Notes of Faith June 17, 2025

Notes of Faith June 17, 2025

The Number of a Man

Here is wisdom. Let him who has understanding calculate the number of the beast, for it is the number of a man: His number is 666.

Revelation 13:18

The most famous number in the Bible is in Revelation 13:18: 666—a number associated with the Beast (the Antichrist). Revelation 13:18 suggests that determining the meaning of 666 will require wisdom and understanding. Interpretations through the centuries have fallen into two main categories: One, 666 refers to an individual, or two, 666 refers to fallen humanity as opposed to the perfection of Jesus Christ.

Recommended Reading:

Daniel 7:7-8

Students of Scripture for the last two thousand years have tried to identify who will be the Antichrist. Suggestions have ranged from individual Roman emperors to the whole Roman Catholic Church and from individual popes to individual national rulers through the centuries. Even a few American political leaders have been nominated as the Antichrist. No one knows who the Antichrist will be, but we do know what kind of ruler he will be: powerful, charismatic, persuasive, deceptive, and diabolical.

Christians should have no fear of the Antichrist and his reign of terror. Be thankful that you belong to Christ and will avoid the coming Tribulation (Revelation 3:10).

Abounding sin is the terror of the world, but abounding grace is the hope of mankind.

A. W. Tozer

My preference would be for good Bible students to not focus on the number 666, but realize that his name will bring his revealing! Antichrist will be against Christ. He will be or become clearly recognizable to those who follow Jesus. We know that Jesus is already the victor and will complete the plan of God for all eternity. We will see each other soon in the glory that God has prepared for us.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 16, 2025

Notes of Faith June 16, 2025

Beast on a Leash

And [God] changes the times and the seasons; He removes kings and raises up kings; He gives wisdom to the wise and knowledge to those who have understanding.

Daniel 2:21

When it is time to vote for the leader of a nation, massive amounts of time, money, and strategy are invested for months prior to the election. When the race is close, the nation waits nervously to see who the new leader will be. But the Bible simplifies matters: It is God who removes leaders and establishes leaders according to His purposes.

Recommended Reading:

Psalm 75:6-7

A day is coming in the future when a world leader will rise with greater and more brutal power than any leader in history (Revelation 13:1-10). He will be the Antichrist—“the beast” (Revelation 13:2)—and will terrorize the world for three-and-a-half years, the second half of the seven-year Tribulation. He will be given power by “the great dragon” (Satan—Revelation 12:9) under whose influence the world currently exists (1 John 5:19). But Satan is like a dog on a leash—firmly controlled by God at all times.

Though the rule of the Antichrist will be terrible, Christians will have been removed from the earth at the Rapture before the Tribulation begins. Make sure your future is in Christ!

All the world’s thrones are occupied by rulers under God’s authority.

John Blanchard

The Antichrist will be known at the beginning of the seven-year Tribulation, “the Time of Jacob’s Trouble,” when a peace agreement is made with Israel. He will bring peace to the world for three and a half years before entering the temple in Israel and proclaiming himself to be God. But the true God will bring him to his eternal end, casting him into the Lake of Fire. The true Christ, the Lord Jesus will return and dispose of the evil working of mankind, those that do not know and worship God. He will establish His kingdom on earth and reign for a thousand years with Jerusalem as His throne. After so much judgment and destruction of this earth, Jesus will revive, recreate a beautiful earth for those who go through this Tribulation and receive the reward promised to Israel in Genesis to Abraham. They will be given all of the land promised by God to Abraham that they have never had until that day. God is always in control. He will bring about His plan, His desire, His will. May we live righteously, patiently, trusting in God, His power, truth and might to fulfill every promise in His Word!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 15, 2025

Notes of Faith June 15, 2025

Called, Loved, Kept

A Sermon That Still Holds On to Me

Article by Bob Kauflin

Pastor, Louisville, Kentucky

At this point in my life, I’ve heard more than 2,500 Sunday sermons. It’s humbling when I compare how much I’ve forgotten from those messages to what I remember (it’s not even close). And I imagine I’m not the only one who feels that way.

