Notes of Faith February 15, 2025

Notes of Faith February 15, 2025

The Four Loves: Storge—Our Love for Family

Be kindly affectionate to one another with brotherly love, in honor giving preference to one another.

Romans 12:10

The Barna Group found that 73% of all U.S. parents are concerned about their children’s spiritual well-being. This wasn’t just a survey of Christian parents. Nearly three-fourths of all American parents harbor concern about the spiritual health of their youngsters.1 The Lord invented the family unit in the Garden of Eden, and even nonbelievers long for their children to have healthy souls.

That’s why we need the kind of family love conveyed by the Greek word storge, which describes the love family members have for each other. The Enhanced Strong’s Lexicon defines it as “cherishing one’s kindred, especially parents or children; the mutual love of parents and children and wives and husbands; love, affection.”

This word is found as part of a compound term in Romans 12:10, translated “kindly affectionate.” What can you do to enhance the well-being of members of your family? Sometimes we treat total strangers more politely than we deal with those in our own home. Love begins under our roof. Let’s find a fresh way of practicing it today.

In a grace-filled Christian home, there is salvation. There is forgiveness. There is hope. There is genuine happiness. There is purpose there.

Robert Wolgemuth

“How Concerned Are Christian Parents About Their Children’s Faith Formation?” Barna, March 30, 2022.

Rom 12:9-16

9 Let love be without hypocrisy. Abhor what is evil; cling to what is good. 10 Be devoted to one another in brotherly love; give preference to one another in honor; 11 not lagging behind in diligence, fervent in spirit, serving the Lord; 12 rejoicing in hope, persevering in tribulation, devoted to prayer, 13 contributing to the needs of the saints, practicing hospitality.

14 Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse. 15 Rejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who weep. 16 Be of the same mind toward one another; do not be haughty in mind, but associate with the lowly. Do not be wise in your own estimation.

Our love is a learning experience, but it should be like God’s love for us. We need to read the Scriptures and discern how God loves so that we can imitate His character. The more we study and learn the ways of Jesus, the more we will become like Him. Lord, help us learn to love everyone the way that You do.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith February 14, 2025

Notes of Faith February 14, 2025

Healthiest Food on Earth

Your words were found, and I ate them, and Your word was to me the joy and rejoicing of my heart; for I am called by Your name, O Lord God of hosts.

Jeremiah 15:16

Researchers at William Paterson University in New Jersey examined 41 types of healthy fruits and vegetables and came up with what they called “the healthiest food in the world.” The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention agreed. It’s watercress.1 Who would have thought?

There’s no question about the healthiest food for the mind. It’s the manna of God’s Word. For the prophet Jeremiah, it was survival food. He said, “When I discovered your words, I devoured them. They are my joy and my heart’s delight, for I bear your name, O Lord God of Heaven’s Armies” (Jeremiah 15:16, NLT).

Spiritual hunger is a requirement for growth. That hunger spurs us on to discipleship and walking with God. We need the constant intake of Scripture for our inner nutrition. Ask the Lord today to ignite that hunger within you; then find God’s words and devour them. They will strengthen you with joy and rejoicing.

The Bible is like food for the inner person. It is milk (1 Peter 2:2), solid food (Hebrews 5:11-14), bread (Matthew 4:4), and honey (Psalm 19:9-10).

Warren Wiersbe

Happy Valentine’s Day! The best food is spiritual food. Eating of the Word of God is satisfying, beyond an earthly healthy, because it is eternal and has eternal rewards if followed. Eat this food every day and obey the truth it proclaims and you will live a most happy, healthy spiritual life! Let’s dig in right now…

Heb 5:11-14

11 Concerning him (Jesus) we have much to say, and it is hard to explain, since you have become dull of hearing. 12 For though by this time you ought to be teachers, you have need again for someone to teach you the elementary principles of the oracles of God, and you have come to need milk and not solid food. 13 For everyone who partakes only of milk is not accustomed to the word of righteousness, for he is an infant. 14 But solid food is for the mature, who because of practice have their senses trained to discern good and evil.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith February 13, 2025

Notes of Faith February 13, 2025

How to Be Filled

Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.

