Notes of Faith September 18, 2025

Notes of Faith September 18, 2025

Tapestry of Usefulness

So please, my lord, let me stay here as a slave instead of the boy, and let the boy return with his brothers.

Genesis 44:33, NLT

Violet Liddle felt God calling her to missions, yet the doors didn’t open. Instead she became a maid. She worked for the likes of George Bernard Shaw and Winston Churchill, living out her Christian testimony. When she later worked for revival groups in England, she said, “It must seem as though my life has been made up of lots of bits and pieces… but I can see how all the different experiences have added up and prepared me for what was to come next.”

That was true for Joseph, wasn’t it? All his experiences prepared him for his role as prime minister. But the same was also true for his brother Judah, who had sold Joseph into slavery. Years later, he was broken over his sin and offered himself as a prisoner. God used it to unite his family.

Everything that happens to us—even our failures and confessed sins—will somehow work for God in His timing. Thank the Lord for all your experiences, which He weaves into a tapestry of usefulness.

God leads His children step by step. I knew that was true.

Violet Liddle

John 13:7

Jesus answered and said to him, "What I do you do not realize now, but you will understand hereafter."

So much that happens to us we do not understand at the time, but nothing takes God by surprise!

Rom 8:28-30

28 And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose. 29 For those whom He foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brethren; 30 and these whom He predestined, He also called; and these whom He called, He also justified; and these whom He justified, He also glorified.

I could not share just verse 28…for the end of what God is doing in you and in me is to bring us to glory…His glory, the glory He places within us for all eternity. This is cause for shouting praise, singing and dancing, giving thanks and worshipping the God of all glory!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 17, 2025

Notes of Faith September 17, 2025

Undeserved Pardon

When Joseph saw Benjamin with [his brothers], he said to the steward of his house, “Take these men to my home, and slaughter an animal and make ready; for these men will dine with me at noon.”

Genesis 43:16

Two important theological words often get used interchangeably—grace and mercy. But they are different, as evidenced by their use in the same sentences in the New Testament (1 Timothy 1:2; 2 Timothy 1:2; Titus 1:4). Grace is receiving something good that we do not deserve, while mercy is being spared something bad that we do deserve.

When Jacob prepared his sons to return to Egypt to get food for their family, he hoped that “the man”—meaning Joseph—would grant them mercy (Genesis 43:14). That is, that they would be spared the wrath of the Egyptian official for apparently stealing his silver in their previous trip to Egypt. For more than one reason, Joseph’s brothers deserved judgment. But when they returned to Egypt, instead of judgment they were shown mercy. Joseph prepared a banquet for them to celebrate their return. They were spared judgment (mercy) but were shown an undeserved welcome (grace).

Thank God for the grace and mercy shown to you and look for opportunities to show them to others.

Every time you draw your breath you suck in mercy.

Thomas Watson

God pours out His grace and mercy upon us every moment of every day. Many do not recognize or refuse to recognize that this grace and mercy come from God alone. Sometimes we miss this truth. But God is faithful and will continue to reveal and declare His existence and presence among His creation! His Word is true and pure. It has, is, and will come to pass. Heaven and earth will pass away but the Word of God stands forever! Pray that your sphere of influence might know the true God, have intimate relationship with Him and receive His full grace and mercy entering the eternal kingdom of Jesus, our Savior and Redeemer!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 16, 2025

Notes of Faith September 16, 2025

How to Forget

And Joseph gave [his brothers] carts, according to the command of Pharaoh, and he gave them provisions for the journey.

Genesis 45:21

Why haven’t you forgotten your home address? Why haven’t you forgotten your phone number? By contrast, why have you forgotten most of the things that have happened in your life? We remember those things that we think about often and forget those things we ignore.

Joseph could have been a bitter man based on all the things that had been done to him—especially by his brothers. But when he was reunited with them, he not only forgave them, but he also acted as if they had never harmed him in the first place. And that is the evidence for forgiving and forgetting—acting as if the harm had never occurred. When it came time to bring his father’s family from Canaan to Egypt, he did everything possible to meet their needs. He treated his brothers as if they had never done anything ill towards him. We may never literally forget an injury done to us, but if we have truly forgiven, we will act as if it never occurred.

If there is someone you have forgiven but not forgotten, ask God for grace to act as if the injury had never happened.

God does not wish us to remember what He is willing to forget.