But some sermons, by God’s grace, keep preaching long after they were preached the first time. I heard one of those sermons on February 14, 2010. My pastor and friend, C.J. Mahaney, was expositing the first two verses of Jude:

Jude, a servant of Jesus Christ and brother of James,

To those who are called, beloved in God the Father and kept for Jesus Christ:

May mercy, peace, and love be multiplied to you. (Jude 1–2)

Jude is one of the shortest letters in the New Testament, so when I heard C.J. was preaching from that book, I assumed it would be a one-and-done sermon, or maybe two. I mean, how much can you say about a letter that is slightly longer than one page in my Bible?

I was about to find out.

What Really Matters

Faithful preachers seek to show from a passage of Scripture what God said, why he said it that way, and what it means for our lives. Most importantly, they help us understand how the written word points us to Jesus, the living Word.

But while these truths are being expressed, something else is happening. Members of the congregation are being taught how to read their Bibles. When preachers make much of the original languages, verb variants, commentaries, and debatable issues but say little about what the passage means for our lives, people learn to read Scripture through the lens of scholarship and academia. They treat God’s word as something to figure out and evaluate more than receive, submit to, and celebrate. When a preacher barely references the passage he’s preaching and engages the church with human-interest stories, current issues, and moral principles, people learn to read Scripture through the lens of culture, personality, and preferences.

“Some sermons, by God’s grace, keep preaching long after they were preached the first time.”

But when a preacher clearly and passionately proclaims Scripture for what it is — the living God revealing himself to us — hearts are softened, eyes are opened, and lives are changed. By the work of the Spirit, he both models and cultivates a hunger for the beauty, goodness, and truth of God’s word. His listeners better understand that only God can tell us what really matters. And from the day I first heard that sermon from Jude, I’ve never forgotten four things that matter.

1. Introductions Matter

C.J. began his message by pointing out how we tend to skim past introductions in the New Testament letters. Guilty as charged. When reading the Epistles, I often assumed the writers were using common greetings of their day with a Christian twist. But C.J. noted Jude’s self-description: “a servant of Jesus Christ and brother of James.” Jude accented his submission to Christ, not the fact that having James as a brother also made him the brother of Jesus (Galatians 1:19). His very first words revealed the profound transformation the gospel produces.

Since that day, I’ve tried to slow down and ask more questions about the initial words of the New Testament Epistles (and all the other books of the Bible). That practice has enabled me to benefit immensely from the first few sentences of books like Romans, 1 Corinthians, and 1 and 2 Peter. And I have no doubt more treasures are in store!

2. Every Word Matters

I had been a Christian for almost forty years when I heard C.J.’s sermon. But I had never noticed the three words Jude uses to describe the recipients of his letter: Called. Loved. Kept. Called by God before time through a divine summons. Loved in a way that far exceeds our comprehension. Kept by God’s power from the effects of indwelling sin and false teaching. How had I missed those words of comfort, encouragement, and hope? I’m not sure, but God used that Sunday sermon to plant them indelibly in my mind and heart.

3. Eternal Realities Matter

Jude wrote to protect his readers from the heresies of his day. False teachers were perverting the gospel, threatening the faith of the saints. But before confronting these current issues, Jude heralds the good news that everything remains under God’s wise and sovereign control. The sermon that day reminded me, and continues to remind me, that behind every attack our society makes on the gospel, God stands unmoved, working out his unchanging plans.

Theological truths aren’t meant to be merely talked about, debated, considered, or even preached. They are foundations for our lives that sustain us through the best and the worst of times. And while many sermons I’ve heard through the years have carried a similar emphasis, the sermon from Jude that day helped me rest more securely in God’s eternal decrees.

