Notes of Faith May 30, 2025

Notes of Faith May 30, 2025

Be the Light

You are the light of the world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden.

Matthew 5:14

The English Puritan leader John Winthrop delivered a message to the colonists embarking from England to establish the Massachusetts Bay Colony in Boston in 1630. Drawing on Jesus’ words in Matthew 5:14—“A city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden”—Winthrop exhorted the colonists to let their light shine in the New World.

The “city” was to be a city of light, based on Jesus’s preceding words, “You are the light of the world.” It is a powerful image. And the citizens of the “city” are to be the followers of Jesus Christ who are to be the light of the world. A “light of the world” implies that the world is in darkness, in need of the light of truth and salvation. Our mission as followers of Jesus is to take that light into the world and illuminate every dark corner.

Consider the part of the world you live in—your extended family, your friendship circle, your workplace—and how you can illuminate your part of the world with the presence of Christ. Ask God today to show you how to be His light.

The light of a holy example is the gospel’s main argument.

R. L. Dabney

John 8:12

12 Then Jesus again spoke to them, saying, "I am the Light of the world; he who follows Me will not walk in the darkness, but will have the Light of life."

Matt 5:14-16

14 "You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden; 15 nor does anyone light a lamp and put it under a basket, but on the lampstand, and it gives light to all who are in the house. 16 "Let your light shine before men in such a way that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father who is in heaven.

God uses those that He gives faith to believe in Jesus to share His grace and mercy, the forgiveness of sin and blessing of eternal life with Him in glory! Let Him use you today to bless another in need of a Savior!

Darkness flees from light! You are the light of the world!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith May 29, 2025

Notes of Faith May 29, 2025

The Power of Salt

You are the salt of the earth; but if the salt loses its flavor, how shall it be seasoned? It is then good for nothing but to be thrown out and trampled underfoot by men.

Matthew 5:13

A certain farmer fertilized part of his pasture with minerals gathered from an ancient, dried seabed. When he let his cows into the pasture, they immediately gravitated toward the section that had been fertilized with the sea minerals. They relished the taste of the grass that had absorbed the salty minerals from the seabed.

For thousands of years, salt has played a pivotal role in human civilizations. Not only does it provide flavor to food, but it preserves food as well. In the right balance, salt is a necessary nutrient for human life. It also creates thirst in those who consume it, prompting hydration for good health. Jesus said that His followers are “the salt of the earth.” We can only assume that He was referencing the ancient uses of salt: adding flavor, preventing decay, and creating thirst. Those are the effects His followers are to have on the world around them.

As you read and apply the Word of God, let it make you a person who impacts your world for Christ.

Salt also irritates. Real living Christianity rubs this world the wrong way.

Vance Havner

Have you noticed that those who do not believe in Jesus do not like to hear you talk about Jesus, sharing the gospel, speaking truth?

John 15:18-19

18 "If the world hates you, you know that it has hated Me before it hated you. 19 "If you were of the world, the world would love its own; but because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, because of this the world hates you.

We are the salt of the earth and indeed sometimes it causes the pain of conviction through hearing the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Love God. Love others, even if they hate you. They need Jesus, just like you did before you came to Him in faith!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith May 28, 2025

Notes of Faith May 28, 2025

Honor and Obey

[The Bereans] were more fair-minded than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness, and searched the Scriptures daily to find out whether these things were so.

Acts 17:11

Many churches have a tradition of standing as a congregation when the Word of God is read during the Sunday worship service. This practice may be based on Nehemiah 8 when Ezra the priest read God’s Word to the assembled crowd of Israelites in Jerusalem: “And Ezra opened the book in the sight of all the people, for he was standing above all the people; and when he opened it, all the people stood up” (verse 5).

The people standing for the Word of God signified two things. First, it was an act of honor. The people had returned to Jerusalem after seventy years of exile in Babylon, and they honored God by honoring His Word (verse 6). Second, it signified their willingness and readiness to shape their lives and practices around God’s will for them. Their actions foreshadowed the actions of Paul’s Jewish audience in the Berean synagogue as they searched the Scriptures to verify what Paul was teaching them.

