Notes of Faith February 9, 2025

Notes of Faith February 9, 2025

A little longer “Note” this morning. It is Sunday and time to worship, praise, pray, give thanks, and a look forward to what God has prepared for those who love Him, obey Him, and are waiting for the return of Jesus!

Head Straight for Heaven

Five Wonders of the World to Come

Article by Jared Compton

Professor, Bethlehem College and Seminary

You won’t get to heaven unless you really want to. That’s what the Bible tells us.

Jesus wanted to go to heaven. Hebrews tells us that the joy of heaven propelled his life of faith (Hebrews 12:2). It’s what motivated him to run and run all the way to the end. The same joy motivated the other heroes too, from Abel to Zechariah (Hebrews 11:4, 37). All ran through dangers and toils and snares — too many to count — and they didn’t stop. Why? Because they longed for heaven. They longed for the heavenly country that they could see just beyond the finish line (Hebrews 11:13–16).

You can’t run the race of faith all the way to the end without a clear vision of heaven. Your legs will give out. The strength of your resolve won’t be enough. The course is too steep. The headwind too strong. Ask the heroes. Ask Jesus. They’ll all say the same thing. Only the joys of heaven can sustain the race of faith.

In their post-race interview, they’d want you to know that the race is possible. What else are we to make of the fact that they made it? But they’d also want you to know how. If we asked them that, I suspect they’d smile, perhaps pause to wipe some sweat off their face, and then begin talking about heaven.

Here’s what they might say.

Reunion

Never forget that heaven will be filled with people who know and love the Lord Jesus just like we do. Everybody there will know the Lord “from the least . . . to the greatest” (Hebrews 8:11). All the people we’ve loved and lost, and who knew and loved the Lord Jesus, will be there in that place. Every single one of them: friends who died too soon, taken by disease or worse; children taken as children; parents; grandparents; wives and husbands.

Heaven will be filled with Jesus-people, with the “church of the firstborn” (New Testament believers) and “the spirits of the righteous made perfect” (Old Testament believers; Hebrews 12:23). Every believer of all time will be there. Some we can’t wait to meet, like Charles Spurgeon or Martyn Lloyd-Jones or John Stott. And others we can’t wait to see again — some whose names are still too painful to say aloud. They’ll be there. All of them.

What a day of rejoicing that will be.

Perfection

Heaven is also a place where God has promised to perfectly “put [his] laws into [our] minds, and write them on [our] hearts” (Hebrews 8:10). If you’ve been a Christian for more than, say, five minutes, then you’ve longed for this reality, even as you’ve experienced it in part. It’s a promise that reminds us that heaven will be free of sin. We will be free from sin. God’s good and life-giving ways will be part of the DNA of our resurrected bodies. You’ll no longer be able to sin. And that lack of freedom won’t bother you! It’ll be one of the best things about you and that place.

It’s a reality every Christian longs for. We long to be free of our inveterate self-seeking. Our debilitating jealousy. Our too-small and ill-directed desires. Our inability to act for God’s glory with anything but mixed motives. That darkness within you that occupies so much of your mind and heart, that pattern you long to see changed, foresworn, put off, that sin that besets you now — it will be permanently removed in the sin-free world to come.

It’s a promise whose future reality extends back into the present. When Jesus died, he activated God’s promise of perfection. The Bible calls it God’s new covenant. And it gives believers in this chapter of the story not only the prospect of future perfection, but present experiences of that future world. When we believed in Jesus, sin’s power over us was broken in a brand-new way. Our slavery to sin and the devil and the fear of death ended (Hebrews 2:14–15). And all this anticipates the full flowering of God’s promise in the future, where sin’s power and presence will be eradicated.

A place without sin. A life without sin. It’s what we were made for. And it’s what God promises us at the end of our race.

Creation

Hebrews calls that coming place a “world to come” (Hebrews 2:5). I’m afraid we don’t think about this enough. Too often, heaven is a cipher for something less real, less tactile, less concrete than this world. As a result, it fails to capture our imaginations and hearts. But the end of God’s story is nothing less than a new creation. A place with food and animals of every kind. A place full of wonder and beauty. A place with things to do, to make, to create. A place filled with music, gardens, and games. A place just like this one, only unburdened by sin.

