Notes of Faith September 5, 2025

Notes of Faith September 5, 2025

Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter

Everything on earth has its special season. — Ecclesiastes 3:1 ICB

Spring and summer, fall and winter — you know what the seasons are, but have you ever wondered why we have them? It’s because the Earth doesn’t sit straight up and down in space. It tilts, or leans, a little — 23.5 degrees, to be exact. So, as the Earth makes its 365-day trip around the Sun, the amount of sunlight that falls on each part of the Earth changes a little bit every day. The places that get more sunlight have summer and spring while the places that get less sunlight have fall and winter. Because the Earth is always moving, the seasons are always changing. When it’s freezing cold during the winter, you can know the summer sunshine is on its way! In fact, it’s already happening somewhere on Earth!

The seasons aren’t the only things that are constantly changing. In fact, just about everything on this Earth is changing. Families change, schools and jobs change, friends change — even you change! Sometimes it can be hard to know what you can count on because everything seems to be changing!

But remember this: God never changes. Nope. Not ever.

He’s the same today as He was yesterday, and He’ll be the same tomorrow too (Hebrews 13:8; James 1:17). So when He says He loves you (John 3:16) and He’ll always be there for you (Matthew 28:20; Deuteronomy 31:6), you know it’s true — spring or summer, fall or winter. Seasons come and go, but God always stays the same.

God never changes. Nope. Not ever.

Lord, no matter what “season” I’m in — whether it’s sunshiny or sad or somewhere in between — I know that You have a purpose for it. Help me to trust You.

I never thought about being in the “winter” of life until this past week, when I went to see doctors, sometimes two in the same day, all week long. The process of growing older is certainly having its effect on me. But I am excited to be here, in Christ, and living life with all of you! And when the Lord chooses to take me home, so much the better! Until then, I will wander through the winter of life, loving God and loving others as He gives me strength. Let us serve the Lord our God in all thought and deed so that we do not sin and lose opportunity to store up treasure in heaven through obedience. Make today a great day in Christ!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 4, 2025

Notes of Faith September 4, 2025

Parade of Envy

But when the Jews saw the multitudes, they were filled with envy.

Acts 13:45

A recent article in Psychology Today said, “Envy is our culture’s silent partner. We scroll social media and quietly compare. We see someone else’s good fortune—an award, a baby, a beach vacation—and feel a little sting, then a little shame about the sting. Nobody wants to admit it.”1

Joseph’s brothers envied him (Genesis 37:11); the tribal leaders envied Moses (Psalm 106:16); Saul envied David (1 Samuel 18:8); the psalmist was envious of the rich and famous (Psalm 73:3); the chief priests envied Jesus (Mark 15:10); members of the Corinthian church envied each other (1 Corinthians 3:3). And behind it all, Lucifer was jealous of Almighty God (Isaiah 14:12-15).

If you’re envious of someone, go to God in prayer. First, confess envy as sin. Second, thank God for all the unique blessings He has given to you. Third, pray for the person of whom you are envious. It can be a simple prayer, but God will use it to help that person and to heal your own heart as well.

Envy goes further than just wanting what someone else has; it is the begrudging, frustrating consternation that that person has it.

Mike Fabarez

It seems that when we have a problem with envy that we not only desire what someone else has but don’t want them to have it either. Envy is evil from the darkness of a fallen heart. Let us confess our envy to God, give thanks for His provision for us and praise God for His provision for others.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 3, 2025

Notes of Faith September 3, 2025

Be a Follower

And [Jacob] said to Joseph, “Are not your brothers feeding the flock in Shechem? Come, I will send you to them.” So [Joseph] said to him, “Here I am.”

Genesis 37:13

It has been said that before one can become a good leader, he must become a good follower. Also, everybody is responsible to someone; everybody is given directions to be followed. And the family is the place where those lessons must be first learned.

Joseph became a great leader in Egypt, second only to Pharaoh in authority. How did Joseph rise to such a prominent position as a leader? Obviously, it was God’s blessing above all. But it was also the fact that Joseph had learned to honor his father, Jacob, as a young man—lessons that guided his rise to prominence in Egypt. Joseph wasn’t perfect as a young man, but he did honor his father. When he was seventeen years old, Jacob sent him on a mission to find his brothers who were tending the flocks at Shechem. Joseph replied, “Here I am”—or “I’m ready”; “I will go”; “Very well.” No questions, no hesitancy, and no discussion. When his father called him, Joseph obeyed.

When God calls us, our response must be the same: “Here am I! Send me”

(Isaiah 6:8).

Beware of reasoning about God’s word—obey it!