4. God’s Love Matters

If you had asked me before I heard that sermon if I had difficulty believing God loved me, I would have said no. But as C.J. unpacked the meaning of the phrase “beloved in God the Father,” it became evident that my attitude was based more on presumption than faith. I had previously struggled with anxiety and depression, and still fought the battle against craving people’s praise. There was a crack in the foundation of my trust.

C.J. quoted a paraphrase of John Owen to help us feel the importance of receiving God’s love for us. “The greatest sorrow and burden you can lay on the Father, the greatest unkindness you can do to him, is not to believe that he loves you” (see Communion with God, 109). What burdens God? How do I show my unkindness to him? By refusing to believe that he truly, deeply, personally, passionately, eternally loves me — not because of anything I’ve done or am, but simply because he has chosen to love me. And he demonstrated that love by giving his beloved Son to die for our sins on a hill called Calvary. At one point, C.J. gently admonished us, “Give up trying to find any reason in yourself that God should love you!” It was counsel I’ve sought to follow to this day.

Still Kept

I have returned to thoughts, quotes, and points of this message over and over in the past decade and a half, helped by having the opportunity to hear it multiple times in other contexts. Its effect has been deep and long-lasting, a fountain of refreshment, encouragement, strength, joy, and faith that has helped me know and love more deeply the God who created and redeemed me.

One never knows which sermons God’s Spirit will use to accomplish his work in our hearts. But I’m especially grateful for this one, which has turned out to be a sermon that kept me, continues to keep me, and keeps on keeping me from drifting into a casual response to God’s word and God’s heart.

Bob Kauflin (@bkauflin) is director of Sovereign Grace Music. He equips pastors and musicians in the theology and practice of congregational worship and serves as a pastor at Sovereign Grace Church in Louisville, Kentucky.

I am sure that I have heard over 2,500 sermons and believe that I have given over 2,500 sermons myself. How many do I remember? Not a good question… But I do remember the Word of God and continue to reflect on the revelation of Himself to me and the relationship He wants with me and my relationship with others around me. Love God! Love others!

This is my prayer for those I have come to love in the local church and community that I live…that we would truly know God and respond to His love with obedience to what He desires in and through our lives. We belong to God eternally through His grace and mercy, providing Jesus as a substitute payment for our sin, forgiving disobedience, and making us His own children. May we forever seek to learn from the Word of God and grow, inside and out, through the grace and knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 14, 2025

Notes of Faith June 14, 2025

Bible Dads: Jairus

Mark 5:21-43

21 When Jesus had crossed over again in the boat to the other side, a large crowd gathered around Him; and so He stayed by the seashore. 22 One of the synagogue officials named Jairus came up, and on seeing Him, fell at His feet 23 and implored Him earnestly, saying, "My little daughter is at the point of death; please come and lay Your hands on her, so that she will get well and live." 24 And He went off with him; and a large crowd was following Him and pressing in on Him.

25 A woman who had had a hemorrhage for twelve years, 26 and had endured much at the hands of many physicians, and had spent all that she had and was not helped at all, but rather had grown worse — 27 after hearing about Jesus, she came up in the crowd behind Him and touched His cloak. 28 For she thought, "If I just touch His garments, I will get well." 29 Immediately the flow of her blood was dried up; and she felt in her body that she was healed of her affliction. 30 Immediately Jesus, perceiving in Himself that the power proceeding from Him had gone forth, turned around in the crowd and said, "Who touched My garments?" 31 And His disciples said to Him, "You see the crowd pressing in on You, and You say, 'Who touched Me?'" 32 And He looked around to see the woman who had done this. 33 But the woman fearing and trembling, aware of what had happened to her, came and fell down before Him and told Him the whole truth. 34 And He said to her, "Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace and be healed of your affliction."

