Monday, June 30, 2025

6-30-2025

Good Morning All,

        James 4:4;” Whoever wants to be a friend of this world is an enemy of God.”

   There is a story about Luciano Pavarotti as a child growing up.  His father introduced him to music and the young lad was so taken by the wondrous task of making music that his father enrolled him in a music academy.  There he learned from some of the most skilled and talented music teachers in the world.

    When he finished the academy, he returned home to his father. He was torn between singing the music which he loved and teaching others to love this music as much as he did.  His father knew that Luciano could not do both and do both as well as he would want to do it.  So, his father looked at him and told him, “You can’t sit on two chairs; if you try, you’ll fall on the floor.”

     This is what our verse is talking about.  It is also what Jesus was talking about when he said a man cannot serve two masters.  We cannot be friends of this sinful evil world and also be faithful to God.  The ways of the world lead us away from God not toward. We have to remain faithful to God or we will “fall on the floor.” 

    This leads many Christians into trouble.  We tend to shy away speaking for God’s Word and truth.  We tend to be silent rather than speak.  In doing so, we are being a friend of the world.  When we quietly watch, we are accepting and supporting the world.  This can be tough when it is one of our family members who live together without marriage or who profess to be gay or choose to walk away from the Church.  It is very hard for we fear that if we say anything we will only drive them further away.

    It is how we give this message that makes the difference.  We need to speak with love but we need to speak.  It will be tough.  It requires prayer and thoughtful study and maybe some advice from a pastor or a counselor.  When you have the facts and trust God to speak for you through the Spirit, you can speak comfortably and speak often.  Sometimes it only has to be that you miss them.  Yet we need to speak, otherwise we are trying to sit on two chairs.

     Keep talking; keep the conversation open.  Try and avoid any chance to say “I told you so;” just be there to help pick up the pieces.  Always show the compassion of Jesus whenever you speak but we need to speak.  This is part of making disciples of all people.  The painful truth is that seeds planted today may not take root for many years; we might not even see it but the seeds need to be planted.  God encourages us to speak his words of grace to a world that knows only the lies of this world.  We cannot be a silent friend of the world and be a friend of God.  We need to sit on God’s chair and his chair alone.       

    Dearest Father, too often we are seduced by the world led to believe that our silence is the right way to go.  Give us the voice to speak your truth to a world that knows only lies.  Move us to do so with the love and compassion of Jesus that we may truly touch the lives of those whom we meet.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret

Sunday, June 29, 2025

6-29-2025

Good Morning All,

    Matthew 4:17;” From that time Jesus began to preach, saying, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”

   This is one of those verses that causes people to really kind of wrinkle their nose at.  “Repent;” it makes it sound like I am some sort of bad guy; well, you are.  Yet there is more to this verse than most of us read.  Most of us see this as Jesus “the kill joy God” coming into our lives and screwing up the good times we are having.  This is what the devil and our sinful nature wants us to believe.

    Of course, the devil and our sinful nature lie to us every single time.  The truth is, God is trying to get us to see that we are on the wrong path and we need to fix it.  When God created the world, it was perfect.  Man was perfect and all of creation worked in harmony with each other.  Then sin entered the world and brought disharmony and caused man to turn away from God.  So that is where we sit, with our backs turned toward God looking and going away from God and his grace.

    To this life Jesus says repent.  In other words, turn around, come back, don’t go that way, it will only harm you.  Repent, turn from the sin that harms you and come back to my grace; repent.

    We need to understand that the 10 Commandments are a reflection of God’s Will.  This is God telling us how we can live the life that we were designed for before man sinned.  This is how the relationship between you and God along with you and your fellow man are designed to be.  We see that if we believe that God is our God and not some other false god pretending to be that our relationship with our creator is better.  If we see that our dealings with other people should be based on respect, love, and honor, we see that we have a better existence.  God’s law serves to bring us back to this proper existence.  When we sin, we turn from God’s perfect design to the broken sinful one.  When this happens, we need to repent; we need to turn away from our sin and back to God’s grace.