George A. Buttrick

Eph 4:32

32 Be kind to one another, tender-hearted, forgiving each other, just as God in Christ also has forgiven you.

Matt 6:14-15

14 "For if you forgive others for their transgressions, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. 15 "But if you do not forgive others, then your Father will not forgive your transgressions.

Some of us might say, “I don’t have a problem forgetting, I have trouble remembering.” And yet when we need to forgive and forget we seem to remember very well that which we need to forget! Love covers a multitude of sins. Isn’t this what Joseph did in forgiveness and forgetting by providing for his family, going beyond just meeting their needs. God, through Joseph loved. Let us learn to love more and more in this selfish world that looks for things to hate. God is love! May the fruit of the Spirit overflow from us to influence those around us! Let love abound!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 15, 2025

Notes of Faith September 15, 2025

Real Repentance

Moreover [Joseph] kissed all his brothers and wept over them, and after that his brothers talked with him.

Genesis 45:15

Occasionally we will see in the news a public figure making an apology for a misdeed of words or actions. It is sometimes hard to tell whether the apology is genuine or is a response to having been found out. While it is not our place to judge the sincerity of an apology, the Bible speaks of “godly sorrow” that produces genuine repentance (2 Corinthians 7:10).

Joseph’s brothers had lived for decades with guilty consciences over selling Joseph into slavery and lying to their father about his fate. They no doubt assumed that Joseph had perished in Egypt. But when they discovered he was the second-most powerful ruler in the land, they were shocked, not to mention ashamed and embarrassed in his presence. When Joseph revealed himself to them, they had a tearful reunion: “And after that his brothers talked with him.” That must have been a conversation filled with confession and repentance and the desire for forgiveness, which was no doubt granted by Joseph.

If you need to seek forgiveness, make sure it is accompanied by godly sorrow that leads to repentance.

Real repentance produces confession and forsaking of sin.

Vance Havner

Confession of sin and repentance comes before saving faith. Many may say that they believe in Jesus but have an unrepentant heart. These are the ones that Jesus says, “I never knew you.” If you truly KNOW the Lord Jesus, you will have a repentant heart the rest of your life, seeking His righteousness, His holiness, His perfection, until you are taken to be with Him, forever! John the Baptist preached repentance from sin. The first messages of Jesus were to repent from sin. Let us fight the good fight of faith against the sin that wages war in our heart. Ask God for His mighty power to overcome the temptations and strongholds that keep us chained as prisoners to sin. Trust His grace and mercy to bring you through daily battles, not to come out unscathed, but stronger in faith and in Christ, able to win the war. May you experience victory in the tribulation you face today!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 14, 2025

Notes of Faith September 14, 2025

Jesus Under Pressure

If you’ve ever had a day in which you’ve been blitzkrieged by demands... if you’ve ever ridden the roller coaster of sorrow and celebration... if you’ve ever wondered if God in heaven can relate to you on earth, then take heart.

Jesus knows how you feel.

In the Gospels, we read of a time when Jesus began the morning by hearing about the death of John the Baptist: His cousin, His forerunner, His coworker, His friend (see Matthew 14:1–13). The man who came closer to understanding Jesus than any other was dead.

Imagine losing the one person who knows you better than anyone else, and you will feel what Jesus was feeling. Reflect on the horror of being told that your dearest friend has just been murdered, and you will relate to Jesus’ sorrow. Consider your reaction if you were told that your best friend had just been decapitated by a people-pleasing, incestuous monarch, and you’ll see how the day began for Christ. His world was beginning to turn upside down.

The emissaries brought more than news of sorrow, however; they brought a warning: The same Herod who took John’s head is interested in Yours.

Listen to how Luke presents the monarch’s madness:

Herod said, ‘I beheaded John. Who, then, is this I hear such things about?’ And he tried to see Him. — Luke 9:9, emphasis added

Something tells me that Herod wanted more than a social visit.

So, with John’s life taken and His own life threatened, Jesus chose to get away for a while. But before He could get away, His disciples arrived. Mark states that the

apostles gathered around Jesus and reported to Him all they had done and taught. — Mark 6:30

They returned exuberant. Jesus had commissioned them to proclaim the gospel and authenticate it with miracles.

They went out and preached that people should repent. They drove out many demons and anointed many sick people with oil and healed them. — Mark 6:12–13

In a matter of moments, Jesus’ heart went from the pace of a funeral dirge to the triumphant march of a ticker-tape parade.

