Notes of Faith January 4, 2026

Notes of Faith January 4, 2026

Pastor’s Pen Pulpit

Series - “Fruit of the Spirit”

January 23, 2000

THE FRUIT OF THE SPIRIT

Galatians 5:22, 23

“For the Fruit of the Spirit is love, JOY, peace, long suffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self control, against such there is no law.”

JOY

Joy is viewed in several connections in the Bible.

John 15:11 - This is Christ’s joy in us.

“These things I have spoken to you that my joy may remain in you and that your joy may be full.”

Note: Joy is associated with the Word. Jesus said, “the Holy Spirit (Who operates in the realm of written truth) would take of mine and show it unto you.” John 16:13, 14

Psalm 16:11 - “In Thy presence is fullness of joy.” The Holy Spirit leads us into the presence of Christ. In Christ we are in the presence of the Father.

Jesus prays to the Father in John 17:13 -

“But now I come to You, and these things I speak in the world, that they may have My joy fulfilled in themselves.”

The people in Nehemiah’s day had tried many substitutes for God to be strong. They discovered that joy was the source of their strength and God and His Word were the source of their joy.

Nehemiah 8:10 - “The joy of the Lord is your strength.”

Nehemiah 8:12 - “God’s people rejoiced greatly when they understood The Word read to them.”

Bottom Line: Jesus is our joy. We have none without Him.

JOY is Jesus (J) and you (Y) - with nothing (O) in-between!

Love to all -

Charles Covington

Joy is an experience way beyond happiness. It is deep seated in the soul and can only be found in God. No God = no joy. Knowing God and believing in Jesus as your Lord and Savior brings true eternal joy! Let the Holy Spirit lead you to Jesus!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 3, 2026

Notes of Faith January 3, 2026

Pastor’s Pen Pulpit

Series - “Fruit of the Spirit”

January 16, 2000

THE FRUIT OF THE SPIRIT

Galatians 5:22, 23

“For the Fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience (long-suffering), kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control, against such things there is no law.”

First you will note that “fruit” is singular. There are not nine Fruits of the Spirit. There is one fruit with nine flavors. These nine flavors are the constituent elements of one fruit. Let’s look at each one.

LOVE

There is a sense in which everything else in this verse flows out of love.

• Love is greater than faith and hope (I Corinthians 13:13)

• Love is the great commandment (I John 3:23)

• Love fulfills the law (Romans 13:8-10)

• Love serves an evangelical purpose (John 13:34, 35)

I Corinthians 13 is the most complete commentary we have on love. Love is seen in 15 movements or expressions in verses 4-7 - all self explanatory.

Love -

suffers long

is kind

does not envy

is not puffed up

does not parade itself

does not behave rudely

does not seek its own

is not provoked

does not keep a record of a wrong suffered

does not rejoice in iniquity

rejoices in the truth

bears all things

believes all things (puts the best possible construction upon everything)

hopes all things

endures all things.

Paul wrote to the Colossians that he prayed for them when he “heard of their faith in the Lord Jesus and their love for all the saints (Colossians 1:4).”

So love is our badge. Let’s wear it!

Love to all –

Charles Covington

I spent ten to twelve weeks preaching on the fruit of the Spirit. I think I could have taken many more. The fruit of the Spirit is the nature of God Himself and His Spirit that lives within the believer will produce this fruit if the person the Spirit is living within will submit to the will of God. The battle of the flesh and the Spirit is great, but in the end we will be with God the Father, because our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ made a way, through the power of the Holy Spirit living within us!

May you overflow with fruitfulness today!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 2, 2026

Notes of Faith January 2, 2026

THE CHRISTIAN BATTLE

I Peter 5: 8, 9

“Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil walks about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour. Resist him steadfast in the faith, knowing that the same sufferings are experienced by your brotherhood in the world.”

The Explanation - verse 9

1. Common Suffering - This passage teaches that the Christian brotherhood shares a common suffering. No Christian is exempt. Suffering is our appointment based on our connection with Christ.

2. From a Common Source - Your adversary, the devil, has been the enemy of God’s people from the time of his fall.

The Exhortation - verse 8

1. Common Caution - We are to be cautious and watchful all the time. The devil never takes a day off, never observes a holiday. He told the Lord that he “walked up and down throughout the earth.”

2. Common Conflict - Resist him steadfast in the faith. All Christians are to resist. Steadfast means unrestricted determination by standing firm in the Word, the body of revealed truth.

The Enemy - verse 9

1. His Character - A roaring lion striking fear into the heart.

2. His Custom - Walking about seeking someone to devour. Satan is always on the move, always hungry for more victims.

HOWEVER, remember John said, “He that is in you is greater than he that is in the world” (I John 4:4). This promise is ours in the midst of every battle no matter how severe the fight rages.

