Notes of Faith June 7, 2025

Notes of Faith June 7, 2025

Then Elkanah went to his house at Ramah. But the child ministered to the Lord before Eli the priest.

1 Samuel 2:11

Elkanah and Hannah were blessed with a son in answer to Hannah’s prayers. When we read the story in the first two chapters of 1 Samuel, we usually focus on Hannah. But Elkanah is described as a man who faithfully traveled to the tabernacle in Shiloh to worship and sacrifice to the Lord (1 Samuel 1:3). He loved Hannah (1:5) and sought to comfort and encourage her (1:8). And the day came when Elkanah and Hannah took their son, Samuel, and dedicated him to God’s service in Shiloh. Samuel became a champion for his people and a hero in the Bible.

It's important to dedicate our children to the Lord. Some people do that in a public worship service. It’s done in various ways in different churches and denominations. But the central truth is that God blesses a child whose dad is devoted to the Lord and gives Him all he has, including his children.

Elkanah’s home wasn’t perfect (1 Samuel 1:1-6), but Elkanah served a perfect God. When we ask the Lord to have His way with our youngsters, they will be blessed.

God is the one who gives children; they belong to Him.

Coty Pinckney

God gives life to all creation. Every child born in the world began in the mind of God before the foundation of the world. (Thank you Larry Clark) Since all begin with God, it would seem that all would have an intimate relationship with Him. But that is not true. Only some come to God in believing faith and enjoy that intimacy. Let us strive toward that relationship as of first priority and leave a legacy of faith not only in our children but in as many as possible that God places around us!

Love God! Love others!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 6, 2025

Notes of Faith June 6, 2025

A Revelation of Grace

Grace to you and peace from Him who is and who was and who is to come.

Revelation 1:4

The book of Revelation may seem ominous and overwhelming, but it opens and closes with grace. In his prologue in Revelation 1:4, John said, “Grace to you and peace from Him who is and who was and who is to come.” And at the end of the book, Revelation 22:21 says, “The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen.” Scripture’s last book opens and closes with God’s grace.

The whole message of Revelation is that God has a plan for this world that will deal with evil and lead His children to eternal glory. Our future is assured by Him who was, and who is, and who is to come. The wickedness of the world isn’t going to last forever. The terror of warfare will run its course. Jesus will overcome His enemies and usher His children into the place He has prepared for them.

God’s grace and mercy are on full display in Revelation. Take a moment and rejoice in that today. Your future in Christ is coming, and it will be wonderful! Praise His Name!

The believer is grateful as to the past, restful as to the present, and trustful as to the future.

William Hendriksen

God is eternal and lives outside of what we understand as time. He is always with us wherever we are, day and night, awake or asleep. Give thanks for God’s grace and mercy in your life. Praise Him for being the only living God. Worship His majesty. Give Him glory and honor in all that you say, do, even think. Be prepared for today and trust Him for tomorrow for H cares for you!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 5, 2025

Notes of Faith June 5, 2025

No Second Chances

In the same hour there was a great earthquake, and a tenth of the city fell. In the earthquake seven thousand people were killed, and the rest were afraid and gave glory to the God of heaven.

Revelation 11:13

The apostle Peter observed a way of thinking common among most people. When confronted with the truth about the end of the age, people would say, “All things continue as they were from the beginning of creation” (2 Peter 3:4). In other words, because life continues uninterrupted, we tend to think it will go on that way forever. But such is not the case.

When describing the two witnesses who will testify during the Tribulation period, the apostle John saw a severe earthquake that would happen in Jerusalem and kill seven thousand people. He saw them as terrified and giving “glory to the God of heaven.” But their fear was not a reverential fear of the Lord, rather it was a fear of death. He gave no indication that the disruption in their lives prompted them to turn to God and secure their salvation. Instead, their fear of death only hardened their hearts further.

After death comes the judgment (Hebrews 9:27). Don’t miss the chance to secure your eternal destiny through faith in Christ.

As death leaves us, so judgment will find us.

Thomas Brooks

Heb 9:27-28

27 And inasmuch as it is appointed for men to die once and after this comes judgment, 28 so Christ also, having been offered once to bear the sins of many, will appear a second time for salvation without reference to sin, to those who eagerly await Him.

Every person will be on one or the other side of judgment…either hell and eternal damnation, or heaven with Christ Jesus, blessed beyond our wildest dreams for living in faith, believing what Jesus accomplished for us that we could never do ourselves!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 4, 2025

Notes of Faith June 4, 2025

Seen and Heard

These [two witnesses] have power to shut heaven, so that no rain falls in the days of their prophecy; and they have power over waters to turn them to blood, and to strike the earth with all plagues, as often as they desire.

Revelation 11:6

Anyone who has ever been called as a witness in court knows what is expected: testify truthfully to what you have seen or heard.