Matthew 5:6

It is not necessary to remind newborns that it is time to eat. Newborns don’t know much, but they know when they’re hungry! And adults know the same thing. Yes, at times we may be so busy that we forget to eat when we should, but our body soon reminds us. When we are physically hungry, we know only one solution: food.

But the same is not true with spiritual hunger. We may think we can satisfy spiritual hunger with materialism, advancement, entertainment, or other worldly intake. But spiritual hunger—lack of purpose, identity, meaning, or fulfillment—can only be satisfied by taking in more of God. It was Blaise Pascal who said, in essence, that there is a God-shaped vacuum in the heart of every person that can only be filled by God. Just as there is a “food-shaped vacuum” in the human stomach that can only be filled by food, so God is the only Bread of Life that can satisfy our spiritual hunger.

Jesus said that those who hunger for the righteousness of God will be blessed by the fullness of His presence. Satisfy your spiritual hunger for Him today.

They who do not thirst for righteousness shall be in perpetual hunger and thirst.

Thomas Watson

God is doing the work He promises in all who are called and believe. This is one hunger that I never want satisfied!

John 6:48-51

48 "I am the bread of life. 49 "Your fathers ate the manna in the wilderness, and they died. 50 "This is the bread which comes down out of heaven, so that one may eat of it and not die. 51 "I am the living bread that came down out of heaven; if anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever; and the bread also which I will give for the life of the world is My flesh."

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith February 12, 2025

Notes of Faith February 12, 2025

Being Teachable

Therefore lay aside all filthiness and overflow of wickedness, and receive with meekness the implanted word, which is able to save your souls.

James 1:21

Prior to his encounter with Jesus Christ, no one would have mistaken Saul of Tarsus, who became the apostle Paul, for a meek or humble person. His focus in life was his personal advancement as a Pharisee in Judaism (Philippians 3:4-6). He was not teachable; his heart and mind were closed to the Gospel.

Ps 119:9-16

9 How can a young man keep his way pure?

By keeping it according to Your word.

10 With all my heart I have sought You;

Do not let me wander from Your commandments.

11 Your word I have treasured in my heart,

That I may not sin against You.

12 Blessed are You, O Lord;

Teach me Your statutes.

13 With my lips I have told of

All the ordinances of Your mouth.

14 I have rejoiced in the way of Your testimonies,

As much as in all riches.

15 I will meditate on Your precepts

And regard Your ways.

16 I shall delight in Your statutes;

I shall not forget Your word.

Nicodemus was also a Pharisee, a “ruler of the Jews” (John 3:1), but he had a teachable heart. He met with Jesus at night to try to understand who Jesus was. He was not too proud to ask questions and consider that perhaps his understanding was limited. In fact, he accompanied Joseph of Arimathea to bury Jesus after the crucifixion (John 19:38-42). One of the marks of humility (meekness) is a teachable spirit, a willingness to learn from God and from others who know Him well. The psalmist prayed, “Open my eyes, that I may see wondrous things from Your law” (Psalm 119:18).

A good way to practice meekness before the Lord is to pray that prayer when you open God’s Word. Ask Him to show you more of Himself and how to conform your life to His will.

Meekness is having a teachable spirit.

Ronald Dunn

I’ve heard about the woman (or man) that married a spouse named “Always Right.” Even when they are wrong, they are Right. Well, we know how that turns out. In the things of the world it has proven in my experience that I should always be teachable, able to listen and learn. Spiritually, if you do not have a teachable Spirit, you will not mature in faith and grow to be more and more like Jesus. Being “Always Right” is reserved for God. Only He is perfect, holy, and righteous. Let us endeavor to be meek, humble, and teachable, that God might use us for His glory each day that He gives us.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith February 11, 2025

Notes of Faith February 11, 2025

Meekness Is Not Weakness

Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.

