Notes of Faith April 6, 2025

Notes of Faith April 6, 2025

The Encouraging Truth About Angels

My visitor had no wings, no flowing white robe, but he did seem to have a warm glow. He was affable and empathetic. Intuitively, I knew right away that he was from another realm. Deep inside, I sensed that I was interacting with a celestial being.

The encounter occurred in a dream when I was a youngster. But it wasn’t an ordinary dream; it was more vibrant, more lucid, more real — so much so that today, it’s the only dream I remember from my childhood.

I wasn’t intimidated by the being. We chatted amiably. He told me something I never knew, and the revelation floored me. Essentially, he said that my efforts to be compliant and dutiful — to treat others well, obey my parents, and visit Sunday school on occasion — would never be sufficient to earn my way into Heaven someday. I was stunned and flustered. I didn’t know what to say. This seemed totally counterintuitive.

Then the angel made a prophecy. He said that someday I would understand. In a flash, he disappeared. Sure enough, sixteen years later, as I visited a church at my wife’s behest, I learned that the angel was right. I found out that eternal life is not a reward for good behavior, but rather it is a gift from God that must be received in repentance and faith. The moment I understood the gospel, my mind flashed back to the angel — and I smiled.

Was this an authentic otherworldly encounter, or could it have been just the aftereffects of a spicy snack before bedtime? Personally, I’m convinced it was genuine because of two bits of corroboration: the angel told me something I didn’t know, and he made a prediction that did, indeed, come true nearly two decades later.

I’m far from alone in reporting a possible encounter with an angelic presence. According to one survey,

75 percent of people around the world believe in angels.

More than one out of three of them report having a personal experience with a celestial being — and for 15 percent of them, it happened in a vibrant dream.1

The Bible features about three hundred references to angels, starting just three chapters into Genesis, where God places “angelic sentries” to guard the entrance to Eden after Adam and Eve were banished from it.2 The Bible’s final mention of angels comes in its last chapter, Revelation 22:16, when Jesus says He has “sent My angel to give you this testimony for the churches.”

One of the most significant scenes in Scripture occurs in Revelation 5:11–12, in which the apostle John describes a vision of Jesus in his post-resurrection glory:

Then I looked and heard the voice of many angels, numbering thousands upon thousands, and ten thousand times ten thousand. They encircled the throne and the living creatures and the elders. In a loud voice they were saying:

“Worthy is the Lamb, who was slain, to receive power and wealth and wisdom and strength and honor and glory and praise!”

Just try to picture that. “Ten thousand times ten thousand” means there were 100 million luminous angels crowded around Christ’s throne and pouring out their worship. In fact, Dr. Craig Keener points out that “ten thousand” was the highest numerical figure used in the Greek language at the time,3 which means this phrase “may be John’s way of describing an inexpressibly large company of angels — myriads upon myriads.”4

Fascination with angels has ebbed and flowed over the past two millennia. In the early 1990s, America saw an outbreak of “angel-mania,” with Newsweek saying that “those who see angels, talk to them, put others in touch with them are prized guests on television and radio talk shows.”5 Bestselling books about angels sometimes offered a stew of New Age and even occultic beliefs, often encouraging readers to focus on these celestial beings rather than looking to God Himself.

Since then, the mania over angels has cooled off. According to Gallup, the number of Americans who believe in angels decreased from 79 percent in 2001 to 69 percent in 2023.6 Still, curiosity about angelic beings remains strong, especially when credible people report extraordinary encounters with them.

“He Caught Me”

The story of one such encounter came while I was chatting with theologian Roger Olson from Baylor University about various attitudes that people have toward the supernatural. The Baptist professor began to get nostalgic about his upbringing in a Pentecostal home, where there had been an openhearted expectation of healings and otherworldly experiences.

“I remember one incident where a little boy in our church, probably ten years old, accidentally opened the door and fell out of the family car while it was driving down the road,” he recalled. “When they rushed to pick him up, they thought he would be dead, but instead he was just standing there. They said, ‘What happened?’ He said, ‘Well, didn’t you see the man? He caught me.’”

