Notes of Faith October 6, 2025

Notes of Faith October 6, 2025

Which Heaven?

I know a man in Christ who fourteen years ago—whether in the body I do not know, or whether out of the body I do not know, God knows—such a one was caught up to the third heaven.

2 Corinthians 12:2

When you hear someone mention heaven, you could ask, “Which heaven do you mean?” The question is reasonable because the Bible mentions three different heavens.

Recommended Reading:

Deuteronomy 10:12-14

In order of proximity to earth, the three heavens are, first, the skies immediately above us—the domain of birds and clouds (Genesis 1:20). The second highest heaven is the vast universe beyond our atmosphere—the domain of the planets and solar systems (Genesis 1:14-17; Psalm 8:3-4; 19:1-6). The third heaven—the only one assigned a number—is not an atmospheric realm but is the domain of God. The first two heavens are visible to us on earth; the third heaven is not. This is the heaven visited by the apostle Paul, either in person or in a vision, where he heard “inexpressible words” that apparently informed the mission to which God had called him (2 Corinthians 12:4).

Eternity in the presence of God is the destination of all who have placed their faith in Christ. Are you sure that heaven is your ultimate destination?

I want to know one thing, the way to heaven.

John Wesley

Deut 10:12-13

what do you think God expects from you? Just this: Live in his presence in holy reverence, follow the road he sets out for you, love him, serve God, your God, with everything you have in you, 13 obey the commandments and regulations of God that I'm commanding you today — live a good life.

Phil 1:23-24

I am hard-pressed from both directions, having the desire to depart and be with Christ, for that is very much better; 24 yet to remain on in the flesh is more necessary for your sake.

The song “Everybody wants to go to heaven” that also says “nobody wants to go now”, is wrong. The mature believer in Christ is more than ready to leave this earthly life and “go” to be with their Lord and Savior now, now, now! Given that the Lord has chosen to leave us here, for the moment…we have work to do, more people to reach with the truth of God that they might be saved! Jesus is building His church, His body, and there is no one that will be left behind. If we keep quiet, someone else will be used by God to reach those that He is drawing to Himself. Let us burn with great fire to proclaim the truth while there is still time. The day of salvation is now!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 5, 2025

Notes of Faith October 5, 2025

It’s Time to Discover Your Gift

You are so unique and valuable to God that He has given you a special gift with which to bless the entire body of Christ.

Most of us have had to say goodbye to someone we love. Perhaps it happened at an airport when that person was moving to another part of the country or across the world and you watched and waved until the plane was out of sight. Maybe it was the goodbye you gave your child as you dropped them off at college for the first time and drove away, your eyes watching the rearview mirror for a final glance. Many of us have said goodbye at the deathbed of our mom or dad or other loved ones.

Saying goodbye to someone close to us is one of the more difficult experiences of life.

The disciples had such an experience. They had been with Jesus for over three years in the Galilean mountains and walking the dusty trails of Judea. They had slept with Him every night and eaten a thousand meals together.

Then came the time to say goodbye. He led them up the Mount of Olives as far as the little village of Bethany, then Scripture records,

It came to pass, while He blessed them, that He was parted from them and carried up into Heaven. — Luke 24:51

You would think they must have been devastated and in despair. But no. The very next verse says,

And they worshiped Him and returned to Jerusalem with great joy. — Luke 24:52

What? He was gone! And yet, they went back to the very city where He had been so cruelly crucified and did so “with great joy.” Why did they respond in such a manner? Paul gave us the answer:

When He ascended on high, He... gave gifts to men. — Ephesians 4:8, emphasis added…

He left them with special spiritual gifts that empowered them to carry on His work. Discovering these gifts brought “great joy” to each of them. When you discover your own gift, it will result in the same great joy.

These gifts are not natural abilities. There is a huge divide between a natural ability and a supernatural, sovereignly bestowed spiritual gift. An opera singer with natural and impeccable musical and vocal abilities might sing in a church service and not lead the people into a true worship experience nearly as much as someone who does not have the precise natural abilities of an operatic superstar but who does have a spiritual gift that God uses to build up His body.

Yes, God has given every believer a spiritual gift. No one is left out.