Matthew 5:5

Caspar Milquetoast was a cartoon character created in 1924 by the comic strip writer H. T. Webster. The character was named after a bland food called milk toast which was eaten by people with weak stomachs. Caspar was portrayed as timid and ineffectual in his dealings with others. Since then, milquetoast has described a timid, insipid, bland, or feeble person.

Sadly, but understandably, the word meek came to be associated with weakness and timidity. This wasn’t helped by the King James Version’s translation of Numbers 12:3: “Now the man Moses was very meek, above all the men which were upon the face of the earth.” Moses was anything but weak and timid, and all modern translations of that verse use the word “humble” instead of “meek” to describe Moses. Humility is a positive trait of strength, not weakness. Humility means fearing the Lord and accepting His will for one’s life. Thus, Jesus praised the meek in the true sense of the word—those who live in submission to God and are blessed.

Meekness is not weakness; it takes spiritual strength to obey and serve God. And the blessing is to inherit His coming Kingdom on earth and for eternity.

Meekness is the mark of a man who has been mastered by God.

Geoffrey B. Wilson

If you believe and trust in the Word of God, that, “the meek shall inherit the earth,” this certainly does not sound like the weak, milquetoast person is going to be rewarded by God. Maybe submission is another one of those words that needs more careful study. We submit to the person and authority of God in meekness and awe. This allows us to live a life of power and authority in His name and will. Let us pursue a life and character of being “meek.” Then we are able to receive such a blessing and reward from God!

Ps 37:7-11

7 Be still before the Lord and wait patiently for him;

fret not yourself over the one who prospers in his way,

over the man who carries out evil devices!

8 Refrain from anger, and forsake wrath!

Fret not yourself; it tends only to evil.

9 For the evildoers shall be cut off,

but those who wait for the Lord shall inherit the land.

10 In just a little while, the wicked will be no more;

though you look carefully at his place, he will not be there.

11 But the meek shall inherit the land

and delight themselves in abundant peace

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith February 10, 2025

Notes of Faith February 10, 2025

Promise of Comfort

If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.

2 Chronicles 7:14

On March 30, 1863, when the United States was being torn by the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln called on Americans to “confess their sins and transgressions in humble sorrow, yet with assured hope that genuine repentance will lead to mercy and pardon.” Lincoln assured the people that the “cry of the nation will be heard on high and answered with blessings.”

The President didn’t quote Matthew 5:4 in his proclamation, but his words were consistent with Jesus’ teaching in the Beatitudes that those who mourn will be comforted. Mourning over what? Jesus no doubt had Israel’s national sins in mind as well as those who mourn over their personal sins. And the comfort of which He spoke surely included forgiveness and restoration. The Old Testament promised forgiveness and comfort at both levels—nationally (2 Chronicles 7:14) and personally (Isaiah 1:18). And the apostle Paul wrote about the results of godly sorrow over sin (2 Corinthians 7:9-10).

If you are mourning today over sin at any level, take heart. God promises to comfort all who mourn with godly sorrow.

Earth has no sorrow that heaven cannot heal.

Thomas V. Moore

2 Cor 7:10

the sorrow that is according to the will of God produces a repentance without regret, leading to salvation, but the sorrow of the world produces death.

Rev 21:3-6

And I heard a loud voice from the throne, saying, "Behold, the tabernacle of God is among men, and He will dwell among them, and they shall be His people, and God Himself will be among them, 4 and He will wipe away every tear from their eyes; and there will no longer be any death (or sin which caused death); there will no longer be any mourning, or crying, or pain; the first things have passed away."

5 And He who sits on the throne said, "Behold, I am making all things new." And He said, "Write, for these words are faithful and true."

There is coming a day when believers in and followers of Jesus will not be able to sin! Sin will no longer be possible! Only God has the power to end the corruption of sin. Praise Him that He will make all things new. May it come soon!

Pastor Dale

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