Oswald Chambers

We participate in many thing in which we are not the leader. Are you a good follower in those that you have chosen to take part? Are you supportive, encouraging, helpful, and uplifting? Being a good follower is a great learning experience toward being a good leader.

God is sovereign and leads us where His heart desires to create in us the character of the Lord Jesus Christ. As we work hard at learning to follow Christ, let us lead others to His throne of grace that they might receive help in their time of need!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 2, 2025

Notes of Faith September 2, 2025

His Reasons, His Timing

So it came to pass, when Joseph had come to his brothers, that they stripped Joseph of his tunic, the tunic of many colors that was on him. Then they took him and cast him into a pit.

Genesis 37:23-24

Through no fault of his own, Job lost everything: his children, livestock, and possessions—everything except his wife and his life. When his wife told him that he should curse God for his misfortunes, Job said, “Shall we indeed accept good from God, and shall we not accept adversity?” (Job 2:10) Job didn’t understand what had happened, but he decided not to curse God.

Joseph was another character who could have felt sorry for himself (Genesis 37–50). He endured a series of betrayals and hardships that might have embittered most people. But through it all, he kept his faith in God and saw God slowly unveil the reasons for the path his life had taken. By the latter years of his life he saw clearly that God had been working all things for good (Genesis 45:5; 50:20).

When difficult things happen in your life, renew your faith in God. Trust Him to reveal His reasons in His time.

Trust and obey, for there’s no other way to be happy in Jesus, but to trust and obey.

James H. Sammis

Tough times usually bring the question “Why”, but as a believer in and follower of Jesus we know that we are safely in God’s hand and sovereign control. He is working out His will for His eternal glory and our glory in Christ Jesus!

Proverbs 3:5-6

5 Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding.

6 In all your ways submit to him, and he will make straight your paths.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 1, 2025

Notes of Faith September 1, 2025

The Ever-Present Lord

The Lord was with Joseph, and he was a successful man.

Genesis 39:2

F. B. Meyer said, “There is an experience in which we do not only believe that He is near, but we perceive His presence by the instinct of the heart. He becomes a living, bright reality; sitting by our hearth, walking beside us through the crowded streets, sailing with us across the stormy lake, standing beside the graves that hold our dead, sharing our crosses and our burdens…. Then the believer leans hard on the ever-present Lord.”

From the time he was seventeen until he was thirty, Joseph encountered one heartbreaking setback after another, but we read: The Lord was with Joseph and showed him mercy…. The Lord was with him; and whatever he did, the Lord made it prosper.

(Genesis 39:2-3, 21, 23).

You may encounter setbacks, and sometimes you go through heartache. But those are the times to perceive Christ’s presence by an instinct of the heart. Let His nearness be a living, bright reality in your life today.

Lean hard on the ever-present Lord, drawing on His fullness, appropriating His unsearchable riches, claiming from Him grace to turn every temptation into the means of increasing likeness to Himself

F. B. Meyer

Whether we know it, believe it, or understand it…the Lord is with us everywhere we go. He even knows our thoughts before we have them. May you be comforted and encouraged today, trusting the Lord who loves and cares for you, to be with you through every circumstance.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 31, 2025

Notes of Faith August 31, 2025

Pumpkin-Flavored Everything

By this all will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another. — John 13:35

It always happens around the beginning of September. One minute there is nothing, and the next minute, everywhere you look, there are signs of fall in the form of pumpkin-flavored everything. There are pumpkin muffins, pumpkin cheesecakes, and the ever-popular pumpkin spice lattes. Just the other day I noticed spiced pumpkin pecan ice cream at the local grocery store. Apparently nothing is off-limits. Even without a single glance at a calendar, the prevalence of pumpkin would give the season away in a flavorful way.

Similarly, there should be an abundance of love present in the life of a believer. Love should be evident in the way we treat our neighbors. There should be love in the way we honor our parents. Love should spur us to serve within our communities. Without uttering a word about church affiliation or conversion experiences, the prevalence of love in our lives should make our relationship with Christ abundantly clear.

There should be a trail of brotherly love everywhere we go, and no one should be off-limits.

Is our “love for one another” the most obvious thing about us? Would someone watching the way we conduct ourselves and the way we interact with others know that we are disciples of Christ? Is there something about us that sets us apart as different and identifies us as belonging to God? The essence of Jesus’ words was that acts and attitudes of love should be as common in the lives of Christ followers as pumpkin spice lattes in the fall. Just for the record, that is really common.

