The blog contains daily devotions and notes from the weekly messages.  We encourage you to review the notes during the sermon or through the week!  Most of the posts will have an audio and/or video link at the end of the notes.  From time to time the pastors will share other insights and devotions here.
 
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Seize the Moment – Day 1183

The Prayer of the Aged Believer!

Psalm 71

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Tuesday, June 13.

 

We live in a culture where influencers are determined by their youth and beauty. Is there a place for the wisdom of the aged in our world today? More than ever, we need the perspective and experiences of our elders. How should the senior saints pray? David modeled for us the prayer of the aged believer in Psalm 71, overtly petitioning God in verse 9, “Do not cast me off in the time of old age; do not forsake me when my strength fails.” Spurgeon insightfully commented on David’s prayer, “Old age robs us of personal beauty, and deprives us of strength for active service; but it does not lower us in the love and favour [sic] of God.”[1]

 

First, pray with confidence! Even if you, as an aged believer, don’t feel valued by our culture in your old age, never forget that your sufficiency is found in God’s inexhaustible grace, not the energy of your fleeting youth. Second, pray with conviction! David continued in Psalm 71:17-19, calling all senior saints to persevere in the mission of God:

 

O God, You have taught me from my youth, and I still declare Your wondrous deeds. And even when I am old and gray, O God, do not forsake me, until I declare Your strength to this generation, Your power to all who are to come. For Your righteousness, O God, reaches to the heavens, You who have done great things; O God, who is like You?

 

Seize the moment and pray Psalm 71, meditating upon the reward of your faith – “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the course, I have kept the faith; in the future there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on that day; and not only to me, but also to all who have loved His appearing” (2 Timothy 4:7-8).

 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

 
 

FOOTNOTE:

 

[1] C. H. Spurgeon, The Treasury of David: Psalms 56-87, vol. 3 (London; Edinburgh; New York: Marshall Brothers, n.d.), 209.


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Seize the Moment – Day 1182

Be a Person of Blessing!

Psalm 70

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Monday, June 12.

 

Do you find yourself cursing people and complaining about the state of the world? Psalm 70:2 should serve as a warning, “Let those be ashamed and humiliated who seek my life; let those be turned back and dishonored who delight in my hurt.” No matter how much in the right you think you are, you should not curse another person, in thought, word, or deed (Matthew 5:21-26). Be a person of blessing, not cursing (James 3:9-10).

 

David teaches us the way in verse 5, “But I am afflicted and needy; hasten to me, O God! You are my help and my deliverer; O Lord, do not delay.” While this may not sound like the prayer of a mighty warrior or conquering king; it is! David was powerful amongst men because he knew intimately the truth that Jesus taught in John 15:5, “apart from Me you can do nothing.” Until you understand this, you are far weaker and more vulnerable than you can imagine.

 

God is not a crutch for weak people; He is the way of victory for all people! We walk with God when we realize that oppressing others is never the way of victory. The way of God is seeking the liberation of all – freedom from sin! You cannot bless and curse a person at the same time. It’s impossible!

 

John 3:16-17 explains why Jesus came from Heaven to Earth, “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life. For God did not send the Son into the world to judge the world, but that the world might be saved through Him.” The rescue mission of Jesus is “to seek and to save that which was lost” (Luke 19:10). Are you living as a hope-bearer or are you being a doomsdayer?

 

Seize the moment and pray Psalm 70, meditating upon the great rescue mission of Jesus Christ – “O God, hasten to deliver me; O Lord, hasten to my help!” (Psalm 70:1).

 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

 

 

 
 

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Grow Strong in God’s Grace (Wk 14)

Learning How to be a Faithful Farmer for God’s Harvest!

 

The Faith that Blesses!

 

Hebrews 11:20 (NASB)

 

God is in the business of transforming stories through the gospel of Jesus Christ. We are to grow strong in God’s grace as active participants in the world He created. God has entrusted His creation to His people to work as His Harvest workers – “All the world’s a field, and all the disciples of Jesus Christ merely farmers!” Therefore, let’s be faithful farmers by following the four-step strategy of a hard-working farmer: 1) cultivate people with faith; 2) sow the good seed of God’s grace (the gospel) into their hearts and minds; 3) care for them as their stories are transformed into fruit-bearing plants; and 4) reap a harvest of praise as the church of Jesus Christ.

 

This strategy must be empowered by the Holy Spirit! Therefore, harvest workers of God’s kingdom are called to grow strong in God’s grace. Let’s take the first step by learning from the transforming stories of the Hall of Faith, found in Hebrews 11.

 

STEP #1 OF THE FARMER’S STRATEGY: CULTIVATE THE SOIL WITH FAITH

 

Today, we are telling the story of Isaac, based on Hebrews 11:20, which says, “By faith Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau, even regarding things to come.”[1] From Isaac’s story, we are going to learn the faith that blesses.

 

How did you come into the faith? What is the starting point of your transforming story? Kimberly and I both came to know Jesus through outreach ministries to the military; we were both young adults out of high school and in the beginning of our military service. Maybe you were blessed to come from a home filled with godliness and faith, and you have been a Christian as long as you can remember. What a privilege and joy! That is our prayer for our three children and for all the children of our congregation. Regardless of how or when your story began, in Christ we each have the power to bless another generation. Though the story of Isaac and his twin sons, Jacob and Esau, we are going to learn the power and choice of blessing people by planting the good seed of God’s grace in their lives through faith.