Look who followed the disciples to locate Jesus. About five thousand men plus women and children (see Matthew 14:21)! Rivers of people cascaded out of the hills and villages. Some scholars estimate the crowd was as high as twenty-five thousand.6 They swarmed around Jesus, each with one desire: to meet the Man who had empowered the disciples.

What had been a calm morning now buzzed with activity.

So many people were coming and going that they did not even have a chance to eat. — Mark 6:31

I’ve had people demand my attention. I know what it’s like to have a half-dozen kids wanting different things at the same time. I know the feeling of receiving one call with other people waiting impatiently on other lines. I even know what it’s like to be encircled by a dozen or so people, each making a separate request.

But twenty-five thousand? That’s larger than many cities! No wonder the disciples couldn’t eat. I’m surprised they could breathe!

The morning had been a jungle trail of the unexpected. First, Jesus grieved over the death of a dear friend and relative. Then His life was threatened by Herod. Next, He celebrated the triumphant return of His followers. Then He was nearly suffocated by a brouhaha of humanity. Bereavement... jeopardy... jubilation... bedlam.

Jesus knows how you feel.

Are you beginning to see why I call this the second most stressful day in the life of Christ? And it’s far from over. Jesus decided to take the disciples to a quiet place where they could rest and reflect. He shouted a command over the noise of the crowd:

Come with Me by yourselves to a quiet place and get some rest. — Mark 6:31

The thirteen fought their way to the beach and climbed into a boat.

Who would question Jesus’ desire to get away from the people? He just needed a few hours alone. Just a respite. Just a retreat. Time to pray. Time to ponder. Time to weep. A time without crowds or demands. A campfire wreathed with friends. An evening with those He loved. The people could wait until tomorrow.

The people, however, had other ideas.

The crowds learned about it and followed Him. — Luke 9:11

It’s a six-mile walk around the northeastern corner of the Sea of Galilee, so the crowd took a hike. When Jesus got to Bethsaida, his desired retreat had become a roaring arena. “Surprise!”

Add to the list of sorrow, peril, excitement, and bedlam the word interruption. Jesus’ plans were interrupted. What He had in mind for His day and what the people had in mind for His day were two different agendas. What Jesus sought and what Jesus got were not the same.

Sound familiar? Remember when you sought a night’s rest and got a colicky baby? Remember when you sought to catch up at the office and got even further behind? Remember when you sought to use your Saturday for leisure but ended up fixing your neighbor’s sink?

Take comfort, friend. It happened to Jesus, too. In fact, this would be a good time to pause and digest this important truth:

Jesus knows how you feel.

Ponder this and use it the next time your world goes from calm to chaos. His pulse has raced. His eyes have grown weary. His heart has grown heavy. He has had to climb out of bed with a sore throat. He has been kept awake late and has gotten up early. He knows how you feel.

You may have trouble believing that. You probably believe that Jesus knows what it means to endure heavy-duty tragedies. You are no doubt convinced that Jesus is acquainted with sorrow and has wrestled with fear. Most people accept that. But can God relate to the hassles and headaches of my life? Of your life?

For some reason, that is harder to believe. Perhaps that is why portions of this day are recorded in all the Gospel accounts. No other event, other than the crucifixion, is told by all four Gospel writers. Not Jesus’ baptism. Not His temptation. Not even His birth. But all four writers chronicle this day.

It’s as if Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John knew that you would wonder if God understands. And they proclaim their response in four-part harmony: Jesus knows how you feel.

Jesus knows how it feels to endure through stress-filled days.

Jesus faced many interruptions and demands on his time.

Jesus can relate to the hassles and headaches of your life.

Jesus can help you get through your angst-ridden days.

Excerpted from Experiencing the Heart of Jesus for 52 Weeks by Max Lucado, copyright Max Lucado.

John 14:27-28

27 "Peace I leave with you; My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Do not let your heart be troubled, nor let it be fearful.

NASU

Jesus spoke these words that we might have His peace, know true peace, eternal peace!

John 16:33

33 "These things I have spoken to you, so that in Me you may have peace. In the world you have tribulation, but take courage; I have overcome the world."

NASU

If you follow Him, you will truly follow Jesus to a resurrected, pure, holy, eternal life. May you have His peace today, enduring, even thriving through the troubles of this world!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 13, 2025

Notes of Faith September 13, 2025

When Fishermen Don't Fish

They were like sheep without a shepherd. So He began teaching them many things.