When you read the Word of God, do so with honor and a readiness to obey.

Study God’s Word for the purpose of discovering God’s will.

Unknown

If we believe that the Bible is the Word of God, then we certainly can ascertain His will from it. Let us be in His Word daily that we might grow in the grace and knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ and to be transformed by His Word to be more and more like Jesus every day that we are given!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith May 27, 2025

Notes of Faith May 27, 2025

O Worship the King

Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom…in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord.

Colossians 3:16

The concepts and phrases of the classic hymn “O Worship the King” are taken from various passages of Scripture about the majesty of God. We “gratefully sing his power and his love,” for He is “our shield and defender, the Ancient of Days.” We “tell of his might and sing of his grace, whose robe is the light, whose canopy space.”

When it comes to the Bible, studying should lead to singing. As we discover God’s “bountiful care,” we should lift our hearts in thanksgiving. As we realize how our King provides for us, though we are “frail children of dust, and feeble as frail,” we should glorify His matchless love that “streams from the hills…descends to the plain, and sweetly distills in the dew and the rain.”

Whatever your preference in music, let your study of God’s Word inspire your worship. Let your Bible be the tuning fork for your soul, the melody for your day, and the source of your songs.

Your mercies how tender, how firm to the end, our Maker, Defender, Redeemer, and Friend.

Robert Grant

Most of the hymns of our faith are based directly from Scripture with some interpretations and applications of Scripture. This is what brings internal joy and prompts a heart filled with singing. Open the Word of God today and listen to your Lord and Savior speak to your heart. Let the “Joy of the Lord” prompt you to sing praise!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith May 26, 2025

Notes of Faith May 26, 2025

As we gather with family, attend parades, and place flags at the graves of fallen soldiers, Memorial Day offers a sacred opportunity to reflect not only on national sacrifice but also on the ultimate sacrifice made by Jesus Christ. While this day is a time of remembrance for those who gave their lives in military service, it can also be a day for deeper spiritual reflection— each Memorial Day message is a chance to consider the ways in which Christ’s example of self-giving love continues to shape our understanding of service, sacrifice, and eternal hope.

Join me to honor the memory of those who died for our country while anchoring our gratitude in the unshakable truth of the gospel.

True love lays down its life for others

Jesus said, “Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends” (John 15:13). This verse is often quoted on Memorial Day, and for good reason… It captures the heart of both the soldier’s calling and Christ’s redemptive act. When we remember those who gave their lives in service, we see a reflection of the selfless love Christ demonstrated on the cross.

Remembering is a sacred act

Throughout Scripture, God calls His people to remember—remember His faithfulness, His deliverance, and His promises. Memorial Day is not just a national tradition but also a spiritual discipline. A Christ-centered Memorial Day message reminds us that remembering the fallen is an act of honoring both human courage and divine grace.

Peace often comes through sacrifice

The peace we enjoy as citizens has been paid for with the lives of others. Similarly, the peace we have with God came through the blood of Jesus. “For He Himself is our peace” (Ephesians 2:14). Let this Memorial Day be a time to reflect on how God brings peace not through ease, but through costly love.

Grief and gratitude can coexist

It is possible—and healthy—to hold sorrow and thankfulness at the same time. Jesus wept at the tomb of Lazarus even though He would raise him moments later. We, too, can grieve the loss of brave men and women while offering thanks for their courage. This tension is part of the Christian walk.

Freedom is a gift, not a guarantee

Both civic and spiritual freedom come at a high cost. While we honor those who fought for our nation’s liberty, we also remember that our eternal freedom was secured by Christ. “It is for freedom that Christ has set us free” (Galatians 5:1). This Memorial Day message is a call to steward our freedoms with wisdom and humility.

Hope transcends the grave

Memorial Day inevitably brings us face to face with death. But as believers, we do not mourn as those without hope. “If we live, we live for the Lord; and if we die, we die for the Lord” (Romans 14:8). The resurrection of Jesus assures us that death is not the end, for those who die in faith will rise again.