Olson pulled a handkerchief from his pocket and wiped his eyes. “There’s no doubt in my mind that an angel caught him.”

Billy Graham offered the account of Scottish missionary John G. Paton, whose home in the New Hebrides Islands of the South Pacific was threatened by a hostile mob intent on burning it down killing him and his wife. Paton and his spouse prayed intently all night — and as the sun rose, they were surprised to see that the crowd had dispersed. They thanked God for sparing them.

A year later, the chief of the tribe that had been threatening them became a Christian. One day Paton asked him why they abandoned their plan to attack Paton’s home that night. Replied the chief, “Who were all those men you had with you there?” Said the missionary, “There were no men, just my wife and I.”

The chief insisted there had been hundreds of big men in shining garments and swords drawn, encircling the home.

“Only then,” wrote Graham, “did Mr. Paton realize that God had sent His angels to protect them. The chief agreed that there was no other explanation.”7

Excerpted from Angels and You, a 5-Day devotional written by Lee Strobel for Devotionals Daily featuring content from his new book Seeing the Supernatural.

Angels are certainly real! Demons are angels, and there is no reason not to believe that they exist. There are many in my life experience who have had circumstances that could not be explained but by angelic appearance. I believe that they have entered into my life more than once that I could understand without vocal communication. These were good events, one saving my life, others just an influence pointing me to the grace and goodness of God, but they were there. God provides what we need to establish His will for us.

Speaking of angels…

Heb 1:14

14 Are they not all ministering spirits, sent out to render service for the sake of those who will inherit salvation?

God has enough angels to take care of those whom He loves and has prepared a place for them to live with Him forevermore!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 5, 2025

Notes of Faith April 5, 2025

Spring Into Life: Renewed Patience

Those who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength.

Isaiah 40:31

To renew means to replenish. Almost everything in our human and material realm needs ongoing replenishment. That’s why the word renew is frequently found in Scripture. Psalm 103:5 says, “[God] satisfies your mouth with good things, so that your youth is renewed like the eagle’s.” Isaiah said that those who wait upon the Lord will renew their strength and mount up with wings like eagles.

Notice how the two verses go together. We need to wait on the Lord, trusting His timing to work out our problems. He’s more patient than we are, and He knows how long it will take for circumstances to turn around. As we trust and wait, He satisfies us in other ways; He renews our strength.

Puritan writer William Gurnall wrote, “Hope assures the soul that while God waits to perform one promise, he supplies another. This comfort is enough to quiet the heart of anyone who understands the sweetness of God’s methods.” If you’re weary and worried today, wait on the Lord. He will replenish your strength and inward youthfulness.

There is not one minute when a believer’s soul is left without comfort. There is always some promise standing ready to minister to the Christian until another comes.

William Gurnall

Isa 26:3

Thou willt keep him in perfect peace,

Whose mind is stayed on Thee

Trying to have the perspective of God and eternity brings comfort and peace. I say trying because we cannot know the end from the beginning as God does. But when we trust Him and remember His promises that are yet to come, we can fully trust and be at peace, filled with hope and renewed in spiritual strength!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 4, 2025

Notes of Faith April 4, 2025

Divine Government

Thus says the Lord: “Heaven is My throne, and earth is My footstool.”

Isaiah 66:1

On the first anniversary of the Battle of Lexington—the beginning of the American Revolution—local pastor Jonas Clarke preached a sermon. He spoke eloquently about God’s overruling providence. He said, “Next to the acknowledgement of the existence of a Deity, there is no one principle of greater importance…than…belief of the divine government and…providence…. That God is Governor among the nations, that his government is wise and just, and that all our times and changes are in his hands.”

We are not waiting for God to take control. He’s already in control. When we see the chaos of our world today, we may be tempted to despair. But things are not what they seem.

The same God who governs the galaxies is overseeing the times—and He ordains all our steps too. His throne is in heaven, and earth is His footstool. Give thanks today that Jesus Christ is now and forever the Lord of all.