 

STEP #2 OF THE FARMER’S STRATEGY: SOW THE GOOD SEED OF GOD’S GRACE

 

The context of this whole Hebrews 11 passage is that one word: faith! Hebrews 11:1 teaches us that “faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.” It means to put your whole trust in someone or something. In this case, and throughout the Bible the object of our faith is in God, who is trustworthy and true. In fact, the purpose of highlighting the people and their stories is to teach us more about who God is and that He is faithful. God is worthy to put all our weight on Him, just as we learned last week through the Abraham-Isaac story. The stories bring to life these doctrinal truths through illustration, illumination, and inspiration!

 

We have been learning about the faith and obedience of Isaac’s parents, Abraham and Sarah. Though far from perfect as a man and woman, above all they modeled a real relationship with God. Truly, they imperfectly put their full trust in God and God’s grace perfectly sustained them. They believed and they acted upon this belief because they are people of the promise, and Isaac’s very life was the fulfillment of God’s promise to them. We learned of God’s faithfulness and trustworthiness through the very existence of Isaac. Isaac was a miracle baby!

 

Here is what we know about Isaac: his birth was foretold, longed for, and miraculous (Genesis 21:1-3). He was circumcised by the very hand of his father Abraham on the eighth day as a sign of the covenant that God had personally made with Abraham (Genesis 21:4). Isaac’s mom died at 127 years old, when he was approximately thirty-seven years old, since he was born when she was 90 (Genesis 23:1). She died approximately twenty years after the climactic event of Genesis 22, when God commanded Abraham to sacrifice his one and only son as an act of worship (check out last week’s teaching). I can only imagine how for thirty-seven years Sarah loved Isaac and spoke of why he was named, “Laughter.” With a smile on her face, she would recount her own lack of faith in God’s plan to give her a baby at 90, and how Isaac shouldn’t make the same mistake: God had proven time and time again, through Isaac’s birth, his experience with her crazy husband on the mount in Moriah as a teenager, that God is a great provider and worthy of all his trust. This would have been a mother on a mission to make sure her son knew he was a miracle, chosen by God, and blessed by his parents, for a purpose.

 

What is amazing about Isaac is his rich faith heritage. When many focus on the speculation of his psychological damage caused by being a teenage boy who was almost slaughtered at the hands of his father Abraham, their musings miss out on the one thing that is the point of this ongoing story of the people of God’s promise; that is the powerful influence of one generation’s faith on the next generation. Isaac’s family blessed him to be a blessing to others! That is the promise of Genesis 12:2-3, given to Abraham, passed on to Isaac, “I will make you a great nation, and I will bless you, and make your name great; and so you shall be a blessing… in you all the families of the earth will be blessed.”

 

How can your home be a place of faith where the next generation is not indulged, but rather blessed so that they will be a blessing to others? When I serve my children, I tell them that I do it  so that they will learn to serve others. I bless them so that they will learn to be a blessing to others! That takes us to our next action step.

 

STEP #3 OF THE FARMER’S STRATEGY: CARE FOR THE MATURING PLANT

 

Isaac may have been a second-generation follower of God, but he believed in God’s promises for himself. His father’s God was His God. His mother’s God was His God. His faith was His own! Isaac was blessed to live in a family with faith, but even as a member of that community, he had to know God for himself. The promise of Genesis 12 had to become his own, just as all the promises of God through Jesus Christ must become our own. The faith of the previous generation is passed on to us so that we can make it our own, passing it on to the next generation.

 

God provided a faithful wife to Isaac in Rebekah (see Genesis 24). Isaac was 40 when he was married and 60 when Abraham died. Before his death, God blessed Isaac with great abundance; Genesis 25:5 says, “Now Abraham gave all that he had to Isaac.” Interestingly, the Bible makes it clear in Genesis 25:11 who was really doing the blessing, “It came about after the death of Abraham, that God blessed his son Isaac.” After Abraham died, God adopted Isaac as his own son; He did not leave Isaac as an orphan! Jesus said in John 14:18, “I will not leave you as orphans.” God tends to the maturing plant through the presence and power of His Spirit!

 

So, like Abraham before him, Isaac was blessed with everything, except the one thing that was necessary to keep passing on the legacy – a child! For twenty years they had tried to conceive a child (Genesis 25:26), then when Isaac was 60, God blessed them as Genesis 25:21 records, “Isaac prayed to the Lord on behalf of his wife, because she was barren; and the Lord answered him and Rebekah his wife conceived.” Isaac had a faith that blessed! He learned this from his mom and dad, but he had to make it his own!

 

Every generation must embrace faith as their own because God does not have grandchildren; He has children! In the same way that Abraham and Sarah wandered through the nothingness of infertility, so did Isaac and Rebekah. For twenty years, they had to wrestle with their own faith and trust in God; to believe God to keep His promises. To learn that God is good! Faith becomes your own when you have personally had to put your full weight into God. You see, you can’t bless someone with a future promise that you yourself don’t believe in. Sure, you can give them a family name and maybe some money and stuff in an estate, but you can’t pass on to the next generation what you don’t have yourself! Brothers and sisters, what matters is that you pass on the name of Jesus! The name that you have learned through life’s hardest circumstances is trustworthy and true! It is only by the name of Jesus you will have an eternal legacy.

 

Do you believe? One day, when each of us must stand before God to give an account for our lives, it will be just you and Him. No pastors, no parents, no excuses, no ATMs, just God and you… Do you know Him? Do you trust Him? Are you reaping the good fruit of a life of faith by having plenty of seed-rich fruit to hand to those in your life? That brings us to our last action step in the hard-working farmer’s strategy.

 

STEP #4 OF THE FARMER’S STRATEGY: REAP A HARVEST OF PRAISE

 

Jacob and Esau are real people in real history; they are the twin sons of Isaac and Rebekah, the grandchildren of Abraham and Sarah. These miracle babies, a set of twins that Jacob blessed according to Hebrews 11:20, represent so much more than who they are. We cannot spend as much time with these brothers as I would like, and prefer as a Bible teacher, but for today’s purposes allow me to draw an important contrast between them. Genesis 25:27-34 says a lot in a short space:

 

When the boys grew up, Esau became a skillful hunter, a man of the field, but Jacob was a peaceful man, living in tents. Now Isaac loved Esau, because he had a taste for game, but Rebekah loved Jacob. When Jacob had cooked stew, Esau came in from the field and he was famished; and Esau said to Jacob, “Please let me have a swallow of that red stuff there, for I am famished.” Therefore his name was called Edom. But Jacob said, “First sell me your birthright.” Esau said, “Behold, I am about to die; so of what use then is the birthright to me?” And Jacob said, “First swear to me”; so he swore to him, and sold his birthright to Jacob. Then Jacob gave Esau bread and lentil stew; and he ate and drank, and rose and went on his way. Thus Esau despised his birthright.

 

Here is the contrast: Jacob highly valued the birthright of the promise of God and Esau despised his because of his own foolish decisions. Jacob and Esau both have some glaring character flaws, but what matters is that they both made a choice: Jacob for the promise of God and Esau for the pleasures of the world.

 

You have a choice: every generation must choose whether they will be a Jacob or Esau.

 

Esau violated the covenant of God, married many foreign wives (Hittites and an Ishmaelite) representing his compromises away from the promises of God and yoking with the world, and he fathered nations who war against God’s people, just like Ishmael fathered great nations who still war against God’s people. Listen to the summary of Esau’s bitterness at rejecting his own birthright and choosing foreign wives, from Genesis 26:35, “They made life bitter for Isaac and Rebekah” (ESV). “Esau” passes on bitterness and grief (NASB), generation after generation.

 

Bitterness begets bitterness! What are some examples in our everyday lives of how we choose Esau: the bitterness of the world? To put it plainly; it happens when we choose to be doomsdayers! When you choose to be negative and nitpicky, as if you are always looking for what is wrong rather than choosing to see what is right, on the verge of anger most of the time, ready to go on the defensive and build a case for your own point of view, living in blame and accusation, critical of others instead of looking for ways to build up and edify, never satisfied rather than living in contentment, never trusting another, but putting yourself first because your worldview as a doomsdayer demands that you protect the glass house you have constructed.

 

There is a way out of bitterness and the consequences of choosing the mindset and lifestyle of a doomsdayer. Jesus sets the prisoners free; He heals the brokenhearted; and He uproots bitter roots! In short, Jesus is our living hope and transforms us from being doomsdayers to being hope-bearers! Church, we are the hope of the world! We are to reap a harvest of praise – declaring the hope of the blessing of God, given to us through Jesus Christ!

 

Jacob’s legacy is the twelve tribes of Israel through whom the Savior – Jesus Christ – was born to carry the promise of Genesis 12 to all the nations. Jacob passed on to us blessings and peace. Genesis 28:3-4 records Isaac’s blessing to Jacob when he sends him back to Rebekah’s people to find a wife and to protect him from his enraged brother Esau, “May God Almighty bless you and make you fruitful and multiply you, that you may become a company of peoples. May He also give you the blessing of Abraham, to you and to your descendants with you, that you may possess the land of your sojournings, which God gave to Abraham.”

 

Blessing begets blessing! What are some examples in our everyday lives of how we can choose Jacob: the blessings of God? This is where you declare, right now, out loud for everyone to hear you: I AM A HOPE-BEARER! God has called you to be a person of faith, hope, and love! God has given you the sufficiency of His grace so that you can live strong in God’s grace! God has given you forgiveness through His Son Jesus Christ so that you can forgive others as God first forgave you. God has given you the Holy Spirit, so that you may reap the fruit of the Spirit for all taste and seed that God is “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control” (Galatians 5:22-23). A hope-bearer endures to the end, show resiliency when knocked down, is faithful to God and His mission, and is humble – reaping a harvest of praise to the glory of God!

 

It’s a choice! I present to you today a choice between generational blessings and generational curses. Jacob and Esau’s sibling rivalry has become regional and national conflict today, millennia later, continuing to breed bitterness and grief. But they also represent the choice each person must make to receive between the blessings of God and the bitterness of the world. Hebrews 12:15-17 confronts us with this choice of bitterness or blessing:

 

See to it that no one comes short of the grace of God; that no root of bitterness springing up causes trouble, and by it many be defiled; that there be no immoral or godless person like Esau, who sold his own birthright for a single meal. For you know that even afterwards, when he desired to inherit the blessing, he was rejected, for he found no place for repentance, though he sought for it with tears.

 

Do you want to have a transforming story? It’s a choice between blessing and bitterness. The time ran out for Esau; it was too late to get back what he had rejected for the world! But you are here today, there is breath in your lungs, and there is still time for repentance: REJECT BITTERNESS! Don’t be a doomsdayer! Grow strong in God’s grace and live your life as a hope-bearer! God’s grace is available to you today personally. Until the Lord Jesus returns or you take your last breath on this earth, you can receive the promises of God as yours through faith in Jesus Christ.

 

Jesus came into the world as the light of God to show the way to God’s blessings. The gospel invites you today to accept Jesus Christ and to receive the promises of God, as John 1:11-13 promises:

 

He came to His own, and those who were His own did not receive Him. But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name, who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.

 

You cannot rest on your parents’ faith, your faith heritage, or you church affiliation. The most important decision of your life is what you do with Jesus Christ. This is a holy moment of decision. Today can be the first day of your eternal legacy… Today, you are being invited to receive the faith that blesses. It will bless you, then it will bless through you!

 
 

You can watch this message by clicking HERE.

 
 
 

FOOTNOTE:

 
[1] There is a lot in this story of Isaac’s life, and his twin boys Jacob and Esau, that cannot be covered in today’s lesson, so I highly recommend that you read for yourself Genesis 24-35. This is a complex story that I do not intend to whitewash over but it was impossible to cover everything and most likely you will find important details missing. I encourage you to make this a starting point, not a finish line, in your discovery and study of the Bible and the transforming stories that teach us about the eternal God and how to live strong in His grace today.
 
 
 

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Seize the Moment – Day 1180

Today’s modern hymn focus will be

Jesus Paid it All

 

Isaiah 1:18 (NASB95)                  

 
 

Come now, let’s settle this,”  says the Lord.

“Though your sins are like scarlet,

 I will make them as white as snow.

Though they are red like crimson,

I will make them as white as wool.”

 

This hymn, written in 1865, came to Elvina M Hall while she was sitting in the choir loft of Monument Methodist Episcopal Church in Baltimore. The story is told that one Sunday morning, with an extremely long pastoral prayer and a continuous sermon, Elvina’s thoughts began to wander. She wrote down this poem in the blank flyleaf of her hymnal. She later showed them to the pastor,

who, unbeknownst to her, has been met with the church organist John Grape earlier in the week who had given him a musical score that had no words, but  thought he might be able to use in the future. When Reverend Schrick placed two together, they fit like a hand in a glove.

 

Jesus paid it all, all to Him I owe,

sin had left a crimson stain,

He washed it white as snow.

 

We need to wake up and realize that this song reminds us that there is nothing we can do to earn our salvation. Jesus gave His all in order for us to have it all…  Life, Love, Hope, Joy, Peace, and have it to the fullest.

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Ken reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 

If you would like to listen to this song, click on this link:

 
 

Jesus Paid It All

 
Verse 1
I hear the Savior say,
“Thy strength indeed is small;
Child of weakness, watch and pray,
Find in Me thine all in all.”
Jesus paid it all, all to Him I owe;
Sin had left a crimson stain,
He washed it white as snow.

 

Verse 2
Lord, now indeed I find
Thy power and Thine alone,
Can change the leper’s spots
And melt the heart of stone.
 
Jesus paid it all, all to Him I owe;
Sin had left a crimson stain,
He washed it white as snow.

 

Verse 3
For nothing good have I
Whereby Thy grace to claim,
I’ll wash my garments white
In the blood of Calv’ry’s Lamb.
 
Jesus paid it all, all to Him I owe;
Sin had left a crimson stain,
He washed it white as snow.

 

Verse 4
And now complete in Him
My robe His righteousness,
I’ll rejoice with all my might,
I am now divinely blest.
 
Jesus paid it all, all to Him I owe;
Sin had left a crimson stain,
He washed it white as snow.

 

Verse 5
And when before the throne
I stand in Him complete,
“Jesus died my soul to save,”
My lips shall still repeat.
 
Jesus paid it all, all to Him I owe;
Sin had left a crimson stain,
He washed it white as snow.
 
 

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Seize the Moment – Day 1179

The Prayer of the Weary!

Psalm 69

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Friday, June 9.

 

There is an exhaustion that goes beyond being physically tired; it is being weary! David spoke of his weariness in Psalm 69:3, “I am weary with my crying; my throat is parched; my eyes fail while I wait for my God.” David expressed himself in a similar way in Psalm 6:6, “I am weary with my sighing; every night I make my bed swim, I dissolve my couch with my tears.”

 

Have you brought your weariness to God? Jesus invites you to do so in Matthew 11:28-30, “Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.” The Greek word translated “weary” is κοπιάω; it’s used twenty-three times in the New Testament. It’s even used to describe Jesus in John 4:6, “Jesus, being wearied from His journey, was sitting thus by the well.” Jesus experienced weariness because it is a reality for all people. Exhaustion is a part of the human condition that requires more than a daily dose of caffeine or an occasional getaway. The older you get the more you realize that the solution goes beyond a simple life hack.

 

The answer is found in learning to live in the unforced rhythms of God’s grace. Jesus gives us unhindered access to the rest of God through His easy yoke, where we become like Him, “gentle and humble in heart.” David concluded in Psalm 69:32-33a, “The humble have seen it and are glad; you who seek God, let your heart revive. For the Lord hears the needy.” True rest comes by putting your hope in Christ alone!

 

Seize the moment and pray Psalm 69, meditating upon the God who promises to give you rest; only Jesus can restore you at the deepest places of your neediness.

 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 
 

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Seize the Moment – Day 1178

Kingdom Plunder!

Psalm 68

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Thursday, June 8.

 

Psalm 68:18-19 is a passage of conquest,
 
“You have ascended on high, You have led captive Your captives; You have received gifts among men, even among the rebellious also, that the Lord God may dwell there. Blessed be the Lord, who daily bears our burden, the God who is our salvation. Selah.”
 
As you may have recognized, verse 18 was quoted by Paul in Ephesians 4:7-10:

 

But to each one of us grace was given according to the measure of Christ’s gift. Therefore it says, “When He ascended on high, He led captive a host of captives, and He gave gifts to men.” (Now this expression, “He ascended,” what does it mean except that He also had descended into the lower parts of the earth? He who descended is Himself also He who ascended far above all the heavens, so that He might fill all things.)

 

Interestingly, in Psalm 68, the Conqueror received gifts, but in Ephesians 4, He gave gifts. Dr. Michael Heiser explained this disparity:

 

In the ancient world the conqueror would parade the captives and demand tribute for himself. Jesus is the conqueror of Psalm 68, and the booty does indeed rightfully belong to him. But booty was also distributed after a conquest. Paul knows that. He quotes Psalm 68:18 to make the point that after Jesus conquered his demonic enemies, he distributed the benefits of the conquest to his people, believers. Specifically, those benefits are apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers (Eph 4:11).[1]

 

Jesus gave the kingdom plunder of the enemy to His church, through the Holy Spirit, to equip and empower the saints to grow in love and do good works (Ephesians 4:11-16).

 

Seize the moment and pray Psalm 68, meditating upon the victory of Jesus Christ – “When He had disarmed the rulers and authorities, He made a public display of them, having triumphed over them through Him” (Colossians 2:15).

 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 
 
 

FOOTNOTE:

 

[1] Michael S. Heiser, The Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible, First Edition. (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2015), 293.


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Seize the Moment – Day 1177

Proclaim the Name of the Lord!

Psalm 67

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Wednesday, June 7.

 

David quoted a thousand-year-old blessing in Psalm 67:1, “God be gracious to us and bless us, and cause His face to shine upon us – Selah.” This is a song with a promise; it invites the worshippers to meditate upon the whole of the Priestly Blessing, given by God to Moses in Numbers 6:22-27:

 

Then the Lord spoke to Moses, saying, “Speak to Aaron and to his sons, saying, ‘Thus you shall bless the sons of Israel. You shall say to them: the Lord bless you, and keep you; the Lord make His face shine on you, and be gracious to you; the Lord lift up His countenance on you, and give you peace.’ So they shall invoke My name on the sons of Israel, and I then will bless them.”

 

As you pray through Psalm 67, you will find it a working out of God’s promise to Moses: when My people invoke My name, I will bless them. Twice in verses 3 and 5, today’s psalm commands the congregation, “Let the peoples praise You, O God; let all the peoples praise You.” Three times, in verses 2, 4, and 7, the promise of Abraham is extended over the nations through the people of God when they call upon the name of the Lord, “God blesses us, that all the ends of the earth may fear Him” (7). The obvious praxis of this promise is to call upon the name of the Lord because God has blessed you to be a blessing to others. As a Christian, you are called to proclaim the name of the Lord wherever you go – He will bless the nations through you!

 

Seize the moment and pray Psalm 66, meditating upon the name of the Lord Jesus Christ – “And there is salvation in no one else; for there is no other name under heaven that has been given among men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12).

 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.
 

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Seize the Moment – Day 1176

Pray with a Cleansed Heart!

Psalm 66

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Tuesday, June 6.

 

Do you want God to hear your prayers? You might be asking yourself, why wouldn’t God hear my prayers? In Psalm 66:16-19, David praised God for giving heed to his voice in prayer, but he also taught us an important truth about how our prayers can be hindered:

 

Come and hear, all who fear God, and I will tell of what He has done for my soul. I cried to Him with my mouth, and He was extolled with my tongue. If I regard wickedness in my heart, the Lord will not hear; but certainly God has heard; He has given heed to the voice of my prayer.

 

Do you fear God? God is holy, and because His perfection sets Him apart from all His creation, there is a chasm that exists between us and Him that cannot be crossed without divine intervention. Isaiah 59:2 makes this clear, “But your iniquities have made a separation between you and your God, and your sins have hidden His face from you so that He does not hear.”

 

Recently, in my devotion on Psalm 61, I described how there is nowhere you can go for God not to hear your prayers. While you can’t go anywhere in all of creation to prevent God from hearing your prayer, you can hinder the effectiveness of your prayers through unconfessed sin, as David testified in Psalm 66:18, “If I regard wickedness in my heart, the Lord will not hear” (cf. Proverbs 28:9). There are motives of the heart and patterns of behavior that hinder the effectiveness of your prayers (ref. James 1:6-7; 4:3; 1 Peter 3:7). Are you meditating upon wickedness in your heart? Has your heart become a den of iniquity, and your soul a harbor for sin? The key to an effective prayer life is a right relationship with God (James 5:16; Hebrews 4:14-16).

 

Seize the moment and pray Psalm 66, meditating upon the cleansing of sin through the blood of Jesus (1 John 1:5-10).

 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 

 
 

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Seize the Moment – Day 1175

Praise God for His Bounty!

Psalm 65

 

Good morning! This is Pastor Jerry Ingalls from New Castle First Baptist Church and today is Monday, June 5.

 

When is the last time you went for a walk in a forest or on a beach? When is the last time you sat and watched a sunset or sunrise? Psalm 65 is a remarkable psalm, which praises God for the bounty of His creation. There is a clarity to be gained by celebrating the handiwork of God, as David does so poetically in verses 9-13:

 

You visit the earth and cause it to overflow; You greatly enrich it; the stream of God is full of water; You prepare their grain, for thus You prepare the earth. You water its furrows abundantly, You settle its ridges, You soften it with showers, You bless its growth. You have crowned the year with Your bounty, and Your paths drip with fatness. The pastures of the wilderness drip, and the hills gird themselves with rejoicing. The meadows are clothed with flocks and the valleys are covered with grain; they shout for joy, yes, they sing.

 

God receives glory when we attribute the beauty and bounty of creation to His goodness and grace. Have you lost perspective on the power of God because you have stopped marveling at His creation? Take time today to praise God in His creation, for it was intended by its Creator to point you back to Him, causing you to seek the bounty of His love. It is for this reason David wrote this psalm: to call worshippers back to true worship of the One who provides for us through the bounty of His creation.

 

Seize the moment and pray Psalm 65, meditating upon the bounty of God’s provision – “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things came into being through Him, and apart from Him nothing came into being that has come into being” (John 1:1-3).

 

God bless you!

 

If you would like to receive a personal phone call today, all you have to do is dial the phone number below right now and one of us will call you soon.

 

YOUTUBE:

If you prefer a video, Pastor Jerry reads his devotion on YouTube as well. Click HERE to visit the page.

Videos are posted about a week after the devotion appears in the blog.

 
 

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Grow Strong in God’s Grace – Wk 13

Grow Strong in God’s Grace: Learning How to be a Faithful Farmer for God’s Harvest!

The Faith that Passes the Test!

Hebrews 11:17-19 (NASB)

 

God is in the business of transforming stories through the gospel of Jesus Christ. We are to grow strong in God’s grace as active participants in the world He created. God has entrusted His creation to His people to work as His Harvest workers – “All the world’s a field, and all the disciples of Jesus Christ merely farmers!” Therefore, let’s be faithful farmers by following the four-step strategy of a hard-working farmer: 1) cultivate people with faith; 2) sow the good seed of God’s grace (the gospel) into their hearts and minds; 3) care for them as their stories are transformed into fruit-bearing plants; and 4) reap a harvest of praise as the church of Jesus Christ.

 

This strategy must be empowered by the Holy Spirit! Therefore, harvest workers of God’s kingdom are called to grow strong in God’s grace. Let’s take the first step by learning from the transforming stories of the Hall of Faith, found in Hebrews 11.

 

STEP #1 OF THE FARMER’S STRATEGY: CULTIVATE THE SOIL WITH FAITH

 

Faith is defined in Hebrews 11:1-2, “Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. For by it the men [and women] of old gained approval.” Today’s transforming story confronts us in our belief in this definition of faith: What happens in life when all we have left is faith?  

A woman finds a lump and finds herself with more doctor visits in the coming months than she has had in the last decade. She prays and prays, has her family, friends, and church pray, only to hear the ‘C’ word. Her mind goes blank as she finds herself walking out of the doctor’s office not remembering anything said to her after she heard the word “cancer.” Her vision clouds over as the tears start falling… Only God knows what’s ahead of her!

A man has just lost his job. He is in his late-forties and has been at the same company since his twenties, and now he’s left with no job, nothing to show for over twenty years of loyalty. His kids are still in college. His 30-year mortgage, twice refinanced, heavy on his shoulders. His mind races out of control as he carries a cardboard box filled with family pictures and worthless tokens out the side door for the last time, heading to the parking lot, heading to his car as he fights back the tears… Only God knows his next steps!

A teenager’s parents are fighting more than ever; the word divorce being thrown around more and more. His grades are suffering, his friends are inviting him to go to parties, he is having a hard time focusing as his world seems to be crumbling around him. Is there really a God, and if so, how could He possibly be good, and does God even care about people like him? He heads out the front door confused, angry, with hopes of ending up somewhere better than here… Only God knows where!

A young couple, recently married, is so excited to have become pregnant in hopes of starting a family together. Three months later, with a nursey under construction, a baby registry filled out, names being discussed, and invitations in the mail, the wife calls the husband from work crying as something terrible is happening, as the EMTs are putting her in the ambulance. She needs him to meet her at the hospital as she won’t stop bleeding. His world starts narrowing and the next breath is too hard to take as he races out the door… Only God knows why!

What happens in life when all that we worked for, hoped for, dreamed of seems to be taken from us in a moment? What races through our minds? That is the situation we are confronted with in today’s transforming story of faith from Hebrews 11. A situation so relevant to our own stories that we are scandalized by God’s presence in this story. A story about unlikely parents – an old man and his wife – and their young son whose name Isaac means “laughter.” An impossible story from beginning to end. A story of death and life. A story of loss and gain, one that foreshadows the Easter Story. A story that keeps being told because within it is the seed of life itself, for it is a transforming story of faith! Hebrews 11:17-19:
 

By faith Abraham, when he was tested, offered up Isaac, and he who had received the promises was offering up his only begotten son; it was he to whom it was said, “In Isaac your descendants shall be called.” He considered that God is able to raise people even from the dead, from which he also received him back as a type.

 

We learn and apply Scripture by watching how the people in His story respond to their situations based on what they believed about God. Faith is a good seed designed by its architect to bear the good fruit of the Spirit in your life. Truth about God leads to life application, which is why we are to plant it like a good seed and tend to it like a maturing plant, so that we may reap a harvest of praise to the One who chose our hearts and minds as His harvest fields.  

 

STEP #2 OF THE FARMER’S STRATEGY: SOW THE GOOD SEED OF GOD’S GRACE

 

Hebrews 11:17-19 highlights the greatest test of Abraham and Sarah’s faith. They were able to obey God because they trusted Him to keep His promises. The seed of faith was planted deep into their hearts and minds! Turn with me to the book of Genesis and let’s read their story is from Genesis 22. To focus our time, I will read verses 1-2, 7-8, 10-12, and 15-18:

 

Now it came about after these things, that God tested Abraham, and said to him, “Abraham!” And he said, “Here I am.” He said, “Take now your son, your only son, whom you love, Isaac, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains of which I will tell you.” … Isaac spoke to Abraham his father and said, “My father!” And he said, “Here I am, my son.” And he said, “Behold, the fire and the wood, but where is the lamb for the burnt offering?” Abraham said, “God will provide for Himself the lamb for the burnt offering, my son.” So the two of them walked on together. … Abraham stretched out his hand and took the knife to slay his son. But the angel of the Lord called to him from heaven and said, “Abraham, Abraham!” And he said, “Here I am.” He said, “Do not stretch out your hand against the lad, and do nothing to him; for now I know that you fear God, since you have not withheld your son, your only son, from Me.” … Then the angel of the Lord called to Abraham a second time from heaven, and said, “By Myself I have sworn, declares the Lord, because you have done this thing and have not withheld your son, your only son, indeed I will greatly bless you, and I will greatly multiply your seed as the stars of the heavens and as the sand which is on the seashore; and your seed shall possess the gate of their enemies. In your seed all the nations of the earth shall be blessed, because you have obeyed My voice.”

 

This very well could have been one of the last things Sarah experienced in her life, as her death was soon after recorded in Genesis 23:1-2. She had walked with God, and her husband, on a very long journey, passing the greatest test of all at the end of their lives together. She trusted God for His promises and from her barren womb, opened through the power of God’s Spirit, came the promises of God to the nations. She has received the reward of her faith even though she did not live to see God’s promise fulfilled through her son Isaac, as described in Hebrews 11:13-16:

 

All these died in faith, without receiving the promises, but having seen them and having welcomed them from a distance, and having confessed that they were strangers and exiles on the earth. For those who say such things make it clear that they are seeking a country of their own. And indeed if they had been thinking of that country from which they went out, they would have had opportunity to return. But as it is, they desire a better country, that is, a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God; for He has prepared a city for them.

 

What do we learn from this dramatic story of faith? We learn that God is trustworthy and true, worthy of our trust! God keeps His promises and provides for that which He promises! God is consistent to His own character and will never violate the integrity of His character, as revealed to us in His Word and through His Son Jesus Christ. If we had time, I could share with you literally dozens of other Bible stories that testify to these truths about God. If we had all day, we could have testimony after testimony that this is true about God. Instead, let’s move to the next action step so we can learn how to live our lives according to this truth.

 

STEP #3 OF THE FARMER’S STRATEGY: CARE FOR THE MATURING PLANT

 

This next step, the step of life application, is the hard one! If you believe that God is trustworthy, then what do you do when all you have left is your faith in a trustworthy God? This is the climax of Abraham and Sarah’s transforming story with God. They have been on amazing journey, chasing after God’s promise and the fulfillment of that which caused them to leave their homeland in search of God’s Promised Land, found in Genesis 12:1-3:

 

Now the Lord said to Abram, “Go forth from your country, and from your relatives and from your father’s house, to the land which I will show you; and I will make you a great nation, and I will bless you, and make your name great; and so you shall be a blessing; and I will bless those who bless you, and the one who curses you I will curse. And in you all the families of the earth will be blessed.”

 

For forty-five years, Abraham and Sarah spent time with God causing them to know His attributes and character (read Genesis 12:4-21:34). When God asked them to return to Him the precious gift, which He had given them (Isaac), they trusted God for who they knew Him to be – trustworthy in character and true to His promises!

 

The Bible doesn’t say it was easy for them; it just records them doing it! At the heart of this story is a man and woman who had a personal relationship with God. This elderly couple said “yes” to a painful offering: they offered their teenage son to God because He asked it of them; they did not understand His command or know if they would ever get him back. They trusted God, which allowed them to make a painful offering!

 

Have you ever made a painful offering to God? Maybe God wants you to give your kidney to someone else who needs it. Maybe God wants you to donate blood on a regular basis. Maybe God wants you to give your extra car to someone who needs a car. Maybe God wants you to give your time to visit lonely people or help those who can’t do what you can. Maybe God wants you to move, sell your house, quit your job, use your talents more, be generous with what He has provided for you. Maybe God wants you to help someone in need. God asks of you because He knows more than you do. He knows what you need, and He knows what is for your good!

 

King David said, “I will not offer burnt offerings to the LORD my God which cost me nothing” (2 Samuel 24:24). Obedience is an outflow of trust! The good seed of faith begets faithfulness and putting your faith into practice causes you to know God more and trust Him for who He is and not for who you wish Him to be. Christianity is not about your choosing when to obey, calculating when to make sacrifices, or doing religious activities like putting coins in a vending machine, hoping God will give you what you want. That is self-serving. We must live with a constant willingness to obey, ready to respond when God asks. It is about trust!

 

Jesus concludes the Sermon on the Mount, in Matthew 7:24-27, making this specific point:

 

Therefore everyone who hears these words of Mine and acts on them, may be compared to a wise man who built his house on the rock. And the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and slammed against that house; and yet it did not fall, for it had been founded on the rock. Everyone who hears these words of Mine and does not act on them, will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand. The rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and slammed against that house; and it fell – and great was its fall.

 

CHAIR ILLUSTRATION Speaking of falling, allow me to share one of my favorite evangelistic illustrations in hopes of bringing this together: SHOULD I PUT MY FULL WEIGHT IN THIS CHAIR?

 

John Paton (1824–1907), a Scot, had travelled to the New Hebrides (a group of islands in the south-west Pacific) determined to tell the tribal people about Jesus. The islanders were cannibals. Nobody trusted anybody else. His life was in constant danger. He had come to tell them the good news about Jesus. He wanted to translate John’s Gospel into their language, but he discovered that there was no word in their language for ‘faith’, ‘belief’ or ‘trust’. One day, when his indigenous servant came in, Paton raised both feet off the floor, sat back in his chair and asked, ‘What am I doing now?’ In reply, the servant used a word that means, ‘to lean your whole weight upon’. This became the expression that Paton used. Faith is leaning our whole weight upon Jesus.[1]

 

You don’t trust God until you have had to put your full weight upon Jesus! You can’t proclaim the faith that “God is good all the time” until you have found Him good in your own life and circumstances! Otherwise, it is truth divorced of reality. Your life of putting your full weight upon Jesus gives meaning to words such as faith, belief, or trust, which have lost meaning in today’s cancel culture. Your trust in God proclaims the gospel of Jesus Christ! This takes us to our last action step.

 

STEP #4 OF THE FARMER’S STRATEGY: REAP A HARVEST OF PRAISE

 

God did for Abraham and Sarah what they could not learn on their own; He gave them an opportunity to put their full weight onto Him! We know God for how He has revealed Himself to be to us – His character, His attributes, His actions, and His judgments. But the only way we can discover that God is who He says He is, trustworthy and true in all that He says and does, is by putting our trust in all that we know about Him as being true! This is what we learn by watching Abraham and Sarah as the people of the promise. As Genesis 22:8 quotes Abraham responding to Isaac, “God will provide for Himself the lamb for the burnt offering, my son.” Here is where our text from Hebrews 11:19 helps us understand the depth of Abraham and Sarah’s faith: “He considered that God is able to raise people even from the dead, from which he also received him back as a type [it foreshadowed the resurrection of Jesus Christ].”   

 

Their faith allowed them to trust God in the worst of circumstances! With Isaac being taken from them, trust in God was all they had left… Not trust that God would give them what they wanted or fix their circumstances; but trust that no matter what may come, God was with them. Did you know that Willow is our fourth child? When my wife and I went through the miscarriage of our third child, Skyler, it was heart wrenching, but God was true to His promise: Immanuel – “God is with us!” His presence comforted us and assured us. He still does today!

 

I am inviting you to join with me in trusting God! I am asking you to believe and putting your faith in Jesus Christ. Faith is scandalous in today’s world; just as trusting another person is risky business, but that ends up being the point: you must risk trust to learn how to trust! You don’t really know what you think you know until you live it! You must pass the test of faith to experience the promises of God, then you reap the harvest of praise!

 

CHAIR ILLUSTRATION: Can you really know what a chair is unless you have put your full weight into a chair? It’s just an abstract concept until it is tested! Just like faith, which is exactly why James says, “faith without works is dead” (James 2:14-26). That’s like saying there can be a plant without a seed being planted! As Paul said in Galatians 6:7, “Do not be deceived, God is not mocked; for whatever a man sows, this he will also reap.”

 

Do you know God as trustworthy and true? Jesus gave it all on the cross so that whosoever puts their full weight onto Him “shall not perish, but have eternal life” (John 3:16). Will you trust Him with your life and circumstances? Will your faith pass the test of trust?

 

Only God knows the next step:

 

  • For the middle-aged woman who just found out she has cancer
  • For the older man who just lost his job
  • For the teenager who is lonely and lost
  • For the young couple who lost their baby
  • For you and your circumstances

 

Bring chair down to response area: I invite you to symbolically come down and take a moment to put all your weight in this chair. Jesus invites you today from Matthew 11:28, “Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest.” Let’s pray and ask God, “Lord, help me to respond to Your gracious invitation so that I can put my full weight onto You today. I come to You today and confess, ‘I trust You. Help me with my mistrust.’ In Jesus’ name. Amen.”

 
 

You can watch this message by clicking HERE.

 
 

FOOTNOTE:

 
[1] Source unknown, shared with me by Scott Underwood.
 
 

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