Serve others as Christ served

On a day devoted to honoring those who served, we are reminded of Christ’s teaching: “Whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant” (Mark 10:43). May we use this day not only to remember but to renew our commitment to serve others selflessly, just as Jesus and so many brave men and women have done.

Pray for those who mourn

A Memorial Day message grounded in Christ should include intercession. Many families carry the weight of loss long after the final note of Taps is played. Let us pray for comfort, strength, and peace for those grieving a spouse, parent, sibling, or friend who never returned home.

Fix your eyes on eternal victory

While we honor earthly heroes, we must not lose sight of our heavenly hope. Memorial Day is a poignant reminder that this world is not our home. “But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ” (1 Corinthians 15:57). Through Christ, every sacrifice finds its ultimate meaning, and every tear will one day be wiped away.

As you reflect on this day of remembrance, may these Christ-centered messages deepen your gratitude, strengthen your hope, and draw you closer to the heart of God. Let your Memorial Day message be one that honors the fallen and glorifies the risen Savior.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith May 25, 2025

Notes of Faith May 25, 2025

“AT LAST!”

GENESIS 2:4–25

When we first read Genesis 2:4, it’s tempting to do a double take. Wait a second, didn’t we just cover this! Sort of, but not exactly. Think of Genesis 1 as a picture of your family tree. It accurately records with some remove the order of events that led to your existence. Think of Genesis 2 as sitting down with your grandparents and asking them about their wedding day. This is a zoomed-in version of the same story, not the second creation of a second man. But rather than offer a poetic and chronological report, Moses rewinds the tape on certain events of Genesis 1.

Suddenly, day 3’s dry land has a name: “a garden in Eden” (2:8 ESV). Day 2’s sea is now a river, and then four rivers with four names: Pishon, Gihon, Tigris, and Euphrates (2:10–14).1 Day 6’s man is not merely created but formed “of dust from the ground” as God “breathed into his nostrils the breath of life” (2:7). This man has the same gig: work and keep the garden (2:15).2 But something’s not quite right. After the chorus of good-good-good-good-good-very good in Genesis 1, the Lord’s assessment in Genesis 2:18 is like a cat’s claws on a chalkboard:

It is not good that the man should be alone. — ESV

We have a problem. What’s the solution? A helper (2:18, 20). But who?

When I was seven, my Christmas list — for Santa, for my grandparents, for my parents, for anyone who could read — featured one item: a golden retriever named Chloe. When Christmas came, I ran downstairs and saw a bunch of small gifts with my name on the wrapping paper. One by one, I ripped them open: a collar, a chew toy, a bone, a leash. But no dog. After I opened the final gift — a dog bowl, for crying out loud — I was wracked with confusion and bubbling with frustration. Was this some kind of cruel joke? Why was everyone so smirky? Could I survive if I ran away? Then my brother darted upstairs and came down with something furry in his arms: a golden retriever named Chloe.

At last!

I imagine the man in the garden felt a lot like me on that Christmas morning. The Lord paraded in front of him a host of unfit gifts — an ant, an antelope, a toucan, a tamarin. The delayed relief heightens the anticipation. No, no, no, no, no. From aardvark to zebra, it’s a no. And then the Lord makes from Adam’s rib a woman, finally a helper “fit” for him, and the man channels his inner Etta James and begins to sing. “At last!” (2:23 ESV).

Genesis 2 is like talking to your grandparents about their wedding day. So where’s the wedding? It’s right here. Did you see it? Moses frames the creation of Eve as both a birth and a marriage. So much so that he breaks genre for a verse and makes an argument reflecting on the story he has just told. Look again at 2:24 in the ESV. That word “therefore” signals a brief shift from narration to discourse, from plot to principle. It’s as if he’s saying, “Look, the Lord created Adam and Eve to set up a paradigm not merely for males and females in general but for husbands and wives in particular.” By the end of Genesis 2, we realize that Moses has been writing both a creation story and a marriage story all along. Though Adam had no father and mother to leave, he did now have a wife to hold fast to.