However dark and mysterious the ways of providence may appear; yet nothing shall overwhelm the mind, or destroy the trust and hope of those, that realize the government of Heaven…that an all wise God is seated on the throne and that all things are well appointed…for them that fear Him.

Jonas Clarke

I am not afraid or distraught or anxious about our government in any way shape or form, for God is in control. He raises up kings and takes them down. And through all of their leading, good or bad, He is working out His perfect plan for His people! I have had cancer and left it in God’s hands. I now have diabetes and have been fighting it for many, many years. I leave that in God’s hands too. God has overwhelmingly blessed me with many of you that are reading this and I am so grateful to Him that you are a part of my life. Friendships in this life may continue for all eternity, provided that you know Jesus as your Lord and Savior as I do. We treasure today, but with God always in control, we have a forever to know and love one another. Again, I am thankful for you and pray that those that I have had little contact with over the years, that God might provide more contact now and in the future. You are deeply appreciated. May you be blessed in trusting God for His provision of life and breath for each day!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 3, 2025

Notes of Faith April 3, 2025

Overwhelming Majesty

And when I saw Him, I fell at His feet as dead. But He laid His right hand on me, saying to me, “Do not be afraid; I am the First and the Last.”

Revelation 1:17

We see it occasionally: Someone collapses to the floor upon hearing sudden and shocking news. But in the Bible, people sometimes had the same reaction but for a different reason: an encounter with the glory and majesty of God.

The prophet Daniel collapsed at the sight of a “certain man” who came from heaven to answer his prayers (Daniel 10:5). Daniel was rendered unconscious, facedown, until the man revived him (Daniel 10:4-10). Likewise, when Saul of Tarsus encountered Christ on the road to Damascus, the glory of the Lord forced him to the ground and rendered him temporarily blind (Acts 9:1-9). When Christ appeared to the apostle John on the isle of Patmos, John “fell at His feet as dead” (Revelation 1:17). Throughout the book of Revelation, the glory and majesty of God are revealed through John’s version of heaven. “Throne,” “king,” “power,” and “authority” are mentioned scores of times.

The book of Revelation may be the closest we come to seeing the majesty of God until we see Him “face to face” (1 Corinthians 13:12). Thank God for how He reveals Himself to us through His Word.

My God, how wonderful Thou art! Thy majesty how bright!

Frederick W. Faber

Rev 1:12-18

12 Then I turned to see the voice that was speaking with me. And having turned I saw seven golden lampstands; 13 and in the middle of the lampstands I saw one like a son of man, clothed in a robe reaching to the feet, and girded across His chest with a golden sash. 14 His head and His hair were white like white wool, like snow; and His eyes were like a flame of fire. 15 His feet were like burnished bronze, when it has been made to glow in a furnace, and His voice was like the sound of many waters. 16 In His right hand He held seven stars, and out of His mouth came a sharp two-edged sword; and His face was like the sun shining in its strength.

17 When I saw Him, I fell at His feet like a dead man. And He placed His right hand on me, saying, "Do not be afraid; I am the first and the last, 18 and the living One; and I was dead, and behold, I am alive forevermore, and I have the keys of death and of Hades.

Majesty

Song by Bill and Gloria Gaither

Majesty, worship his majesty

Unto Jesus be all glory, honor, and praise

Majesty, kingdom authority

Flow from his throne, unto his own, his anthem raise

So exalt, lift up on high the name of Jesus

Magnify, come glorify Christ Jesus, the King

Majesty, worship his majesty

Jesus who died, now glorified, King of all kings

So exalt, lift up on high the name of Jesus

Magnify, come glorify Christ Jesus, the King

Majesty, worship his majesty

Jesus who died, now glorified, King of all kings

Jesus who died, now glorified, King of all kings

We will see His majesty soon…perhaps today!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 2, 2025

Notes of Faith April 2, 2025

Promised Blessings

Blessed is he who reads and those who hear the words of this prophecy, and keep those things which are written in it; for the time is near.