When Jesus landed and saw a large crowd, He had compassion on them and healed their sick.

It’s a good thing those verses weren’t written about me. It’s a good thing thousands of people weren’t depending on Max for their teaching and nourishment. Especially on a day when I’d just heard of the death of a dear friend. Especially on a day when I wanted to be alone with my friends. Especially after I’d gotten into a boat to escape the crowds. Had that been me in Jesus’ sandals on that Bethsaida beach, the verses would read something like:

They were like sheep without a shepherd. So Max told them to quit grazing on his pasture and to head back to their pens.

When Max landed and saw a large crowd, he mumbled something about how hard it was to get a day off and radioed for the helicopter. Then he and the disciples escaped to a private retreat.

It’s a good thing I wasn’t responsible for those people. I would have been in no mood to teach them, no mood to help them. I would have had no desire even to be with them.

But, as I think about it, Jesus had no desire to be with them either. After all, He did leave them, didn’t He? He had every intention of getting away and being alone. So what happened? Why didn’t He tell them to get lost? What made Him change His mind and spend the day with the people He was trying to avoid?

Answer? Take a look at five words in Matthew 14:14:

He had compassion on them.

The Greek word used for compassion in this passage is splanchnizomai, which won’t mean much to you unless you are in the health professions and studied “splanchnology” in school. If so, you remember that “splanchnology” is a study of the visceral parts. Or, in contemporary jargon, a study of the gut.

When Matthew writes that Jesus had compassion on the people, he is not saying that Jesus felt casual pity for them. No, the term is far more graphic. Matthew is saying that Jesus felt their hurt in His gut:

He felt the limp of the crippled.

He felt the hurt of the diseased.

He felt the loneliness of the leper.

He felt the embarrassment of the sinful.

And once He felt their hurts, He couldn’t help but heal their hurts. He was moved in the stomach by their needs. He was so touched by their needs that He forgot His own needs.

He was so moved by the people’s hurts that He put His hurts on the back burner.

Maybe that’s why God brings hurting people into your world, too. All solitude and no service equals selfishness. Some solitude and some service, however, equals perspective.

Here’s a story to illustrate my point.

When I was in high school, our family used to fish every year during spring break. One year my brother and my mom couldn’t go, so my dad let me invite a friend. I asked Mark. He was a good pal and a great sport. He got permission from his parents, and we began planning our trip.

Days before leaving, we could already anticipate the vacation. We could feel the sun warming our bodies as we floated in the boat. We could feel the yank of the rod and hear the spin of the reel as we wrestled the white bass into the boat. And we could smell the fish frying in an open skillet over an open fire.

We could hardly wait. Days passed like cold molasses. Finally spring break arrived. We loaded our camper and set out for the lake.

Jesus was so moved by the people’s hurts that He put His hurts on the back burner.

We arrived late at night, unfolded the camper, and went to bed — dreaming of tomorrow’s day in the sun. But during the night, an unseasonably strong norther blew in. It got cold fast! The wind was so strong that we could barely open the camper door the next morning. The sky was gray. The lake was a mountain range of white-topped waves. There was no way we could fish in that weather.

“No problem,” we said. “We’ll spend the day in the camper. After all, we have Monopoly. We have Reader’s Digest. We all know a few jokes. It’s not what we came to do, but we’ll make the best of it and fish tomorrow.”

So, huddled in the camper with a Coleman stove and a Monopoly board, we three fishermen passed the day — indoors. The hours passed slowly, but they did pass. Night finally came, and we crawled into the sleeping bags dreaming of angling.

Were we in for a surprise. The next morning it wasn’t the wind that made the door hard to open, it was the ice!

We tried to be cheerful. “No problem,” we mumbled. “We can play Monopoly... again. We can reread the stories in Reader’s Digest. And surely we know another joke or two.” But as courageous as we tried to be, it was obvious that some of the gray had left the sky and entered our camper.

I began to notice a few things I hadn’t seen before. I noticed that Mark had a few personality flaws. He was a bit too cocky about his opinions. He was easily irritated and constantly edgy. He couldn’t take any constructive criticism. Even though his socks did stink, he didn’t think it was my business to tell him.

“Just looking out for the best interest of my dad’s camper,” I defended, expecting Dad to come to my aid.

But Dad just sat over in the corner, reading. Humph, I thought, where is he when I need him? And then, I began to see Dad in a different light. When I mentioned to him that the eggs were soggy and the toast was burnt, he invited me to try my hand at the portable stove. Touchy, touchy, I said to myself. Nothing like being cooped up in a camper with someone to help you see his real nature.