   This is what repentance is really all about.  It is not about God taking away our fun but about returning to the proper, healthy life that we were created for.  To keep returning to sin is to keep returning to the very thing that causes us pain.  God calls us to repent; to turn away from this self-destructive behavior and return to God’s grace and favor.  We can continue to beat our self over the head and claim we like it or we can repent and turn back to God and his path for our life.

Dearest Father, too often we go our own way which causes us pain and suffering.  Too often we miss your call to repentance and only suffer more.  We give you thanks for the mercy to call us and we ask that you strengthen us to hear your call and heed it.  We ask that you be with those who are in the most pain and suffering.  Lead them to hear your call to repentance and to come home.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret

Saturday, June 28, 2025

6-28-2025

Good Morning All,

    Psalm 46:10; “Be still, and know that I am God.”

   When I was a kid, the big ticket for party favors was the “Chinese Finger Trap.”  (If you are too young, ask your parents or grandparents.)  You would put the index finger of each hand into the end of this tube and then try to pull them back out.  The secret was that you couldn’t just pull your finger out.  The harder you pull, the tighter the finger trap pulls on your finger.  In order to release yourself from the trap, it requires some counter intuitive thinking and you must apply pressure to keep the finger trap pushed together so it is as loose as possible.

    I remember one time when a classmate was playing with one in class.  The teacher started yelling at him to take it off.  The more the teacher yelled the more stressed the student got and just kept pulling.  Soon he had pulled so hard his fingers started to turn purple.   The teacher had to get a pair of scissors to cut the finger trap off.  It was kind of a learning lesson.  Sometimes, when we pull the hardest, is when we suffer the most.

     That is what our verse is about.  While this is the traditional translation, there is a better one.  “Let go of your concerns!  Then you will know that I am God.”  Another translation is “Stop your struggling!  Know that I am God!” These are better because they more accurately describe what the Psalmist is saying.  By simply being silent, it can imply that by listening to directions then we can proceed.  What we really need to do is to stop fighting and stop worrying.  We cannot fight the devil and his attacks on our own.  If we try, it is like struggling in quicksand; you only get into more trouble.

    When the devil begins to tell us his lies and we try to fight on our own, we will lose.  We need to see that our refuge, the place where we go to be safe, is God and not our own skill.  So, when the devil comes and tells us we are worthless or hopeless or of no value, we need to stop our own futile struggle and turn to God for our strength.  The devil will launch every possible, and some impossible, attack, painful thought, every fear, real or imagined (mostly imagined) anything to fire at you with as much intensity as possible.  When that attack comes, we are just like that student who kept pulling until his fingers were purple.  We can never handle the stress that the devil applies to us. 

    We need to recognize that we need to stop struggling and receive God’s grace and mercy and trust in him to give us the comfort and strength to battle the devil’s attacks.  We will only survive because of God’s grace fighting for us, because we are saved by blood of Jesus.  God has told us he will fight for us; we need to stop fighting, to be silent, and know that the God of love is battling for us.

Dearest Father, all of our efforts are of no value.  Our only hope is in your grace.  Give us the wisdom to trust in you and you alone.  Guide us by your Spirit and guard us as we face the challenges of this life.  Give those who are battling especially hard battles the peace they need to know that they are secure in you.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret         

Friday, June 27, 2025

6-27-2025

Good Morning All,

         Romans 10:9: ’because, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.”

    Most adult Americans are, by nature, a cynical bunch.  This usually occurs when after being burned a time or two with buying something that just sounds “too good to be true;” we come to the realization that if it sounds too good to be true it isn’t true at all.  We hear this admonition from every consumer watchdog group that exists.  The Better Business Bureau, the Consumer Protection League, the Consumer Report; take your pick, they all tell the same story.  Do not trust or believe anything that sounds too simple.

