Job 42:5-6

“I have heard of You by the hearing of the ear, But now my eye sees You. Therefore I abhor myself, And repent in dust and ashes.”
Job 42:5-6

After two chapters of narrative about Job’s incredible suffering, and thirty-five chapters of back and forth complaining and wrong advice from supposed friends, God finally intersects the situation and reveals His omnipotence to Job. The verse above is Job’s conclusion. And now that he has seen for himself what he had heard throughout his lifetime, he is completely unnerved. In coming face to face with the Almighty God, Job instantly repents because he realizes he is “poor in spirit” but as we know from Jesus’ promise, that is the beginning of the kingdom of heaven for all of us.

So spend some time getting close to God today. Read about His mighty attributes in His Word, and balance that against your frailty and weaknesses. When we realize God’s mercy toward us and understand His grace, we can truly be thankful.

Basking in the reality of who He is,

Pastor Gerard Deleeuw

1 Thessalonians 5:24

He who calls you is faithful, who also will do it.
1 Thessalonians 5:24

What a simple short verse and yet what a message it delivers. In an age when we have learned to trust no one, God declares He and His Word are absolutely trustworthy. If He has said so, we can count on it! Knowing that should stimulate an even greater hunger in our hearts to study His Word filled with assurances, glorious promises, and needful warnings. After all, this book is filled with the dependable promises of God. Read John 8:12.

He means what He says,

Pastor Jack Abeelen

Ephesians 6:10

Finally, my brethren, be strong in the Lord and in the power of His might.
Ephesians 6:10

As Paul finishes up speaking to the Ephesian believers, laying out for them who they are in Christ, and then how to live out that very truth, he closes his letter with the reality that, when you truly live out the Christian life, you are going to face opposition from the enemy.

Paul begins this exhortation with verse 10 above. He reminds these believers, as well as believers today, where our strength comes from. So often, our first reaction, our natural reaction, is to fight our battles with our own strength. We resort to our own wisdom, our own planning, and our own way of facing the battle and that is exactly what the enemy wants. He wants us to fight our own battles because those are the battles Satan knows he can win.

However, when we enter the battlefield in the Lord’s strength, we then have a power and a might that Satan cannot match. We have the wisdom and power of God that is infinite and perfect, and while the battle may be difficult, we can walk confidently knowing the victory belongs to us!

Only by His might,

Pastor Jason Witt

Romans 6:1-2a, 15

What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound? Certainly not! … Shall we sin because we are not under law but under grace? Certainly not!
Romans 6:1-2a, 15

One of Paul’s most effective teaching methods is the use of rhetorical questions. In building his argument that justification is by faith alone, apart from works, he is arguing against taking his teachings about the grace of God to an absurd extreme. In Romans 5:20, Paul declared “where sin abounded, grace abounded more.” His rhetorical question in 6:1 is to cut off the absurd conclusion that the grace of God is so bountiful that it doesn’t matter if we continue in known sin.

In 6:14, Paul pronounced, “You are not under law but under grace.” But lest anyone misunderstand this wonderful truth, he is quick to ask, “Shall we sin because we are not under law but under grace?” He answers both questions with a resounding, “Certainly not!” This can be also be translated, “May it never be!”

Many of us might look at these two questions of Paul with a quick, “Well, of course, I would never do that.” But with a moment’s reflection, the Spirit of God moves upon our conscience reminding us of how many times we have fallen to a temptation while thinking in the back of our minds, “God will forgive me” or even remembering 1 John 1:9, and saying, “I will confess this later.”

Let us not be deceived like this. Paul’s summary in verse 12 is: “Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body.” As children of the King, we should not let sin reign in our lives. We should instead submit ourselves to our good, good Father, hallowing His holy name in our hearts.

Tom Day

1 Timothy 6:10

For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil, for which some have strayed from the faith in their greediness, and pierced themselves through with many sorrows.
1 Timothy 6:10

Money in and of itself is not what is evil but it’s the love of money that is evil. Paul warns Timothy the love of money will cause you to do all sorts of wicked and evil things. For one, it will cause you to stray away from your faith. Jesus says in Matthew 6 on the Sermon on the Mount, “No one can serve two masters; for either he will hate the one and love the other…” Your faith is the first one to go. Do you serve God or do you serve money? You can’t do both.

Your greediness will bring trouble your way. When you love money and it’s the only thing that matters to you, you begin to bend the rules. Which is why your faith is the first to go. You cut corners and begin to cheat others, which brings troubles. It could be in their greediness that a marriage comes to divorce. It could be that in their greediness, the law catches up to them and they end up serving time. Whatever the case may be, the love of money will drive you to do evil things, resulting in sorrows.