It was a long day. It was a long, cold night.

When we awoke the next morning to the sound of sleet slapping the canvas, we didn’t even pretend to be cheerful. We were flat-out grumpy. Mark became more of a jerk with each passing moment; I wondered what spell of ignorance I must have been in when I invited him. Dad couldn’t do anything right; I wondered how someone so irritable could have such an even-tempered son. We sat in misery the whole day, our fishing equipment still unpacked.

The next day was even colder. “We’re going home” were my father’s first words. No one objected.

I learned a hard lesson that week. Not about fishing, but about people.

When those who are called to fish don’t fish, they fight.

When energy intended to be used outside is used inside, the result is explosive. Instead of casting nets, we cast stones. Instead of extending helping hands, we point accusing fingers. Instead of being fishers of the lost, we become critics of the saved. Rather than helping the hurting, we hurt the helpers.

The result? Church Scrooges. “Bah humbug” spirituality. Beady eyes searching for warts on others while ignoring the warts on the nose below. Crooked fingers that bypass strengths and point out weaknesses.

Split churches. Poor testimonies. Broken hearts. Legalistic wars.

And, sadly, poor go unfed, confused go uncounseled, and lost go unreached.

When those who are called to fish don’t fish, they fight.

But note the other side of this fish tale:

when those who are called to fish, fish — they flourish!

Nothing handles a case of the gripes like an afternoon service project. Nothing restores perspective better than a visit to a hospital ward. Nothing unites soldiers better than a common task.

Leave soldiers inside the barracks with no time on the front line and see what happens to their attitude. The soldiers will invent things to complain about. Bunks will be too hard. Food will be too cold. Leadership will be too tough. The company will be too stale. Yet place those same soldiers in the trench and let them duck a few bullets, and what was a boring barracks will seem like a haven. The beds will feel great. The food will be almost ideal. The leadership will be courageous. The company will be exciting.

When those who are called to fish, fish — they flourish! Jesus knew that.

When He arrived at Bethsaida, He was sorrowful, tired, and anxious to be alone with the disciples. No one would have blamed Him had He dismissed the crowds a second time. No one would have criticized Him had He waved away the people. But He didn’t. Later He would. Later He would demand their departure and seek solitude.

But not before He “healed their sick” and taught them “many things.”4 Self was forgotten... others were served... and stress was relieved.

Make a note of that. The next time the challenges “outside” tempt you to shut the door and stay inside, stay long enough to get warm. Then get out.

When those who are called to fish don’t fish, they fight.

Excerpted from In the Eye of the Storm by Max Lucado, copyright Max Lucado.

Have you experienced this? It is easy to complain about others and what we are not doing. Plans change, excitement wanes in the waiting, grumbling, murmuring begins, anger rises, words become arguments. All we wanted to do was get to work and plans had to change! God is in those changes. He is in control of all things. Patience is being taught. Perfect timing is playing out. Wait on the Lord for the fullest of His blessing. We live to please Him, amen!

Prov 3:5-6

5 Trust in the Lord with all your heart;

do not depend on your own understanding.

6 Seek his will in all you do,

and he will show you which path to take.

NLT

Ps 27:11-14

11 Teach me your way, O Lord;

lead me in a straight path

because of my oppressors.

12 Do not turn me over to the desire of my foes,

for false witnesses rise up against me,

breathing out violence.

13 I am still confident of this:

I will see the goodness of the Lord

in the land of the living.

14 Wait for the Lord;

be strong and take heart

and wait for the Lord.

NIV

Let us not fight among ourselves when things do not go as planned, rather let us listen to the heart of God and follow His plan for each day as it comes. There are many ways to fish for hearts in need of a Savior. Let’s be prepared for second and third options to redeem the souls of men!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 12, 2025

Notes of Faith September 12, 2025

Time Will Tell

To everything there is a season, a time for every purpose under heaven.

Ecclesiastes 3:1

God is more patient than we are because He sees us from the perspective of eternity. That’s why Moses wasn’t called to his work until age eighty. That’s why Jesus began His ministry at age thirty. That’s why Abraham’s prayer for a child wasn’t answered until it seemed too late, and that’s why our Lord showed up at the home of Lazarus after the man had died.