What would it look like if we were all known for our love for one another? How would it change our families, our workplaces, and our towns if we truly loved one another? I believe it can be done. If someone can make pumpkin- flavored potato chips and convince people to buy them, we can make brotherly love the theme of the season. Let’s make it obvious that we are Jesus’ disciples.

For every creature of God is good, and nothing is to be refused if it is received with thanksgiving. — 1 Timothy 4:4

Fall Trees

I will restore to you the years that the swarming locust has eaten. — Joel 2:25

It’s always exciting when the leaves begin falling from the trees and blowing in the crisp breezes of fall. We ooh and aah over the myriad of colors. There comes a point, however, when all the leaves have finished their falling, and the trees stand bare. How do you feel when you see the fall trees without their leaves? At first glance, perhaps, they seem empty, as if everything has been stripped away. They are left standing stark on a gray landscape, and, well, they often seem a little sad and alone. They appear barren.

In time, however, those very same trees will begin to show signs of new growth. Buds will hint at the beauty of things to come. In due time, fresh flowers and leaves will appear, and the trees that appeared dead will spring to life again. So it’s important to remember in the cold days of fall that bare is not the same thing as barren.

Life is full of seasons.

There are times when we feel things being stripped away from us and we are left standing bare before the world. Others looking at us may see no signs of life and believe us to be barren. But our God is a God of restoration, and no loss goes unnoticed by Him. Many times, what looks like barrenness to the world is only a season of bareness.

Our fruitful days are coming, and God is about to do a work in our lives that only He can do.

Through the prophet Joel, God promised restoration to His people. He promised to restore the years the locusts had eaten. These were locusts that God Himself had sent to swarm among them. The Lord knows when things need to fall away from our lives, and we can trust Him also to bring us again to a season of growth and new life. Just remember that whatever the season you’re currently in, bare is not the same as barren and that anything stripped away is leaving room for God to do something new.

Therefore be patient, brethren, until the coming of the Lord. See how the farmer waits for the precious fruit of the earth, waiting patiently for it until it receives the early and latter rain. — James 5:7

Excerpted from Devotions for the Fall by Stacy Edwards, copyright Thomas Nelson.

I am seeing the ads for pumpkin everything too! And I am succumbing to them! Dairy Queen has a pumpkin flavored blizzard! I want to try it. I like pumpkin… pie, cheesecake, coffee, ice cream…even my chickens like pumpkins!

But the point of the story is the stripping away of the old and the restoration of the new. God does not do this in us in the “Fall” season. He is always working at stripping away the old man so that the new man in Christ can produce fruit! Just think, if we were to work with God and shake the leaves of the old man off, waiting patiently for the new growth God creates in us to bear fruit for His glory, what daily lives we could lead with excitement and expectation.

The “Fall” season is not comfortable or beautiful or easy, as things are being stripped away from our lives. But those things must die so that God can use our lives to bless others who suffer from the same or similar struggles in their lives.

I am praying for you this morning, that whatever “Fall” season God has you going through, that you are able, like Jesus in His persecution and death, to look forward to the glory that God is preparing for you, in this life and the next! Be strong and courageous in Christ. Know that you are loved and have an intimate relationship with the King of kings! He will bring His bride to glorious perfection.

He who began a good work in you, will be faithful to complete it!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 30, 2025

Notes of Faith August 30, 2025

We…sent Timothy, our brother and minister of God, and our fellow laborer in the gospel of Christ, to establish you and encourage you concerning your faith.

1 Thessalonians 3:1-2

Timothy was probably a teenager when Paul sent him on his very first solo mission. Paul, Silas, and Timothy had evangelized in the city of Thessalonica, planting a church there. Being run out of town, they traveled three hundred miles south to the city of Athens. But Paul was worried about the new believers, so worried that he sent the teenager to check on them. Timothy traveled three hundred miles alone, slipped into Thessalonica, sought out the new believers, encouraged them, and brought updates back to Paul. It’s amazing such a young man would be sent on such a mission. But he was successful.

Whatever our age, the Lord has a way of sending us to new places, new people, new situations, and unexpected circumstances. Wherever we go, there are people we can establish and encourage in their faith. The God of Timothy is our God, and the mission endures.

Let’s follow the Lamb wherever He goes (Revelation 14:4).

Christ has been sent here to reveal the Father and to show forth His glory. So we are sent into the world to show forth Christ’s glory, which is the glory of the Father.

A. W. Pink

We are sent to be around coworkers, those at the grocery store, our doctor(s), a neighbor…many opportunities to share the glory of God through the gospel of Jesus Christ, or to give an encouraging word to a brother or sister in need. Wherever God sends us we are to be light in a dark place. Share the light of the glory of God that you have been given that another might be blessed today!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 29, 2025

Notes of Faith August 29, 2025

Protected by Prayer

Praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, being watchful to this end with all perseverance and supplication for all the saints.

Ephesians 6:18

The believer’s spiritual armor is well known to students of Scripture

(Ephesians 6:10-18). Six pieces of armor are mentioned, but prayer is often overlooked (verse 18). To see why Paul included it, we must remember the theme of this section: “Finally, my brethren, be strong in the Lord and in the power of His might” (verse 10).

This whole section of Paul’s letter is about being strong in the Lord—and spiritual armor is definitely a part. But his concluding exhortation about prayer is also a part of the protection we need against the schemes of the devil (verse 11). This is evidenced by Paul’s own request that the Ephesian church pray for him that he would be fearless and courageous in proclaiming the Gospel while imprisoned in Rome (verses 19-20). He made the same request for prayer to the church in Rome on another occasion when he was headed for likely persecution in Jerusalem (Romans 15:30-31).

Should we clothe ourselves daily in the spiritual armor of God? Absolutely! But do not fail to include the protective power of prayer.

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

William Cowper

Ask the Holy Spirit to help you memorize Scripture. It is these that give us hope, strength, and the power of God to make it through each day. May you be encouraged and blessed as you pray for God’s strength in you today!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 28, 2025

Notes of Faith August 28, 2025

Persistent, Patient Prayer

Then [Jesus] spoke a parable to them, that men always ought to pray and not lose heart.

Luke 18:1

If we make a request of someone—perhaps a friend or coworker—and don’t receive an answer, we wonder why. Did they forget? Does their silence mean no? Are they still considering our request? We may be afraid to ask again and so continue in a state of confusion. Sadly, we take that human experience and apply it to God in the case of unanswered prayer.

Recommended Reading:

Luke 18:1-8

Several things are different when it comes to unanswered prayer. First, Jesus taught that God knows what we are going to pray for before we even ask (Matthew 6:8). That eliminates the possibility of God not having heard our prayers. Second, Jesus told a parable illustrating the fact that we should continue to ask and not give up (Luke 18:1-8). In the parable, a woman petitioned a judge with her request and continued to ask until she received an answer. A second parable of Jesus illustrates the similar points of boldness and persistence in prayer (Luke 11:5-8).

Third, God is good and will not withhold anything from His children according to His perfect plans. Pray and be patient while awaiting God’s answer.

The great tragedy of life is not unanswered prayer, but unoffered prayer.

F. B. Meyer

We are taught from instinct, our parents, and educators that we need to pull our pants up and take care of every problem that comes our way. This is a bleak attempt to leave God out of every issue of life. But it is God who has created each one of us in our mother’s womb, knows us more intimately than any other, and is involved in every moment of our lives. Let us not only be aware that God is… but that God hears and answers prayer. Jesus prayed continually. Jesus is God and yet He prayed to His Father intimately and always. Let us learn to be like Jesus, talking to “our” Father, as He taught us to pray. Pray without ceasing. Pray about everything. Your Father loves conversation with you.

James 4:8

8 Draw near to God and He will draw near to you.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith August 27, 2025

Notes of Faith August 27, 2025

Learning to Pray

And when you pray.... But you, when you pray.... And when you pray.

Matthew 6:5-7

When a child tells his father he wants to learn to ride a bike, what does the father do? He could explain the parts of the bike. He could show the child a video about bikes. He could talk about the dangers involved in bike riding. Or he could put the child on the bike and work with him until he could ride! In other words, the best way to learn most things is by doing and practicing them.

Truth be told, most Christians don’t pray as well as they wish they did. They can identify with the disciples who asked Jesus to teach them to pray (Luke 11:1). In His Sermon on the Mount, Jesus devoted extensive time to teaching about prayer (Matthew 6:5-14). He even provided a model prayer for His disciples to use, as if to say, “If you want to learn to pray, pray like this.” Prayer is a discipline, a practice, that only gets better when it is exercised. The best way to learn to pray is to pray!

Life is fragile—handle it with prayer.

Unknown

1 John 4:14-15

14 We have seen and testify that the Father has sent the Son to be the Savior of the world.

15 Whoever confesses that Jesus is the Son of God, God abides in him, and he in God.

Let the Holy Spirit within you speak to your heavenly Father because of the saving grace and power of the Lord Jesus Christ! Prayer…just do it! As you live each day growing in Christ, you will discern more and more the will of God, and learn to pray…“Thy will be done!”

Pastor Dale