Three Things Every Christian Should Know Saturday, Jun 6 2026 

Three Things Every Christian Should Know

Text: “Study to shew thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed…” — 2 Timothy 2:15 (KJV)

There are many things a Christian can learn, but there are some things every Christian must know. If we do not understand these foundational truths, we will struggle to understand who we are, why Jesus came, and what God expects from us.

Today I want to declare:

Three Things Every Christian Should Know

1. Every Christian Should Know the Bible, Its Purpose, and Its Fulfillment

The Bible is not merely a collection of stories. It is one divine story told over thousands of years.

Jesus said:

“Search the scriptures; for in them ye think ye have eternal life: and they are they which testify of me.” (John 5:39)

The Purpose of the Bible

The Bible reveals:

  • Who God is
  • Who man is
  • Man’s fall into sin
  • God’s plan of redemption

From Genesis to Revelation, the Bible is the story of God’s pursuit of fallen humanity.

The Fulfillment of the Bible

The Old Testament is full of shadows and prophecies:

  • Adam points to Christ.
  • Noah’s ark points to salvation.
  • Abraham offering Isaac points to Calvary.
  • The Passover lamb points to Jesus.
  • The Tabernacle points to Jesus.
  • The sacrifices point to Jesus.

Every road in the Old Testament eventually leads to Christ.

Luke 24:27 says:

“And beginning at Moses and all the prophets, he expounded unto them in all the scriptures the things concerning himself.”

Every Christian should know:

  • The Bible is God’s Word.
  • The Bible has one central theme: redemption.
  • The Bible finds its fulfillment in Jesus Christ.

If you know the Bible, you know God’s plan.

2. Every Christian Should Know the Purpose of Jesus Christ

Many know the name of Jesus but do not understand why He came.

He Came to Fulfill the Old Testament

Matthew 5:17:

“Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil.”

Jesus completed what the prophets foretold.

He was:

  • The promised Messiah
  • The Lamb of God
  • The Seed of Abraham
  • The Son of David
  • The suffering servant of Isaiah

He Came to Introduce the New Covenant

The Old Covenant was written on tables of stone.

The New Covenant would be written in hearts.

Hebrews 8:10:

“I will put my laws into their mind, and write them in their hearts.”

Jesus established:

  • Grace
  • The New Birth
  • The Church
  • The Outpouring of the Holy Ghost

He Came to Show Us the Future

Jesus not only explained the past; He revealed the future.

He taught:

  • The coming of the Holy Ghost
  • The birth of the Church
  • His return
  • The resurrection
  • Heaven and hell
  • The eternal kingdom of God

Revelation calls Him:

“Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending.”

Jesus stands at the center of history.

He explains the past.
He transforms the present.
He reveals the future.

Every Christian should know:

  • Why Jesus came.
  • What Jesus accomplished.
  • What Jesus is preparing.

3. Every Christian Should Know Their Place in God’s Plan

The story does not end with Jesus ascending into heaven.

Now we enter the story.

Our Place in Salvation

Acts 2:38 gives us our response:

“Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.”

Every believer must personally experience salvation.

Nobody can repent for you.

Nobody can be baptized for you.

Nobody can receive the Holy Ghost for you.

Our Place in the Church

The Church is not an optional activity.

It is God’s chosen instrument in the earth.

Hebrews 10:25:

“Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together…”

Every Christian should know:

  • The church needs me.
  • My family needs church.
  • I need the church.

We are not spectators.

We are participants.

Our Place in Outreach

Jesus said:

“Go ye therefore, and teach all nations…” (Matthew 28:19)

The mission of the Church did not end in Acts.

It continues through us.

Every Christian should ask:

  • Who am I reaching?
  • Who am I praying for?
  • Who am I inviting?
  • Who am I discipling?

God never intended for us to merely occupy a pew.

He called us to occupy the harvest field.

Every Christian should know:

  1. I have a place in salvation.
  2. I have a place in the church.
  3. I have a place in the harvest.

Conclusion

Every Christian should know three things:

1. Know the Bible

It reveals God’s plan and finds its fulfillment in Christ.

2. Know Jesus Christ

He fulfilled the Old Testament, established the New Covenant, and revealed the future.

3. Know Your Place

Your place in salvation.
Your place in the church.
Your place in the harvest.

The Bible points to Jesus.

Jesus points to the Church.

The Church points the world to Jesus.

And now God is asking each of us:

“Do you know your place in My story?”

The greatest tragedy is not ignorance of facts.

The greatest tragedy is knowing the story of redemption but never finding your place in it.

Today, let us know the Book, know the Savior, and know our place in the Kingdom of God. Amen.

The Tarantula Hawk Wasp Friday, Jun 5 2026 

The Tarantula Hawk Wasp

When I was very young, maybe the first or second grade my sister and I who was younger than me was sleeping on a mattress on the floor. We were very poor one particular morning as I got out of bed. A very large tarantula came out after me.

Of course I was horrified. We lived in a very small shotgun style house in Texas. The tarantula bowl they walked out of the room. We were sleeping in into the kitchen right through the kitchen toward the front door. We open the door. It walked right out the front door onto the porch and down onto the sidewalk.