35 While He was still speaking, they came from the house of the synagogue official, saying, "Your daughter has died; why trouble the Teacher anymore?" 36 But Jesus, overhearing what was being spoken, said to the synagogue official, "Do not be afraid any longer, only believe." 37 And He allowed no one to accompany Him, except Peter and James and John the brother of James. 38 They came to the house of the synagogue official; and He saw a commotion, and people loudly weeping and wailing. 39 And entering in, He said to them, "Why make a commotion and weep? The child has not died, but is asleep." 40 They began laughing at Him. But putting them all out, He took along the child's father and mother and His own companions, and entered the room where the child was. 41 Taking the child by the hand, He said to her, "Talitha kum!" (which translated means, "Little girl, I say to you, get up!"). 42 Immediately the girl got up and began to walk, for she was twelve years old. And immediately they were completely astounded. 43 And He gave them strict orders that no one should know about this, and He said that something should be given her to eat.

Jairus was the ruler of a synagogue on the shore of the Sea of Galilee. When his daughter became deathly ill, he turned to Jesus who had just arrived from across the lake. He begged Jesus to come, and they headed toward Jairus’ house. But the crowds and an ill woman caused a catastrophic delay. The ruler’s daughter died.

The words Jesus spoke are for us just as much as for Jairus: “Do not be afraid; only believe” (Mark 5:36). When it comes to our children and to all the other issues of life, this is what Christ asks of us. Commentator William Lane wrote, “[Jairus] was now asked to believe that his child would live even as he stood in the presence of death. Such faith is radical trust in the ability of Jesus to confront a crisis situation with the power of God.”

Think of your area of greatest need today. Listen to Jesus telling you: “Do not be afraid; only believe.”

The resuscitation of Jairus’ daughter is both a deed of compassion and a pledge of the conquering power of Jesus over the combined forces of death and unbelief.

William Lane

Jesus is the giver of life! Every breath, every heartbeat comes from God. He is all powerful, over all things, even death! Praise Him, for you will live for all eternity. His original design for you was not destroyed by your sin, for you were reborn by His grace through His gift of faith to an eternal glorious life with Him. Lift up every prayer, believing that Jesus can and will bring His glory to your need.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 13, 2025

Notes of Faith June 13, 2025

Speak of the Devil

And the dragon was enraged.

Revelation 12:17

The devil is popular in Hollywood. Over the years, his name has appeared in the titles of many movies: The Devil Wears Prada, The Devil in a Blue Dress, The Devil and Daniel Webster, and others. But Satan is no movie star. He’s a malignant fallen archangel whose goal is to damage and destroy God’s creation. In Revelation 12, we see his anger and rage during the last half of the Tribulation. Throughout the book of Revelation, he’s seen as opposing the Lord’s people in every way possible.

How thankful we feel as we also see God’s care for His people during this time. Remember, the devil is a created being. God is infinite and eternal; Satan isn’t. God is everywhere present at once; Satan isn’t. God possesses unlimited power and authority; Satan doesn’t. God will be eternally victorious; Satan will be cast into hell.

Satan is alive and well on earth today, so cloak yourself in the armor of the believer (Ephesians 6:10-18) and resist him. He will flee from you (James 4:7).

Keep us from the evil one; uphold our faith most holy, and let us trust you solely with humble hearts and lowly.

Adapted by Martin Luther

James 4:7-10

7 Submit therefore to God. Resist the devil and he will flee from you. 8 Draw near to God and He will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners; and purify your hearts, you double-minded. 9 Be miserable and mourn and weep; let your laughter be turned into mourning and your joy to gloom. 10 Humble yourselves in the presence of the Lord, and He will exalt you.

Satan’s defeat can be accomplished by knowing and using the Word of God, just as Jesus did in the wilderness. He has already lost the eternal war but will continue to fight until he is thrown into the Lake of Fire, deceiving, tempting the people of the world not to believe in, nor to trust and follow God. Our fight with Satan and his fallen angels will not end until we die, or are taken to be with Christ through the rapture of His saints.