Love to you all,

Pastor’s Pen Pulpit

January 9, 2000

Charles Covington

All people will or have experienced suffering in one form or another. But it is not planned by God for us to experience it alone. He created us to live in community, a community of believers who love one another and support one another in and through all things! May you be blessed today by the community in which you live!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith January 1, 2026

Notes of Faith January 1, 2026

I am sending out “pen-pulpits” as we called them…notes from my pastor Charles Covington that he started writing after recovering from a severe stroke. He continued to serve and mentor me for seven years after this health crisis and left a blessing of these short notes. I pray you are bless by them as I still am!

Pastor’s Pen Pulpit

January 2, 2000!!!!!

OLD/NEW

II Corinthians 5:17

“Therefore if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. Old things have passed away: behold all things have become new.”

Two Observations

1. The passing of the old.

2. The advent of the new.

January 1, 2000 marked the passing of three old entities and the coming of three new ones - two of which none of us has ever experienced.

1. old year - new year

2. old century - new century

3. old millennium - new millennium

Christ’s first coming marked the passing of an old era and the coming of a new era. We read in Hebrews 1:1, 2

God, after He spoke long ago to the fathers in the prophets in many portions and in many ways, in these last days has spoken to us in His Son, whom He appointed heir of all things, through whom also He made the world.

When a person comes to Christ this marks the passing of an old era and the advent of a new one.

1. old position - no longer in Adam but now in Christ

2. old person - now a new creation in Christ Jesus

May each of us in this new year, new century, new millennium realize anew the wonderful position we have in Christ and live each day to His glory as new creations in Christ Jesus. God bless.

Love to you all,

Charles Covington

Those of you who belong to Christ, faithful followers, obedient to the Word of God, know that you are saved, changed, transformed, by being in Christ through the faith that God has given you…but all too many people fake the Christian life, saying that they believe in Jesus, but not truly having a relationship with Him, listening to what He says to them, and not doing the things He told us through His Word, our Bibles, to live according to truth and righteousness. We have been given power over Satan’s deceptions and temptations through the Holy Spirit living within us! Start today and every day with God and you will experience that wonderful transformation that God planned for you from before the foundation of the world. May you learn the joy of walking with God in 2026!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 31, 2025

Notes of Faith December 31, 2025

Faith While Waiting

He has made everything beautiful in its time. Also He has put eternity in their hearts, except that no one can find out the work that God does from beginning to end.

Ecclesiastes 3:11

Our journey through life is like children who anticipate Christmas morning. They know something exciting awaits them, but they don’t know what it is until they unwrap it. Likewise, God has put in the human heart a longing, anticipation, and expectation that eternal joy is coming, yet for now we can’t know the totality of God’s plans and purposes until they are revealed. So we live in a state of expectation and trust in the present: expectation based on God’s promises and trust based on His faithfulness.

The nation of Israel lived with that same tension. After Moses led them in renewing their covenant with God before entering the Promised Land (Deuteronomy 29), he warned them about the consequences of being unfaithful and how those consequences would unfold. Some things are revealed, but the “secret things” belong to the Lord alone until they are revealed (verse 29).

Rejoice today in the eternal longing God has put in your heart and renew your faith in Him for the “secret things”—His plans and purposes—yet to be revealed.

God takes us into His confidence and shares His secrets with us.

J. I. Packer

“Faith is the victory that overcomes the world.” Words of truth from a great hymn. God exists. We either believe in Him or don’t. Our every moment circumstances are encompassed by God through our faith or we live through those circumstances without trusting in a God of creation, provision and care. God has given me faith to believe. This world has brought many trials and will continue to bring more should He give me another day on this earth. But God has gone before me, walks with me, and is a guard behind me, as I go through each trial and leads me in the path of righteousness for His name’s sake to my eternal home with Him!

(Psalm 23)

The eternal longing and hope of being with God forever stirs my heart more each day. The secret blessings promised for those who love Him and await the coming of Jesus, our King, Lord, Savior and Redeemer, for me, are but an afterthought of just being able to live in His presence. I know there is something special coming through the eyes of faith but the longing of my heart is just to be with Jesus!

What do you long for?

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 30, 2025

Notes of Faith December 30, 2025

Perfection in Imperfection

I know that nothing is better for [mankind] than to rejoice, and to do good in their lives, and also that every man should eat and drink and enjoy the good of all his labor—it is the gift of God.