“You can’t run the race of faith all the way to the end without a clear vision of heaven.”

What do you long for in this world? What places make your heart ache? What smells and textures and sounds make your heart sing? Pine needles on a sunny forest path. Freshly baked bread. Birdsong, rushing water, cello suites. Windswept plains. Starry, starry nights. Each is a pointer given by God and meant to draw us inexorably to the world to come.

Every single good desire created by this world — every last one — will be fulfilled in the next.

There is a world at the end of our race, with joys far too large for our little words. Metaphor and simile try their best. But these too fall short, which is why the best window into that world is this one. So, we must not forget that when God created this world, he called it “very good” (Genesis 1:31). But when he talks about the world to come, he calls it even “better” (Hebrews 11:16).

Love

Now for the best part: God is there.

It’s the best reality of heaven, and it’s the hardest one to wrap our minds around. Hebrews doesn’t just tell us that God is preparing a world for us; Hebrews tells us that God is planning to live there with us. That’s why the place is called “the city of the living God” (Hebrews 12:22). It’s the fulfillment of God’s age-old promise to be our God and for us to be his people (Hebrews 8:10). In that promise, we finite creatures find our best and highest good.

We’re rightly glad that heaven is a place and that it’s full of other people we know and love. But still, there is something in us, a longing, that only God himself can fill. There’s a kind of joy that comes from relating to God that is unlike anything else. It’s a joy that is often easier to experience than to explain.

But let me try.

Our deepest joys on this earth come from personal relationships. We experience them when we spend time with people we know and love and who know and love us. People who know us and still love us. That’s what each of us wants more than anything else.

This is precisely what God gives us in himself. He knows us better than anyone else. And he loves us still. In fact, he loves us more than anyone else. More than we could ever imagine. God loves you so very much. And he’s proven it beyond all shadow of doubt by sacrificing his most precious Son for our good (John 3:16; Romans 5:8; 8:31–32).

One day, Hebrews tells us, in that coming world, full of God’s family and free from sin, we’ll live with God himself. We’ll live with the one whose love for us is better than life itself (Psalm 63:3). This hope is either true or it isn’t. And, if true, then it is more than sufficient to fuel our race of faith all the way to the glorious end.

Forever

Finally, Hebrews — the heroes — want you to know one more thing. Heaven is forever.

Hebrews calls that world to come unshakable, “lasting,” and “eternal” (9:15; 12:27; 13:14). All that good comes not with a period but an ellipsis. There’s no expiration date. No final chapter. No end. Every good of this world ends to make us long for the next. Every good meal, conversation, laugh, and sunset. They all end so that we long for a world where the good never ends. Or, better, where the good ends only because what follows is better still.

All our adventures in this life, wherever our race may take us in this wide world, are, as C.S. Lewis reminds us, simply “the cover and the title page” to the “Great Story . . . which goes on . . . forever” and “in which every chapter is better than the one before” (The Last Battle, 767).

Forever joys. Forever increasing joys. It’s the kind of story only God could tell. It’s the kind of happy ending only an infinitely creative storyteller could imagine. So run, Christian, run. Run all the way to the end. Heaven will be worth it all.

The best is yet to come. Easy to say when we are going through tough times. But even the best of times is not really the best there is. Sin has caused everything in this world to suffer. But that will come to an end for those who truly know and worship God, who have come to Jesus in believing faith, confessing and repenting of their sin, forgiven and having an eternal home prepared for them!

I do not feel old and yet none of us knows how many days or moments that we have left before we pass from this world. I am excited, filled with joy and expectation to experience what God has prepared for us that lasts forever. Life is short. The seventy years that God has given me here indeed seem like a vapor. I pray that if Jesus tarries to receive His bride that I have many more years to share the love of Jesus with those He puts around me. May you be blessed as you contemplate the perfection that God has waiting for you when you see His face and live forever in His presence!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith February 8, 2025

Notes of Faith February 8, 2025

Philia – Love

All who are with me greet you. Greet those who love us in the faith.