God doesn’t work on our timetable. In Genesis, Joseph was enslaved at age seventeen and spent about thirteen years in slavery and prison. Yet during that time, God was preparing him to become one of the most powerful men in the world. If you’re waiting for an answer from God, be patient and remember that God has perfect timing. An anonymous little poem puts it like this:

God has perfect timing; never early, never late.

It takes a little patience and it takes a lot of faith.

But it’s truly, worth the wait!

We shall not grow weary of waiting upon God if we remember how long and how graciously He once waited for us.

Charles Spurgeon

In Galatians chapter 5 we are given the fruit of the Spirit of God. After Love, joy, and peace, we read patience… This fruit is one of the hardest to deploy in our lives. We are impatient from birth, screaming to be fed, cleaned up, and lovingly comforted. We grow up finding more and more things making us impatient. May we mature in Christ Jesus day by day, allowing His Spirit to control our lives, yielding our desires for His perfect will. Thank you heavenly Father for promising to make us like Your Son in His righteousness and holiness. One day we will be made complete and join our Savior and Lord. Until then, let us learn to be patient.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 11, 2025

Notes of Faith September 11, 2025

Remember those who suffered and died 24 years ago in New York city when the twin towers were destroyed. Remember the family of the young and inspiring Charlie Kirk, who was taken from us yesterday. Pray for the Lord Jesus to come and end the evil that is in this world.

Sniffing the Perfume

It is not in me; God will give Pharaoh an answer of peace.

Genesis 41:16

Joseph and Daniel were so alike! Young men exiled from their home who ended up in the palace of pagan rulers who awoke with disturbing dreams. Both young men told the ruler, in effect, “I can do nothing, but I know God, and He can do everything.” It reminds us of the apostle Paul, who said, “Not I, but Christ” (Galatians 2:20, KJV).

For Christians, receiving compliments is a bit of a challenge. We’re to be thankful and gracious to the one talking with us, and we don’t want to ignore, deflect, or devalue their kind comments. At the same time, we don’t want to harbor anything in our hearts that can lead to pride or self-sufficiency. That’s why it’s good to think through our response to applause and tributes. It’s always nice to respond with “Thank you,” “Praise the Lord,” or “You’re so kind and encouraging.” One pastor, whenever complimented for his sermon, simply smiles and says, “I hope it was helpful.” Another says, “Thank you, and thank the Lord!”

A big part of being sociable is learning to accept compliments gratefully while giving God all the glory in our hearts.

When people come up and give me a compliment…I take each remark as if it were a flower. At the end of each day I lift up the bouquet…and say, “Here you are, Lord.”

Corrie Ten Boom

Gen 41:9-16

9 Then the chief cupbearer said to Pharaoh, "Today I am reminded of my shortcomings. 10 Pharaoh was once angry with his servants, and he imprisoned me and the chief baker in the house of the captain of the guard. 11 Each of us had a dream the same night, and each dream had a meaning of its own. 12 Now a young Hebrew was there with us, a servant of the captain of the guard. We told him our dreams, and he interpreted them for us, giving each man the interpretation of his dream. 13 And things turned out exactly as he interpreted them to us: I was restored to my position, and the other man was hanged."

14 So Pharaoh sent for Joseph, and he was quickly brought from the dungeon. When he had shaved and changed his clothes, he came before Pharaoh.

15 Pharaoh said to Joseph, "I had a dream, and no one can interpret it. But I have heard it said of you that when you hear a dream you can interpret it."

16 "I cannot do it," Joseph replied to Pharaoh, "but God will give Pharaoh the answer he desires."

I love the t-shirt that says, “I can’t, but I know a guy”. I hear that kind of reference often when I ask for help about something around the house. It is a very poor way to express the person of Almighty God and yet some might listen to that simple reference and say, Oh yeah…He can do anything! It is God who has made us, who sustains us, who gives us our every breath, heartbeat, and thought. I give God thanks and praise for these thoughts that I send to you each day, for they are given to me to share with you. May you be blessed today by sharing with others what God has given to you that they so deeply need.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 10, 2025

Notes of Faith September 10, 2025

Hope When You Are Distressed by Evil

The hot African sun beat down unmercifully on everything and any- thing at the border between Uganda and Rwanda in the fall of 1994. The Rwandan civil war had ended, amnesty had been offered to the losing side by those now in power, and my brother, Franklin, had just made arrangements for medical services to be given to hundreds of thousands of refugees inside Rwanda.