Every single believer has one. It may not yet be recognized or exercised, but this special gift anointing is there inside each of us, waiting to be discovered. The Bible makes this plain, saying that…

there are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit. There are differences of ministries, but the same Lord. And there are diversities of activities, but it is the same God who works all in all. But the manifestation of the Spirit is given to each one for the profit of all. — 1 Corinthians 12:4–7

These manifested gifts are given to each of us. You are so unique and valuable to God that He has given you a special gift with which to bless the entire body of Christ.

Importantly, while each of us has at least one gift, no one person has all the gifts. Paul made this clear, too, as he closed the twelfth chapter of 1 Corinthians:

Are all apostles? Are all prophets? Are all teachers? Are all workers of miracles? Do all have gifts of healings? Do all speak with tongues? Do all interpret? — 1 Corinthians 12:29–30

The answer was obvious — No! No one has all the gifts. But Paul finished the thought by saying we should…

earnestly desire the best gifts. And yet I show you a more excellent way. — 1 Corinthians 12:31

And with that word he launched into the thirteenth chapter of his epistle, revealing that love is the “more excellent way.”

God has given every believer a spiritual gift. No one is left out.

Every spiritual gift should be operated within the environment of the love of Christ. Paul made this point clear as well:

Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I have become sounding brass or a clanging cymbal. And though I have the gift of prophecy... and though I have all faith... but have not love, I am nothing. — 1 Corinthians 13:1–2

The twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth chapters of this first letter to the Corinthian believers contain Paul’s dissertation on spiritual gifts. In chapter twelve Paul laid out the gifts. In chapter fourteen, he warned and pointed out how they are often perverted from their intended use. But in between, in chapter thirteen, he revealed that love is the measure, the standard —

The greatest of these is love. — 1 Corinthians 13:13

This is like a Holy Spirit sandwich, and love is the filling. Love is the very oxygen in which the kingdom of God operates, and without love, we, like Paul, are nothing more than sounding brass or clanging cymbals.

As we have noted previously, all believers — you, me, every single one of us — are likened to a body. We are, in fact, the visible body of Christ to the world today. While we are dependent upon the Holy Spirit for our spiritual life, we are interdependent upon one another as well. Like members of our own physical body, we must work together in love and unity to accomplish His will. This is why each of us is especially gifted for a unique purpose to function in the body of Christ.

We must forget the idea that the church is an organization. It was never primarily intended to be such. You are part of a living organism: the church, the body of Christ. My own physical body depends on the health and strength of every part of it. If one part ceases to function like it is designed to do, my whole body is affected. If my liver ceased functioning, I would not say, “Oh, I have lots of other organs. I am not going to worry about this one.”

Every part of my body is interdependent on every other part. And so it is with the body of Christ. We can’t say of another believer, “We don’t need her. Forget her — we’re okay without her.”

To this Paul said,

There should be no schism in the body, but that the members should have the same care for one another. And if one member suffers, all the members suffer with it; or if one member is honored, all the members rejoice with it. Now you are the body of Christ, and members individually. — 1 Corinthians 12:25–27

In the distribution and the functioning of the gifts, we are dependent upon the Holy Spirit. But in order to function as Christ intends, we are interdependent on each other.

God has given these gifts to us. They are not earned nor deserved. They are supernaturally bestowed by a sovereign Lord. Every believer has a gift. No believer has all the gifts. They are to be used for God’s glory, for the uplifting and building up of the church, the body of Christ. And they are always to be exercised in an environment of love. They are designed…

for the equipping of the saints for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ. — Ephesians 4:12

These gifts, listed primarily in Paul’s letters to the Corinthians, the Romans, and the Ephesians, are given with three distinct characteristics. There are motivational gifts designed to encourage the church. There are miracle gifts that prove the authenticity of the faith. And there are ministry gifts that seek to meet the needs of the entire body of believers. Remember, you have at least one. As we journey through the list of gifts in these next few chapters, see if you can discern which one(s) have been given to you, so that it might be said of us what was said of those early believers, that we, too, were characterized by “great joy.”

Excerpted from The Spirit Code by O. S. Hawkins, copyright Dr. O. S. Hawkins.

All y’all have spiritual gifts…one or more. They are to be used to bless the church, the body of Christ! We are weaker when we all do not use our gifts for one another. Let us consider how we might use what has been given to us for the purpose of others! Pray for God to use you, even if you haven’t figured out how God might use you. Be willing. Be ready. Answer when He calls and be obedient to what He says.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 4, 2025

Notes of Faith October 4, 2025

Glimpses of Heaven: Ezekiel

And above the firmament over their heads was the likeness of a throne, in appearance like a sapphire stone; on the likeness of the throne was a likeness with the appearance of a man high above it.

Ezekiel 1:26

Some biblical heroes had momentary glimpses into heaven. Ezekiel saw God’s glorious throne, but he struggled to describe it. A whirlwind split the skies and revealed God’s throne surrounded by creatures who were later identified as cherubim (Ezekiel 10:1). Lightning ripped through the sky, and above it all was the throne of God as blue as lapis lazuli.

Seated on it was a form that resembled a man, glowing with fire and radiating blinding light. The appearance of a rainbow covered the entire scene. Ezekiel said, “This was the appearance of the likeness of the glory of the Lord. When I saw it, I fell facedown, and I heard the voice of one speaking” (Ezekiel 1:28, NIV).

Oh, to contemplate the eternal throne of our Savior. An old hymn says, “God is still on the throne, and He will remember His own.” Whatever you’re facing today, get a glimpse of this truth—God is still on His throne.

With our God before us in all His glory, sitting on the throne of grace, will our hearts dare to say we mistrust Him?

Charles Spurgeon

Peter, James and John, received a glimpse of the glory of God when Jesus pulled back the veil of His humanity, allowing these three to see His true glory. Oh, that we might comprehend and experience the blessing of being in the presence of God, for indeed we are…all the time. May we be more aware of His glory and live to please our Creator, Lord, and Savior!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 3, 2025

Notes of Faith October 3, 2025

A Grand Entrance

Then God will give you a grand entrance into the eternal Kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

2 Peter 1:11

Each year, the Cannes Film Festival brings the world’s greatest movie stars to the French Riviera where they walk down the famous red carpet. But what happens to the carpet after the festival is over? It’s cut up and made into handbags, hats, and slippers. For a cost, you can have a hat made of material walked on by the world’s celebrities.

You may never walk with the stars on a red carpet, but you will walk with the angels down golden streets. Various translations render 2 Peter 1:11 in different ways, using phrases like lavish reception, glorious welcome, triumphant admission, and grand entrance.

Heaven is a place of ultimate rejoicing, a wonderful home where we will know all our brothers and sisters in the Lord. It will feel like home, and its love will fill the air. The fact that God wants us all to live in heaven with Him shows us how much He loves and cares for us. Thank Him today that you can feel calm and safe in the knowledge that He has provided an eternal, perfect future for us.

Now, my fellow sinner, you are as welcome to Heaven as Jesus was. Your sins would have forever kept you out; but on the accursed tree He took those sins away.

Unknown

As each day passes and God fulfills His promise to make me more like Christ, I fervently desire the day when I will be with Him forever! The eternal forgiveness of my sin and the blessings of intimacy with God are beyond my understanding, yet the sure hope that He gives me through the gift of faith burns within my heart to draw closer to Him every day. May we all strive to please the God who gives us life and loves us with everlasting love!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 1, 2025

Notes of Faith October 1, 2025

This devotional thought comes from a dear friend who helps in debriefing missionaries when they take a break to rest, restore, and reflect on the work God has given them. They are a blessing to those they serve and to me as well!

Deborah Wise…

I had the opportunity to reflect on the story of Hagar this week, in a Bible study I am part of. The timing was especially poignant, because the questions the angel of the Lord asks her in the desert (Genesis 16:7–8) are at the heart of debriefing:

“Where have you come from, and where are you going?”

Do you notice she answers neither of those questions? Her reply, “I am running away from my mistress Sarai.” really describes what she is doing at the present moment. God’s questions are past- and future-oriented.

In truth, Hagar was from Egypt, and from the description of the well where God met her, it appears she was on her way back there. It is so human to idealize a place or time in our pasts, and desire to escape there when our present circumstances get hard. I wonder if, in her conversation with God, Hagar began to remember some of the challenges in her old homeland, so that, when God asked her to return to Abram’s household, her heart was a little bit prepared.

A romanticized version of our history can make it harder to be at peace with our present situation. Inevitably we are disappointed if we try to recapture that former “perfect” time or place because 1) it never existed and 2) even if it did, the people and places have changed with the passage of time—and so have we. An honest recalling of the past—including both the good AND the bad—can make the present more bearable and give us hope for the future. As we remember God’s faithfulness through the ups and downs of our story, we are strengthened follow where He leads knowing that He sees, hears, and indeed cares for us.

We play the song below during our debriefing, giving missionaries a chance to reflect on where they’ve come from and where they might be going. I believe you will find it meaningful, as well… It’s written from the perspective of the Israelites upon their exodus from Egypt, but I think it could be Hagar’s song too.

Painting Pictures of Egypt by Sarah Groves

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dbikUG_go7M

Praying you walk in the presence of the God Who Sees you this week!

There is no hiding and playing peek-a-boo with God. He sees us everywhere we go. He lovingly provides our need in every earthly circumstance and if we come to faith in Jesus and follow Him in obedience, we have the glory of heaven to look forward to, leaving behind the ravages caused by sin in this world. Pray to keep our eyes, heart and mind focused on Jesus that in all suffering of this world we remember that Jesus overcame sin and death for our sake and the glory of His name!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 3, 2025

Notes of Faith October 3, 2025

A Grand Entrance

Then God will give you a grand entrance into the eternal Kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

2 Peter 1:11

Each year, the Cannes Film Festival brings the world’s greatest movie stars to the French Riviera where they walk down the famous red carpet. But what happens to the carpet after the festival is over? It’s cut up and made into handbags, hats, and slippers. For a cost, you can have a hat made of material walked on by the world’s celebrities.

You may never walk with the stars on a red carpet, but you will walk with the angels down golden streets. Various translations render 2 Peter 1:11 in different ways, using phrases like lavish reception, glorious welcome, triumphant admission, and grand entrance.

Heaven is a place of ultimate rejoicing, a wonderful home where we will know all our brothers and sisters in the Lord. It will feel like home, and its love will fill the air. The fact that God wants us all to live in heaven with Him shows us how much He loves and cares for us. Thank Him today that you can feel calm and safe in the knowledge that He has provided an eternal, perfect future for us.

Now, my fellow sinner, you are as welcome to Heaven as Jesus was. Your sins would have forever kept you out; but on the accursed tree He took those sins away.

Unknown

As each day passes and God fulfills His promise to make me more like Christ, I fervently desire the day when I will be with Him forever! The eternal forgiveness of my sin and the blessings of intimacy with God are beyond my understanding, yet the sure hope that He gives me through the gift of faith burns within my heart to draw closer to Him every day. May we all strive to please the God who gives us life and loves us with everlasting love!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith October 2, 2025

Notes of Faith October 2, 2025

One’s Ultimate Desire

We are confident, yes, well pleased rather to be absent from the body and to be present with the Lord.

2 Corinthians 5:8

Toddlers are small enough to fit comfortably in the lap of a grandparent to read a book, watch a movie, or just snuggle. In other words, it’s not the activity or the environment that is important to the child; it is the presence of a beloved person.

The same could be said for the Christian’s anticipation of eternal life. While Revelation 21 presents a gorgeous preview of heaven, there is something more important to consider: the presence of the person of Jesus Christ. In a moment of introspection, the apostle Paul wrestled with something most Christians have thought about: Would we rather remain here or be in heaven? While he recognized his obligation to be present in service to the Church, he also had a great desire to “depart and be with Christ, which is far better” (Philippians 1:21-26). He knew that “to be absent from the body [was] to be present with the Lord”—which was his ultimate desire.

Is your ultimate desire to be in the presence of Jesus? The better you know Him now, the stronger that desire will grow.

May God grant us a desire for God that supersedes all other desires.

A. W. Tozer

This is becoming mature in Christ…to desire relationship with God above all things! May we know God, worship God, serve God, converse with God and seek His presence both now and for all eternity!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 30, 2025

Notes of Faith September 30, 2025

Vengeance Is Mine

Joseph said to [his brothers], “Do not be afraid, for am I in the place of God?”