    So, the devil, the world and our sinful nature screams at us as loud as they can, “It is too good to be true; don’t buy it!!”  Yet God clearly tell us it is that simple.  If you believe that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, died and rose from the dead to pay for your sins, you are saved.  That’s it; that’s all there is to it.  If you believe that Jesus Christ dies for you sins and rose again, you have salvation.  God has promised this!  It is not debatable or of any form of second guessing.  If you believe, you are saved.

    So why do we struggle?  Mostly this goes against everything we are told in the human world.  Have you ever talked to an economist?  Within in five minutes he will tell you, “There’s no such thing as a free lunch.”  Do you listen to the Better Business Bureau or the Consumer Report?  Do not trust anything that sounds too good. That is the message of the world.  This is part of what Scriptures means when it says the wisdom of the world is folly to God.  It doesn’t make sense to the world but it is God’s desire to do this.  It makes sense to God and in the end, isn’t that who we should worry about?

     God has chosen to save us through the death of Jesus his Son.  God has chosen to give us this salvation.  God has chosen to give us the faith to trust in that salvation.  It is way too easy according to the world but it is God’s plan.  Believe with your heart and you are saved.  If you truly believe this, your life will change.  God will give you a newness because you are a new creation.  You are a redeemed child of God; over everything else, you are God’s child.  That is what the devil wants you to forget; that is what the devil wants to hide and confuse you about.  You are God’s redeemed child because he loves you and he wants you to live with him in heaven.  So, he makes it simple for us; believe in your heart that Jesus died for you and you will be saved.  It doesn’t get any better than that!  Trust in God’s promise and you will be saved.  It is not too good to be true; it simply is true!

Dearest Father, the world tries to confuse us with all of its tricks.  Give us the confidence to trust in your saving grace.  Give us wisdom to cling to the cross of Jesus as the sign of our salvation.  Give us the courage to believe in our heart that Jesus is our Savior.  Keep us in your loving arms and defend us from the lies of the devil.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen,

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret   

Thursday, June 26, 2025

6-26-2025

Good Morning All,

     John 13:34; “I’m giving you a new commandment: Love each other in the same way that I have loved you.”

    Many years ago, there was a pop song that had the chorus line “If you can’t be with the one you love, honey; love the one you’re with.”  This line pretty much sums up the world’s view of love.  This view is based entirely on the selfish concept of “me, me, only me.”  It gives a much-distorted view of love.  A common view of love is the one that states, “I’ll love you as long as you love me and are nice to me and as long as you make me feel good.”  This way of looking at love also distorted the view of God’s law and covenant.

    During the time that Jesus ministered here on earth, the Pharisees and the Scribes had completely distorted the correct way to read God’s law that was given to Moses.  The Pharisees made the law very condemning and harsh.  They used the law to punish and attack the people.  They used it as a cruel rod of oppression.  They used the law to beat the people into submission and gave them no comfort, no peace, and no hope.

    This was the way religion worked at this time.  It was about rules, really picky rules, and it was about being judged or judging someone else.  This was one of the reasons that Jesus’ message resonated with the common, everyday people at this time and not with the religious elite.  The message of Jesus offered hope.  Instead of condemning, he offered forgiveness.  He told his disciples that faith, true faith is very different from what the Pharisees taught.  True faith was shown with love.  This is what Jesus meant when he called it a “new commandment;” it was new to the way they were used to.  It was new to them but not to Jesus or God.

    This doesn’t mean that we forget the law.  The law serves as a guide to our life.  When we approach someone who is in sin, it is not so much telling them that they are wrong.  It is telling them that what they are doing is hurtful to themselves and hurtful to their relationship with God.  When Jesus told the woman who was caught in adultery to “go and sin no more;” this was as much about the harm she was doing to herself, her family, and all the others involved.  The pain that she felt was pretty much self-inflicted.  This is common today.