It was a pretty scary thing. It was about six or 7 inches across big hairy legs. I was petrified. It looked like a monster to a six or seven-year-old boy.

A couple of men in the neighborhood came over to kill it. They brought a shovel and a broom. My memory tells me they kept hitting it and trying to kill it and it would jump. We would all jump then they would hit it again. They weren’t able to kill it by just hitting it, but they stun it and now to where it wasn’t moving and somebody said the best thing to do is burn it so they took matches and lit paper and burned him and finally got rid of him.

Quite a process of elimination, taking several grown people and probably close to 20 minutes or 25 minutes. When the same effect is achieved by a wasp that is only an inch and a half to 2 inches long.

The sting of the tarantula hawk wasp has become famous because of entomologist Justin O. Schmidt, who deliberately allowed himself to be stung by many insects to compare their pain.

When Schmidt was stung by a tarantula hawk wasp, he described it this way:

“Blinding, fierce, shockingly electric. A running hair dryer has just been dropped into your bubble bath.”

He rated it among the most painful insect stings in the world. The pain is said to be excruciating but usually lasts only about 3–5 minutes before rapidly fading.

The Sting That Stops Everything

Schmidt said that when the tarantula hawk stings you, the best thing to do is simply lie down and scream because you cannot concentrate on anything else.

Sin is like that sting.

A small compromise may seem insignificant, but when sin enters a life, it can suddenly dominate every thought, every relationship, and every decision. One moment the tarantula is walking freely; the next moment it is paralyzed by the wasp’s venom.

Likewise, many people are not destroyed by one catastrophic event. They are paralyzed by a single sting of bitterness, unforgiveness, pride, lust, or fear.

The enemy doesn’t always have to kill you.
He only has to paralyze you.

But there is a greater power than the venom of the enemy.

Paul said:

“O death, where is thy sting?” (1 Corinthians 15:55, KJV)

The sting of sin brings paralysis and death, but the cross of Christ removes the sting. What Satan intended to immobilize, Jesus came to liberate.

Also….

The tarantula hawk does not sting the tarantula because it hates it. It stings it because it wants to use it for another purpose. ( Satan wants you for his purposes )

The devil often attacks people with the greatest potential.

The largest spider in the desert becomes the target.

Sometimes the intensity of the battle is evidence of the value of the prize.

A small spider may be ignored, but the giant tarantula draws the attack.


“The size of your struggle may be an indication of the size of your purpose.”

The Sting

The tarantula hawk wasp is only a fraction of the size of the tarantula it hunts. If you placed them side by side, most people would assume the spider would win every time.

But the wasp doesn’t win by strength.

It wins by knowing where to strike.

The tarantula may have more size, more legs, more power, and more intimidation, more resources…but one precise sting changes everything.

Many people feel overwhelmed because they are looking at the size of the enemy instead of the power God has placed within them.

I. The Enemy Looks Bigger Than You and he has a sting. 

The tarantula is intimidating.

  • Bigger
  • Stronger
  • More frightening

David faced Goliath.
Moses faced Pharaoh.
Israel faced Jericho.

The devil loves to convince us that the problem is too big.

Much like the wasp stinging the tarantula, he knows exactly where and how to sting us to make us paralyzed and take us out of the race

Some people are staring at:

  • Financial tarantulas
  • Family tarantulas
  • Health tarantulas
  • Spiritual tarantulas

The enemy has stung you and is feeding off of you. 

Illustration

The tarantula hawk wasp never consults the spider about whether it can win. It simply attacks like a silent ninja.

The Enemy Has a Sting

The wasp’s greatest weapon is not its size but its sting.

Satan’s greatest weapon is not:

  • Money
  • Buildings
  • Programs
  • Popularity

His power is in his sting…

  • Guilt
  • Condemnation
  • Discouragement
  • Being offended
  • These things paralyze us and make us immobile 

The devil is not afraid of your personality.

He is afraid of your prayer life.

III. One Touch Can Change Everything

The wasp doesn’t have to sting the tarantula a hundred times.

One successful strike changes the battle…just one.

One service can change a life.

One altar call can break years of addiction.

One prayer meeting can start revival.

One touch from God can accomplish what years of human effort could not.

Acts 2 happened in a single moment.

Saul became Paul in a single encounter.

The woman with the issue of blood received her miracle in a single touch.

Never underestimate what God can do in one moment.

The Giant Becomes the Testimony

After the battle, the wasp drags away the very thing that once looked unbeatable. Satan gloats.

What once looked like a threat (your potential) becomes a trophy.

God wants to defeat the stinging of Satan in your life

David carried Goliath’s sword.

Israel carried spoils from Egypt.

The three Hebrew children walked out of the fire without even the smell of smoke.

The thing that was sent to destroy you may become the testimony God uses to inspire others.

The cancer becomes the testimony.

The addiction becomes the testimony.

The financial crisis becomes the testimony.

The family struggle becomes the testimony.

Conclusion

The tarantula looked stronger.

The tarantula looked bigger.

The tarantula looked unbeatable.

But the stinging changed it all  you have to learn to deal with the sting of life

Disappointment

Rejection

Hatred

When you get stung…. Keep your faith strong keep being around good people keep coming to church. Keep your eyes on the prize.

Somebody has been measuring your problem and forgetting to measure your God.

You have stared at the size of the spider long enough.

It’s time to remember that God specializes in  conquering  great things.

You may feel insignificant.

You may feel outnumbered.

You may feel overwhelmed.

You may feel stung and immobile

But the Holy Ghost inside of you is greater than every giant, every devil, every obstacle, and every mountain that stands in your path.

“Greater is he that is in you, than he that is in the world.” (1 John 4:4)

Stop looking at the wasp.

Start trusting the anecdote.

The power of God is enough.

Mornings Thursday, Jan 22 2026 

Morning

Here are some passages that teach about seeking God early in the morning:

1. Psalm 63:1 David in the wilderness

“O God, thou art my God; early will I seek thee: my soul thirsteth for thee, my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty land, where no water is.”

This is the classic verse:

  • Early will I seek thee
  • Not obligation — desire and hunger

2. Proverbs 8:17

“I love them that love me; and those that seek me early shall find me.”

God attaches a promise to early seeking:

  • Seek early → find God

3. Lamentations 3:22–23

“It is of the LORD’S mercies that we are not consumed… They are new every morning: great is thy faithfulness.”

Morning is when:

  • Mercy is renewed
  • Yesterday’s failures don’t define today

4. Mark 1:35 Jesus’ example

“And in the morning, rising up a great while before day, he went out, and departed into a solitary place, and there prayed.”

How do we go wrong if we follow Jesus example?

Jesus:

  • Woke up before sunrise
  • Sought God before people

5. Psalm 5:3

“My voice shalt thou hear in the morning, O LORD; in the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee, and will look up.”

6. Isaiah 50:4

“He wakeneth morning by morning, he wakeneth mine ear to hear as the learned.”

Morning is when:

  • God teaches
  • God speaks

7. Job 1:5 Job as priest for his family

“And Job rose up early in the morning… and offered burnt offerings.”

Job didn’t wait for crisis:

  • He covered his family daily
  • Early intercession

8. Psalm 88:13

“But unto thee have I cried, O LORD; and in the morning shall my prayer prevent thee.”

“Prevent”  means:

  • Go before
  • Start the day with God first
  • Give God the first and best

We believe in first fruits, and that if we give God the first of our finances, he will bless the other 90%.

What about our day? Is it possible…

“If God gets your first hour, He’ll bless your remaining 23.”

“The devil wants your mornings rushed, distracted, and noisy — because he knows whoever controls your morning often controls your day.”

“Those who seek God early don’t just start the day better — they start the day aligned with eternity.”

  • First light
  • First love
  • First voice you listen to
  • First spirit you yield to

All of Scripture leans toward this principle:

Seek Him first — especially in the morning.

Our Mandate: Daily Study Tuesday, Dec 30 2025 

The mandate to read and study the word of God each day and make it a daily part of our life is not found in the Torah (the first five books of the Bible). It is found in Joshua chapter 1.8. The blessings and the conquest of personal territory written in the book of Deuteronomy chapter 11 happens when we apply the admission of Joshua one and eight to our life, our work, and our free time.

Deuteronomy 11.8 Therefore shall ye keep all the commandments which I command you this day, that ye may be strong, and go in and possess the land, whither ye go to possess it; 

9 And that ye may prolong your days in the land, which the LORD sware unto your fathers to give unto them and to their seed, a land that floweth with milk and honey.

10 For the land, whither thou goest in to possess it, is not as the land of Egypt, from whence ye came out, where thou sowedst thy seed, and wateredst it with thy foot, as a garden of herbs: 

11 But the land, whither ye go to possess it, is a land of hills and valleys, and drinketh water of the rain of heaven: 

12 A land which the LORD thy God careth for: the eyes of the LORD thy God are always upon it, from the beginning of the year even unto the end of the year.

13 And it shall come to pass, if ye shall hearken diligently unto my commandments which I command you this day, to love the LORD your God, and to serve him with all your heart and with all your soul, 

14 That I will give you the rain of your land in his due season, the first rain and the latter rain, that thou mayest gather in thy corn, and thy wine, and thine oil. 

15 And I will send grass in thy fields for thy cattle, that thou mayest eat and be full.

Joshua 1.3 Every place that the sole of your foot shall tread upon, that have I given unto you, as I said unto Moses. 

4 From the wilderness and this Lebanon even unto the great river, the river Euphrates, all the land of the Hittites, and unto the great sea toward the going down of the sun, shall be your coast. 

5 There shall not any man be able to stand before thee all the days of thy life: as I was with Moses, so I will be with thee: I will not fail thee, nor forsake thee. 

6 Be strong and of a good courage: for unto this people shalt thou divide for an inheritance the land, which I sware unto their fathers to give them. 

7 Only be thou strong and very courageous, that thou mayest observe to do according to all the law, which Moses my servant commanded thee: turn not from it to the right hand or to the left, that thou mayest prosper whithersoever thou goest. 

8 This book of the law shall not depart out of thy mouth; but thou shalt meditate therein day and night, that thou mayest observe to do according to all that is written therein: for then thou shalt make thy way prosperous, and then thou shalt have good success.

We must also be careful that our work does not affect our daily study of Scripture. The addiction of becoming lazy or a workaholic and not making Bible study a priority can also lead one into temptations and sin that can violate our personal relationship with God as well as our fellow human beings. The goal is to achieve a healthy balance between our study of God’s word and our daily work.

Anavah-humility Monday, Dec 22 2025 

Anavah-humility.

Have you ever been just out for a walk or maybe in nature somewhere and all of a sudden you were overcome with the awe and the wonder of all you were seeing around you. Walking through the forest, walking along the beach, watching children play on a playground. These breath taking moments can cause you to stand in awe and realize how small we are in the big scope of the world.

In the Hebrew language, the word we translate humility is the word anavah. It is a very interesting word to our English way of thinking. The literal definition is to occupy your God given space in the world. This has a meaning of don’t overestimate yourself and how important you are, but on the other hand, don’t underestimate yourself as though you have no significance at all.

Early in the Bible, there’s the story of the people who wanted to build a tower. They wanted to make a name for themselves. It would appear from that statement that they wanted to be famous. They wanted people to know who they were. They wanted to do something that everyone would admire and respect. When you look at it carefully, their desire was to do the exact opposite of what the word anavah-humility means in the original language. They wanted to take up more space than their God-given allotted-space in the world.

In today’s world so much of this generation is about liking our Facebook post. It’s about retweeting our friend’s post so they can get more views. Many times this creates a false sense of self-worth and how important we are. We are following in the footsteps of the tower of Babel, trying to take up more than our God-given space in the world.

It is my belief that when we try to take up more than our God-given space, it brings discontent in our life. This is not anavah, humility.

Some people are of the opinion that humility is thinking less of yourself. That idea translates into taking up as little space on this earth as possible. It would mean staying out of people’s thinking and off their radar. This is not a correct posture. This is not what God wants of us. God wants us to be aware of our place and to be comfortable in it. When we do this we balance our lives and live in peace and contentment.

There is a very beautiful balance in learning this principle of anavah. When we do this and only take up our space two things happen. 

Number one we do not squeeze anybody else out of their space and compete for their space. 

Number two we don’t reduce our space so that we don’t take care of our responsibilities and others have to help us with our lives because of inferior feelings, self hatred or weakness.

I encourage you keep in mind anavah

Make a choice today: I’m going to take up the space that God gave me to fill. I’m not going to intrude on someone else and try to take up their space. I’m not going to hide from the world and shrink out of everyone’s focus -and thus force someone else to do what I should be doing.

Anavah is understood as properly “occupying your God‑given space,”- neither inflating yourself nor denying genuine gifts.

It includes empathy and responsiveness to others’ needs, seeing one’s abilities as responsibilities entrusted by God rather than grounds for arrogance.

Anavah is modesty in your stance before God and other people.

Stand your ground-but only your ground. 

(Resources: 52 Hebrew words by Dave Adamson and Perplexity AI)

Which study Bible in 2026? Thursday, Dec 18 2025 

 Which study Bible for 2026?

One of the most common questions I have been asked over the last 50 years in my travels is simply which is the best study Bible?

I think all of us know there is no singular answer that encompasses everything.

Some Bibles excel in readability like large print. Some Bibles appeal because of their size and ease of carry. I am of the opinion some Bibles are carried in our modern world because they are currently a fad. You know it’s the groovy Bible to carry. It is the latest… Have you got one yet? There are even some Bibles that would carry a certain status with some people. Maybe it’s a collectible. Maybe it’s a new bind in an exotic leather of some type. I really do understand all that, and that is not even my subject today. My subject today is totally trying to focus on the content and what it would add to your knowledge in the next 365 days of 2026.

Every year at this time I spend a little time deciding which study Bible I’m going to use for the next 12 months. This is a simple process that I have used for the last 30 years or so. I have used many study Bibles. Here are a few that I have used. I began with the Thompson Chain Bible. I have also used the Schofield Bible, the Dake Bible, the Companion Bible, the Spirit Application Bible, the Ryrie Study Bible, the Chronological Bible, the Student Bible, the Hebrew Bible, the Apostolic Study Bible, and of course, the Premier Study Bible. There have been others that I have used, but I think you get the picture.

I have read the Bible every year cover to cover since I was 14 years old. The majority of those years has been a different study Bible. I do my best to read not only the Bible text, but the footnotes, the introductions, and all the added information.

When Young ministers ask me what I would recommend them to read I always recommend use a different study Bible every year and read everything. That includes the dates, the notes, the references, all of it. It is my personal opinion this is one way a young preacher can “round out” a lot of his thinking on doctrinal issues and also biblical history.

I would like to tell the young impatient ministers there are no shortcuts to really understanding the Bible. It is a long, lifetime process. There is no one study Bible that’s going to make you brilliant and smart by itself alone. I believe most older advanced ministers would tell you that the more they’ve studied the more they realize what they don’t know.

I would like to add a personal recommendation. If you only read or study so that you can preach a message you’re going to miss the greatest moments in your spiritual life. I believe your study should be because you love Jesus Christ. 

I believe your study should be daily. If you truly study daily, you will never be without a message to preach. You will always have more subjects than you can deliver in public services. Learn to be consistent, learn to put the word of God first, and God will give you sermons and revelations.

Having said that let’s begin. I am not going to include the Premier Study Bible (PSB) in this blog. My reason is, I have spent a number of years participating writing commentary and in the development of this Bible. I am still on the publishing board and the financial board of the PBS. It is impossible for me to be impartial and to not prefer it above the others —so please know that what I’m about to write does not include the PSB. Every young beginning minister should start his ministry by reading the PSB cover to cover.

I realize this next comment will cross swords with a number of preachers, and I am fine if you disagree. I have never read any translation, except the King James version of the Bible. It is my preferred reading and study. I have used other translations to see if there is a meaning in a particular passage that I am overlooking, however, to be honest I’m 99% always using the KJV. I believe in the majority text and I believe it is the correct text to study. This whole subject is maybe for another blog. Suffice it to say that I am not a believer in the minority text and the Bibles that are printed from that textus. This also applies to even the interlinear. It is impossible to remove 60,000 words from the text without affecting what you’re studying.

So today the question I am discussing is: if you could only have one study Bible, which one would it be?

My answer (that excludes the PSB) is if I could only have one Bible, I would want to use the Thompson Chain. It is possible that some of my bias is because it was the first Bible I began to use when I started preaching full-time at 23 years old. I still have it, and it literally has been written on every single page of the Bible. I believe in writing and making notes in my Bible -that is just a personal preference.

The original Thompson Chain-Reference Bible company was purchased in the last few years by Zondervan. They have produced it in a new binding and a new block text. This is a very good Bible. It is a Bible that if you did not own any other reference material, you would still be able to get a very well-rounded picture of doctrine and Bible history. It is literally the Bible on itself -meaning what does the Bible say about the Bible, and it leads you through chains of scriptures to do that.There is no one “Bible wonder” that does everything, but I do think this particular Bible comes closer than the others.

Just for fun I’m going to list some Bibles and what I prefer about these particular Bibles:

For reading: Schuyler (I like the chapter divisions)

For carry to church: Allan ( I like red letter and Allan does not make any)

For size/convience: Cambridge (my first Bible bought with my own money at 16)

For article/cool notes/introductions: The Student Bible (Zondervan-out of print)

For new preppie cool factor: Humble Lamb

For being a collectible: Thomas Nelson Signature Series (out of print)

Whatever Bible you choose to use in 2026 may I highly recommend reading your Bible cover to cover in 2026.

Blessings

Reflecting on 50 years of Ministry Saturday, Dec 6 2025 

Reflections on 50 years of preaching and modern preaching.

One half of a century: In some ways it seems a blink of an eye, in other ways it seems like a bite of eternity.

50 years ago I was 23 and today I am 73. At the end of last July, 2025 I reached 49 years of full time ministry. At the end of July 2026 I will complete 50 years of full time ministry. So much has changed and much has remained the same. 

My focus today is ministry and preaching. Concerning preaching I am referencing style, content, and delivery. These are my somewhat random thoughts.

Recently, over the last few years I have noticed in myself I prefer slower, quieter preaching. I kind of drifted into that without planning or even recognizing it was happening.

It seems to me I gradually began to see this in myself and began to analyze my thoughts. I found myself being disloyal to the loud fast preaching and decided to not allow negative thoughts to influence me in the years that remain in my life. I had found myself grimacing when the screaming got loud. As lame as it may sound I sincerely began to seek God for what He thought as opposed to what I was experiencing.

I may be misreading this next part as to what happened to me, but I see the poetic justice God uses at times in what happened. 

I had been given a small book on Hebrew words as a birthday gift by a dear lady in our church. I have been reading it slowly and carefully. While in the mindset of considering modern preaching it seems God straightened out my thinking.

There is a small Hebrew word TAL. It is the word for dew, morning dew. The small book ignited my thinking on how God speaks to us. This book emphasizes how the dew is so important in scripture. It is used 37 times if I have counted correctly. It is always used in terms of blessing.

As I pondered this I realized God has two major ways to send the water to earth that earth must have to survive. God uses dew and rain.

There are two ways the Word of God comes:

The dew – gentle, quiet, soaking over time -this is teaching.

The rain – loud, powerful, saturating fast – this is preaching.

Both are heavenly.

Both are divine.

Both are needed.

But they are not the same.

THE DEW OF TEACHING: SLOW, CONSISTENT, NOURISHING

The dew falls silently in the night when no one hears it.

It doesn’t shout.

It doesn’t announce itself.

It simply appears.

I will be as the dew unto Israel…

Hosea 14:5

Dew is personal.

Dew is delicate.

Dew doesn’t run off – it soaks in.

Teaching is the dew of heaven.

It comes quietly into the spirit,

line upon line,

precept upon precept.

For precept must be upon precept… line upon line… here a little, and there a little.

Isaiah 28:10

This is teaching:

where the pastor calmly

opens the Scriptures,

and expounds the Word,

and truth sinks gently into the soul.

Pentecostals love the shout 

but we also need the stillness of instruction.

For the dew of teaching forms roots.

THE RAIN OF PREACHING IS SUDDEN, POWERFUL, AND REVIVING.

Now look again at the text:

My doctrine shall drop as the rain…

 Deuteronomy 32:2

Rain is bold.

Rain is public.

Rain makes a noise on the rooftops.

Rain gets everyone’s attention.

This is preaching.

The voice lifts.

The anointing strikes.

The Word thunders like Elijah on Mount Carmel:

there is a sound of abundance of rain.

1 Kings 18:41

When preaching falls,

chains break,

altars fill,

sinners weep,

and backsliders tremble.

Rain produces shout,

but dew produces depth.

Rain revives quickly,

but dew sustains quietly.

THE CHURCH NEEDS BOTH THE DEW AND THE RAIN

Some churches only get dew 

and the saints grow knowledgeable but grow dry in passion.

Some churches only get rain 

and the saints shout but lack foundation.

Their spirituality only lasts a few days.

But God intended both.

In my search I discovered there is no place on planet earth where dew is not found. In some arid locations it is the only form of hydration for plants, hence a desert. Dew is quiet but causes nourishment daily. None of it is lost. It slowly works its purpose without any waste or runoff. The Bible uses dew as a metaphor for blessing. 

Rain is more noticeable. Rain can be gentle or intense. Rain can bless or cause destruction by flooding with cloud bursts. Rain can be forecast by weathermen. All rain is not salvaged. We must have drains and gutters and French drains due to overflow. Rain was used as a form of judgment in the days of Noah’s ark. Rain has more forms and intensity. Rain is loud and obvious. 

As I pondered this I began to feel like God was chiding me and correcting me. It was clear from a Bible perspective both are needed to give life giving water to our earth.

My conclusion is we need both dew (teaching) and rain (preaching). 

When I began to travel as a young evangelist I was 23 and only knew how my pastor did things. Brother Terry, my pastor, was a strong teacher.  Our general church life was we would have a long revival of six weeks or so and then Brother Terry would teach and establish the new converts. He also preached at times but in my memory he taught more often.

It seems to me this was the case with many churches in the 1960-1970 era. The large churches of those decades were built by men of teaching and preaching (dew and rain). Men like Paul Price, the Davis brothers, David Gray (used charts at times), Voar Shoemake, Clyde Haney, and others. 

I say this to encourage young preachers. Preach it hard and loud and long. 

Bring the rain!

Those of us who have many miles on our odometer can also take confidence in the value of the dew (teaching). The manna was attached to the dew so never doubt the value of teaching.

Numbers 11.9

9 And when the dew fell upon the camp in the night, the manna fell upon it.

In Simple Terms

If an environment is very dry or very stable in temperature, dew will not form. 

Jesus said I would that you were either hot or cold.

Just as there are places on earth where dew is rare, there are hearts where the spirit’s moisture no longer settles. 

Dryness comes when prayer ceases, when the air of faith grows thin. 

But just as Elijah prayed and the heavens gave both rain and dew again,  revival always begins when someone kneels and calls upon the Lord.

So let us not become deserts.  

Don’t let your faith become dry in the heat of distraction.  

Let the dew return – the quiet Word that roots us.  

Let the rain fall – the power that renews us.

When the dew rests upon our spirit, truth takes hold.  

When the rain pours from heaven, the fruit appears.  

And when both move together: teaching and preaching, Word and Spirit — the Church becomes a flourishing field under open heavens.

Lord, make us a people who receive Your dew in the dawn and Your rain in the storm that Your Word may live in us,  

and through us, the earth may be refreshed again.

False Teachers Thursday, Dec 4 2025 

False teachers by Kenneth Bow

They stand in garments shining, yet their hearts are full of night;

They speak with swelling words of praise, but never walk in light.

They promise fountains flowing, yet their wells are dry within;

They cause the hurt of Zion, but they never call it sin.

With smooth and crafted speeches they deceive the simple soul;

They bind with cords of flattery, yet never make men whole.

They love the chiefest places, and the greeting in the street;

But tremble not before the Lord, nor bow at Mercy’s seat.

They flee when wolves are coming, for they never knew the Lamb;

Their staff is but a painted rod, their cry a hollow sham.

They steal the words of others, saying, “Thus the Lord hath said,”

While God stands far from their deceit and truth falls cold and dead.

But still the Good Shepherd rises, and His voice the sheep will hear;

His rod corrects, His staff protects, His presence calms their fear.

For every false anointed, there is One who reigns above—

The Shepherd true, whose only crown was truth, sacrifice and love.

So test the spirits daily, weigh each voice against His Word;

For many feign the prophet’s fire, yet do not obey the Lord

Cling to the ancient pathway, let His truth defend your way—

The Lamb will guard His chosen flock until His coming day.

The Overton Window Friday, Nov 21 2025 

The Overton Window

 “When the Window Moves, but the Word Stands”

Understanding Culture, Conviction, and the Overton Window

TEXT:

Psalm 119:89“For ever, O LORD, thy word is settled in heaven.”

Jeremiah 6:16“Ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein…”

Romans 12:2“Be not conformed to this world…”

INTRODUCTION

The world around us is shifting. Culture is changing. Values are drifting. Things that were once unthinkable have become normal.

Not because truth changed…

but because the cultural window moved.

Sociologists call it the Overton Window—the range of ideas that society sees as acceptable at any given time.

But the church doesn’t live by a window.

The Overton Window moves through stages:

We live by the Word.

When the Overton window moves, but the Word stands.

“The world is always shifting its standards.”

1. Unthinkable

2. Radical

3. Acceptable

4. Sensible

5. Popular

6. Policy

What was once shocking becomes normalized.

What was once sin becomes celebrated.

What was once holy becomes mocked.

But don’t mistake social acceptance for spiritual righteousness.

Isaiah 5:20

“Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil…”

Culture moves.

Trends move.

Beliefs move.

But God says, “I change not.” (Malachi 3:6)

II. THE CHURCH MUST RECOGNIZE THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CULTURE AND DOCTRINE

Culture can shift. Doctrine cannot.

Some things are cultural:

• Music styles

• Service length

• Technology

• Dress fashions

• Architecture

• Program formats

The window moves on these things. That’s normal. It’s fine.

But some things are biblical, eternal, unchanging:

• Holiness

• Repentance

• The Oneness of God

• Jesus’ name baptism

• Infill­ing of the Holy Ghost

• Separation from the world

• Righteous living

• Moral purity

• Apostolic worship

These do not move with the window.

They are fixed by the Word.

We do not let culture determine our convictions.

We let Scripture determine our stance.

III. WHEN THE WINDOW MOVES, THE CHURCH MUST STAND IN THE OLD PATHS

Jeremiah 6:16 tells us to seek “the old paths.”

Not old clothes.

Not old songs.

Not old traditions for tradition’s sake.

But the old paths of truth:

• The Gospel

• Prayer

• Consecration

• Worship

• Holiness

• Apostolic identity

Those paths never go out of style.

Culture may shift, but conviction must stand.

When the world says, “Loosen up,”

the church says, “Hold the line.”

When society says, “It’s not a big deal anymore,”

the church says, “If God said it, it is still a big deal.”

When the window moves,

the Word stays where it’s always been.

IV. THE DANGER OF A MOVING WINDOW: DRIFT

Hebrews 2:1 warns us:

“…lest at any time we should let them slip.”

If you aren’t anchored, you drift.

If you don’t hold the line, the line moves.

If you don’t know the Word, you follow the window.

**Samson didn’t lose his strength in one moment—

he lost it in stages.**

Step by step…

Compromise by compromise…

As the window moved in his life,

his conviction weakened.

**Lot didn’t jump to Sodom—

he inched toward it, step by step.**

He moved his tent “toward Sodom,”

and eventually he was living in the city.

Culture pulls.

The enemy pushes.

The window shifts.

If we are not anchored, we drift.

V. WHEN THE WINDOW MOVES, THE CHURCH HAS A CHOICE

Choice 1 — Follow culture.

This leads to compromise, confusion, and coldness.

Choice 2 — Follow Christ.

This leads to revival, authority, and anointing.

You cannot keep both:

• The favor of the world

• And the fire of the Spirit

You choose one.

VI. THE CHURCH CAN SHIFT CULTURE WITHOUT LETTING CULTURE SHIFT THE CHURCH

The Overton Window does not just move us

the church can move it.

Every revival moves the window of what people think is possible.

In Acts:

• They prayed until the Spirit fell.

• They preached until hearts were pricked.

• They worshiped until jail doors opened.

• They lived holy until the city took notice.

Revival moved the window.

If the church will:

• Pray boldly

• Worship passionately

• Preach truthfully

• Love deeply

• Live holy

• Stand firm

…we will shift the culture around us.

VII. THE CALL: FIX YOUR LIFE TO THE WORD, NOT THE WINDOW

Ask yourself:

“What has moved in me that God never told me to move?”

“What have I accepted just because society accepted it?”

“What convictions have softened?”

“What disciplines have drifted?”

“What holiness line have I allowed to shift?”

It’s time to:

• Rebuild the altar

• Return to prayer

• Reclaim holiness

• Rededicate ourselves

• Realign with the Word

• Reject cultural compromise

• Re-anchor our identity in Jesus

CONCLUSION

Culture has a window.

The church has a Word.

Culture shifts.

Truth stands.

Trends come and go.

Holiness does not.

The world changes its mind every decade.

God’s Word has not changed in eternity.

Stand with the Word.

Live above the window.

Anchor your life to the truth.

And let God use you to shift the culture around you.

Preaching Still Works Sunday, Mar 30 2025 

Preaching Still Works

Let me tell you something: preaching still works. I don’t care what the world says, I don’t care what culture tries to cancel, the preached Word of God is still God’s chosen weapon to change lives.

It works in the church. It works in the streets. It works in living rooms. It works on the radio. Preaching just works.

Romans 10:14 says, “How shall they hear without a preacher?” Oh, you better believe it—God uses the foolishness of preaching to confound the wise, to break the chains of sin, and to raise the dead things back to life.

Preaching isn’t just talking—it’s declaring. It’s proclaiming. It’s releasing the fire of Heaven into the hearts of people. 

When that anointed Word goes forth, demons tremble, sickness flees, and hearts are pierced with conviction. Preaching is a lifeline, a sword, a trumpet in Zion. It tears down strongholds and lifts up the Name that is above every name—JESUS!

That’s why you need to get involved. That’s why you need to say amen or waive your hand or stand up or do something to show. Yes, I support this. Yes, I am involved. Yes, I’m on board.

You can have your lights, your programs, your productions— if there’s no preaching, there’s no power. It is the one indispensable thing needed to build a church. You must have preaching.

Paul told Timothy, “Preach the Word. Be instant in season and out of season. ” That means when they want it and when they don’t. Because somebody’s soul is hanging in the balance.

Preaching works—because God watches over His Word to perform it. So when the Word is preached, miracles break out. When the Word is preached, prodigals come home. When the Word is preached, revival breaks loose. Preaching makes things happen.

Matt 4.23 And Jesus went about all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom,…..

g2784. κηρύσσω kēryssō; of uncertain affinity; to herald (as a public crier), especially divine truth (the gospel): — preacher(-er), proclaim, publish.

AV (61) – preach 51, publish 5, proclaim 2, preached + g2258 2, preacher 1;

to be a herald, to officiate as a herald to proclaim after the manner of a herald -always with the suggestion of formality, gravity and an authority which must be listened to and obeyed. To publish, proclaim openly: something which has been done used of the public proclamation of the gospel and matters pertaining to it, made by John the Baptist, by Jesus, by the apostles and other Christian teachers…

It pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe

John preached Matt 3.1

Jesus preached Matt 4.23

Jonah preached Matt 12.41

Apostles preached Acts 8.4

Paul and Barnabas preached Acts 15.35

1 Cor 1.18 For the preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us which are saved it is the power of God.

1 Cor 1.21 For after that in the wisdom of God the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe.

1 Cor 2.4 And my speech and my preaching was not with enticing words of man’s wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power:

Titus 1.3 But hath in due times manifested his word through preaching, which is committed unto me according to the commandment of God our Saviour;

So don’t stop preaching. 

Don’t water it down. 

Don’t compromise. 

Preach it hot, preach it holy, preach it full of the Holy Ghost. 

Because preaching still works!

Why Preaching Still Works:

Romans 10:13-15

“For ‘Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.’ How then can they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without a preacher?”

Preaching is God’s Method, Not Man’s Idea

“How shall they hear without a preacher?”

Church, preaching didn’t come from a church board or a conference committee—it came from the mind of God. 

From the prophets in the Old Testament to John the Baptist in the wilderness, to Jesus Himself declaring, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!”to the Apostles—God has always used a voice to carry His message.

Preaching is not a TED Talk. It’s not a motivational speech. It’s not entertainment.

It is the divine delivery system of Heaven’s message to Earth.

Preaching Breaks Chains and Builds Faith.

Romans 10:17 – “So then faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.”

When the Word is preached—faith is born. 

When Peter preached, 3,000 souls were saved. 

When Paul preached, demons fled and dead men rose.

The preached Word builds up what the devil tried to tear down.

It breaks addiction. 

It heals hearts. 

It stirs the sleeping. 

It calls the prodigal home.

You may not remember the preacher’s name… but you’ll remember what God did through that Word.

Preaching Carries Power Because It Carries God’s Presence

1 Corinthians 1:21 – “It pleased God through the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe.”

Don’t let the world call it foolish. Heaven calls it fire.

When preaching is under the anointing—it’s not the preacher talking—it’s the Spirit of God declaring war on darkness.

When preaching goes forth, it’s not just volume—it’s violence in the spirit realm, tearing down strongholds and lifting up the Cross.

Preaching invites the presence of God to invade the present moment.

Preaching Still Works—So Preach On!

The devil would love for the Church to go quiet…

He doesn’t mind a little worship, or a little fellowship—as long as there’s no preaching.

Because when we preach:

• Heaven listens

• Hell trembles

• And hearts are changed

So preach on preacher.

Preach when they shout, preach when they stare.

Preach when it’s popular, and preach when it’s not.

Preach in the pulpit, preach in the streets—preach in power and with fire.

If you’ve been running —it’s time to surrender.

If you’ve forgotten the power in the Word—it’s time to return.

And if you’re hungry for the fire of God to fall again—get to this altar and ask for fresh oil.

Two things about preaching

Number one it is the only indispensable thing in building a church. You can build without a building you can build without music you can build without a lot of things that we like, but preaching is the one thing you cannot do without. 

Number two preaching is the only element that every church in the world uses they may use different music or wear robes or have big cathedrals or meet in living rooms, but every one of them have preaching 

Because preaching still works.