Revelation 1:3

Those starting a career in sales are taught the principle of “features and benefits.” That is, after describing the features of a product, it’s important to convey the benefits the product provides. The principle of “features and benefits” is evident everywhere in commercial advertising.

While the Bible is not selling a product, it clearly notes the benefits that will accrue to those who read it and put its words into practice. This is most clearly seen in the book of Revelation. Both the apostle John and Jesus Christ Himself say that keeping the prophetic words of Revelation will bring blessings to those who read and embrace its words. In other words, Revelation provides its own motivation for reading the book and being guided by what it says. Given the apocalyptic nature of the book, perhaps the Spirit added the promise of blessing as extra motivation for reading this last book of the Bible.

Set a goal to read through Revelation in the coming days and anticipate how God will keep His promise of blessing to you.

Those who would have the blessings of God’s testimonies must come under the bonds of his statutes.

Matthew Henry

Rev 22:6-7

6 And he said to me, "These words are faithful and true"; and the Lord, the God of the spirits of the prophets, sent His angel to show to His bond-servants the things which must soon take place.

7 "And behold, I am coming quickly. Blessed is he who heeds the words of the prophecy of this book."

The entire Word of God, the sixty-six books as originally inspired and written, are faithful and true. We need to read the Scriptures, understand what they say, that we might truly know God, believe in His Son, Jesus the Christ, to be free from our guilt of sin and its penalty of death. True faith is exemplified by God’s giving His Spirit to live within the believer. But no one will know these things without hearing/reading the truth of the Word and the Holy Spirit giving them understanding to be able to believe. God loves His creation. We must respond to His love with reverence, awe, obedience and trust! You will be blessed if you will get in and stay in the Word of God!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith April 1, 2025

Notes of Faith April 1, 2025

No April Fools jokes here!

High Time!

Now it is high time to awake out of sleep; for now our salvation is nearer than when we first believed.

Romans 13:11

Dr. J. Frank Pantridge was a cardiologist at Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast. He knew that people who die from heart attacks often do so within an hour of the attack. So in 1965, Pantridge developed the first portable defibrillator and had it installed in an ambulance. His invention has helped paramedics around the world save many lives.

When it comes to spiritual heart trouble, believers are like God’s paramedics. The Lord has stationed us all over the world to provide the medicine of the Gospel urgently and effectively. We sometimes think there’s lots of time left for us to share the Gospel with someone. But maybe not! We never know when the other person will die, when we ourselves will be called to heaven, or when the Lord Jesus will come for us in the clouds. The brevity of life and the imminent return of Christ should motivate us to share the Gospel whenever and wherever we can, to whomever we can.

Today, look for an opportunity to share the Gospel with someone in need!

The gospel is only good news if it gets there in time.

Carl F. H. Henry

Many times I can agree with what someone says…just not how they say it. For instance, the above quote. The gospel is truly the only good news that everyone needs to hear and respond to, but because of the promises of God, it will always be on time. There is not one who will be damned because you and I do not share the gospel. God will use someone else to take truth to those in need of salvation. But you and I lose tremendous blessing both now and for all eternity if we do not share. We could find a new brother or sister because the hearer of the gospel responds to the call of Christ on their life and heart. Not only will we have blessing in this life but forevermore. These believers and followers of Christ were encouraged and challenged by you to believe and trust in Jesus. God draws them to Himself and uses us to share the good news of salvation that they might repent of their sin and trust Jesus for forgiveness and eternal salvation. There will never be a person that God has chosen from before the foundation of the world that does not come to faith. God’s promises have never and will never fail!

Share the good news! Pray for opportunity today. And pray that they hear and respond with true repentance and faith in Jesus.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 31, 2025

Notes of Faith March 31, 2025

Who? . . . You!

Therefore, since all these things will be dissolved, what manner of persons ought you to be in holy conduct and godliness…?

2 Peter 3:11

When Albert Einstein proposed his theory of relativity, it became an accepted fact that traveling into the future is possible but not into the past. That doesn’t stop Dr. Who. The famous fictional character is the star of the longest running science-fiction television series in the world. He can travel into the past as easily as into the future.

