to such as keep His covenant and His testimonies.

Psalm 25:10

You will no doubt experience something this year that will make you wonder, “Why?” It could be painful or disruptive, or it could be just an unexpected circumstance. In any case, unplanned events always make us wonder why God has allowed them.

The psalmist David said something about God’s ways that require a second look. He said that God’s plans are mercy and truth to those who are faithful to Him—those who keep His commandments. We would assume that God’s ways are mercy and truth to everyone, not just to those who follow Him. But there is a difference between how people view God’s ways. Those who trust in Him find mercy and truth in what God allows; those who don’t trust in Him are more likely to find randomness and arbitrariness in God’s ways.

Those who walk in obedience to God can affirm Romans 8:28: God causes all things to work together for good to those who love Him. Even when we don’t see mercy and truth immediately, in time we will. Prepare your heart now to trust God with what this year holds.

Obedience to God’s will is the secret of spiritual knowledge and insight.

Eric Liddell

John 14:15-16

15 "If you love me, you will obey what I command.

This is the part of the Christian life that is so hard…obedience.

Rom 7:14-20

14 We know that the law is spiritual; but I am unspiritual, sold as a slave to sin. 15 I do not understand what I do. For what I want to do I do not do, but what I hate I do. 16 And if I do what I do not want to do, I agree that the law is good. 17 As it is, it is no longer I myself who do it, but it is sin living in me. 18 I know that nothing good lives in me, that is, in my sinful nature. For I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it out. 19 For what I do is not the good I want to do; no, the evil I do not want to do — this I keep on doing. 20 Now if I do what I do not want to do, it is no longer I who do it, but it is sin living in me that does it.

Admit it or not, you sin, yes because it is the nature that is within you, but, again, be honest, all too often, you choose to sin. How much pain and hurt do we bring to the heart of God. He is gracious and forgiving through His love for us in offering Jesus Christ, His only Son, to die as a sacrifice for our sin. All we must do is repent of our sin, believe in Jesus and follow Him…be obedient to His commands! Not an easy life…No one should become a Christian thinking life will be easy. God loves those who love Him and are obedient. Let us pursue a life that imitates Jesus…even when we fail…start again a fervent pursuit of righteousness!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 17, 2025

Notes of Faith January 17, 2025

Living Hope

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to His abundant mercy has begotten us again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.

1 Peter 1:3

Though the phrase “born again” does not occur in the Old Testament, the idea of rebirth does in various ways. Humanity was “reborn” after the Flood. Abraham figuratively received his son Isaac back from the dead. Jacob was given a new life after wrestling with God. But none of these many figurative examples are the same as the way Jesus used the phrase.

Jesus said we must be spiritually born again in order to enter God’s Kingdom

(John 3:3). Peter said that God has “begotten us [given us a new birth] again to a living hope.” Why a living hope? Because our new birth to eternal life is based in the “resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.” What hope does a person have who dies outside of Christ? None. But faith in the resurrected Christ—the Christ who conquered death—gives us “living hope.”

The Christian’s hope extends beyond the grave. Give thanks to God today that you have been born again to a living hope.

If you are never born again, you will wish you had never been born at all.

J. C. Ryle

What a quote! There is no reason for living than knowing and having a relationship with Jesus Christ. Even those who don’t seem to like us because of the color of our skin, our “body parts”, our political party affiliation, speech accent, and many more, NEED Jesus! We must be imitators of Christ, forgive those who rant and rail against us, pray for the Holy Spirit to invade their hearts, that they might come to the truth of God and His desire for them. Let us spend the rest of our days on earth striving to live a life pleasing to God, encouraging others, lifting up others, sacrificing our own needs and desires that God might be honored and glorified. Heavenly Father, please continue to pour out your grace, love, and mercy, that we might live for you every day that you give us!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 15, 2025

Notes of Faith January 15, 2025

Get Your Hopes Up!

The hope of the righteous will be gladness, but the expectation of the wicked will perish.

Proverbs 10:28

Charles Swindoll wrote, “When we are overworked and exhausted, hope gives us fresh energy. When we are discouraged, hope lifts our spirits. When we are tempted to quit, hope keeps us going…. When we fear the worst, hope brings reminders that God is still in control.”1

1 Thess 5:9-11

9 For God has not destined us for wrath, but for obtaining salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ, 10 who died for us, so that whether we are awake or asleep, we will live together with Him. 11 Therefore encourage one another and build up one another, just as you also are doing.

Proverbs 10:28 says that hope brings gladness into our minds and hearts. That’s true even when the present circumstances are not what we’d wish. Hope is a solid expectation of certain future events, which include the fulfillment of all God’s promises for us in this life and in the one to come.

We must hold to our biblical hope when everything else feels hopeless. Hope often becomes most precious to us when our personal resources have been exhausted and we realize that amid our problems God is present. When you’re going through difficulties, be thankful in the knowledge that you can put your trust in Him. Look to Jesus, and get your hopes up!

With God life is an endless hope. Without God life is a hopeless end.

Bill Bright

Hope, trust, faith, obedience and more are intertwined in Christ! Hope that does not fail is hope that is not dependent upon ourselves but totally on God and His faithfulness! His promises never fail. Life is not easy. True hope is not easy because you must believe that God is always in control. Sometimes life seems to treat us unfairly and we tend to blame God. But God loves us more than anyone else could and this vapor of a life is a short journey, even if it includes pain and suffering. The promise of God in the life to come with Him excludes all things caused by the entrance of sin into the world. We wait in sure hope of the day when He takes us to be with Him through death or His return for His bride. Come quickly, Lord Jesus!

Pastor Dale

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