    We are often our own worst enemy.  We hold onto hate or grudges; we think that fulfilling selfish desires makes us happy and it never does.  The person who loves money never has enough and worries about it constantly.  The person who loves himself only thinks of himself and is usually lonely most of the time.  The person who expects others to make him happy rarely is because our source of happiness is not outside of us but comes from our inner peace which we have with and from God.  Our only source of true joy is love; the kind of love that is the expression of our faith in Jesus.

    Father of all love, too often we fall short of your glory and on doing so we fail to love as you love us.  Strengthen us with your grace and move us by your mercy to reach out and to show your love to those around us.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

6-25-2025

Good Morning All,

        Ecclesiastes 4: 9-10; “Two people are better than one because together they have a good reward for their hard work.  If one falls, the other can help his friend get up. But how tragic it is for the one who is all alone when he falls. There is no one to help him get up.”

     Do you remember the song by Bill Withers called “Lean on Me?”  It came out in the early 19070’s.  It was a song that spoke of a person who needs someone to lean on; someone to help you with the burdens of life.  This was one of many songs of that style.  Simon and Garfunkel had “Bridge over Troubled Waters”, the Hollies sang “He ain’t heavy, he’s, my Brother.”  All singing the same thought; we need other people.

     When God created man in His image, man was designed to do three things.  First, man was to live in God’s Presence and worship and praise God and to be God’s helper here on earth.  Second, man was to take care of God’s creation.  The third thing man was designed to do was to be a companion with his fellow man. 

     Of course, sin destroyed all of these.  Man, no longer lived in God’s Presence rather man sought out his own selfish desires and destroyed whatever stood in his way whether it was another man or part of creation.  It is no accident that the next story after Adam and Eve sin that we read about Cain killing Abel.  Sin destroyed man’s relationship with man as well.

      Yet Jesus came to the world to restore it and to reconcile it back to God. We, as redeemed children of God, are restored to God’s kingdom and reign; just not completely.  We live in the time of “now but not yet.” We are now fully children of God; just not yet fully glorified.  Until that time, we are here, waiting for the full restoration, we are to bring the Gospel of Jesus- the total forgiveness of sins- to the whole world.

    One of the most effective ways of doing this is by helping other people.  Jesus frees us from the shackles of sin so we are free to begin to live our life the way God intended us to live.  We try and sometimes we fail but God’s grace gives us the power to get up and try again and again.  So, we struggle on in life but we know that with God’s grace our struggle is a little easier if we face it with our family and friends at our side.  They are there to be God’s voice of comfort and re-assurance, they are God’s hands to hold us tight and they are God’s shoulders for us to cry on.  Sometimes we cry and sometimes we are the shoulders but we go through it together.  We are God’s redeemed children; we are the Church, the body of Christ called to do his work here on earth and given the grace to face each day.  In the end, we have heaven; but until that day we have God’s promise and we have each other.  So go ahead and lean on your brother or sister because tomorrow they will lean on you.   Through both, we receive our strength from Christ.

Dearest Lord Jesus, as we go through this life in a sinful world, we ask that you give us the strength to allow our brothers and sisters to lean on us as they receive the blessing of your comfort and peace.  Be with all our brothers and sisters who face incredible struggles in their lives and give them the certainty of their salvation and the comfort and love of their fellow Christians.  In your precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret        

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

6-24-2025

Good Morning All,

    Romans 8:26; “At the same time the Spirit also helps us in our weakness, because we don’t know how to pray for what we need. But the Spirit intercedes along with our groans that cannot be expressed in words.”

    Whenever you go to a gathering of Christians, do you ever marvel at how some people can seem to just stand up and pray for a longtime and seem to know what to say?  Their prayers just seem to flow with an endless sense of clarity and proper language.  Do you ever think, “I wish I could pray like that?”  You are most likely in the vast majority, like I am, where our prayers have more “umms” and “urrs” and really long awkward pauses.  Most of us struggle with prayer and not just public prayer but with our own private prayer as well.