Titus 3:15

In the early 1680s, William Penn made a treaty of friendship with a Native American chieftain named Tamanend. Penn built a port city on the Delaware River to serve as a governmental center. He knew the word philia meant “friendship,” so he named his city Philadelphia—City of Brotherly Love. Penn had experienced persecution, and he wanted to build a city where people loved and respected each other.

Every city, town, church, marriage, and home should have the spirit of philia. In Christ, your husband is also your brother; your wife is also your sister. The Bible says that within the faith we should be “gentle, not quarrelsome” with each other (1 Timothy 3:3). The apostle Paul said, “And a servant of the Lord must not quarrel but be gentle to all” (2 Timothy 2:24). In Titus 3:15, Paul spoke of those who loved (philia) him in the faith.

Ask God to give you philia, and let’s love each other as friends in the faith of our Heavenly Father.

In a good marriage the husband and wife are also friends. Friendship means companionship, communication, and cooperation. This is known as philia.

H. Norman Wright

There are other Greek words that we translate love which we will look at on another Notes of Faith. Let us practice philia, loving one another, in humility, thinking others as better than ourselves, sacrificing our needs and concerns for others, with the hope and prayer that they will listen to God and do His will by coming to Jesus in faith believing that He is the only way to be saved!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith February 7, 2025

Notes of Faith February 7, 2025

Missing the Mark

Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.

Matthew 5:4

Cristiano Ronaldo is one of the greatest soccer players in the world. Last year at Euro 2024, he missed a penalty shot. He felt he’d let his team and fans down. The great athlete’s face twisted into pain, and he couldn’t keep from weeping. His tears dominated the headlines the next day.

If an athlete can weep over a missed shot, shouldn’t we be able to weep over our sins? There are a few occasions in life when we can’t help but cry when we see the mistake we made, the sin we committed, or the harm we did. Matthew 5:4 says, in the Amplified Bible, “Blessed [forgiven, refreshed by God’s grace] are those who mourn [over their sins and repent], for they will be comforted [when the burden of sin is lifted].”

The closer we come to the Lord, the more sensitive we become to sin in our life. We know we are bankrupt without the Lord, and we mourn our sin. The Lord not only forgives us; He also comforts us.

Spiritual mourning is the godly sorrow that produces repentance, and it is blessed because it leads to life. The more you have of this kind of mourning in your life, the more blessed you will be.

Colin S. Smith

James 4:8-10

8 Draw near to God and He will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners; and purify your hearts, you double-minded. 9 Be miserable and mourn and weep; let your laughter be turned into mourning and your joy to gloom. 10 Humble yourselves in the presence of the Lord, and He will exalt you.

We must humble ourselves, recognize that we need to be forgiven before forgiveness can be offered by God. We continue to sin every day, though some think they do not…they are wrong. Humbly coming to the throne of grace in true contrition, confession, with a desire to pursue holiness and righteousness, opens the floodgate of compassion and grace from our heavenly Father. Draw near to the only One who can set you free from the chains and suffering caused by sin.

Ps 51:7-13

7 Purify me with hyssop, and I shall be clean;

Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.

8 Make me to hear joy and gladness,

Let the bones which You have broken rejoice.

9 Hide Your face from my sins

And blot out all my iniquities.

10 Create in me a clean heart, O God,

And renew a steadfast spirit within me.

11 Do not cast me away from Your presence

And do not take Your Holy Spirit from me.

12 Restore to me the joy of Your salvation

And sustain me with a willing spirit.

13 Then I will teach transgressors Your ways,

And sinners will be converted to You.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith February 6, 2025

Notes of Faith February 6, 2025

Humble Service

Serving the Lord with all humility.

Acts 20:19

Billy Graham said, “In Heaven there will be many believers who never received any acknowledgement while on earth, yet they faithfully prayed and humbly served Christ. I believe their crowns may sparkle with more jewels than the philanthropist who endowed the church and whose name is engraved on the plaque in the narthex.”1

When we realize we are spiritually poor, we’re able to come to Christ in a spirit of humility and receive the riches of His grace. That disposition of heart leads to effective service. Some people serve Christ to impress others, and they “preach Christ even from envy and strife” (Philippians 1:15). But those who are humble of heart are able to serve the Lord in a way He truly blesses. Peter said, “Yes, all of you be submissive to one another, and be clothed with humility” (1 Peter 5:5).