The best way to know the future for certain is to study biblical prophecy. You’ll know more than Dr. Who! God has unfolded a vast amount of information in Daniel, Ezekiel, Zechariah, Matthew 24, 1 and 2 Thessalonians, and Revelation. In fact, the entire Bible is one-fourth prophecy.

God has given us this top-secret information about the future for several reasons—to inform us, to reassure us, to encourage us, and, perhaps most importantly, to spur on our growth in holiness. We want to live in a way that glorifies Him, should He come today. Today, let’s remind ourselves that Jesus may come again before tomorrow’s sun rises and sets. And let’s live accordingly!

The end of creation is that the Creation might glorify [God]. Now what is glorifying God, but a rejoicing at that glory He has displayed?

Jonathan Edwards

2 Peter 3:10-13

10 But the day of the Lord will come like a thief, in which the heavens will pass away with a roar and the elements will be destroyed with intense heat, and the earth and its works will be burned up.

11 Since all these things are to be destroyed in this way, what sort of people ought you to be in holy conduct and godliness, 12 looking for and hastening the coming of the day of God, because of which the heavens will be destroyed by burning, and the elements will melt with intense heat! 13 But according to His promise we are looking for new heavens and a new earth, in which righteousness dwells.

Col 1:16-18

16 For by him all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities—all things were created through him and for him. 17 And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together.

Ultimately, all things will bring glory to God, for He made them, and in Him they exist. We look to the promise of a future glory, living with God eternally, in a place prepared for those He chose before the foundation of the world, who came to Jesus through His gift of faith, sought and found forgiveness of sin and were given a pure and perfect righteousness in Christ. These are the eternal saints of God. I pray that you are among them. Let us always seek, good day or bad, to bring glory to God!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 30, 2025

Notes of Faith March 30, 2025

Her Many and Marvelous Ministries

How Women Give Life to the Church

Article by Scott Hubbard

Managing Editor, Desiring God

Imagine a family that gathers on Sunday nights for a household meeting. They meet often in other ways throughout the week — for meals, devotions, outings. But on Sunday, the father calls everyone together to review the last week, look ahead to the next, and remember their family identity. The whole family takes part in the meeting, but the father clearly leads.

Now imagine that someone observes this meeting and says, “This father leaves no room for his family’s gifts. Why should he always lead the meeting? If his daughters don’t have a more prominent voice here, then where will they use the gifts God has given them?”

To any healthy family, such a question would seem silly. One of the daughters might well respond, “Where will we use our gifts? In any number of places. I play piano for our family devotions. I help prepare meals for my younger brothers. I put together care bags that our family hands out to the homeless. I mentor a middle-school girl from our church. I may not lead our family meetings, but the meeting is just one part of the family.”

You can probably see where I’m going. Every week, our churches gather to look back, look ahead, and remember our identity in Christ. And God has ordained that qualified men, spiritual fathers, lead these meetings. Now, some visitors may wonder why men hold the microphone most of the time; they may even take offense at that pattern. But the weekly gathering is just one part of the church, and much of the most important ministry happens all week.

Ministry Beyond Sunday

To be sure, in some churches, much of the most important ministry does not happen beyond Sunday. The members rarely meet throughout the week; their gifts lie largely dormant Monday through Saturday; they seldom venture forth on mission. In such a church, the person who holds the microphone matters tremendously because most of the ministry happens there.

But even a moderately healthy church is less like a weekly performance and more like a family. We are “the household of God” (1 Timothy 3:15), a fellowship of spiritual fathers, mothers, brothers, and sisters (1 Timothy 5:1–2), able to “exhort one another every day” because we see one another so often (Hebrews 3:13). Ministry happens not just on Sunday mornings and not just in church buildings: it happens on Tuesday afternoons and Thursday nights in homes and parks and cafés and soup kitchens and neighborhood streets.

I have no wish to downplay the crucial importance of the weekly gathering or the preached word. But like a family meeting, the purpose of a church’s gathering is not simply to do ministry but also to equip and send out for ministry during the rest of the week (Ephesians 4:11–12). On Sunday, the church’s fathers take the lead in calling the whole family — women as much as fellow men — to engage in every-day ministry with the gifts God has given them.