As Franklin prepared to cross the border, guarded by soldiers who lazily lounged at their posts, passing the time by smoking cigarettes and flicking the ashes onto the sun-parched earth, he noticed a little Rwandan girl. She was seated in the back of a pickup truck, clutching a blanket, rocking back and forth, and quietly singing to herself. In reply to his inquiry, my brother was told she was one of the thousands of children whose parents had been killed during the war. This little girl in particular had seen her family hacked to death with machetes until not one family member was left. She was all alone in the world.

When my brother asked a nearby soldier what she was singing, the soldier shrugged indifferently and said he didn’t know because she was singing in French. A soldier was found who spoke French, and when he was taken to the little girl, he listened casually then said, “She is singing something about God’s love.” My brother asked the soldier to listen more carefully and tell him exactly what she was singing. This time the soldier listened intently then said, “She is singing

‘Jesus loves me, this I know; for the Bible tells me so.’”

The evil actions of others had stripped the little girl of everything except what her parents or missionaries apparently had given her — her faith in Jesus! In a deeply moving way, the little girl was clinging to all she had left in the world, which was her hope in God’s love for her.

Such stories read in the newspaper, such scenes of cruelty observed on televised newscasts, such violence witnessed in our streets and schools and homes could cause any caring person to be deeply distressed over the evil actions of wicked people in our world. I find myself at times avoiding the local and world news because of the outrage I experience at such reports.

But sometimes the evil actions of others become very personal, and we cannot avoid them because they are committed against us or against our loved ones. In such instances, the outrage can become a root of deep-seated anger, hatred, frustration, and bitterness that festers until our lives are filled with distress.

Have you been stripped of everything? Stripped materially, emotionally, financially, socially, intellectually, physically? Stripped of your marriage, your health, your family, your home, your friends, your reputation, your youth? Are your days filled with distress because of the evil actions of others? Does your future look bleak and barren because your present is so bitter?

If you have been stripped of anything — or everything — look up! The vision of His glory gives you and me the same hope for the future as the little Rwandan refugee. What hope did she have for the future? None — except for the hope she had in Jesus.

In Him, each of us has a glorious future — a glorious hope — because one day God will straighten the crooked, right the wrong, humble the proud, judge the wicked, and vindicate the righteous!

Why? Because God is just!

Jesus loves me, this I know;

for the Bible tells me so.

Finding Hope in Knowing God Is Just

The apostle John had just witnessed the dramatic moment for which God’s people yearn — the moment when the Lamb — who is the Lord Jesus Christ — asserted His right to rule the world and fulfill God’s purpose for the human race. At long last, the world would be ruled rightly and justly. The entire universe must have still been reverberating from the thunderous acclamation of the worthiness of Christ when John “watched as the Lamb opened the first of the seven seals” (Revelation 6:1). He watched as the Lamb began to take charge of a wicked world filled with evil actions.

The opening of the first of the seven seals apparently began a time in human history that Jesus described when He said,

For then there will be great distress, unequaled from the beginning of the world until now — and never to be equaled again. If those days had not been cut short, no one would survive, but for the sake of the elect those days will be shortened. — Matthew 24:21–22

The Bible refers to this period of great distress as Jacob’s trouble,1 Daniel’s seventieth week,2 and the tribulation.3 In essence, the tribulation is a seven-year period at the end of human history when God’s wrath is poured out upon the world in response to man’s evil actions.

Because God is just, judgment is coming.

And the principles with which He will judge the world in the future are the same principles with which He judges you and me today.

God Judges with Patience

One of the first principles of judgment that becomes apparent in Revelation 6 is that God judges with patience. John “saw under the altar the souls of those who had been slain because of the word of God and the testimony they had maintained. They called out in a loud voice, ‘How long, Sovereign Lord, holy and true, until you judge the inhabitants of the earth and avenge our blood?’ Then each of them was given a white robe, and they were told to wait a little longer” (Revelation 6:9–11a). God is patient in judgment.

When we read of the sex trafficking of women and children . . .

When we read of a wealthy, famous celebrity charged with sexually assaulting women . . .

When we read of school shootings that claim the lives of innocent children . . .

When we read of young children kidnapped for pornographic purposes . . .

When we read of babies born to be sacrificed in occult practices . . .

When we read of men brutally raping and beating women in front of their children . . .

When we read of a terrorist group invading a peaceful nation, slaughtering hundreds of people, raping and torturing women, burning babies alive in ovens . . .