Are you poor in spirit? One of the ways you can tell is by evaluating your daily service for Christ. Let’s all rededicate ourselves to serving the Lord with all humility.

May our gratitude find expression in our prayers and our service for others, and in our commitment to live wholly for Christ.

Billy Graham

Acts 20:19-21

serving the Lord with all humility and with tears and with trials which came upon me through the plots of the Jews; 20 how I did not shrink from declaring to you anything that was profitable, and teaching you publicly and from house to house, 21 solemnly testifying to both Jews and Greeks of repentance toward God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ.

I often pray that the Lord will keep me from a prideful attitude, using me for His glory, while I do not even know how He used me…as if my shadow passing over someone gives them a blessing from God that I never see happen. This is truly my prayer…to be used by God without even knowing that it happened so that my mind cannot think of patting myself on the back or receiving some reward. It is good enough just to know that God is using me.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith February 5, 2025

Notes of Faith February 5, 2025

Our Spiritual Need

Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

Matthew 5:3

In 2023 a Florida deputy was accused of street racing because, as it turned out, he wanted to impress his girlfriend. People get into a lot of trouble trying to impress others. We’re all guilty to some extent, aren’t we? It’s our pride!

Jesus had a better idea. He blessed those who were poor in spirit. He said, “Great blessings belong to those who know they are spiritually in need. God’s kingdom belongs to them” (Matthew 5:3, ERV). When the Lord spoke of being poor in spirit, He meant the opposite of everything that’s summed up in the word pride. Those who are poor in spirit have a proper assessment of who they are without Christ. As the International Children’s Bible puts it: “Those people who know they have great spiritual needs are happy.”

When we recognize we are spiritually bankrupt, we’ll understand the wonder of God’s love for us through Christ. We cannot impress anyone, not even ourselves. But Jesus loves us nonetheless, and through Him alone we find the Kingdom of heaven.

The indispensable condition of receiving the kingdom of God is to acknowledge our spiritual poverty. To the poor in spirit, and only to the poor in spirit, the kingdom of God is given.

John Stott

We love God because He loved us first…

We cannot really love whom we do not know. We must learn to know God to love God and then we will be able to love one another!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith February 4, 2025

Notes of Faith February 4, 2025

Pursuing Happiness

Not that I speak in regard to need, for I have learned in whatever state I am, to be content.

Philippians 4:11

“All men...are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” These famous words from the American Declaration of Independence have been criticized by some who say that Americans believe it is their right to be happy.

In modern terms, happiness usually refers to laughter—an emotional response to life’s circumstances. It is worth noting that there is no reference in the four Gospels to Jesus laughing (though He undoubtedly did when appropriate). Far more prevalent in Scripture is the notion of joy and the idea of contentment. Contentment is the idea of finding joy in the will of God whatever the circumstance. Jesus didn’t laugh in the Garden of Gethsemane as He contemplated His future death, but He was content with God’s will for Him at that moment.

True joy and contentment are found in the Person of Christ. Our pursuit of happiness must lead us to joy and contentment in Him.

If you are not content with what you have, you would not be satisfied if it were doubled.

Charles Spurgeon

Phil 4:11-14

I have learned to be content in whatever circumstances I am. 12 I know how to get along with humble means, and I also know how to live in prosperity; in any and every circumstance I have learned the secret of being filled and going hungry, both of having abundance and suffering need. 13 I can do all things through Him who strengthens me.

If you cannot be content in the circumstances in which you find yourself, you will never find contentment, always wanting more.

Pastor Dlae

Notes of Faith February 3, 2025

Notes of Faith February 3, 2025

God Wants You Happy!

O Lord of hosts, blessed is the man who trusts in You!

Psalm 84:12

A cynic once defined Christians as people who live in fear of someone, somewhere, being happy. That is, the cynic had the impression that God wants to make life burdensome and difficult. A person who believes that has never read the Bible. Thirteen times in the Old Testament we find the phrase, “Blessed is the man who.”