May we fight the good fight until we meet our Savior face to face!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 12, 2025

Notes of Faith June 12, 2025

The Sound of Respect

How a Wife Honors Her Husband

Article by Tanner Kay Swanson

Guest Contributor

My toddler’s sayings pepper my journal. On the drive to church: “Daddy, are you preaching today?” With eyes closed: “Mommy, I’m praying for another baby.” After reading about Jonah: “Chomp. I ate you. Bleck. I spit you out.” While watching a diaper change: “You can clean butts, but only God can clean hearts.” Too true.

Ultimately, the record I keep isn’t a matter of sentimentality or laughter (or wisdom). No, I mark my son’s speech because I want to know my son. While I can neither see nor clean his heart, I can listen to it. “Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks” (Matthew 12:34). From the most talkative of toddlers to the quietest kid in class, what’s on the inside will come out — and it will come out through words.

As a wife, I need to hear that word. In theory, I desire to pursue Christ and a marriage that reflects him. I embrace God’s call for the first wife (to help) and God’s command for all brides (to submit). I want Scripture, not society, to light the path of my femininity. Where a million other wives would call me foolish, regressive, or even oppressed, I believe my true Husband’s truer adjective for me: “Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and keep it!” (Luke 11:28). I hear God’s word for the home, and I long to keep it.

But then I go to grab the car keys, and they’re not there. Where’d he put them this time? I want to start dinner at 5:00, and it’s 5:30. Why isn’t he home already? I’m ready to leave church, and another conversation gets started. Doesn’t he see how cranky the kids are? I thought the dishes would be done sooner, and it’s later — so much later that salsa has tried to lay permanent claim to my favorite blue plates. Shouldn’t he know by now? Quickly, out of the abundance of my heart, my mouth speaks, and I do not sound like a wife who knows the words of Ephesians 5:33, let alone loves them:

Let the wife see that she respects her husband.

Root of Our Respect

The temptation to disrespect differs in shape and size from one wife to the next. I love order, schedules, cleanliness — tidy words that sometimes mean tireless and tiring control. When my thoughts, tongue, or both lash out against my husband, it’s usually because he stepped on the toes of my nice and neat expectations. But for the next wife, it may be his straight-and-narrow ways that elicit eye rolls. Where one scorns her husband for keeping the car too messy, another shakes her head at him for keeping the car too clean. Whether he works out “too often” or “not enough,” oversees the kids “too strictly” or “too carelessly,” shows affection “too little” or “too much” — our disrespect can be creative. Whatever its form, disrespect is always right in its own eyes (Proverbs 21:2).

Thankfully, the One who weighs the heart is also the one who changes the heart. God never commands where he won’t also equip, and respecting our husbands certainly requires supernatural gear. For the heartbeat of Ephesians 5:33 is not polite behavior but a particular, even peculiar, kind of emotion. Google a twenty-first-century definition of “respect,” and the top hit reads something like this: “deep admiration for someone or something due to their qualities, abilities, or achievements.” Yet turn to the first-century church, and you will find that the New Testament’s definition differs greatly: The word translated “respect” (Greek phobeō) is often translated as “fear.” “Let the wife see that she respects [phobētai] her husband.”

“Wives, Jesus is worthy of all our respect. Therefore, under him, let us see to it that we respect our husbands.”

What does that mean? Let’s start with what it doesn’t mean. Respect is not staying silent in the face of a husband’s abuse, sin, or even simple error. Neither is respect seeing a husband as superior in value, one to whom a wife should bow and tiptoe around. Rather, the wife who “sees to it that she respects her husband” is the wife who, by grace through faith, sees Christ as the head of the church — and therefore sees her husband as Christ’s appointed representative (Ephesians 5:22–23). This wife fights heart-level disdain for her husband out of wholehearted commitment, first and foremost, to respecting her God.

It should come as no surprise, then, that in the New Testament, such respect is most often a response to God revealed in Christ. When Jesus walks on the sea, calms the storm, raises the widow’s son from the dead, or himself rises from the grave, how do onlookers respond? With fear — with respect (Matthew 14:26; 28:5–8; Mark 4:41; Luke 7:12–16). And for those whose fear springs from faith, their great trembling before him leads to happily trusting in him (Psalm 2:11).