Ecclesiastes 3:12-13

We can see from Genesis that it was God’s purpose for mankind to enjoy the world He created. Sadly, that purpose has been made more difficult by the intrusion of sin. Until creation is restored in eternity, it behooves us to remember and enjoy the gift of life we have from God.

Recommended Reading:

Psalm 139:15-16

The Westminster Shorter Catechism reminds us that “the chief end of man” is to “glorify God and to enjoy Him forever.” And Psalm 16:11 teaches us that “in [God’s] presence is fullness of joy; at [His] right hand are pleasures forevermore.” Forever doesn’t begin when we die a physical death. Eternal life—and eternal pleasure and joy—begins when we are born again through faith in Christ. As we see creation suffering the birth pangs of redemption and restoration (Romans 8:20-23), let us glory in the life our Creator God has given us.

Thank God today for His perfection revealed in the midst of an imperfect world—and for the joy and pleasure you find in knowing Him.

God finds pleasure in us when we find pleasure in Him.

Augustine

Gen 1:31

31 God saw all that He had made, and behold, it was very good

God made all things, including mankind, the only thing created in His image, to be a blessing to Himself. God knows and calls even the stars of the heavens by name. His love is all encompassing! But the sin of mankind brought separation from God and all creation suffers because of man’s sin. But God, (some of the greatest words in the Bible), so loved the world that He sent His only Son (Jesus) into the world that those who would believe in Him (that He is God and their Savior) might not perish (die, and be punished for unbelief eternally) but be given eternal life (with God)!

We were created to live eternally with God in the perfection of His creation. (It is awesome and more beautiful than words can describe.) Sin brought death and separation from God. God offers salvation, redemption, justification, sanctification, and glorification, (being made perfect, without sin, and a body made for eternal heavenly existence with Him!)

Let us give praise and thanks to God every day we have on this earth, testifying to the truth and glory of God to all who will listen, praying that God might use us to glorify Himself, increase His family through us, and finally take us home to be with Him forever!

Ps 84:10

10 Better is one day in your courts

than a thousand elsewhere

Gal 6:8

8 The one who sows to please his sinful nature, from that nature will reap destruction; the one who sows to please the Spirit, from the Spirit will reap eternal life.

Col 1:9-14

9 For this reason, since the day we heard about you, we have not stopped praying for you and asking God to fill you with the knowledge of his will through all spiritual wisdom and understanding. 10 And we pray this in order that you may live a life worthy of the Lord and may please him in every way: bearing fruit in every good work, growing in the knowledge of God, 11 being strengthened with all power according to his glorious might so that you may have great endurance and patience, and joyfully 12 giving thanks to the Father, who has qualified you to share in the inheritance of the saints in the kingdom of light. 13 For he has rescued us from the dominion of darkness and brought us into the kingdom of the Son he loves, 14 in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins.

Let us live our lives, pleasing and blessing God, for that is why we were created!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 29, 2025

Notes of Faith December 29, 2025

Practicing the Presence of God

Fill Thou My Life

“The multitude of your sacrifices—what are they to me?” says the Lord…. “When you come to appear before me, who has asked this of you, this trampling of my courts?”

Isaiah 1:11-12, NIV

A strange danger lies along the paths of Christians, the temptation to start going through the motions. It seems incredible that we would become desensitized to the sacred, but that’s what happened to the people of Israel. Isaiah accused them of going through certain rituals without mindfulness of their meaning or holiness.

We, too, can become so familiar with the “typical” things we do as Christians (like carrying a Bible, going to church regularly, or saying grace at meals) that their significance and meaning fades in our hearts. How easy to sing a song or share in a prayer while our minds wander!

To change all this, we need to cultivate a sense of God’s presence and remember the personal nature of our relationship with Him. We need to worship Him with our study of the Scriptures. During the coming year, make time every day to go to God’s Word, allowing it to fill your heart and mind with His truth.

Fill Thou my life, O Lord my God, in every part with praise, that my whole being may proclaim Thy being and Thy ways.

Horatius Bonar

Let us “remember” that God is always with us, everywhere, at all times, even when we sleep. Remembering the presence of God will help us to not practice our spiritual lives in error, without significance and true heart response to God’s love for us. Ask yourself, as you go through a typical day and week, if you are simply practicing habits without any heart, mind and spirit involved. God desires relationship!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 28, 2025

Notes of Faith December 28, 2025

There will be a memorial service for James Belle at 5885 Downey Avenue, Long Beach, CA, at 1:30 p.m. on Sunday, January 4, in the worship center of the north building. Those who receive this and are able to attend will be a blessing to the family. Thank you in advance for your support. Pastor Dale

Who Is Your Jesus?