What does blessed mean in Scripture? In modern English translations it is often translated as “happy” or “joyful.” In other words, God wants us to be happy and joyful in life and gives us instructions on how to achieve that goal. We are blessed when we walk in God’s ways (Psalm 1:1), when we trust in God (Psalm 84:12), when our sins are forgiven (Psalm 32:2), when we dwell in God’s presence (Psalm 65:4), when we rely on God’s strength (Psalm 84:5), and more. God would not have provided ways for us to be happy and joyful if He did not intend for us to be so.

Meditate on these and other verses which promise blessedness. It is there for the receiving for all who seek it God’s way.

Seek for happiness and you will never find it. Seek righteousness and you will discover you are happy.

D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones

Matt 5:3-12

3 "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

4 "Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.

5 "Blessed are the gentle, for they shall inherit the earth.

6 "Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied.

7 "Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy.

8 "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.

9 "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.

10 "Blessed are those who have been persecuted for the sake of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

11 "Blessed are you when people insult you and persecute you, and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of Me. 12 "Rejoice and be glad, for your reward in heaven is great; for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you.

Replace the word blessed with the word happy for that is what blessed means. If you want to be truly happy … there is work to do, not the theme of don’t worry, be happy. It does not work that way. Seek the Lord. You will find happiness.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith February 2, 2025

Notes of Faith February 2, 2025

Safe Place: Face Your Fears

Two Equals One

by Jimmy & Irene Rollins

Longevity requires navigating life’s seasons together.

We as human beings have a universal fear of change, but where does that fear come from? These transitions in life change us, but why do we so readily assume the worst? In our experience this has most often been a result of our differences. Differences in communication style, differences in needs, differences in our upbringings — they can cause tension whenever it seems the rules have changed or another element has been introduced, and now there’s some insecurity.

Often our fears are rational; they come from something we experienced in our past that we don’t want to experience again.

Maybe your parenting styles differ and you’re afraid of causing your children the same trauma you experienced in your childhood. Instead of working together to find balance, you make your spouse the villain and fight each other.

Maybe a change in job was the beginning of the end of your parents’ marriage, and now you don’t want your spouse getting that promotion. Your spouse doesn’t understand the source of your fear, so it just seems like you don’t support their dreams.

Whatever the fear is, love requires us to face it. Only then can we build on our marriage and grow together.

There is a tendency to assume we know best. There’s a sense of security in a “known way” of doing things. No matter how much we love one another, it’s often altogether too tempting to hold on to our way — to being the one who is “right.” The irony is that we have often overanalyzed the other’s methods but never even considered why ours are so important to us. There was a certain group of people in Scripture who held on to their way of doing things without consideration for a new way. Jesus talked directly to them on a number of occasions — they were known as the Pharisees. Jesus told them,

Speaking of blindness: Why do you focus on the speck in your brother’s eye? Why don’t you see the log in your own? — Luke 6:41 The Voice

Love has no fear.

We put our spouse under a magnifying glass, but we’re afraid to look in the mirror. We need to confront our fear and contain it. Before we determine that our spouse’s way of doing things is wrong, we need to evaluate our way: Where does this fear come from? Why is it so important to me to do this my way? Often you will be able to trace your fear to a specific origin. Don’t keep this information to yourself — make your spouse aware of your feelings. This is all part of owning your emotions — it’s something we call “extreme ownership.”

Some may say they don’t want to change or they look at changing as a person as a negative thing, but change is required for positive things such as learning and growing. By definition, we can’t improve if we stay the same.

Remember: Love has no fear. And Scripture tells us that love “rejoices with the truth” (1 Corinthians 13:6). Love also does not judge, and it is not arrogant. Which means that when our spouse expresses their opinion or way of doing things, we don’t assume a position of superiority. Love should compel us to consider their approach and their feelings. What naturally results is a melding or unification of methods. The two become one, stronger through each new transition.

Excerpted with permission from Two Equals One: A Marriage Equation for Love, Laughter, and Longevity by Jimmy and Irene Rollins, copyright Jimmy Rollins and Irene Rollins.