Has the risen and reigning Christ so staggered our senses, so awed our hearts, so changed our lives? Then, in an important sense, our earthly husbands will no longer have to earn our respect in order to have it. We will offer it freely, joyfully, gloriously, in reverence and fear of the One who ultimately deserves it. Even the wind and the sea obey him. Will we?

Ways We Can

If we will, daily prayer is a good starting point. To become truly respectful wives, we first admit ourselves truly helpless wives. Because, again, what God desires from us is that we become not picture-perfect housewives but female ambassadors of the gospel through and through. As much as we may scrub our lives to make them appear respectful on the outside, we convince God no further than the Pharisees (Luke 11:39–40). When he calls us to respect our husbands, he bids us to “give as alms those things that are within” (verse 41) — to give ourselves over to the kinds of affections that suit resurrected wives. God alone can source and sustain this heart-level respect for our husbands.

Along with praying for divine intervention, it’s also wise to consider our habits, particularly those related to our speech. First, as we’ve said, because our words reveal our heart. But perhaps just as importantly, because our words can alter our hearts. Habits form and shape us. The more disrespect we heap on our husbands through our words, the more we will actually disrespect our husbands. But when we daily wield our tongue to build our husbands up, in both private and public, our hearts are bound to follow suit. Consider, then, three small “guards” (Psalm 141:3) a wife might consider setting over her lips in order to help her heart to thrive in holy respect for her husband. Almost surely, she’ll find that God will bless her marriage and her witness too.

1. Respect him in your head.

Our secret conversations betray our real impulses. There’s a reason David prays, “Search me, O God, and know my heart! Try me and know my thoughts!” (Psalm 139:23). Our minds articulate and reinforce our deepest desires and feelings. As our hands fumble for the morning alarm, what thoughts are first out of the gate about the man who stirs beside us? While we go about our day, does our mind betray gratitude or a grudge when it comes to our husband’s own priorities, decisions, and tasks? When we crawl into bed, are we more prone to rehearse his mistakes or ours?

Even our prayers can become servants of disrespect. Do we think we know “how horribly he’s sinning,” “how exactly he should change” — or do we humbly admit our finite perspective, refusing to exaggerate his faults and to forget our own? Praying for a husband to be sanctified (or saved!) isn’t a pass for a wife to sin. Rather, let us lay our minds before the One who hears every secret word from afar, pleading, “See if there be any grievous way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting!” (Psalm 139:24). God loves to lead wives in this way. Thankfully, supernatural unspoken respect for our husbands lies along the path.

2. Respect him in your home.

Many wives wouldn’t dare to speak to a neighbor, coworker, or friend the way they speak to their husbands. Why are we obliged to apply the Golden Rule to everyone else yet often withhold its wise, peaceable practice from our husbands? They are our very flesh (Genesis 2:24); they are the ones to whom we’re joined before our Lord (and the world). Would Jesus approve of the way we address our husbands behind closed doors? As a wife, I sometimes think that I cannot read James 1:26 enough: “If anyone thinks he is religious and does not bridle his tongue but deceives his heart, this person’s religion is worthless.”

Would we be distinctly Christian wives? By the Spirit’s power, let us learn to use our mouths more and more for bridled, respectful speech. Freer and freer from religious duplicity, our hearts will thank our tongues for it. So too will our husbands.

3. Respect him in your hangouts.

Complaint loves company. Rather than succumbing to the temptation, what if we saw time with friends not as a chance to commiserate about marriage but as a God-appointed opportunity to showcase covenant-keeping love? As imperfect as our marriages are, Christ’s commitment to us is still the sure, sweet ground beneath them (Ephesians 5:32). When we strive to speak respectfully about our husbands and hopefully about our marriages, what do we communicate to the world about this whole Christianity thing? It’s true, good, and beautiful — so much so that even its most unpopular parts are really worth living.