Message from Nathan Jones

Nathan Jones: Should you be one of the increasingly few who still remember what the real "reason for the season" is this Christmas, then you can't help but think about Jesus. How, though, in your mind's eye, do you actually picture Him?

The Christmas Jesus

Because the Christmas holiday celebrates the Savior's birth, when picturing Jesus, one naturally sees a baby. Popular nativity scenes portray Luke's description of Jesus as a tiny babe swaddled in strips of cloth and lying in an animal trough. His parents, Mary and Joseph, gaze down adoringly. Shepherds and wise men gape in amazement from their perches along stone walls. The heavenly host flies above majestically singing, "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, goodwill toward men!"

While the angels add a sense of the divine to the Nativity Story, and Hollywood adds the touch of a beam of Bethlehem starlight spotlighting the little family, for the most part, the scene is rather pastoral. We see a peasant family sitting in the hay among the barnyard animals in some sort of cave. It is meant to be a very humble scene.

The Easter Jesus

Because Christmastime is also celebrated by cultural Christians and even non-Christians, the humble imagery of the baby Jesus remains in the mind's eye. That is, until Easter. Then Jesus is portrayed altogether differently. Now He's all grown up, fully bearded, yet frail and emaciated. His lithe body suffers from beatings and is covered in lash marks. He is nailed naked to a tree where he hangs limply, bleeding. And there Jesus remains on that cross in the mind's eye, at least until Christmas returns to reset the mental image of Jesus back into a tiny baby again. And the circle continues.

The Popular Jesus

One of the most popular scenes from the movie "Talladega Nights" is when the lead character, race car driver Ricky Bobby (played by Will Ferrell), says grace with his family over a feast of fast food. He begins each praise and prayer request with "Dear Lord Baby Jesus" until his wife, Carley, impatiently interrupts with a, "Hey, you know, Sweetie, Jesus did grow up. You don't always have to call him 'baby.'" Incensed, Ricky responds with, "Well, I like the Christmas Jesus best, and I'm saying grace. When you say grace, you can say it to grown-up Jesus, or teenage Jesus, or bearded Jesus, or whoever you want." Even Ricky's father-in-law, Chip, chimes in with, "He was a man! He had a beard!" From there, the conversation degenerates as each family member describes the "Jesus" they prefer: a ninja fighting off evil samurai, a guy sporting giant eagle's wings, or a cool fellow singing lead vocals in a band, and so on.

Christians watching this movie tend to squirm, dumbfounded over whether this scene balances closer to blasphemy or comedy. And yet, one cannot help but come away with a profound revelation: most people have created their own "Jesus."

People see Jesus in the only way they've ever encountered Him, and often that's only during Christmas and Easter. Therefore, Jesus remains to most people as either a helpless baby or a dying man.

The Prophetic Jesus

The beauty and majesty of God's Prophetic Word introduce us to a third image of Jesus that few, if any, encounter because they never study Bible prophecy. In the prophecies concerning Jesus' Second Coming, human frailty is stripped away, revealing Christ's true glory—a divinity that the Apostles could only glimpse at the Transfiguration. Christ's true form stunned James and John into silence and Peter into babbling. The Apostles had witnessed Jesus in His eternal, glorified state!

In Revelation 1:8, Jesus introduces Himself with the self-identification, "I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End... the Almighty," breaking out of the box of babyhood with His claim to agelessness and ultimate power. Revelation 1 continues to describe Jesus as "One like the Son of Man," so only resembling frail humanity in appearance. Clothed with a garment and girded with a golden band, His hair gleams bright white as wool, and His eyes blaze like flames. Jesus' feet glow like brass refined in a furnace, and His voice thunders with the sound of many waters. Jesus' holiness blinds with the strength of the sun. The Jesus whom the elderly apostle John encountered caused him to fall at Jesus' feet, as if he were a dead man.

Jump ahead to Revelation 19, and you'll stand in awe of the description of Jesus as He triumphantly returns to earth as a warrior king, dispensing righteousness, judgment, and waging total war against Satan's forces. Jesus bursts out of the heavens riding His white war charger as the armies of Heaven trail endlessly behind Him. Jesus' eyes blaze like fire, atop His head sit many crowns, His robe is dipped in blood, and He strikes the enemy nations dead with the sword of the Word protruding out of His mouth. Emblazoned on Jesus' thigh is the title: "King of kings and Lord of lords."

Often, it is more palatable to paint Jesus inside the box of one's mind as a little baby or suffering servant, but is that the genuine Jesus? In part, yes, for they were as much a part of Jesus as our own baby, childhood, and teenage selves once were to us then, but are no longer.