And if we aim to grow up into “the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ,” then we need every gift in full operation (Ephesians 4:13). A church can flourish without the gifts of women no more than a family can flourish without the gifts of women (a fact I appreciate more every time I am left alone for a while with my kids).

Church of Many Members

Nevertheless, even in a healthy church, we can sometimes forget that we are an all-of-life fellowship of fathers, mothers, brothers, and sisters. Sunday morning can seem like the time to do ministry. And so we, both men and women, need help remembering what it might mean to be a church of many members, where ministry belongs to both men and women across all life stages.

To that end, consider four exhortations, two to my sisters in Christ and two to fellow brothers.

1. Dream of your many ministries.

Dear sisters, I know that we pastors sometimes fail to mention the many pivotal ministries beyond Sunday morning. But can I encourage you to dream about the dozens of ways our churches need your gifts beyond the gathering?

“Godly male leadership creates more space (not less) for women to use their gifts.”

The New Testament does not hesitate to mention the many ways God uses women to strengthen his church. It was a woman who prophesied over our infant Lord (Luke 2:36–38), women who funded much of Christ’s ministry (Luke 8:1–3), a woman who likely delivered the greatest letter in the world (Romans 16:1–2), and women whom Paul called “fellow workers” (Philippians 4:3). A woman welcomed Jesus out of the womb; more women welcomed him out of the tomb. The church in Philippi began in a woman’s home (Acts 16:14–15), and other churches went on meeting in women’s homes (Colossians 4:15).

Wherever the church takes root, women are there, watering and tending its young shoots. They counsel the weak and wandering. They tend to the sick and dying. They adopt the orphan, care for the widow, teach fellow sisters and little souls, and build homes where all these and more feel welcome. They pray like Anna, serve like Phoebe, host like Nympha, and minister alongside their husbands like Priscilla.

As John Piper writes, Christian women do not “measure [their] potential by the few roles withheld, but by the countless roles offered.” They “look to the loving God of Scripture and dream about the possibilities of [their] service to him” (What’s the Difference?, 79–80).

2. Mature the men among you.

Some of the ministry opportunities mentioned above are directed exclusively toward other women — and indeed, women can minister to other women in many ways that men cannot (Paul’s instructions in Titus 2:3–5 offer just one example). But let me also assure you that, in some ways, you can minister to men in ways that men cannot.

Paul drops a remarkable statement into his list of greetings in Romans 16: “Greet Rufus, chosen in the Lord; also his mother, who has been a mother to me as well” (verse 13). Paul, the frontier missionary and church planter, the spiritual father of so many believers, found a mother in Rufus’s mother. He doesn’t mention specifics, but in some way, this woman loved him as a mother might — perhaps tending his wounds or offering a place for him to stay or speaking needed words of encouragement (or all of the above).

We might also consider how not only Aquila but also Priscilla “took [Apollos] aside and explained to him the way of God more accurately” (Acts 18:26). As a sister might encourage a younger brother, she came alongside the powerful Apollos and helped him speak even more powerfully.

Rufus’s mother provided something for Paul that Rufus himself could not; likewise, Priscilla offered something crucial to Apollos. These men needed mothers and sisters in Christ — women not trying to act like men but eager to help men act like men.

Sister, you may not believe it, but there are brothers in your life who would stand a little taller by your word of encouragement, who would battle a little bolder at your suggestion. Speak prudently, of course, in ways befitting a sister or mother, but know that you have a role to play in maturing the men around you.

3. Give women’s gifts a home.

Brothers, when Eve awoke in the garden, she found herself paired to a man already on mission. This animal-naming, chaos-taming Adam had been given a charge, and it was a charge large enough that he required help — her help. Immediately, the full breadth of Eve’s womanhood was called forth by this man on mission.