     I don’t know how many times I have had someone tell me that they don’t know how to pray.  I kind of blame that on the Church.  We have many prayers which have been crafted and honed over many months or years to say what is “proper.”  Most of us don’t have months to think of a prayer.  If you get a phone call that someone you love has had an auto accident, you need a prayer right now.  So, we struggle with our daily prayer life because we don’t know what or how to pray.  Unfortunately, the devil loves to whisper in your ear that you can’t really pray so why try?

    Yet God has given us a way to deal with our struggling prayers.  First, he invites us to pray, at all times and in all ways.  He gives us the Lord’s Prayer to use as an example or just to use as it is.  Finally, and most importantly we have Jesus praying for us (John17:20) and we have the Holy Spirit praying for us.  These three things alone should give us confidence to pray and yet we still struggle.

    So, in order for us to have an easier time of praying, here are some ideas.  First, practice, practice, practice!!  We need to have a solid and continual prayer life.  Luther suggested that we set aside three times a day to pray.  He suggested when you get up when you have lunch and when you go to bed.  The important part here is that you get in the habit of praying and not just waiting until you are in a stressful situation. 

     If you feel the need to, try reading some of the prayers that have been written by others.  Remember this is for you not God to be comfortable with your prayers.  God is already comfortable with your prayers; he knows your needs long before you pray them.  He calls us to pray in order that he might give us healing and comfort.  He uses our prayers to give us relief from our pains.  He uses our prayers to help us celebrate our joys.  There is an old hymn that encourages us to “speak oft with the Lord.”  This is good advice.  Prayer is God’s gift to us; use it often.

Dearest Father, we don’t come to you in prayer as often as we should and for this, we ask for your forgiveness.  Give us the wisdom to seek you out in our prayers so that we may receive your tender mercy.  Be with those who are in pain now and have nowhere to turn.  Use us to be your hands and your voice.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret

Monday, June 23, 2025

6-23-2025

Good Morning All,

    Revelations 21:5; “The one sitting on the throne said, “I am making everything new.” He said, “Write this: ‘These words are faithful and true.”

    Who doesn’t like new stuff?  I know that we all make a big deal about the old comfy chair or the old comfy shoes or shirt.  I know we all have a favorite pair of jeans that should have been tossed years ago; but really, we like things new.  We like the smell of new things.  We like the feel of new things.  We like the idea that no one else has possessed or touched it.  We almost always are a little saddened when the first scratch, dent or tear shows up.

    Even when it comes to experiences in life, we tend to enjoy new things.  The first time you drive a car, the first time you ride on an airplane, the first time you meet someone or your first child or grandchild.  When it is all new, everything is exciting and awesome.

     We even view newness as a fresh start.  When a student starts a new year, sometimes we like to view it as a new start, a clean slate from last year’s struggles.  Perhaps a new job or moving to a new community will let us leave the failures of the last job or home and we want to wash the bad away and get a clean, new start.  The trouble with that is we usually bring our old struggles with us.  Whatever caused problems for us before are probably still with us.

    Yet this is where with God it is different.  God actually makes us new.  It isn’t just a wash job and a little paint; it is all new.  Through the atoning blood of Jesus, you are made new.  We really do get a clean slate.  Even when it is something that the world may condemn you forever for.  Perhaps you are a woman who had an abortion; perhaps you are a father who abused your children; perhaps you are a child who stole from your parents; maybe you struggle with drugs and alcohol or other addictions; maybe you think that whatever is in your past will follow you and keep you down; but it won’t.  In Jesus, you are a new creation.  God is making everything new all we have to do is to trust this to be true.  We only have to have the God given desire to believe.

    The devil will lie to you and tell you that you just can’t do it; but the empty cross and the open tomb tell us we can because Jesus did it for us.  Jesus made us new and so we are.  He continues to make us new each day with the washing away of our sins daily. So that we can be new people who live in His gracious and loving kingdom. The struggles of the past may rear their ugly heads; some inner demons die hard; but they do die. Yet we know for certain that these words are true and faithful for God is making everything new giving us life eternal in his Name.