Genesis 2 double-clicks on Genesis 1:26–31 and fills in some missing information. As it turns out, the creation story of Genesis 1 had some drama in it: we didn’t go straight from good to very good, but we went from good (1:25) to not good (2:18) to very good (1:31).

Before sin even enters the world, the Lord is fixing our problems and giving us what we need.

As we arrive at the end of Moses’ beginning, what have we learned?

The Lord has no rival.

His creation is wise and orderly.

The peak of this creation is humanity — you and me.

Humans have a special status (created in the image of God) that gives us the ability and obligation to do our special job (to subdue the earth as we mirror God to the rest of creation).3

The creation of Eve is also the creation of marriage.

Genesis 2 ends with Adam and Eve on their honeymoon. They are husband and wife in a world without the memory of sin and any experience of shame. It’s beautiful. It’s unbelievable. It makes us long for something similar.

But no honeymoon lasts forever.

You might be thinking, “Um, gardens aren’t dry and seas aren’t rivers.” You’d be right! But look back to how Moses uses those phrases. Dry land (1:10) simply means “not sea,” and sea simply refers to “not sky” or all water (1:9). With this in mind, a garden and four rivers does in fact specify what kind of dry land and sea we’re dealing with. It’s not a contradiction but a closeup.

“Work it and keep it” offers us a clue that Moses wants us to see that Eden is a kind of temple, where God dwells with his people. How do we know? Because Moses tells us that priests work and keep the temple (Num. 1:53).

Did you notice who names the animals? It’s not the Lord, it’s the man. He’s already exerting his authority over the rest of creation.

Excerpted from From Eden to Egypt by Alex Duke, copyright Alex Duke.

There is a day coming when God will take away sin. It will not exist! We will not have an evil thought, or lustful desire, or unrighteous anger… hallelujah! It will be glorious in the presence of our holy God to walk with Him and be holy as He is holy! At last, the honeymoon of Christ and His bride will come and it will never end. God’s grace and mercy has brought eternal salvation and a glory that is beyond our current understanding. Perhaps our joining God in this glory is very soon. Keep looking up!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith May 24, 2025

Notes of Faith May 24, 2025

You were cut out of the olive tree which is wild by nature, and were grafted contrary to nature into a cultivated olive tree.

Romans 11:24

Recommended Reading: Psalm 128:1-4

Jesus was well known for using agricultural metaphors in His teaching. But the apostle Paul occasionally did the same. The most sophisticated example is his use of olive trees to illustrate the union of Jews and Gentiles into the redemptive plan of God (Romans 11:11-24).

Olive trees—wood, fruit, and oil—are mentioned nearly forty times in Scripture. Olive trees were so well known in the Mediterranean region that Paul could talk about the practice of grafting cultivated and wild trees knowing his readers would understand. Normally a branch of a cultivated olive tree would be grafted into a wild olive trunk to produce a new, fruit-bearing tree. In his example, a cultivated olive tree represented the Jews and the wild olive tree represented the Gentiles. “Contrary to nature,” Paul wrote, God has grafted a wild branch (Gentiles) into a cultivated tree (Jews) to extend the blessings of Abraham to all the world.

When you enjoy olive oil, remember how God has grafted Jew and Gentile into a new “tree” of faith.

The glory of the body of Christ appears in the diversity of its members.

R. B. Kuiper

Rev 5:9

"Worthy are You to take the book and to break its seals; for You were slain, and purchased for God with Your blood men from every tribe and tongue and people and nation.

Phil 2:9-11

God highly exalted Him, and bestowed on Him the name which is above every name, 10 so that at the name of Jesus EVERY KNEE WILL BOW, of those who are in heaven and on earth and under the earth, 11 and that every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.

All human beings came through Adam and Eve. We all carry the same blood that gives life. Sin brought death but the sacrifice of Jesus Christ on the cross offering His blood as atonement for our sin brings eternal life to those who believe in Him. All people can be saved by the grace of God through the faith that He gives to believe in Jesus! Come, be grafted into the family today!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith May 23, 2025

Notes of Faith May 23, 2025

Fall in Love with Mercy

Marriage is a beautiful gift, but it also can be the relationship that requires the most mercy and humility.