Matt 17:1-3

17 Six days later Jesus took with Him Peter and James and John his brother, and led them up on a high mountain by themselves. 2 And He was transfigured before them; and His face shone like the sun, and His garments became as white as light. 3 And behold, Moses and Elijah appeared to them, talking with Him.

The role of witness will be given to two men in a dramatic way during the first half of the coming seven-year Tribulation (Revelation 11:3). The Antichrist will have emerged on the scene, and the two godly witnesses—thought by many to be Elijah and Moses—will challenge his power and authority through amazing signs and wonders. They will testify to the power and glory of the true God for three-and-a-half years after which the Antichrist will kill them. But after three-and-a-half days, God will restore them to life, and they will ascend to heaven.

We are to testify about God now. So whatever your calling from God, be a bold witness for Him. Speak what you have seen and heard about what Christ has done for you.

Ask the Lord to make your life a glory to him, a menace to the devil, a strength to your church, and a witness to the world.

Frederick P. Wood

Everyone can share the experience of what God has done, is doing, and has promised to do in their lives. After coming to Jesus in faith, believing in Him, one does not have to know the entire Bible to share the truth of the gospel, the good news of forgiveness of sin, the provision of salvation and eternal life. Often the best witness is a transformed life, from one of continual, habitual sin, to one of striving to be righteous and holy. Those who follow Jesus ARE witnesses. Are we good witnesses? What do people see and hear as they watch our everyday life? Do they see Jesus and the work He is doing in us? Seek intimacy with God and your witness will be glorifying to Him!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 3, 2025

Notes of Faith June 3, 2025

Sweet and Sour

Then I took the little book out of the angel’s hand and ate it, and it was as sweet as honey in my mouth. But when I had eaten it, my stomach became bitter.

Revelation 10:10

It has happened in most families’ experience—a toddler consumes way more candy than a parent would have allowed. And the aftermath results in a sour stomach or worse.

In the apostle John’s vision in Revelation, the angel that held a scroll told John to consume the scroll—but with a warning: It would be sweet to the taste but sour to the stomach. While the Word of God is always sweet to the taste (Psalm 119:103), its contents can sometimes be troubling. Such would be the contents of the scroll John would consume, for it foretold trouble and suffering that would come upon the earth. But whether the subject is blessing or trouble, all of the Word of God must be consumed and applied. We are to preach not only the parts of the Bible that are sweet to the taste but also the parts that trouble the soul.

Let us imitate the Berean Christians—they searched the Scriptures daily to glean their truths and apply them to their lives (Acts 17:11).

Any part of the Bible can only be properly explained in reference to the whole Bible.

F. F. Bruce

I have not used the word “sour” to describe biblical truths that cut to the heart. I have called these “ouch” moments, or soul cleansing truths. I have them all too often, but I do realize as should you that you are still being transformed into the character of Christ. After coming to Christ in faith, some things are easier to change, but others, like word choices, thoughts, and even body language that you may not know that you are doing, needs to be chiseled out of the hardness of the old self. I have also worked hard to lead others into the whole Bible. God did not give us just the gospels or the New Testament, but sixty-six books, Old and New Testaments, that comprise all truth that we need to know God, to come to Christ in faith and obedience, to live an earthly and eternal life pleasing to Him! Read and enjoy the entire Bible!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 2, 2025

Notes of Faith June 2, 2025

When Evil Is Removed

But in the days of the sounding of the seventh angel, when he is about to sound, the mystery of God would be finished, as He declared to His servants the prophets.

Revelation 10:7

Some Bible readers are surprised when they encounter 1 John 5:19: “We know that we are of God, and the whole world lies under the sway of the wicked one.” They wonder how, if God is sovereign, the whole world can lie under the influence of Satan.

The same person who wrote about Satan’s influence in the world also recorded a vision of the End Times in the book of Revelation—the apostle John. In that vision, John saw a time when “the mystery of God would be finished, as He declared to his servants the prophets.” While John doesn’t specifically describe the nature of the mystery, it surely has to do with the culmination of evil and catastrophe on the earth in the End Times and the coming of God’s Kingdom on earth—a day foreseen by the apostle Paul (1 Corinthians 15:24).

Do not be anxious about the pervasiveness of evil in the world. The day is coming when it will be removed and righteousness will reign.

When the Bible speaks of God’s permission of evil, there is still no escape from his sovereignty.

D. A. Carson

1 Cor 15:24

then comes the end, when He hands over the kingdom to the God and Father, when He has abolished all rule and all authority and power.

Satan the deceiver brought evil into the world with him.

John 8:44

He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth because there is no truth in him. Whenever he speaks a lie, he speaks from his own nature, for he is a liar and the father of lies.

He lied to Eve about God, and both Adam and Eve believed the lie instead of the truth of God.