There are many truths and commands in Scripture that are hard to live out in our fallen nature. We are okay with some but others bring out our selfishness and desire for mine, mine, mine, or me, me, me. I have said this before, but I believe that true love requires sacrifice and in many instances much sacrifice. Let us seek to follow God’s Word to the letter and be a great sacrificial lover of others.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith February 1, 2025

Notes of Faith February 1, 2025

The Four Loves: Agape—Our Love for God

We love Him because He first loved us.

1 John 4:19

The New Testament was originally penned in Greek, and there are four different Greek words translated love. The word agape represents the essence of divine love—God’s own special love. It’s the love God has for us and the kind of love He gives us for Himself and others.

Osborne Gordon, a nineteenth-century British pastor, said, “There is no soul so pure and heavenly that it can throw back upon God all that love which He lavishes upon us. God loves us infinitely more than it is possible for us to love Him; but whatever feeble flame of love is kindled in our hearts and goes up as a sacrifice to Him, we are only giving Him of His own.”

That’s a good description of agape. The greatest command within Scripture is to love the Lord our God with all our heart, mind, and soul (Matthew 22:37). It’s the Lord Himself who gives us the agape that allows us to do that. Let His love set your heart on fire, and return it like sparks flying upward to Him.

Our love of [God] is nothing more than His love to us, reflected back upon Him, the source of love.

Osborne Gordon

1 John 4:7-12

7 Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God; and everyone who loves is born of God and knows God. 8 The one who does not love does not know God, for God is love. 9 By this the love of God was manifested in us, that God has sent His only begotten Son into the world so that we might live through Him. 10 In this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins. 11 Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another. 12 No one has seen God at any time; if we love one another, God abides in us, and His love is perfected in us.

I have learned of love in sacrifice and try to teach others to see an expression of their love through sacrifice for another. God’s greatest love for us was His greatest sacrifice in sending His Son into the world to die for us. Love is expressed in many ways as is given to us in 1 Corinthians chapter 13…

1 Cor 13:4-8

4 Love is patient, love is kind and is not jealous; love does not brag and is not arrogant, 5 does not act unbecomingly; it does not seek its own, is not provoked, does not take into account a wrong suffered, 6 does not rejoice in unrighteousness, but rejoices with the truth; 7 bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. 8 Love never fails

Let us strive to be more like the character of God in our love.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 31, 2025

Notes of Faith January 31, 2025

Diligently

And you must commit yourselves wholeheartedly to these commands that I am giving you today. Repeat them again and again to your children. Talk about them when you are at home and when you are on the road, when you are going to bed and when you are getting up.

Deuteronomy 6:6-7, NLT

“Let me show you this Bible verse I found today!”

That simple statement—or one like it—may be the single most effective tool for training our children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. It’s personal, conversational, Scripture-based, and meaningful. We’re to be personally committed to reading God’s Word, and as we uncover its great truths, we should share them with our children, at home or on the road, when getting up or going to bed.

This doesn’t require a Bible college education or a seminary degree. It’s not just for ministers and missionaries. It’s the great privilege of every parent and grandparent to share from the overflow of our hearts and minds.

To return to the Scriptures, we must all take responsibility for our family’s spiritual and emotional health and well-being. Decide today to strengthen your family through the study of God’s Word.

When we help the younger generation to love, serve, and honor God, we…welcome the blessings of God into generations to follow.

Pastor Allen Jackson

Prov 3:5-6

5 Trust in the Lord with all your heart

And do not lean on your own understanding.

6 In all your ways acknowledge Him,

And He will make your paths straight.

Ps 1:1-3

1 How blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked,

Nor stand in the path of sinners,

Nor sit in the seat of scoffers!

2 But his delight is in the law of the Lord,

And in His law he meditates day and night.

3 He will be like a tree firmly planted by streams of water,

Which yields its fruit in its season

And its leaf does not wither;

And in whatever he does, he prospers.

Being in the Word of God every day will make your day better and those that you interact with throughout the day because you did. The Holy Spirit will bring Scriptures to your mind that you may use them for your benefit and the benefit of those around you. May you be blessed by the Word you read and meditate on today!

Pastor Dale