Let There Be No Question

Someday, probably very soon, my son will begin to tally my speech. He may not keep a journal, but no matter. He’ll hear enough to know whether or not I respect his dad. In my son’s maturing mind and heart, I want there to be no question that I respect my husband as the head of our home. For in respecting the man, I hope to show my son (and everyone else) that the Lord and Savior who stands behind and over our marriage is “worthy . . . to receive power and wealth and wisdom and might and honor and glory and blessing!” (Revelation 5:12).

Wives, Jesus is worthy of all our respect. Therefore, under him, let us see to it that we respect our husbands.

Tanner Kay Swanson works from home as a wife, mother, and editor. She and her husband, T.J., live in Denver, Colorado, with their sons.

A husband is to love his wife as Christ loves the church and gave His life for her. There is nothing Christ does not do for the love of those that belong to Him! Husbands, love your wife. Wife, respect your husband.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 11, 2025

Notes of Faith June 11, 2025

Hedge of Protection

And war broke out in heaven: Michael and his angels fought with the dragon; and the dragon and his angels fought, but they did not prevail.

Revelation 12:7-8

Because we do not see the warfare that takes place in spiritual realms, it is easy to forget that it even exists. In his vision of the End Times, John saw the war between God’s angelic agents and Satan (Revelation 12:7-9).

The oldest example we have of this warfare occurred in Job’s life. Satan wanted to prove to God that Job was only faithful because God had put a “hedge” of protection around his life (Job 1:10). That is, God had prevented Satan from having access to Job and his family. But God removed the hedge and allowed Satan access to Job in order to prove that his faithfulness was not based purely on blessing but on love for God—which Job ultimately proved.

Daniel discovered that a war in heaven for three weeks had delayed an answer to his prayers (Daniel 10). And Paul taught that we are in a struggle with principalities and powers in heavenly places (Ephesians 6:12).

Do not let your guard down. Pray that God would keep a hedge of protection around you and your family as you pursue a righteous life.

There is no holiness without a warfare.

J. C. Ryle

Dan 10:12-13

12 Then he said to me, “Do not be afraid, Daniel, for from the first day that you set your heart on understanding this and on humbling yourself before your God, your words were heard, and I have come in response to your words.

We win spiritual warfare on our knees. We cannot defeat the enemy in our own strength, but God will protect us with His angelic army and the power of His Word, if we humble ourselves before Him.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 10, 2025

Notes of Faith June 10, 2025

Wooly Devil

The devil, who deceived them, was cast into the lake of fire and brimstone where the beast and the false prophet are. And they will be tormented day and night forever and ever.

Revelation 20:10

Last year, a new plant species and genus was discovered in a U.S. national park for the first time in decades. It was a little fluffy, fuzzy flower that was given the name “wooly devil” because of its two striking red petals that reminded researchers of the devil’s horns. In Revelation 12, the devil is pictured as a red dragon with ten horns, but that’s symbolic. In truth, he is a fallen archangel who moves through the earth “seeking whom he may devour” (1 Peter 5:8).

Satan was defeated at Calvary, but his final doom will only occur after the thousand-year reign of Christ (Revelation 20:10). In the meantime, we must determine to live in consistent victory over his schemes (Ephesians 6:11). That requires prayer. Our greatest leverage over the devil doesn’t come by shaking our fists but by bending our knees. Ask God for victory today regarding any situation in which you feel the devil is active.

Satan trembles when he sees, the weakest saint upon his knees.

William Cowper

1 Peter 5:6-11

6 Therefore humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you at the proper time, 7 casting all your anxiety on Him, because He cares for you. 8 Be of sober spirit, be on the alert. Your adversary, the devil, prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour. 9 But resist him, firm in your faith, knowing that the same experiences of suffering are being accomplished by your brethren who are in the world. 10 After you have suffered for a little while, the God of all grace, who called you to His eternal glory in Christ, will Himself perfect, confirm, strengthen and establish you. 11 To Him be dominion forever and ever. Amen.