Do you believe God and His Word that He has given us or do you believe in the deceptions of the Devil?

One day for true followers of Jesus there will be no evil, no Satan, NO SIN!

I can’t wait for that day, to meet Jesus in all of His glory and be given a greater glory than I have ever known or conceived in my mind. All saints will join me in praise and worship to the King of kings, Lord of lords, and Giver of life eternal!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 1, 2025

Notes of Faith June 1, 2025

Re-Open the Windows

The Challenge of the Secular in Our Generation

The apostle Paul gave King David the highest tribute when he described him as a man after God’s own heart and as one who “served the purpose of God in his own generation” (Acts 13:22, 36). Can we, as followers of Jesus, rise to such a challenge today in one of the most momentous generations in history?

We live in “a civilizational moment,” a period when a civilization loses touch with the foundation and inspiration on which it was built. We therefore face three basic options: renewal of the inspiration, replacement of the inspiration by another, or disintegration and decline. Do we need to remind ourselves that all the great civilizations of the past are to be found in ruins, in museums, or in history books?

Western civilization, the most influential in history, owes much to the Greeks and the Romans; however, it is primarily the fruit of the Christian gospel and Scriptures, which converted the European barbarians from the fourth to the tenth century. In many ways, the Reformation era, often regarded as a pivotal moment in shaping the modern world, represents the high point of this influence. But the role of Christians and the Christian faith has steadily receded since the seventeenth century, due (it is said) to three main reasons: divisions within the church, secularism, and secularization.

Gripped by the Secular

Many Christians confuse secularism and secularization. Secularism is a philosophy maintaining that there is no God (or gods) or any supernatural reality. As Bertrand Russell put it simply, “What science cannot discover, mankind cannot know.” There is no reality beyond the world of the five senses.

Secularization, in contrast, is a process by which more and more of the forces of the modern world (such as science, technology, and market economics) become independent and are no longer understood or dealt with under the framework of faith. Faith, as a result, has been made more marginal and less meaningful — “privately engaging, publicly irrelevant.”

“In times past, what was unseen was not unreal. Indeed, the unseen was more real than the seen.”

The combination of secularism and secularization has been devastating for the Christian faith. In the traditional world of times past, whether Christian or pagan, what was unseen was not unreal. Indeed, the unseen was more real than the seen, and the seen was understood in light of the unseen. But the two trends together have created what Peter Berger calls “a world without windows.” What is unseen is now unreal. Secularism and secularization have tried to shear off the entire supernatural reality of the Bible and therefore to cut off the church from the inherent power of the word and the Spirit, leaving many Christians in an endless search for renewed relevance through one accommodation to the world after another.

The merging of secularism and secularization appeared to vindicate the triumph of Enlightenment secularism as the replacement for the Christian faith in Western civilization. “Man had come of age,” reason had replaced revelation, progress could replace God, and humanity could achieve heaven on earth. Voices such as Stephen Pinker and Yuval Harari represent this secularist confidence today.

The Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648) seemed to be the nail in the coffin of Christian influence on the West. But the “Second Thirty Years’ War” (1914–1945) exposed the inadequacy of Enlightenment secularism as the replacement faith for the West. And the looming alternative to Christian faith and to Enlightenment secularism is now clearer than ever: a world of ideologies, authoritarianism, and power without principle — whether “hard totalitarianism,” as represented by China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea, or “soft totalitarianism,” as represented by the managerial revolution and the encroaching state within the West.

Return from Exile

One key question for Christians today is, Can there be a renewal of faith under the conditions of modernity — not, it must be said, for the sake of the West but for the sake of the integrity and faithfulness of the faith itself?

Most Christians would answer in the affirmative, but we dare not respond too quickly or too lightly, as it now appears that the future of humanity depends on the answer. What is clear — and, once again, contrast is the mother of clarity — is that there can be no renewal from within secularism. Where fate dogged the ancient world, determinism dogs the prospects of the secular modern world. We are not free. We are determined. There is no way out from Decline and Fall. When science has finished reckoning all the factors that influence us, we can never do otherwise than what we have done and will do.

In the Scriptures, by contrast, there is freedom in repentance, even in an extreme crisis such as that of the prodigal son in the pigsty in a far country. That is why the ironclad secular pairing of Decline and Fall can be replaced by the biblical pairing of Exile and Return. As Moses promised at the end of his life, when the people of God return to the Lord, he will return to them and restore their fortunes (Deuteronomy 30:1–3). We need only to think of the First and Second Great Awakenings — their spiritual and theological power and their social and cultural transformations — to appreciate the significance of this promise.

“The kingdom of God is most powerful and culturally transforming when it is believed to be true rather than useful.”