Genesis 50:19

Shortly before the nation of Israel entered the promised land of Canaan, Moses recited a song in praise of God (Deuteronomy 32:1-43). Speaking of those who oppose God, Moses quoted God’s perspective on them: “Vengeance is Mine, and recompense” (verse 35). In other words, the wicked will reap what they have sown (Galatians 6:7). It is not up to men to pay back the wicked for their deeds, for vengeance belongs to God alone (Romans 12:19).

Once their father, Jacob, had died, Joseph might have been tempted to exact revenge on his brothers. But he didn’t. Years before Moses spoke about vengeance belonging to God, Joseph seemed to have understood that important truth: “Do not be afraid, for am I in the place of God?” He knew that any judgment or retribution for evil must come from God alone, not from man. To seek vengeance on another person is to put ourselves in the place of God to whom judgment belongs.

Vengeance is a carnal, common response when we have been wronged. If you have been wronged, meditate on Paul’s expansion of this theme in Romans 12:17-21.

The instinct of retribution is the strongest instinct of the human heart.

Augustus H. Strong

As stated above, our fallen nature desires to fight back…an eye for an eye…no, not really…we want to cause worse injury and pain than has been inflicted upon us. It is not easy to forgive, but it is the will and heart of God. He forgave you and me when we did not have a heart turned toward Him. We conspired evil in our hearts until He drew us with His gift of faith and gave us His heart. Let us not seek vengeance and retribution but rather forgive and pray for hearts to be changed by the Spirit of God for His name’s sake and their eternal destination.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 29, 2025

Notes of Faith September 29, 2025

Knowing God's Story and Making It Known

In the beginning, God... — Genesis 1:1

Ultimately, every one of us yearns to know about our existence. Don’t you?

Who am I? How did all this get going? What is my purpose? Why do I love life so much though it often hurts so bad? Why does it feel like something big is missing? What’s next?

Speaking directly to these deep and important questions, God has provided a grand, sweeping saga, an epic tale that reveals the true, behind-the-curtain explanation of your beautiful life and the lives of those around you.

In the Bible, God tells us what on earth is going on. He explains history. He has given us an engaging, page-turning, no-holds-barred account. From the beginning, to the middle, to the end and beyond, it’s the story of you, me, and everybody else.

And if we let it, God’s story will captivate us.

The rugged subplots filled with thrills and tragedies, the rolling scenes of despair and hope, even the moody characters who emerge and disappear draw us in with delight and confusion. At every turn, God’s story invites us to stop, sit, think. Get lost in wonder.

It is no accident that God created us to love stories. They are the international language of the soul. Our hearts perk up at the sound of “Once upon a time...” And His story is better than any fairy tale or fable. It not only engages and entertains, but it also enlightens and explains human existence. That’s the best of stories. God’s epic deals with the big stuff of life like no other. Why human existence? Why such joy and pain? Why conflict and death? Why fear and hope and faith and love? Why Jesus? What happened? What’s to come?

No, God’s story doesn’t satisfy all our curiosities, but it gives us His framework to navigate life well in obedient faith. God wants that because He wants to walk out your story with you in His history toward eternity. But He walks with those who look to Him through a life of faith. And so, His desire is that you “watch your life and doctrine closely” (1 Timothy 4:16). Doing so is like an invitation extended to Him to meet you in the twists and turns of your life every day.

Those of us who are Christians are God’s storytellers in each generation. We proclaim the greatest story: God’s gospel. This can only be achieved if we know it — really know it. Not the cherry-picking version that suits our desires. Not the manipulative version that only listens to God selectively in bits and pieces. He reveals His will through story as we listen to Him tell it in the Book of Wisdom—the Scriptures. We listen, we learn, we grow, and we pass on what we hear from Him. And so, it is essential that we regularly invite Him into our day to truly listen.

Yes, God wants to be invited into your personal story within His history every day — invite Him in!

The Christian faith is decreasing in influence in society, but in many ways it’s because of Christians. And at times it seems this downward trajectory is irreversible. We’ve been in this situation many times before — times when it looked as if the faith was fading away — but it didn’t (and it will not). God’s people got back on track through His Word. God resurrects what’s dead when His people align life to His story and let Him into their part within it.

God wants to be invited into your personal story within His history every day — invite Him in!

Today we need more people like the heroes we meet in the pages of the Bible: master theologians like our Isaiah, straight shooters like Obadiah, weeping preachers like Jeremiah, men and women with hearts like David and Ruth committed to God. We are the current generation of a long seed within humanity called to witness to God. Thanks to Jesus, our nemesis the Snake-Satan is defeated, but he is yet to be removed. As he spreads his false gospel, so Christians must spread God’s good news with urgency. That takes dedication, discipline, and devotion. It means knowing God’s story to tell.

Our Master longs for (and deserves) our attention and devotion. Listening to His story daily shapes our lives and benefits those around us too. There is a well-known parable of ducks that uses a little humor to nudge Christians away from indifference in our calling as God’s storytellers.i

In the land of ducks, the Christian ducks would waddle out of their homes, waddle down Main Street, and waddle into church every Sunday. They would waddle to their pews to sing songs and listen to the duck choir. The duck pastor would then waddle to the pulpit and preach with passion from the duck Bible: “Ducks! God has given you wings! With wings you can fly! With wings you can mount up and soar like eagles. No walls can confine you! No fence can hold you! You have wings. God has given you wings, and you can fly like birds.” All the parishioner ducks nodded and shouted “Amen! We can fly! Amen!” Then, the pastor duck closed his Bible, dismissed the duck congregation, and they all just waddled back home.

The point of this tale is powerful: Christian ducks shouldn’t waddle about when they’ve learned to fly. And Christians shouldn’t be silent with God’s story when they’ve heard it from God. We are God’s storytellers. It’s up to us to tell it.

Gracious God, thank you for giving us the greatest story ever told. Draw me nearer, I pray, to know your heart, to walk with You, and to serve as Your storyteller for all who yearn for meaning, hope, and healing. Amen.

Excerpted from The Story of God and Us by Jonathan Murphy, copyright Jonathan Murphy.

I have more than one reason to shout “Go Ducks”! This Christian duck story is the more important one, for it involves the eternal destiny of souls. May we take the story given us by God and fly with confidence in His grace and mercy to a world desperately in need of salvation and true healing of heart and mind.

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith September 28, 2025

Notes of Faith September 28, 2025

No Service for Jesus Is Small

Most of us live most our lives doing mostly mundane things. We might experience a few pivotal, defining moments in life. But most days we don’t get married, receive a positive pregnancy test, or achieve a breakthrough in our field. Most days, we’re commuting, studying, parenting, working, doing the dishes, mowing the lawn, or paying the bills.

Do those activities count in God’s eyes? Does the mundane matter to him?

Recently, as I watched a movie about the first man on the moon, it struck me that simple, ordinary activities on earth matter more in space. Eating is everyday on earth; in zero gravity, where food floats, it’s an adventure. Walking on earth is forgettable; a step onto the moon’s surface is immortal. If you find a screw lying around your home, it’s no big deal; if you find one floating in your space capsule, it’s a huge deal. The context of an ordinary activity can supercharge its significance.

A little three-verse story early in Mark’s Gospel shows that a mundane deed can matter enormously when offered in response to Jesus’s goodness and for Jesus’s glory.

Immediately [Jesus] left the synagogue and entered the house of Simon and Andrew, with James and John. Now Simon’s mother-in-law lay ill with a fever, and immediately they told him about her. And he came and took her by the hand and lifted her up, and the fever left her, and she began to serve them. (Mark 1:29–31)

Ordinary Service, Person, and Place

The word for serve in verse 31 refers to attending, caring for, and helping others, including waiting on them at table. Simon’s mother-in-law is probably bringing bread, refilling cups, wiping crumbs, clearing dishes. Her service is ordinary. She’s not painting a masterpiece to honor Jesus, or building a cathedral for him, or composing a song to be performed by a two-hundred-member choir. Her service is more ordinary than that. She herself is an ordinary person. In fact, she’s not even named in the story — instead, she’s identified by means of her relationship with her famous son-in-law (Simon). Moreover, she’s performing her humble service in a humble town: the fishing village of Capernaum, which had perhaps fifteen hundred residents.

“An ordinary deed, done in response to Jesus’s goodness and for Jesus’s glory, matters enormously.”

So, her service for Jesus is not an extraordinary effort by a famous person in a famous place. It’s not Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel ceiling, Bach’s Mass in B Minor, or a Charles Spurgeon sermon. It’s just a no-name woman in a no-name place putting bread on a table.

And yet it gets a mention in the Bible. “She began to serve them.” Mark considers her service worth including. We still read about it two thousand years later. It matters greatly. Why? To understand, let’s draw two implications from this passage for our own service to others.

From Jesus’s Goodness

The things we do — even the most ordinary, everyday, blasé activities — matter when offered in response to what Jesus has done for us. Notice that, in the story of Simon’s mother-in-law, Jesus is the initiator of the action. He leaves the synagogue with his disciples. He enters Simon and Andrew’s house. He approaches the mother-in-law. He takes her by the hand. He lifts her up. We’re not even told whether she believes in Jesus or whether she speaks a single word. We’re just told that the fever leaves her, and she begins to serve. Clearly, she acts not to secure Jesus’s attention or favor — he’s not holding auditions to see whom he’ll choose to heal! — but because he’s already healed her. And that response to Jesus’s goodness is worthy of inclusion in Holy Scripture. Her mundane work matters.

It’s the same for us. “We love because he first loved us” (1 John 4:19). A meal cooked for a neighbor, a patient interaction with a child, a kind word to a discouraged colleague — each can become an echo of Jesus’s full provision, perfect patience, and infinite kindness to us. When we love and serve others because we’ve already received infinitely more from God, the deed (as simple and mundane as it may seem to be) grows great. What a liberating and hope-giving truth! It blows the dust from our ho-hum days, causing them to sparkle with significance. It means the world is bursting with opportunities for us to act in ways that matter forever.

For Jesus’s Glory

We’re not told the mother-in-law’s motivation for serving Jesus. But by reading the story in its immediate context, we get a clear sense of why Mark (the Gospel writer) included it. The immediately preceding story of Jesus casting out an unclean spirit in the Capernaum synagogue emphasizes Jesus’s authority in teaching and exorcism (Mark 1:21–28). The verses that immediately follow rapidly summarize lots of Jesus’s additional activity, thereby showing that his authority extends far beyond a single exorcism or healing (verses 32–34). His authority is over every spirit and every disease.

In context, the main point of the story of Simon’s mother-in-law is Jesus’s authority over her sickness. His authority is clear from the immediacy of the healing — the fever dissipates instantly. It’s also clear from the completeness of the healing, which not only deals with the fever but also heals the weakness that normally follows sickness. The key proof of both the healing’s immediacy and its completeness is recorded in verse 31: “She began to serve them.” Her service — simple and humble as it is — therefore carries massive significance. It’s exhibit A for the authority of Jesus, which is the main point of this section.

It’s the same for us: Our smallest, simplest acts can display Christ’s majesty. “So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God” (1 Corinthians 10:31). When ordinary people perform ordinary acts in order to display an extraordinary God, those acts grow great. They’re aligned with the ultimate purpose of the universe (Romans 11:36).

Good News for Today

An ordinary deed, done in response to Jesus’s goodness and for Jesus’s glory, matters enormously. Here’s some good news: You can practice this today. Pick any of the umpteen mundane tasks that lie before you: vacuuming the carpet, driving a kid to soccer practice, fixing a faucet, completing a spreadsheet. Now surround it with these two phrases: “from Jesus’s goodness” and “for Jesus’s glory.” If you really feel the first phrase, it will yield cheerfulness, eagerness, generosity, and humility in doing your task. And if you really mean the second phrase, it will ennoble and enliven what you do, granting it direction, purpose, and consequence.

Jesus calls his followers to lives of humble, ordinary, deeply significant service, from his goodness and for his glory. The mundane matters.

Article by Stephen Witmer

Pastor, Pepperell, Massachusetts

Even the greatest of attempts to earn salvation are as filthy rags before God. But even the mundane done in the name of Christ brings blessing and honor before God. Let us learn to serve all others in the name of Christ.

Pastor Dale