A couple asked to speak to me after a “Sacred Marriage” seminar. The husband had done some truly heinous things, and their marriage seemed on the verge of breaking up. The wife rightfully desired to call him to account. We talked for over an hour, and both of them left in tears — good tears that were bringing healing and restoration.

I gave the sermon at their church the next morning, and the husband sheepishly approached me after the services. “I bet I’m the worst man you’ve ever preached to,” he said.

“You’ve certainly done some awful things,” I admitted, “and you and your wife invited me into some of your worst moments — but I know that’s not the whole story. If someone created a video of my worst moments, and that’s all you were to see about me, you’d be tempted to kick me out of this church before you’d shake my hand.”

Because we married a sinner, we’re going to see some ugly, ugly things. That’s why our attitude toward another’s sin will determine, in large part, the degree of intimacy we can achieve in marriage. A Pharisee might impress a mate, but he’ll never get truly close to her, because judgment repels intimacy as surely as heat melts ice.

One glorious day, God used a Bible verse to open my eyes to a reality so large that it changed everything about how I view my marriage and my standing before God, as well as how I am to treat others. Micah 6:8 tell us to “love mercy.” That short phrase — “love mercy” — kept playing in my mind.

Love mercy. Micah isn’t telling us merely to “demonstrate” mercy or only to “practice” mercy; he tells us to fall in love with it!

Love mercy.

The wide, biblical concept of mercy includes forgiveness but also has roots in loyalty. One commentator notes, “This steady, persistent refusal of God to wash His hands of wayward Israel is the essential meaning of the Hebrew word which is translated loving-kindness [or mercy].” 1 This is a loyalty and forgiveness seasoned with graciousness and kindness — particularly to those who don’t deserve it. It is one of the most beautiful words in the English language and certainly one of the most precious truths in the Christian faith.

What does it mean to fall in love with mercy? It means I am to become mercy’s biggest fan. Having received mercy from God, I am to walk in assurance and thankfulness, using my own gift of mercy as the lens through which I view anyone else’s sin — including that of my spouse.

Mercy is wonderful. Without mercy, I’d be damned for all eternity. Through His mercy, God made a way for me to enjoy eternal happiness instead of never-ending pain and torture. Mercy also allows me to minister. As a fallen man who sins daily, I could never even begin to reach out to others with God’s perfect gospel unless every hour I live in the joy of knowing that Jesus Christ’s sacrifice on my behalf has set me free and washed me clean. In short, without mercy, I’d be toast; but with mercy, the celebratory toast never ends!

Falling in love with mercy means I love everything about it.

It means I also love the way it applies to the person I married. Just as I love my wife when she’s in the kitchen, the living room, and the bedroom, so I love mercy when it’s applied to me, my wife, and my children. There is no arena where I don’t delight in mercy. People who love mercy feel eager to show mercy to others. Like God, they not only want to forgive, they are eager to forgive. You don’t have to convince them to show mercy; they love to show mercy!

A Christian spouse who understands mercy is a husband or wife who looks forward to another opportunity to demonstrate God’s grace. It is a believer eager to forgive, whose first thought leaps toward reconciliation rather than revenge. Mercy isn’t an obligation grudgingly given in to — it’s the love of his or her life! It’s his or her favorite practice.

Listen to one of the most practical applications of mercy I’ve ever read about. A wife got in an accident while driving a brand-new car. She felt understandably upset, fretting about what her husband would say when he found out. As she retrieved the insurance papers from the glove compartment, she found this note in her husband’s handwriting: “Dear Mary, when you need these papers, remember it’s you I love, not the car.” 2

You are an imperfect, very fallible, prone-to-mess-up sinner saved by mercy. You married a fallible sinner who needs the same remedy. The intimacy of marriage cannot be sustained without mercy. Our sin and guilt are so powerful that, absent mercy, every human relationship will fall before their might. You can self-righteously judge every spouse who has ever lived. You can prove his or her guilt in a court of law. You can compellingly state your case and clearly demonstrate how far your spouse has fallen short — but the judgment you render will kill intimacy in your own life; it won’t kill sin in your spouse’s life. It will also herald your spiritual poverty and destruction:

Judgment without mercy will be shown to anyone who has not been merciful. Mercy triumphs over judgment! — James 2:13

This week, meditate on mercy. Fall in love with it. Seek to understand what a gift you’ve been given in God’s mercy. And then, from that foundation, explore the riches of extending this same mercy to others, beginning with your spouse. Commit to memory the theologically crucial phrase “Mercy triumphs over judgment,” and seek to build your marriage anew on the back of God’s gift rather than on the failed policies of the legalistic Pharisees.