This Edenic pattern offers a principle for us — one that speaks most directly to husbands but also to all the church’s men. The principle is this: in so many cases, godly male leadership creates more space (not less) for women to use their gifts. The women who served as patrons of the twelve (Luke 8:1–3), the women who labored alongside the apostles (Philippians 4:3), the women who hosted gatherings in the early church (Colossians 4:15) — they all found their ministries under the leadership of good men (Jesus, Paul, the church’s elders). The strong men around them called forth their own active help.

I’m not suggesting that women should never begin new ministry ventures themselves; many needs in the church and the world benefit from feminine initiation. But when a church’s men lead in creative, sacrificial ways, many feminine gifts finally find a home.

Brothers, if we rarely take the lead in prayer meetings, missions committees, small-group discussions, music ministries, or other areas of church life, then the sisters among us may find themselves forced to fill in for our passivity — or sit out altogether. How many of our sisters’ stunning gifts will lie dormant and dusty if we fail to lead?

4. Honor the women among you.

Beyond such leadership, one of the best steps we can take as men is to follow Jesus and Paul in gladly honoring the women around us. In Romans 16, Paul did not blush to name nine women among the twenty-six people he greeted, nor was he sparing in his commendations of them: Phoebe was the church’s servant and Paul’s patron; Prisca was a “fellow worker”; Mary “has worked hard for you”; both Tryphaena and Tryphosa are “workers in the Lord”; and as we saw, Rufus’s mother “has been a mother to me as well” (Romans 16:1–3, 6, 12–13).

And surely Paul honored them as he did because of the Lord he followed. In a world that so often discounted and denigrated women, Jesus saw women, conversed with women, dignified women, and rose up to honor the ministry of women in the face of those who ignored or despised it. No one regarded the widow and her two copper coins — but Jesus did (Mark 12:43–44). No one esteemed the astonishing “waste” of perfume poured from loving hands — but Jesus did (Mark 14:6–9). He knew how to honor women.

Do we? If we do, the mothers and sisters in our churches may not care very much who holds the microphone on Sundays. And they may return to their many ministries freshly feeling what they really are: indispensable.

Scott Hubbard is a teacher and the managing editor for Desiring God.

It is my understanding that God has called men to lead the spiritual life and maturity of those around him. Adam failed in the garden when he did not even attempt to stop Eve from partaking of the forbidden fruit. Instead, he followed her lead and the deception of Satan. Men today need to use the gifts that God has given them and lead their wives, their families, their churches, their communities, in spiritual truth. At the fall of man, part of the curse of God was that the woman would desire the man. Some of you started laughing already. The woman’s desire would be for the man’s role or position of leadership! And many of them do it well. It is not that they cannot lead. It is just not the “role” God called woman to fulfill. Man is the head of his wife and family as Christ is head of the church. As the church is to submit to the headship of Christ, so the woman and children are to submit to the “holy and righteous” headship of the husband/father. Men, we need to step up spiritually and lead, better than Adam. We need to listen to God, be obedient to His Word, protect our families from the evil one, and pursue knowing and being like Christ Jesus in every moment of life. The women of CGBC, our church, have proven to be greatly gifted and by God’s grace have blessed this community of believers with His glory and blessing without pursuing the microphone or pulpit. This is a submission of obedience to God.

I humbly admit to failure in leadership of this church, yet praise God for the congregation, men and women who support me and encourage me in the “role” God has called me to fill. Let us love our women as Christ loves the church and gave Himself for her. Let us lead our women, full of the Holy Spirit, making spiritually mature decisions that glorify God and encourage our women in mature faith through our words and deeds. Let us not fight for position and role. God made us to work together. It is the fall of mankind that brought sin and fighting over roles. Let us be pleasing to God and serve both God and one another as He designed! Love the women of the church and support them in their gifting by finding opportunity for their gifts to by greatly expressed.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 29, 2025

Notes of Faith March 29, 2025

For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light. Ephesians 5:8

“This little light of mine, I’m gonna let it shine.... Won’t let Satan blow it out, I’m gonna let it shine.... Hide it under a bushel, NO! I’m gonna let it shine.... Let it shine ’til Jesus comes, I’m gonna let it shine. Let it shine, let it shine, let it shine.”