What drives you? Is it the love of money and more of it? Or is it the love of God unto good works?

Joshua Navarro

Exodus 34:14

For you shall worship no other god, for the Lord, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God.
Exodus 34:14

We know that there are many names for God in the Hebrew text of scripture. All of them are wonderful, and each of them highlights a divine truth of His character. One of them is El Qanna; Jealous God.

In our culture, being jealous can bring to mind a negative association, that of weak insecurity, or selfishness. But in the heavenly sense, it is a benevolent term, illustrating devotion and the strength of a love that is boundless in pursuing the object of its desire. Charles Spurgeon put it this way, “Your Lord is very jealous of your love, O believer. Did He choose you? He cannot bear that you should choose another.”

Let’s take a moment to examine our hearts today. Any goal, anything, or any aspiration that stands above our Lord is unfaithfulness on our part. Realizing this, I am driven with joy back to my First Love, the One who paid the highest price to set me free and win my heart. We are His bride, Church, let’s be true to Him!

Jeff Deal

Matthew 5:3

“Blessed are the poor in spirit, For theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”
Matthew 5:3

There are a few words in Greek for being poor, but the word used here doesn’t just describe someone who is having trouble paying bills or who is barely getting by financially, but instead it is someone who is destitute or helpless.

There are many today that consider themselves to be spiritual people. They go to church a few times a year, they meditate or pray, or believe in a higher power, so they are spiritual. Unfortunately, that kind of spirituality is fleshly and worldly and leaves the individual with a false sense of security. They think that they are spiritually wealthy, but their spirituality won’t overcome this world.

But to be “poor in spirit” means that we realize that we are spiritual paupers with no hope of seeing the “Kingdom of God” without God’s help. And as we come to Jesus and receive from Him His Spirit, ours is the “Kingdom of God.” Now the Kingdom of God isn’t Heaven, though that is ours as well, but we receive the Kingdom of God in our hearts, as new creations with new life in Christ and as children of the King.

So there must be emptiness before there can be fullness, and poverty of spirit precedes riches, grace, and blessings in the Kingdom of God.

Pastor Doug Hardin

Psalm 34:3

Oh, magnify the LORD with me, And let us exalt His name together.
Psalm 34:3

Worship of the Lord is something wonderful and if you go through the Psalms, you can find many songs praising the Lord. The above is one of the many Psalms that David wrote and what really sticks out to me is what David is calling us all to. Notice he isn’t saying that only he will magnify and exalt God, but rather we should be doing this corporately. I encourage you today to join with your brothers and sisters in Christ and magnify and exalt Jesus’ name as great this day! When the saints worship God together, the world sees how wonderful He is.

Blessings,

Pastor Sean Boehm

Genesis 33:4

But Esau ran to meet him, and embraced him, and fell on his neck and kissed him, and they wept.
Genesis 33:4

Jacob finally meets his brother after some 20 or so years. He continued to devise plans up to the last moment and yet, after all that, when Esau saw him, he ran right to his brother and gave him a hug.

There are a couple of points here. One, the most important thing Jacob did was when he prayed in the last chapter. God worked everything out for him, making the fear he had useless. Fear usually is.

Second, we tend to think others’ attitudes towards us are worse than they really are. Can I tell you an ugly truth? Most people aren’t thinking about you at all. They have their own lives to live and are focused on that.

How much time do we spend worrying when we could spend time worshiping? Corrie ten Boom said, “Worrying doesn’t empty tomorrow of its sorrow, it empties today of its strength.” Give your worries to God and live today for Him!

Casting my cares upon Him,

Pastor Ron Kitchell

Romans 8:37

Yet in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us.
Romans 8:37

A military campaign must fulfill two objectives. The first is to conquer and subdue the enemy. The second is to occupy the disputed territory. The occupation is considered the more difficult task. In a foreign land surrounded by the enemy, without support you can be quickly overrun and driven out.

Our spiritual battle is similar. Jesus has conquered sin and death (Romans 5:21) but we must occupy until He comes again. In this war, we are more than conquerors. Jesus has won the victory and the Holy Spirit now occupies us. We are surrounded by the enemy but we are not alone. We will never lose our support for He will never leave nor forsake us. We live in hostile territory but be of good cheer, for He has overcome the world.

Occupying till He comes,

Pastor Rod Harris

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