The tempter will one day be gone forever from our presence. The one who deceived and helped bring the consequence of sin; death, eternal punishment and separation from God, will himself be condemned to suffering in the depths of the place prepared for him by God. The suffering we experience now will seem light and easy to endure when we see the glory of what God has prepared for those who love Him. May we focus on His glory and rest peacefully, trusting in His promises to bring us home to be with Him.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 9, 2025

Notes of Faith June 9, 2025

Missed getting this out on Monday. I spent my birthday at the Corvette Museum in Bowling Green, Kentucky, having a great meal and shopping at Buc-ees. It was a great day!

Tribulation

For then there will be great distress, unequaled from the beginning of the world until now—and never to be equaled again.

Matthew 24:21, NIV

The English word tribulation comes from the Latin term tribulum, which was a threshing sledge—boards with spikes pulled by an animal over sheaves of wheat to release the grain. It’s a vivid image of how we feel in times of trouble.

Jesus spoke of two different kinds of tribulation. In His sermon about the signs of the times, Jesus warned of “great tribulation, such as has not been since the beginning of the world until this time, no, nor ever shall be” (Matthew 24:21). He was describing the coming Tribulation that will precede His Second Coming. But Jesus also spoke of the kind of tribulation everyone faces here and now. He said, “In the world you will have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world” (John 16:33).

Even in our darkest moments, God is still with us. His promises give us strength as we walk through overwhelming circumstances. What a blessing to know that His words hold firm even when we feel harrowed!

[Jesus] doesn’t deny that we have heavy issues to deal with. He simply offers to take all of our weighty matters onto His own shoulders and let us rest in Him.

Chris Tiegreen

I have yet to meet someone who had no issues/problems, tribulation as Jesus spoke. We have various trials, some small and bothersome, others much greater, even life threatening. But Jesus promises to be with us during and to carry us through to the other side of all of these into His glory! We must still deal with these matters of life. While dealing with them we may rest peacefully in His love and promises. Let us not be anxious, worried, not trusting in His wondrous love and perfect peace. He cares for us beyond our understanding.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith June 8, 2025

Notes of Faith June 8, 2025

Jesus In Me: One Thing I Know for Certain

Jesus In Me

I have heard the Holy Spirit spoken of as an “it,” a feeling, a dove, a flame of fire, a ghost, an emotion, or even an ecstatic experience. He is referred to as the third Person of the Trinity, as though He is the least of the Trinity, or a postscript to the more sig­nificant Father and Son. All of which is inaccurate.

While the Holy Spirit may be symbolized by a dove or flame of fire, while His presence may be accompanied by an emotion or feeling or ecstatic experience, He Himself is distinctly separate from those things. The Holy Spirit is not a thing but a Person.

So at the outset of our exploration of who the Holy Spirit is, keep in mind that He is a living Person who has a mind, a will, and emotions. He is referred to as the third Person of the Trinity not because He is the least, but because He is the third Person to be more fully revealed in Scripture.

One thing I know for certain: The Holy Spirit is not an optional extra in my Christian life. He is a divine necessity.

My prayer for you is that God Himself will draw near to you and you will experience the constant companionship of the Holy Spirit in a fresh new way. And as a result, you will come to love Him even more. The Holy Spirit is wonderful. He is our Helper. He is our Comforter. He is our Counselor. He is our Strengthener. Our Standby. Our Advocate. Our Intercessor. He is another Jesus . . . Jesus living in us.

And maybe especially in these times of isolation and chaos, I can’t wait for you to get to know Him better.

Written for FaithGateway by Anne Graham Lotz, author of Jesus in Me.

The power of God lives within the believer and follower of Jesus! I have often heard that we must yield in faith and let the Holy Spirit act through us. It is He who is making us more like Jesus day by day, until we are made perfect and meet Him face to face. May you be blessed today, knowing that the One who spoke the world into existence lives within you. He is making you to be an eternal joy for both you and Himself. May we glorify God today in all we think and say and do!

Pastor Dale