The repetitive lyrics of this song make it a favorite with children. Though the origin of the song is unknown, it is universally thought to be based on Jesus’ words in Matthew 5:14-16.

In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said that His followers are “the light of the world” (Matthew 5:14). We are the light of the world because we have living in us the One who is the ultimate “light of the world” (John 8:12). In the children’s song the words “I’m gonna let it shine” reflect Jesus’ admonition not to allow our light to be hidden. Instead, we are to let our light shine via good works so the world can see Him in us and glorify God.

Let us put into practice the words of the song to let our light shine until Jesus comes again!

If God lights the candle, none can blow it out.

Charles Spurgeon

Matt 5:14-16

14 "You are like light for the whole world. A city built on a hill cannot be hid. 15 No one lights a lamp and puts it under a bowl; instead he puts it on the lampstand, where it gives light for everyone in the house. 16 In the same way your light must shine before people, so that they will see the good things you do and praise your Father in heaven.

Reflecting Jesus, being the light of the world, is our purpose. To show to those without the light what the light looks like, the goodness of light, the glory light brings to each one, is life in Jesus! May we bring light to this dark world every day as we walk with Jesus.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith March 28, 2025

Notes of Faith March 28, 2025

I Am with You Always

I broaden the path beneath you so that your ankles do not turn. This shows how intricately I am involved in your life-journey. I know exactly what is before you, and I can alter the path ahead of you to make your way easier. Sometimes I enable you to see what I have done on your behalf. At other times you are blissfully unaware of the hardship I have spared you. Either way, My work to widen the way before you demonstrates how lovingly I am involved in your life.

From your perspective, My workings are often mysterious. I do not protect you — or anyone — from all adversity. Neither was I shielded from hardship during my thirty-three years of living in your world. On the contrary, I willingly suffered unimaginable pain, humiliation, and agony on the cross — for your sake! When My Father turned away from Me, I experienced unspeakable suffering. But because I was willing to endure that excruciating isolation from Him, you will never have to suffer alone. I have promised: I am with you always!

And about the ninth hour Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying, “Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?” that is, “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” — Matthew 27:46 NKJV

... And teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age. — Matthew 28:20

You broaden the path beneath me, so that my ankles do not turn. — Psalm 18:36

As you come to Me and take My yoke upon you, I fill you with My very Life.

I am the resurrection and the life; all lasting Life emanates from Me. People search for life in many wrong ways: chasing after fleeting pleasures, accumulating pos- sessions and wealth, trying to deny the inevitable effects of aging. Meanwhile, I freely offer abundant Life to everyone who turns toward Me. As you come to Me and take My yoke upon you, I fill you with My very Life. This is how I choose to live in the world and accomplish My purposes. This is also how I bless you with Joy unspeakable and full of Glory. The Joy is Mine, and the Glory is Mine; but I bestow them on you as you live in My Presence — inviting Me to live fully in you.

Come to Me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. — Matthew 11:28-29

Whom having not seen, ye love; in whom, though now ye see Him not, yet believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory: Receiving the end of your faith, even the salvation of your souls. — 1 Peter 1:8-9 KJV

Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in Me will live, even though he dies.” — John 11:25

Excerpted from Jesus Calling for Easter by Sarah Young, copyright Sarah Young.

Receiving the free gift of God in Jesus, providing salvation and future glory with Him, is the greatest of all gifts. But living daily in the world knowing that God in Jesus will never leave me…during the excruciating suffering that comes as we walk this earth, is a close second. I really don’t understand how people make it through the day without an intimate relationship with Jesus. If you do not know Him, seek to know Him. Ask questions of Him, He will answer. Read the Bible, God’s Word, to find truth and God’s will for your life. If you are a believer and follower of Jesus, continue to pursue Him, draw closer to Him, and imitate His life and character each day you live. Your reward is waiting in eternity and you will be blessed on earth as well. God loves you! You belong to Him as His child! Look up, for the coming of your Redeemer is near!

Pastor Dale