Jesus eternal is the Jesus of Bible prophecy. So stand in awe of your Savior this Christmas season, and all year long!

Jesus has always been King of kings and Lord of lords, Creator, Savior, Redeemer, and Friend of sinners! May your image of Jesus be one that is eternal!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 27, 2025

Notes of Faith December 27, 2025

The Center

He, bearing His cross, went out to a place called…Golgotha, where they crucified Him, and two others with Him, one on either side, and Jesus in the center.

John 19:17-18

Noah Webster came to faith in Christ during the Second Great Awakening, and his 1828 dictionary often used biblical examples to define the words. Under the word center, Webster included this definition: “to fix on a central point.” And he illustrated it with this sentence: “Thy joys are centered all in me alone.”

If you still have a Christmas centerpiece on your table, let it remind you Jesus was crucified in the center of the victims. But also remember Revelation 5:6: He is now “standing at the center of the throne” (NIV).

Wherever Jesus is, He is central. He is in the center. Sadly some Christians have included Jesus in the panorama of their lives, but He doesn’t occupy the central spot. Is that true for you? Yield everything to His authority today, and let Him be the Lord of all there is of you. Let Him be the centerpiece of your life. All your joys are centered in Him alone!

He controls everything and He is faithful—why wouldn’t you want Jesus to be the center and controller of your life?

Craig Etheredge

What would our lives be like if we were like Noah Webster and defined life through the Word of God? Everything finds its existence and foundation in God. Pray that you might know Him intimately, worship Him wholeheartedly, and serve Him eternally!

Pastor Dale

Notes of Faith December 26, 2025

Notes of Faith December 26, 2025

 

Keeping the Peace

 

You will keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on You, because he trusts in You.

Isaiah 26:3

 

How is it that the season in which we celebrate the birth of the Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9:6) can become a season of stress and anxiety? The Christmas season has become so busy that it is easy to lose the peace that Jesus promised: “Peace I leave with you, My peace I give to you” (John 14:27).

 

Recommended Reading:

Philippians 4:6-9

 

As you take a moment to rest between Christmas and the beginning of the new year, reflect on this question: How do we maintain the peace of God and closeness with God that allows us to keep everything else in perspective? Surely it begins with maintaining a daily closeness with Jesus whereby we find rest for our souls (Matthew 11:28-30). In that discipline we are reminded of God’s words through the psalmist, “Be still, and know that I am God” (Psalm 46:10). In those moments we can focus on what is true, noble, right, pure, lovely, and admirable—values not always communicated by the world (Philippians 4:6-9).

 

It’s much easier to maintain a daily discipline of intimacy with God than to restart it once it is lost.

 

God cannot give us happiness and peace apart from Himself.

C. S. Lewis

 

Isa 9:6

6 For a child will be born to us, a son will be given to us;

And the government will rest on His shoulders;

And His name will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,

Eternal Father, Prince of Peace.

 

Luke 2:14

14 "Glory to God in the highest,

And on earth peace among men with whom He is pleased."

 

 

John 16:33

33 "These things I have spoken to you, so that in Me you may have peace. In the world you have tribulation, but take courage; I have overcome the world."

 

Phil 4:5-7

The Lord is near. 6 Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. 7 And the peace of God, which surpasses all comprehension, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

 

2 Peter 1:2

2 Grace and peace be yours in abundance through the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord.

 

John 14:27-28

27 "Peace I leave with you; My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Do not let your heart be troubled, nor let it be fearful.  28 "You heard that I said to you, 'I go away, and I will come to you.'

 

Rev 1:4

Grace and peace to you from him who is, and who was, and who is to come…

 

Rev 22:20

20 He who testifies to these things says, "Yes, I am coming quickly." Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.

 

Wonderful Peace

 

Refrain:

Peace, peace, wonderful peace,

Coming down from the Father above!

Sweep over my spirit forever, I pray

In fathomless billows of love!

 

Far away in the depths of my spirit tonight

Rolls a melody sweeter than psalm;

In celestial-like strains it unceasingly falls

O’er my soul like an infinite calm.

 

Refrain

 

What a treasure I have in this wonderful peace,

Buried deep in the heart of my soul,

So secure that no power can mine it away,

While the years of eternity roll!

 

Refrain

 

I am resting tonight in this wonderful peace,

Resting sweetly in Jesus’ control;

For I’m kept from all danger by night and by day,

And His glory is flooding my soul!

 

Refrain

 

And I think when I rise to that city of peace,

Where the Author of peace I shall see,

That one strain of the song which the ransomed will sing

In that heavenly kingdom will be:

 

Refrain

 

Pastor Dale