1. W. L. Hoad, “Mercy, Merciful,” in The New Bible Dictionary, ed. J. D. Douglas (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1962), 809.

2. Cited in Mahaney, Sex, Romance, and the Glory of God, 42.

Excerpted from Devotions for a Sacred Marriage by Gary Thomas, copyright Gary Thomas.

Everyone must receive mercy from God or they will not be saved! What concerns me is not the mercy of God but my character and the mercy I am willing to give toward others. May we all grow in the grace and mercy of Christ and give as our Lord gives to us, without condition!

Pastor Dale (From Minnesota today)

Notes of Faith May 22, 2025

Notes of Faith May 22, 2025

Scepter, Lamp, Mirror, and Breeze

Lord, keep my lamp burning…. Your word is a lamp for my feet, a light on my path.

Psalm 18:28; 119:105, NIV

John Blanchard read this intriguing quote from Reformer John Calvin: “The Bible is the scepter by which the heavenly King rules His people.” Blanchard agreed, but he added: “This does not mean that we are to look upon it as a rod of iron. Nor, on the other hand, is it to be treated trivially as some kind of religious toy, to be used for our spiritual entertainment. Instead, it is meant to be a constant means of enlightenment, enrichment, and encouragement, its dynamic influence bringing a deepening joy into our daily lives.”

How odd that the practice of Bible reading sometimes feels dull or dutiful. Let’s shake ourselves free from the legalism of monotonous Bible reading and learn the life-giving fascination of abiding in its words. Make up your mind to read the Bible with fresh prayers for insight and with fresh perspective. Make it a joyful experience. Try some new methods. Use your pencil or pen. Ask God to make His Word to you as a golden scepter, a living book, a blazing fire, a heavenly breeze, a revealing mirror, a nourishing meal, and a shining lamp.

[The Bible is] the book I live with, the book I live by, the book I want to die by.

N. T. Wright

God is at work within me as I pray that He is in you. I am drawn closer day by day. He calls me to His Word to know Him and live according to what He commands. We do have trouble in this world, but a day is coming when God will bring more glory to us than we can now understand. When sin does not exist we will be holy. Do you understand what it means to be holy? Praise God from whom all blessings flow!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith May 21, 2025

Notes of Faith May 21, 2025

Living by the Sword

Put on the full armor of God, so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes.

Ephesians 6:11, NIV

An earlier generation of Christians was raised on “sword drills” in Sunday school. Youngsters would line up and “draw swords,” which meant they held up their Bibles. Then a reference was given—perhaps Ephesians 6:17—and they raced to see who could turn there soonest. Scripture was their sword.

Recommended Reading:

Psalm 119:9-16

The Bible is not only a sword; it is also an entire armory of swords. Sometimes we use it defensively to withstand an attack on our faith or well-being (Ephesians 6:17). But sometimes the swords are aimed at us. We read a verse, hear a sermon, or talk with a friend, and immediately we feel the convicting power of the Holy Spirit. “For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart” (Hebrews 4:12).

Let the sword drill into you for your good and for God’s glory.

The word, stored in the heart, provides a mental depository for the Holy Spirit to use to mediate His grace to us, whatever our need for grace might be.

Jerry Bridges

Great memories of learning books of the Bible and verses taught to raise young warriors for truth and relationship with God! Pick a book of the Bible today, then spend the rest of the month reading it, over and over. You will be surprised at how God will open your eyes to His will for you! Go ahead…dig in!

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.

Pastor Dale