Dear Father, you make us new each day by washing away our sins.  Give us the joy to celebrate this and the peace to take comfort in this great message.  Help us to live the life which you have laid out for us.  Give us courage to speak your truth in a world which speaks only lies.  Strengthen us as your voice; allow us to boldly call you Lord of our lives.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret

Sunday, June 22, 2025

6-22-2025

Good Morning All,

    1 Samuel 1:13; “Hannah was speaking in her heart; only her lips moved, and her voice was not heard”.

      The story of Hannah.  This is one of those sad stories.  Hannah was married to a man named Elkanah.  Hannah wanted children, especially a son, but couldn’t have any.  If that wasn’t sad enough, she had a “sister wife” as in Elkanah had two wives.  The other wife, Peninnah, had children and she tormented Hannah for not being able to have children. I cannot think of anything crueler than to torment a woman who wants to have a child but can’t.

    For years, Hannah cried to the Lord; each time her prayers became more desperate.  Each time the pain was deeper.  Her prayers were so intense and earnest that she moved her lips but no sound came out.  Yet she continued to cry out to God until he answered her prayer and gave her a son, Samuel, and then her prayer turned to one of joy and celebration!

     I hope none of you have ever been in this situation.  Yet I am sure many of us can relate.  At some time in our life, we have felt tormented.  Maybe it was when you were in school and something embarrassing happened and no one would let it go.  Perhaps you have neighbors who always go on fancy vacations while you struggle just to get a weekend off.  Perhaps your co-workers get a new car every couple of years while you keep driving that ten-year-old car.  Perhaps it is more painful; maybe someone you thought loved you, left to find someone new.  Perhaps a son or a daughter doesn’t call anymore.  Perhaps a divorce has cost you time with a grandchild; life can be painful.

     The one thing I would like you to take away from this is that Hannah turned to God in prayer.  She didn’t turn to Oprah or Dr. Phil; she turned to God in prayer.  She didn’t call her friends or go to Facebook; she prayed to God.  She poured out her heart and all her pain to God.  She felt so much pain that she couldn’t even speak but she turned to God and God listened.  She found her comfort in God’s grace.  God was her source of comfort and hope.  God is our source of comfort and hope.

    This doesn’t mean that you shut your family and friends out; remember they are God’s hands and shoulders when life’s struggles occur.  But don’t try and shut God out either.  God invites us to come to him with our fears and our sorrows, our pain, and our sadness.  He knows about the cruelty we face; he knows the sorrows that wait for us each day.  He invites us to call upon is name and to listen to his comfort.  He will use your family, your friends, your brothers and 

     We will face pain and sorrow in this life; a sinful world guarantees it.  Yet we can suffer alone and battle our demons by our self or we can let God defend us, comfort us, and protect us.  Even in our greatest pain, God hears and answers us.

Dearest Father, we cry and you hear.  You comfort us and give us hope.  Be with us as we cry, be with us as we rejoice.  Give those who are suffering the pains of this world and see no hope to hear your voice of comfort and peace.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret   

Saturday, June 21, 2025

6-21-2025

Good Morning All,

      2 Corinthians 4:18; “We don’t look for things that can be seen but for things that can’t be seen. Things that can be seen are only temporary. But things that can’t be seen last forever.”

    Have you ever seen a movie that is filmed in 3-D?  If you watch one, you have to wear special glasses to see the movie.  One of the “lenses” is green cellophane and the other one is red cellophane.  As you watch the movie with the glasses on, the movements seem more alive.  One common theme of these movies is that the action is always toward the screen and not to the left or right.  This makes the film seem to be right in your lap.  The thing about these movies is that if you don’t watch the movie with the glasses on; the film is blurry and is almost impossible to watch.

    This is how our world works.  We live in the world and it is blurry at best.  It is so blurry that to some, lies seem like truths and truths seem just wrong.  This is why the world seems so mixed up to us; it is.  When you watch or read the news, the truth seems all the blurrier.