When we read of murder, extortion, sadism, perversion, cruelty, and blasphemy, we want to scream, “God, holy and true and righteous! How can You stand it? Why do You allow such evil actions to take place? Why don’t You strike such evil people with lightning? Or open up the ground and swallow them? Or just drop them dead in their tracks?”

Have you experienced injustice at the hands of someone else? Have you been the victim of evil actions by someone who seemed to get away with his or her wickedness? Like Jeremiah of old, did you cry out,

You are always righteous, Lord, when I bring a case before you. Yet I would speak with you about your justice: Why does the way of the wicked prosper?

— Jeremiah 12:1

Did you want to say, “If You are loving and good, why don’t You do something about the evil actions of others?”

In the midst of our heated, passionate distress comes the quiet answer:

The Lord is not slow in keeping his promise, as some under- stand slowness. Instead he is patient with you, not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance. — 2 Peter 3:9

God is patient because He understands how long eternity is! He knows that when an unbeliever dies, that person is not only separated from God and barred from Heaven, he or she is condemned to live for all eternity in hell, a place of physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual torment that lasts forever and ever and ever and ever.

And God, who so loved the world that He created it . . .

who so loved man that when he sinned, He planned for his redemption . . .

who so loved the world that He sent His only, beloved Son to be the Redeemer, paying the price of redemption with His own blood. . . .

. . . so loves the world still, even with all of its evil actions, that He is not willing for any to perish! Therefore, He is patient. He withholds His wrath as He seeks all to come to repentance, that they might be saved from the judgment to come! What a magnificent God we worship!

In what way are you aware of God’s patience? Have you misunderstood it, mistaking His patience for tolerance of evil?

See Jeremiah 30:7.

See Daniel 9:24, 27.

Excerpted from The Vision of His Glory by Anne Graham Lotz, copyright Anne Graham Lotz.

God loves His creation and said it was good! Before sin came into the world it was perfect. Even so, God made a way for mankind to be redeemed from the curse of sin, that man might have an eternal relationship with his Creator. God is patient and just. He will judge evil and unbelief. Hell is real. Heaven is real. We will arrive at one of these two destinations in a quick moment of time. Two things mankind is commanded to do… Love God. Love others!

Lord, forgive us for our lack of love. Pour out your Spirit upon us that we might love as You love. Increase our faith and devotion to live righteously, pure and holy before You. May we love the world as You love it, not as those with a fallen heart that love evil. Praise God from whom all blessings flow!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 9, 2025

Notes of Faith September 9, 2025

From Bad to Worse

My problems go from bad to worse. Oh, save me from them all!

Psalm 25:17, NLT

If you feel your problems are going from bad to worse, you have lots of company in the Bible. Joseph went from keeping his father’s sheep, to a cistern, to slavery, and on to an Egyptian prison (Genesis 37–39). In the book of Ruth, Naomi’s situation deteriorated until she called herself Mara, meaning “bitter” (Ruth 1:20). We all know how Job’s problems multiplied (Job 1–2). And the apostle Paul’s third missionary journey led to him being arrested in Jerusalem, stalled for two years in Caesarea, placed aboard a ship headed into a hurricane, shipwrecked, and bitten by a viper (Acts 26–28).

Trials and suffering are the common lot of all humanity, and sometimes things seem to go from bad to worse in our lives. But don’t give up! Look again at all the examples above. Joseph ended up as prime minister of Egypt, Naomi became a beloved grandmother, Job received twice what he had lost, and Paul’s troubles led to the writing of Ephesians, Colossians, Philippians, and Philemon—the Prison Epistles.

Commit your troubles to the Lord. Trust Him. He will save you from them all.

We are all faced with a series of great opportunities brilliantly disguised as impossible situations.

Charles Swindoll

Ps 25:16-21

16 Turn to me and be gracious to me,

For I am lonely and afflicted.

17 The troubles of my heart are enlarged;

Bring me out of my distresses.

18 Look upon my affliction and my trouble,

And forgive all my sins.

19 Look upon my enemies, for they are many,

And they hate me with violent hatred.

20 Guard my soul and deliver me;

Do not let me be ashamed, for I take refuge in You.

21 Let integrity and uprightness preserve me,

For I wait for You.

May we have the trust and faith of Job to wait for God to complete His work in, around, and through us. Though we may face difficult times, Jesus showed us the way to overcome the world…through Him!

Pastor Dale