As Lord Acton and Christopher Dawson both underscore, “Religion is the key to history.” Civilizations are about far more than geography, climate, and military power. Along with these other factors, civilizations ultimately rise or fall on the adequacy of their answers to the fundamental questions of human existence — and thus they rise or fall on religion, on faith. Civilizations rise through a creative minority, and they endure or fall according to whether that creative minority remains powerful. The final question in a civilizational moment is whether there are sufficient people with ultimate loyalty to what they see as ultimate reality — or not.

How Then to Live

How does this challenge find us today? Many of the post-1970s forms of Christian accommodation to the world will not do. Much of the church-growth movement, for example, owes more to case studies from Harvard Business School than to the power of God’s word and Spirit. Resorting to politics also will not do. Politics is important for citizenship, but the first thing to say about politics is that politics is not the first thing. Thus, the politicization of the church is the wrong response to the loss of cultural influence.

Reliance on “cultural Christianity” is no better. The new appreciation that faith is indispensable to culture, as well as the number of eminent thinkers who have recently come to faith through this insight, is warmly welcomed. But cultural Christianity is not true faith. It is a useful way station on the road to faith but not the destination itself. The kingdom of God is most powerful and culturally transforming when it is believed to be true rather than useful.

Our challenge at this crucial generation is to read God’s word and welcome God’s Spirit, asking that our hearts, minds, and spirits be opened to the full transcendent reality of the Lord of the Burning Bush, the Lord of the Smoking Mountain, the Lord of the decisive call to pick up our crosses and follow him. Modernity is perhaps the greatest challenge the church has ever faced; only a faith enlarged and empowered by the full truth of God can hope to prevail.

Like Elisha’s myopic servant, we need to have our Western windowless world blasted open, our secular modern shortsightedness surgically corrected, so that we can see the “horses and chariots of fire all around” (2 Kings 6:17). Only then can we put on the whole armor of God and join the struggle not “against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places” (Ephesians 6:12).

It is time to face up to secularism. It is time to weigh the full devastation of secularization. Let us confess our spiritual, intellectual, and cultural poverty in light of such challenges, just as we put our trust in the God who is greater than all and can be trusted in all situations. In a word, we must have faith in God. We need have no fear. It is time to rise to meet our time as our time meets us, and so to serve God’s purposes in our own extraordinary generation.

Os Guinness is an author and social critic. His latest book is Our Civilizational Moment: The Waning of the West and the War of the Worlds (2024).

As I have often taken things for granted, like breath, and heartbeat, and sight and hearing, and so many others…I also, all too often, take for granted my faith, my God gifted eternal salvation. How can this be?! We, believers and followers of Jesus have been reborn, transformed, given new life! We have died to the old sinful desires and have put on the new of Christ to live as true Christians (little Christs). The world encroaches on all of us. We let it seep into our lives through the influence of family, friends, the persistent culture around us. But the Word of God has not changed. We must know it, obey it, and stand firm in what we know to be TRUTH. Those who walk with God are at peace. They are not mindless numbskulls as some think. The world cannot know God or His peace. Let us strive to keep the world at a distance, far from the force that rules our mind and hearts. Let us live, now, to be pleasing to God, speaking truth to the world with reverence and respect, yet not wavering in our stand for the Word of God! May you be blessed as you worship the One and only living and Almighty God!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith May 31, 2025

Notes of Faith May 31, 2025

Instead of the thorn shall come up the cypress tree, and instead of the brier shall come up the myrtle tree; and it shall be to the Lord for a name, for an everlasting sign that shall not be cut off.

Isaiah 55:13

Myrtle is a flowering tree common to the Mediterranean and Middle Eastern regions. The variety known as “common myrtle” is possibly the one mentioned a half-dozen times in the Old Testament. Its infrequent mention can be contrasted with the significance of its message in the contexts where it appears.

When the prophet Isaiah first began to speak against the sins of Israel, he said that God would turn the bountiful land into a land of briers and thorns (Isaiah 5:6; 32:13)—an obvious image of judgment. But then, as Isaiah’s message shifted to one of restoration after the Babylonian captivity, he said that the briars and thorns would be replaced by the cypress tree and the myrtle tree (Isaiah 55:13). So the myrtle became an image of peace and prosperity as God restored the land.

Let the myrtle tree remind you that God’s peace and blessing are always on the other side of restoration from sin.

Every breach of peace with God is not a breach of covenant with God.

Thomas Brooks

We wander. We walk away. Certainly when we sin we are not in intimate relationship with God. But we still have a relationship! There may be discipline from God. His desire is to bring us closer to Himself, in greater love and obedience. If you happened to have wandered or walked away from God, please know that you can return to the arms of Jesus, no matter what you have done while away. He will forgive through His perfect sacrifice, giving His life’s blood for your disobedience of sin. He desires an eternal perfect relationship and will fulfill that prophecy come true as He has all others.

Pastor Dale

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