    Part of this is the mistaken idea that once you become a Christian nothing goes wrong.  We want to think that there will be no more troubles or problems.  We are surprised that events in the world, in this nation, go against God’s will.  We shouldn’t be surprised.  The world is a sinful place that sees things all blurry.  

     We have been given the special glasses.  Through the faith that we have because of Jesus, we can see things that the sinful world does not.  We see God’s grace and we see the future, a future of eternal life with Christ.  Even in the pains and failures of this sinful world, we see Jesus. We will have pain; we will have tragedies.  We will see and experience things which hurt us and give us great sorrow.  We will see things that will completely baffle us unless we see them through the glasses of faith.   It may not make sense but, through God’s mercy, the redeemed children of God will be held close to God’s heart and given salvation.  We can only be certain of this when we see things and events through faith; through those special glasses that

God gives us.                       

     So, if you are looking at the world and thinking the world is winning; take heart, be sure you are looking at it through faith and see God’s ultimate glory being revealed.  See the world through faith, it is God’s gift to us to get through this life.  We are his blessed children now and forever.  See the world through the glasses of faith.

Dearest Father, the world we see is filled with pain for us and for those around us.  We need your grace to guide us through the sorrows that are.  Forgive us when we silently watch the evil occur and fail to speak your words of mercy.  Strengthen us to see the truth and to speak the truth.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret

Friday, June 20, 2025

6-20-2025

Good Morning All,

      Psalm 3:3; “But you, O Lord, are a shield that surrounds me.  You are my glory.  You hold my head high.”

      This is the end of a little doublet by David when he was attacked by King Saul.  The first part of this doublet is very telling. “O Lord, look how my enemies have increased.  Many are attacking me. Many are saying about me, “Even with God on his side, he won’t be victorious.”  Maybe as you read this, you are thinking “I don’t have any foes; no one is trying to kill me.”  We all have foes.  They may not be flesh and blood but we all have foes.

    You might be the kid who thinks “no one likes me;” “nobody cares whether I live or die.”  Maybe you the person fighting against alcohol or drugs and just can’t win.  Maybe the hours at your job have been cut or maybe your job is even gone.  Maybe every time you talk to your spouse it is only a fight.  We all have foes.  We all have enemies and they attack us without mercy; these foes even tell us that we can’t win even with God on our side.  Our foes seek to destroy; they seek to rip us apart and then toss us aside.  We all have foes; they attack with vengeance.

    Yet David points to the truth of battling our foes.  Jesus is our shield and he surrounds us with his love.  Through his mercy, he guards us and gives us his love and his Holy Spirit.  He leads us to see that often our foes are our own making; caused by the devil lying to us.  God gives us the grace to trust his promise and to see the pain that the devil causes us to experience.  Do you feel lonely because you want everyone to like you?  Do you struggle with addictions of any sort?  Are you trying to fill a void in your life that is always empty?  Do you argue all the time because you are only seeing things from your side?  All these pains are real but they are often exasperated by the deceit of the devil. 

    God gives us hope and the certainty of his comfort.  This hope comes from the Holy Spirit and this comfort comes through his children here on earth.  He uses us, his family, to be the arms and hands to share this comfort and love.  When the foes attack and you need a shoulder to cry on, God uses the members of his Church to bring you comfort.  He uses your family and friends to bring you, his peace.  God is our shield; he holds our head up and gives us hope.  He gives us life.  The empty cross and the empty tomb are the guarantee that this promise is kept.

    The only way to defeat our foes is to trust in God’s faithfulness and his power to save us.  Trust in God and his promise of forgiveness.  Cling tight to the promise.

    Dear Father, our foes are many and we cannot win on our own.  We need you Father to defend us and to send us a Savior.  Give us the courage to cling to you and to your promise of hope and salvation.  Keep us in your loving arms while guarding us from the devil’s arrows.  Father, we know that there are those who need your extra mercy as their foes battle them; use us to bring them your everlasting peace.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret