Saturday, January 30, 2021

Stand Firm in the Fire


While most of the book of Daniel talks about how Daniel stood strong in his faith, there is one other story that is worth looking at because it shows us how we can stand firm even in the midst of trials.  As much as we try to avoid all kinds of difficult situations, it is often only by going through them that we learn how to lean on our faith and trust God.  The Bible says this often:

1 Peter 1:7 (NLV) These trials will show that your faith is genuine.  It is being tested as fire tests and purifies gold—though your faith is far more precious than mere gold.  So when your faith remains strong through many trials, it will bring you much praise and glory and honor on the day when Jesus Christ is revealed to the whole world.   

Romans 5:3-4 (NLV)  We know that troubles help us learn not to give up.  When we have learned not to give up, it shows we have stood the test.  When we have stood the test, it gives us hope.  

James 1:2-3  (NLV)  You should be happy when you have all kinds of tests.  You know these prove your faith. It helps you not to give up.

OK, I don’t know about being happy during trials, but walking through difficult situations strengthens our faith in ways that nothing else can.  In many ways, a faith that is tested is a faith that can be trusted.  And sometimes that testing comes only through the fire of trials, we see this in some friends of Daniel.  

From the first week of our series, we learned that not only was Daniel taken from his home in Israel and sent to serve in the court of King Nebuchadnezzar, but so were all the best and brightest young men in Israel.  Daniel was not alone when he refused to eat food from the king’s table because it had been sacrificed to the Babylonian gods, neither did his friends Hannaniah, Mishael, and Azariah.  We know them better by their Babylonian names, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego.  

Their names were changed because the plan of the king was to indoctrinate them into the Babylonian culture so they would renounce their faith and never work to reestablish the nation of Israel.  The name change was to try and instill in them a new identity that would connect them to the gods of Babylon.  Hananiah, which means God is gracious, was given the name Shadrach which means at the command of Aku, (one of the Babylonian Gods).  Mishael, which means who is God, was given the name Meshach which means who is Aku, and Azariah, which means God has helped, was given the name Abednego, which means slave of the god Nebo.  While their names changed, their identity did not.  These three young men continued to trust that God would be gracious and help them.  

When the young men joined Daniel in not eating the food, God made sure they were stronger than all the other men in the king's service.  They trusted God, and God proved himself trustworthy.  Their faith had been tested so now it could be trusted, and they were going to need to trust it because a true trial was coming.  

In Daniel 3 we read that King Nebuchadnezzar set up a huge gold statue of himself and called all the people to bow down and worship it.  At certain times every day, music would play, and everyone needed to stop what they were doing and worship the king.  If you didn’t bow down and worship, you would be thrown into a furnace.  By now you can guess what happened, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego did not bow down to worship the statue.  If they weren’t going to eat food sacrificed to the gods of Babylon, they certainly weren’t going to worship a golden statue of the king.  So while everyone else was bowed down in worship, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego remained standing.  They stood out among the crowd, they stood up for what was right, they stood strong in their faith, but would they now be able to stand in the fire?  

Daniel 3:13-18

They stood in the face of the fire and if we want this kind of faith, here are three things we need to do.  

1. Be obedient to God in the small things.  

Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego were obedient to God in the small things before they stood strong firm in the face of a fire.  They trusted God with their diet before they trusted God with their lives.  By taking small steps in following God, they experienced that God could be trusted.  Now that their lives depended on God alone, they could trust Him completely.  

While sometimes the most dramatic stories of faith are of people who come to know God and immediately change their lives and walk in a new direction, for most of us, our faith grows slowly over time.  We take a small step, we obey God in some way, and when we find peace, or power, or God’s presence, it gives us confidence to take another step.  Our obedience to God in small ways gives God the opportunity to prove himself trustworthy so we can lean on him when the fires start and the problems come.   

An area in my life where I took small steps of faith and proved God trustworthy is with money.  As a child, one of my greatest fears was that I was going to end up homeless.  I remember watching news reports of the homeless in NYC and feared that someday that was going to me.  My fear could have led me to a lifetime of holding on to all my money, but when I first became a pastor, I realized that I could never talk about giving to God if I did not practice giving to God myself.  So I started to tithe.

Tithing is the practice of giving 1/10 of what God has given to us back to God.  Tithing is not a law we are required to follow, it is a spiritual practice that helps us prove that God is trustworthy.  It is an act of love and obedience that helps us develop a stronger faith.  My first year of tithing was difficult because I had no savings, I had school loans to pay off, and 1/10 of my income seemed like a huge amount of money, but I was obedient to what I heard God say.    

I began by tithing my income, then I realized I needed to add to that some of my benefits, and now I increase the percentage each year.  This is how I have chosen to practice giving to God, and I can tell you that God has proven himself trustworthy.  Over the last 27 years I have never been in need and God has provided for me and cared for me not just financially but in many more ways.  It was small steps of obedience that have helped me trust God for larger things.  

Maybe the small thing God is asking you to obey has to do with giving, or maybe it has to do with forgiving.  While I know forgiving others is often no small thing, there are times that we hold on to small offenses with a firm grip.  If we can begin to obey God’s call to love and forgive in small areas, then maybe we find it not only possible to forgive in larger areas, but it becomes our desire to forgive and live in peace.  

Maybe the small step of obedience is to serve God or others in just one way this week.  Maybe it’s taking time to pray, or reaching out to someone in love, or finding a way to serve in the church or community.  It will be those small steps of obedience that will develop a faith that will help us stand firm in the fire.  

The second thing we see from Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego is that they knew God was both Able and Willing to help and save. Daniel 3:17, If we are thrown into the blazing furnace, the God we serve is able to deliver us from it, and he will deliver us from Your Majesty’s hand.

Sometimes we believe that God is able to do great things and we see him doing those things in the lives of others, but we question His willingness to do them in our lives While we might question God’s willingness to help us, His desire is to do just that.  

In Paul’s letter to the Ephesians he includes this prayer:

I pray that out of God’s glorious riches he may strengthen you with power through his Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the Lord’s holy people, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God.  Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen

God is willing to do great things in us because His love for us is deep and wide and high and strong.  Paul understood both God’s power and desire to save because he had experienced it himself.  Paul said that in his day, he was the chief of all sinners.  He was actually trying to kill the followers of Jesus and persecuted Christ himself, and yet God was willing and able to forgive him, and save him.  Paul says, look - if God was able and willing to save me, he will save you too.   

You are not beyond God’s hand to save - He is able to do it, but more importantly you are not beyond God’s heart to save, He is willing to do it, and he desires to do it!  God’s love is there to help us and strengthen us if we will allow it.  The Bible is full of so many passages that talk about the love of God and how it is there to help us and if you need to hear some of them, I want to encourage you to check out the next steps and read some of them this week.  Take a small step of obedience and allow God to love you, and lead you, and strengthen you so that He can prove His love for you.  

The last thing we see from Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego was that they knew it was their job to be obedient, and God’s job to care for the outcome.  This is hard because we want to know the results before we start, but the reality is that faithful obedience is our responsibility, the outcome is God’s.  

Just like Daniel had to keep praying without knowing whether or not he would get thrown in a lion’s den, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego had to stand in obedience and leave the outcome to God.  

Daniel 3:18.  But even if he does not, we want you to know, Your Majesty, that we will not serve your gods or worship the image of gold you have set up.

They didn’t know the outcome, they weren’t sure what would happen, but that didn’t matter, they knew they just had to be faithful.  What helped them be faithful and stand firm was that their faith had already been tested, so now it could be trusted.  And they knew that God was able and willing to save them - one way or another.   They stood firm and God did save them.   

The story of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego ends with them not only being thrown into the furnace but bound hand and foot so there would be no escape.  Once they were thrown into the fire, the king looked in, but he didn’t see three bound men set ablaze, he saw four men up and walking around.  Daniel 3:24-25.

Then King Nebuchadnezzar leaped to his feet in amazement and asked his advisers, “Weren’t there three men that we tied up and threw into the fire?”  They replied, “Certainly, Your Majesty.”

He said, “Look! I see four men walking around in the fire, unbound and unharmed, and the fourth looks like a son of the gods.”

In the midst of the fire, God not only saved them, God set them free from the chains that bound them.  I love this because their standing firm didn’t just get them through the difficult situation, it allowed them to experience freedom in the midst of it.  When we stand firm in our faith, we may find ourselves in the midst of a fire, things might not be easy for us at all, but God is able to set us free from worry or fear as we go through it.  

Even more powerful than Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego being saved in the fire and set free from the chains is that they are not alone, God Himself is with them.  There are four walking in the fire and the fourth is God Himself.  In their greatest need and most difficult trial, God was there.  In the midst of the fire, God was there.

Many times when we stand firm we find ourselves in a fire.  The trials are difficult, the pain is real, and the outcome is uncertain, and what helps us stand firm even then is knowing that we are not alone.  I have watched so many people stand in the fire of sickness and disease, and what helps them stand firm in their faith is knowing that they are not alone.  When we pray, we acknowledge that God is there, and in very real ways God makes Himself known.  When we walk through the fire, God is there - God promises that He will be there.  We hear this from

Let me end with that promise found in Isaiah 43:1-4a  (edited)

Do not fear, for I have redeemed you;

I have called you by name; you are mine.

When you pass through the waters, I will be with you;

and when you pass through the rivers, 

they will not sweep over you.

When you walk through the fire,

you will not be burned;

the flames will not set you ablaze.

For I am the Lord your God,

The Holy One of Israel, your Savior;

I will ransom you and save you 

for you are precious and honored in my sight,

and I love you.  


God is willing and God is able to walk with us through the fire, so stand firm.  Allow your faith that has been tested to now be trusted.  


Next Steps

Stand Firm in the Fire

Read the story of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego in Daniel 3.  

A faith that has been tested is a faith that can be trusted.  


What small steps of obedience helped these three stand firm in the face of the fire?  

What small steps of obedience has helped strengthen your faith in God?  

What one small step of obedience do you feel God calling you to take this week?  

How might this help you trust God more in the future?


Do you believe God is Able and Willing to help you?  Why or Why not?  

Which do you struggle with more, seeing God as able to help, or willing to help?  

Where do you need God’s help today?  He is more than able and He desires to help.  


We can stand firm even IN the fire because God Is There.

When have you experienced God walking with you?  

During what trials have you experienced God’s help or peace?

Where do you need to experience the power of God’s presence today?  

Ask God to open your eyes so you can see Him with you.  


Read and reflect on these scriptures which speak of God’s love:  

Deuteronomy 3:6, Joshua 1:6-9, Psalm 18:1-19, 

Isaiah 43:1-5,  49:14-16,  54:10,  58:11, 

Jeremiah 29:11, Lamentations 3:22-27, Zephaniah 3:17, 

Romans 8:38-39, 2 Thessalonians 3:3, Hebrews 13:5-6.


Saturday, January 23, 2021

Stand In Faith


If you have ever prayed for something and never saw any results, if you have prayed for miracles that have never happened, or for help that has yet to come, you are not alone.  We have all been in those situations and many of us are there right now.  This week I have been praying for a situation that personally has just kind of broken my heart and the truth is that I will never fully know the result of that prayer.  If this is where you are today, then I hope you will hear something that will give you hope and encouragement.  We are in a series called STAND and today we are going to look at how Daniel was able to stand in faith when he didn’t see God moving.  

Daniel is now in his 80’s which means that for over 6 decades Daniel had been living in exile.  He was forced out of Israel as a teenager when the Babylonians destroyed Jerusalem, and he had risen to power and leadership under the Babylonians and now the Persians.  We have seen how Daniel stood out to follow God, how he stood up for what was right and how he stood strong when people tried to tear him down.  For more than 60 years, Daniel has been praying for one thing - the restoration of Israel.   

For decades, Daniel prayed for the deliverance of his people, and it had not happened.  He prayed that he and his people would be able to return to the land of Israel, and it had not happened.  He prayed for the restoration of the Temple and the rebuilding of Jerusalem, and it did not happen.  While God honored and blessed Daniel in so many ways, his prayers and dreams had not been fulfilled and it was in a vision that Daniel was being asked by God to now Stand In Faith.  

When Daniel prayed for his people, all he saw was ongoing conflict and destruction so he decided to fast and pray for 21 days.  Once again he knelt in prayer in order to stand strong, and at the end of those 3 weeks, Daniel had a vision of a heavenly being that was so full of God’s glory that it drove him to his face.  

I, Daniel, was the only one who saw the vision; those who were with me did not see it, but such terror overwhelmed them that they fled and hid themselves. So I was left alone, gazing at this great vision; I had no strength left, my face turned deathly pale and I was helpless. Then I heard him speaking, and as I listened to him, I fell into a deep sleep, my face to the ground.  A hand touched me and set me trembling on my hands and knees.  He said, “Daniel, you who are highly esteemed, consider carefully the words I am about to speak to, and stand up, for I have now been sent to you.” And when he said this to me, I stood up trembling.  Daniel 10:7-11

There are two things we see happening here that helps Daniel stand up and these are the same things that can help us stand in faith when we think God is not listening or acting.  The first is that a hand reached out and touched Daniel.  A hand reached out to Daniel in his prayer to remind him he was not alone.  When we are struggling to make sense out of what God is doing, or what we think God is not doing, God’s hand reaches out to us.  We may not see it, we may not feel it like Daniel did, but God’s hand is always reaching out to us - and God is reminding us we are not alone.  God’s hand is offering us strength, grace, peace, and power.  Whenever we feel that God is not working or that God is not present, we need to know that His hand is reaching out to us.  

The second thing we see is why God’s hand was reaching out to Daniel, it was because God loved him.  The messenger said that Daniel was highly esteemed by God.  He was loved by God.  What helps us stand in faith is knowing beyond any doubt that God loves us.  God loves us more than we can possibly imagine.  God’s love reaches out to us when we are in need, and God’s voice tells us we are loved if we will take the time to listen.  Experiencing the love of God’s hand and hearing affirmation from God’s word helps us stand in faith when we are uncertain and filled with doubts.  

One of my favorite passages in the Bible says the same thing.  One of the reasons I love this passage is because at a point in my own life when I felt like everything was lost, God reached out to me, and a few weeks later I came upon these words of affirmation.  As I read them, it was the first time the Bible was not a collection of ancient words, these were now my words.  This was my story, it was my heart, and from that moment on I read and heard scripture differently.  Psalm 18:1-19

I love the images here.  We cry out to God and God hears us.  Our cry is not only heard but it moves the heart of God so much that He reaches out and lifts us up out of deep waters.  God’s hand and love moves us to a safe place.  God doesn't do this because we deserve it, or because we have been good, but because God delights in us.  He loves us.  This doesn’t mean everything we pray for will happen the way we want it to and at the time we want it to.  It doesn’t mean all our problems will be solved by the end of our time in worship, or by the end of the week, or the end of the year.  It just means we can stand in faith because we are not standing alone, we are standing with one who comes to be with us and to love us. 

Daniel stood in faith because he knew that God was with him and that God loved him, but he heard something else that helped him keep standing in faith.  Daniel 10:12

Then he continued, “Do not be afraid, Daniel. Since the first day that you set your mind to gain understanding and to humble yourself before your God, your words were heard, and I have come in response to them.  But the prince of the Persian kingdom resisted me twenty-one days. Then Michael, one of the chief princes, came to help me, because I was detained there with the king of Persia.  Now I have come to explain to you what will happen to your people in the future, for the vision concerns a time yet to come.”

Let’s set aside our questions about this prince of Persia and the spiritual battle that is talked about and focus on what the messenger said first.  Since the first day that you set your mind to gain understanding and to humble yourself before your God, your words were heard, and I have come in response to them.  

The first day Daniel prayed for his people, God heard him.  That could mean 21 days earlier, but it could also mean 60 years earlier, but the first time he prayed - God heard him.  If you have been praying for a long time and are not seeing any results, or if you are wondering if God hears you, or if God cares about you and your situation, then hear this:  God heard you the first time you prayed.  

God heard you the first time you prayed for healing.  God heard you the first time you prayed for a job, or for a relationship to be healed, for our nation to be healed.  God heard you the first time you prayed for your children, or the children of our world.  God hears us the first time we pray and while this doesn’t mean we stop praying (perseverance in prayer is important), we can’t question whether or not God hears us.  He does.  

Once again, Psalm 18 says that God hears our cry from his temple and He comes to save us.  The process of salvation, the work that God might need to do to resolve the situation and deliver us might take some time, but God heard us the first time we prayed.  

This vision of Daniel’s tells us that God reaches out to us because He loves us, and that He not only hears our prayer but that He is working for our good even if we see nothing happening.  If you think about it, God’s hand often has to be at work behind the scenes before we see anything change.  Have you ever gotten a note, phone call, or gift at just the right moment?  Well, God had to be moving in those people days or weeks beforehand to plant the idea and work out the details.  

In the life of the church there have been many moments when God came through for us at just the right time, but that was only because He had been moving months or years in advance.  One area where we have all been able to see this is in our current live streaming of worship.  A few years ago we upgraded all our lights and audio which has helped the look of our services, and then at the end of 2019 we hired Justin Maddox to be our technical director.  We had no idea what 2020 was bringing us, but God did, so when we needed help a year ago, we already had in place what we needed.  Just because we don’t see God moving doesn’t mean God is not at work.  God is doing more than we can see or understand which means we can stand in faith..  

The final thing we see from Daniel is that God’s strength is made perfect in our weakness.  Daniel 10:15-19

While he was saying this to me, I bowed with my face toward the ground and was speechless.  Then one who looked like a man touched my lips, and I opened my mouth and began to speak. I said to the one standing before me, “I am overcome with anguish because of the vision, my lord, and I feel very weak.  How can I, your servant, talk with you, my lord? My strength is gone and I can hardly breathe.”

Again the one who looked like a man touched me and gave me strength.  “Do not be afraid, you who are highly esteemed,” he said. “Peace! Be strong now; be strong.”

When he spoke to me, I was strengthened and said, “Speak, my lord, since you have given me strength.”

Daniel is at the end of his own strength.  He has nothing left, even his breath is gone, and it is only then that the messenger says, Now be strong.  None of us like getting to the place where we come to the end of our own strength, but many times that is the only place where we begin to experience God’s strength. Too often we want to be in control and we want to be able to rely upon ourselves alone, but there are times we can only stand in faith when faith is all we have left to stand on.  As long as we are standing in our own wisdom, or our own cleverness, or our own understanding and ability, we aren’t really standing in faith.  When we stand in our own strength we aren’t drawing upon the strength of God.  

Getting to a place of true weakness is not comfortable and so we fight, but instead of fighting it we need to embrace it, and we embrace it through humility.  That’s what Daniel was doing when he had the vision, he was humbling himself and seeking God’s power and strength in prayer.  Humility in prayer is needed if we are going to hear God’s voice and see God’s hand at work.  Fasting and prayer is one way we can stand in faith saying that we are not going to trust our own power but God’s power.  

A simple children’s song makes this point for us.  In Jesus loves me it says, we are weak, but He is strong.  It doesn’t say when we are weak God will make us strong, it says that in our weakness God is there to be our strength.  Instead of running away from weakness there are times we need to run toward it and humble ourselves trusting that God will meet us there and be our strength.  

When we don’t see God, when we don’t hear God’s voice, when we question God’s actions or inactions, we can stand in faith because:

God’s hand is reaching out to us.

God loves us more than we know.

God is doing more right now than we understand 

In our weakness, God is strong

Keep standing in faith.  



Next Steps

Stand In Faith


When have you experienced God reaching out to you?  How did that help you and the situation you were in?

When have you prayed for something and God answered quickly?  When have you prayed and it seemed like God didn’t answer at all?

What are you praying for now and not sensing God’s presence or power?  

Read Daniel 10.

What had Daniel been praying for during his life?  How does this vision help Daniel stand (and pray) in faith?  

Which of the following can help you stand in faith?  

God is reaching out to me.  

God loves me more than I can imagine

God is doing more than I can see or understand

God’s strength is made perfect in My weakness

Read Psalm 18.  How do we see these same principles at work in this psalm?  

How will you pray differently this week knowing that God loves you and is actively working in your life?  

What does humility look like in your relationship with God?  


Sunday, January 17, 2021

Stand Strong


This month we are looking at stories from the life of Daniel to learn how to STAND with and for God in this New Year, and today we are going to look at probably the most familiar story we know about Daniel, Daniel in the Lion’s Den.  I don’t know what image comes to mind when you think of this story, but for me it’s usually something like this. (Picture)  Since this is usually a story we find in children’s Bibles, we often see Daniel surrounded by cartoon lions that look like big tame cats that he could pet, or cuddle up with.  While this is fine for telling the story to children, we need to understand that the circumstances of Daniel being in the lion’s den were much different, and his experience teaches us something about standing strong in our own faith.  

The first thing to understand is that the lions were not tame pets.  These were wild beasts kept in a dungeon underground for the sole purpose of killing people who were tossed in.  The idea of being tossed into this pit must have been terrifying for anyone, including Daniel.  The second thing to consider is that Daniel might be in his 70’s or even 80’s at this time, and had risen to be one of the top leaders in the nation.  Daniel had been a risen up as a valuable and trusted leader under King Nebuchadnezzar and his successors, and when the Persian’s defeated Babylon, Daniel remained in power.  In Daniel 6, we see the new king, Darius, divide the nation into the three regions and appoint an administrative leader over each one.  Because of Daniel’s gifts and abilities, the king not only made Daniel an administrator, but planned to put Daniel over the entire kingdom.

Now Daniel so distinguished himself among the administrators by his exceptional qualities that the king planned to set him over the whole kingdom. At this, the administrators tried to find grounds for charges against Daniel in his conduct of government affairs, but they were unable to do so. They could find no corruption in him, because he was trustworthy and neither corrupt nor negligent. Finally these men said, “We will never find any basis for charges against this man Daniel unless it has something to do with the law of his God.”  Daniel 6:3-5

While the king saw the value of Daniel’s leadership, the other leaders were jealous.  Daniel was not only better at the job than they were, but he was a foreigner.  He was neither a Persian nor a Babylonian, he was from Israel and he had never given up his faith in God.  The more God blessed Daniel as he stood out and stood up, the more those around him wanted to tear him down.  When God raised Daniel up, others tried to tear him down.  There is an important lesson for us here.  

We often think that if we are serving God, living for God, or standing out and standing up for our faith that things should go well for us.  We have this idea that when we are faithful, we will get what we want, and when we follow God, life will be easy.  But this is simply not true, and it never has been.  All through scripture we find stories of people who stood strong in their faith and things were difficult.  Moses stood strong each time he went to Pharaoh, and each time Pharaoh sent him away saying NO.  Even when God finally set the people of Israel free, their travels through the wilderness were difficult.  

Before David became the king he honored God and yet he was chased down and persecuted by Saul.  Jesus lived for God in all ways.  He stood out, and he stood up, and yet he was constantly misunderstood and persecuted. The Apostle Paul followed Jesus and did all God called him to do and he was arrested, beaten, put in prison, shipwrecked, and finally killed for his faith.  We have to let go of this idea that if we will just stand strong in our faith that everything will be easy.  It won’t.  Problems will come, pain will come, disappointment and trials will come while we are serving God and standing strong, but through it all, God will be with us. 

So as God raised Daniel up, the other administrators wanted to tear Daniel down, but they couldn’t find any grounds for it in his work, so they turned to his faith.  They had the king issue a decree that no one could pray to anyone but the king.  

So these administrators went as a group to the king and said: “May King Darius live forever! The royal administrators have all agreed that the king should issue an edict and enforce the decree that anyone who prays to any god or human being during the next thirty days, except to you, Your Majesty, shall be thrown into the lions’ den. Now, Your Majesty, issue the decree and put it in writing so that it cannot be altered—in accordance with the law of the Medes and Persians, which cannot be repealed.” So King Darius put the decree in writing.  Daniel 6:6-9


Those jealous of Daniel plotted to destroy him, and now Daniel has three choices.  

He can stop praying for 30 days.

He can fake it and pray privately so no one notices.

He can stand strong and pray as he always did.  

I had to ask myself what I would do in a situation like this.  Please don’t read more into this than what I am saying, I know we are in a politically divisive time, and I am not suggesting either side is, has, or will ever do this, but what would we do if we were told we had to pray to the president alone for 30 days or else be killed.  Would we stop praying?  Would we keep going as we always did?  Or would we just pray privately so that no one would know.  The decree did not say you had to pray to the king, just that you couldn’t pray to any other god or human.  So I won’t pray to the king, I’ll just pray to God in private.  I can see myself doing that, not making waves, but that is not what Daniel chose to do.  

Now when Daniel learned that the decree had been published, he went home to his upstairs room where the windows opened toward Jerusalem. Three times a day he got down on his knees and prayed, giving thanks to his God, just as he had done before.  Daniel 6:10

Daniel stood strong, and what gave him the strength to stand during this difficult time was his willingness to kneel.  

Kneeling to pray is what gives us the strength to stand.  

Now let’s be clear, what gave Daniel the strength to stand strong and pray during this time was that he had been kneeling to pray, three times a day, for years.  Daniel didn’t go out now and make a public show of his faith, he simply did what he had always been doing.  It says he prayed just as he had done before.  His practice was to kneel down to pray, and it was a lifetime of prayer that gave Daniel the ability to now stand strong.  

What gave Jesus the strength to stand strong and not only carry a cross but be willing to die on it?  It was a time of prayer on his knees in the Garden of Gethsemane.  One of the most moving places I visited in Israel was that garden, really a grove of olive trees.  From the garden you can see the walls of Jerusalem in one direction and the wilderness in the other.  Jesus had a decision to make that night.  He knew Judas was coming to betray him.  He knew they were coming to arrest him and that he would be tried, publicly humiliated, and put to death.  Jesus could stand strong in his faith, go to Jerusalem, or he could flee to the wilderness.  The choices literally laid before him.  He kneeled down to pray and it was during that prayer that Jesus resolved to stand strong and carry the cross.  

But that decision didn’t come because Jesus prayed just in that moment, it came because Jesus had spent a lifetime in prayer.  Jesus prayed for 40 days after his baptism, He created moments to be alone to pray, and His prayer life was so engaging that His disciples asked Him how they could pray.  Prayer was an ongoing part of Jesus’ life, and it was a lifetime of kneeling to pray that gave Jesus the strength to stand.  

Tomorrow we celebrate Martin Luther King Day, and King was a man who stood strong in the face of persecution and trials.  Through death threats and violence directed at himself and his family, King stood strong and many have said that his ability to stand came from his willingness to kneel in prayer.  During the Montgomery bus boycotts, which were early in King’s life as a civil rights leader, he faced great opposition and persecution from all sides.  He was ready to quit when he sat down and prayed:  

Lord, I’m down here trying to do what’s right.  Now, I am afraid. And I can’t let the people see me like this because if they see me weak and losing my courage, they will begin to get weak. I am at the end of my powers. I have nothing left. I’ve come to the point where I can’t face it alone.  

In her book, Standing in the Need of Prayer, Coretta Scott King said, When Martin stood up from the table, he was imbued with a new sense of confidence, and he was ready to face anything.  Kneeling to pray, and acknowledging our own weakness and our own need for God, is often the door that leads to the strength to stand.  

It wasn’t that one prayer that gave King strength, it was a lifetime of prayer.  Prayer can’t be seen as our last resort when we are in trouble, but the practice of a lifetime that can give us strength.  Prayer is one of the rhythms that deepens our relationship with God and it helps us be able to hear God when He calls us to stand out, stand up, or stand strong.  Last week we talked about how important it is to hear God’s voice when we feel called to stand up, and prayer is a big part of hearing that voice.  

Daniel knelt down to pray, but that is just one way we can practice prayer in our lives.  Prayer can be done as we walk, as we sing, as we read, or as we practice silence.  Prayer can be written in journals, be voiced sitting at a table, turned into art, and shared with family and friends.  If you are looking for some new ways to pray, I invite you to check out the next steps this week and not only read about prayer, but consider how to make prayer an ongoing part of your life.  Allow your conversation with God to literally overflow into every area of your life so that when the time comes you will be able to stand strong.  

If in our time of prayer we hear God telling us to stand strong, we then need to trust God with the results.  

Daniel knelt to pray three times a day.  He may have prayed for God to change the heart of the king and take back the decree.  He may have prayed for God to deliver him from the coming evil.  Daniel didn’t know the results when he knelt down to pray, but he did know that he could trust God. Daniel 6:13-24

Daniel trusted God for the results.  He didn’t know if God would rescue him, or how God might rescue him, and it may not have mattered to Daniel, he just knew that he needed to stand strong and trust God.  That is what Daniel did, and God delivered him.  We don’t know how God closed the mouths of the lions, we don’t know what the angel of the Lord looked like, and I can’t imagine that Daniel spent a peaceful night cuddled up with a lion, but the lions did not harm Daniel.  

Jesus left the Garden of Gethsemane and trusted God for the results.  Standing strong wasn’t going to mean no pain and no persecution, but Jesus trusted God for the results, and three days after His death, Jesus rose victorious over sin and death.  His trust in God, and his willingness to stand strong, not only delivered Him, but all of us.  

Standing strong in our faith doesn’t mean that everything will always work out the way we want it to, and it doesn’t mean life will be easy.  Daniel was thrown into a lion’s den without knowing the results.  Jesus was nailed to the cross trusting God for a resurrection.  There will be times when God might call us to stand strong without knowing the results.  What can help us trust God and stand strong is a lifetime of kneeling down to pray.  It’s not too late.  A lifetime of prayer can start today.  Let us pray.


Next Steps

Stand Strong


Read the story of Daniel in the lion’s den found in Daniel 6.

What new insights do you see?  

What would you do in Daniel’s situation?

What example from Daniel can you follow?


Kneeling to pray is what gives us the strength to stand.

Prayer is one of the 5 Rhythms that can strengthen our Relationship with God.  Learn more about prayer, and different ways to practice prayer, from our http://bellefontefaith.com/prayatfaith.  

When has prayer helped you stand strong in faith during a difficult time?

How can you strengthen your prayer life so you can stand strong both today and into the future?

How can prayer become part of your family life?


Trust God for the results.

Daniel stood strong without knowing the results.  A harrowing night in a lion’s den led to his deliverance.

Jesus stood strong without knowing the results.  A harrowing three hours on the cross and three days in the grave led to our deliverance.  

Where are you needing to stand strong without knowing the results?  Even if the situation is not easy, how might God deliver you?  

When have you trusted God with an unknown future or during a difficult time?  What did you learn?  How was God with you?  How did God deliver you?  


To learn more about the 3 Relationships and how to stand strong in faith, go to https://bellefontefaith.com/3r.  You can take the free assessment and find resources to help you stand strong in your faith.  


Saturday, January 9, 2021

Stand Up


Last week we started a series called STAND so that we can consider how to stand with God and for God during this New Year.  We are learning lessons from Daniel in the Old Testament, and today we are going to look at how to STAND UP for what is right.  I should let you know that I did not plan for this topic to come up this week, and with the events that took place on Wednesday, I considered dropping this message all together, but then I realized that Daniel actually does have something to say to us in light of our current situation.  

We aren’t going to learn from Daniel when to stand up for what is right because God is going to ask each of us to do that in different ways and at different times.  God might want you to stand up and say something privately to a friend who is blind to a problem in their life, or God might want you to speak to a larger issue that needs to be addressed in our community and world.  There are different times and places when we will be asked to stand up, what we can learn from Daniel is how to stand up when God asks us to.  

It’s important to know how God wants us to stand up because what we saw this week is how NOT to do it.  God’s ways are not filled with arrogance, pride, and a hatred that leads to violence.  God’s ways are filled with humility and work for reconciliation and peace.  If the fruit of God’s spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control, then those qualities need to be seen when we stand up, and we will see these at work in Daniel.  What we can learn from Daniel are four principles of how to stand up for what is right when God asks us to.

If you remember from last week, the nation of Israel had been destroyed, and King Nebuchadnezzar had forced God’s people into exile all across Babylon.  The finest young men in Israel, those who might one day rise up to be leaders of the nation, were forced into the king’s service and indoctrinated into the Babylonian culture and religion.  The goal was to get these young men to renounce God and leave their faith so that they would never be able to help rebuild the nation.  Daniel was part of this group of leaders, and while he was indoctrinated into the culture of Babylon, he was willing to stand out for his faith and not eat food that had been sacrificed to the pagan gods.  Because Daniel honored God, God honored him.  God gave Daniel greater wisdom and discernment than any other leader, and God gave him the ability to interpret dreams, and this is now how God is going to ask Daniel to stand up. 

Daniel 4:4-7, 10-18a

So the king had a dream and let’s be honest, it doesn’t take a genius, or even an expert in dream analysis, to figure it out.  We can do this.  A tree that is large and powerful and provides a place for all to live is clearly the nation of Babylon.  A messenger from heaven would be the message of God who says he is going to cut down the tree, or destroy the nation, and drive the king into the wilderness.  If we can figure this out, then chances are that all the wise men the king first asked for help could have figured it out as well.  They knew what the dream meant, they just didn’t want to tell the king because they didn’t want to be the ones to give him the bad news.  They were afraid that to stand up and tell the truth would cost them their lives, so they simply said, “we can’t do it.”  

So then Daniel is called in.  Daniel was known for having the gift of interpreting dreams, and when he hears the dream he has to immediately know what it means because it is plain to see.  The real question for Daniel was whether or not he was going to stand up and tell the king the truth.  Like the wise men before him, he could lie and tell the king that he couldn’t interpret the dream, or he could stand up and speak God’s truth.  Daniel stood up for what was right, and from him we can learn a lot about how to do this ourselves. Daniel 4:19-27

We believe that Daniel is about 40 years old here, which means that for several decades Daniel has been serving the king.  Daniel is trusted and he has been so helpful that the king had made him second in command.  The king trusted Daniel’s wisdom and insight.  He knew Daniel was honest in his counsel and honorable in his living.  There is a strong relationship between these two men which allows Daniel to speak courageously and honestly.  What we see here is that CONTEXT is important.  

Anytime God asks us to stand up for what is right, it is important for us to think about the context.  Are we speaking privately to a friend who is going through a difficult time?  Are we speaking to a family member whose behavior concerns us?  Or are we speaking publicly about a social issue that is complex, or an injustice we want to see changed?  The context is important because we will speak in different ways in different situations.  

Beyond the public and private context, there is also the context of relationship for us to consider.  Too often we see people stand up and speak out without any regard for others.  I decided to read the comments from an online article this week and I have to say it was pretty toxic - which is I why I don’t usually read them.  Here were anonymous people standing up for what they thought was right but in the process they were tearing down others - people they didn’t know.  There was no context of relationship.  There was no willingness to listen or consider what others were saying or thinking or feeling.  We are living in an age when people can quickly and easily stand up and speak out for what they think is right without giving thought to a larger context or how their words and actions might impact others.  

What a blessing it would be if all of us would take the time to walk in someone else’s shoes for a while before we comment on what we think they should do.  The more we can understand people, and listen to their life experiences and perspectives, the more thoughtful and helpful we can be when we do stand up and speak up for what is right.  It is always more powerful when we stand up within the context of a healthy relationship or at least after taking the time to listen.  Respect and regard for others is needed. 

This leads us to the second thing we learn from Daniel.  When Daniel stands up for what is right, he does it with COMPASSION.  

Before Daniel gives the king the bad news about the dream, he starts by saying that he wished the dream was about the king’s enemies and not him.  Daniel cared for the king.  Think about this, the king had destroyed Daniel’s nation, removed Daniel and all his family and friends from their homes and nation, and was indoctrinating Daniel with the goal of getting him to forget his God and renounce his faith, and yet Daniel still had compassion for him.  

Compassion is an important principle for us to hold on to when God calls us to stand up for what is right.  Compassion is the fruit of love, patience, kindness and gentleness all rolled into one.  Compassion helps us have self-control so we don’t say the first thing we think of.  We always need to stand up with compassion.  We may disagree on many things, and we may see things from a radically different points of view, we also might see vastly different ways to solve the world’s problem, but that doesn’t mean we can’t still have compassion for one another.  

When we look at the social and political climate today, it’s clear there is not much compassion.  We didn’t see compassion this week, we haven’t seen a lot of compassion this past year, and if we are honest, we haven’t seen it for a long time.  We no longer disagree with people, we set them up to be our enemy and seek to silence them and destroy them.  Here’s the problem with that, Jesus told us to love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us.  In many ways, Nebuchadnezzar was Daniel’s enemy, but Daniel still had compassion for him.  If we can’t stand up for what is right with compassion, then maybe we need to consider if we should stand up at all.  


Daniel’s compassion was also seen when he pleaded with the king to repent so that God might have mercy and turn things around.  This is the kind of compassion we need to have when we approach a friend about problems we might see in their life.  It’s ok to approach someone about a sin we might see, or a problem that concerns us, but our motivation has to be love, and our words have to be gentle.  

The Apostle Paul said, Brothers and sisters, if someone is caught in a sin, you who live by the Spirit should restore that person gently.  Galatians 6:1.   Yes we need to stand up for what is right and say something, but we need to say it in the context of a healthy relationship and allow our words to be filled with love.  

This leads to the third principle we learn from Daniel. We don’t stand up to CORRECT people but to CONNECT people to God.  Let me say that again!

Daniel didn’t speak up because he knew he was right about the dream, he spoke with compassion to try and get the king to humble himself and connect with God.  He was working to reconcile the king to God.  He was working to bring peace.  Here is a good question we need to ask ourselves in any situation where we think God is asking us to stand up for what is right: will what I’m going to say or do help CONNECT people to God?  

This is most important when we are thinking about speaking to someone one to one. We don’t point out a problem to correct them, we point it out to help connect them to God.  If we see a problem and can’t wait to point it out because it will make us look good, or show others how smart and faithful we are, that’s called pride - not compassion - and Jesus spoke to this.  Jesus said, don’t point out the speck of dust in someone else’s eye when there is a plank sticking out of your own eye.  If we are speaking up without compassion, that plank in our own eye is pride, and we need to step back and evaluate our own heart.  We need to ask ourselves, is my desire to correct this person or to connect this person to God.  

Daniel’s desire was to connect the king to God.  He wanted the king to humble himself so he would know the love and power of God.  Daniel spoke in the context of a relationship, he spoke with compassion, and his goal was to connect the king to God.  

There is one final thing for us to consider.  Are we being CALLED to stand up for what is right.  Daniel was literally called by the king to come and speak to the problem.  Once Daniel was called by the king to speak, he had to ask if he was called by God to speak.  Daniel could have just interpreted the dream and left it at that, but he didn’t.  He knew he was called by God to stand up for what was right and to speak with compassion and work to connect the king to God through repentance.  

Before we speak publicly about an issue or privately about a concern we have for a friend, we need to first stop and pray.  Is God calling us to stand up?  If God is not calling us to stand up, then maybe we need to work quietly and prayerfully behind the scenes and support those God has called.  Maybe our role is to support someone else, or work to bring context and compassion to the situation.  Maybe God will use us to try and connect everyone in the situation to God and not just watch people argue back and forth about what is right.  Knowing what God has called us to do is vital and we might want to make this our first step and not the last.   

There is a hymn that has become a favorite for many people called Here I Am Lord and the chorus asks this very question.  Here I am Lord.  Is it I, Lord?  I have heard you calling in the night.  I will go, Lord, if you lead me.  I will hold your people in my heart.  

Is it I, Lord?  Are you calling me to stand up for what is right?  Is this the cause I am to champion?  Is this the situation I am being called to step into with courage and compassion?  If we are being called to stand up for what is right, if we are being called to speak up for God, then we need to ask to lead us.  All around us we see how not to stand up for what is right.  More division and anger is not the answer, the answer is more compassion, a deeper context and healthier relationships in which to speak, and goal of connecting all of us to God.   


Next Steps

Stand Up

From social media to the streets, we see many examples of how NOT to stand up for what is right.  Let us pray for the “soul” of our nation, so that we all might learn how to stand up in ways that honor God and one another.  

Raad Daniel chapter 4.

What was Daniel being called to stand up and do? What was the king calling him to do?  What was God calling him to do?  How is the fruit of God’s spirit seen in Daniel’s words and actions?  


Four principles we learn from Daniel about how to stand up.

1. CALLED.  

When have you experienced God’s call to stand up for what is right?  

Is there a situation right now that you are feeling called to address?  Ask God to show you your purpose and lead you in the process of standing up.  

2. CONTEXT

Where do you need to reach out and build healthier relationships so that you can stand up more effectively?

Whose shoes do you need to walk in so you get a better understanding of different viewpoints?

3. COMPASSION

When have you not stood up with compassion?  What were the consequences?  

When has someone stood up to you with compassion?  How did that make you feel?  Did it change the situation?

Where do you need to have more compassion and show more compassion to others?

4. CONNECTION

Ask God to guard your heart from pride so you don’t seek to correct people but connect people to God.  

Who do you know that needs to be connected to God?  How can you pray for them and reach out to them with compassion this week?  


Saturday, January 2, 2021

Stand Out


Can we just give a big shout out to the New Year we are in!!  I don’t think the world has ever been more ready to see one year end and another year begin.  Here’s to 2021!!!  At the beginning of every year we have the opportunity to make a commitment to improve not only our lives but our world.  I am not a big fan of making New Year’s resolutions because I know that by now, January 3rd, I will probably have broken them, but there is something exciting about the New Year.  I see it as a clean slate where we can write out the life we want to live.  The New Year provides us the possibility of being all we want to be, but it takes courage and commitment to live with conviction.  To help inspire us to live this way this year, we are going to look at some stories of courage and commitment found in the book of Daniel. 

 In this OT book, we hear about Daniel and 3 friends who chose to stand up to honor God.  Through all kinds of challenges, they stood strong and firm in their faith, and because they did, their world was changed.  Before they stand up, or stand strong, or stand firm, they first have to make the decision to stand out.  As we begin a New Year, can we make the choice to stand out in the world around us.  Can we be the light shining in the darkness?  Can we be the power of love in a world filled with hate and division?   

 Living for Jesus means standing out and at times looking different because the values of God’s kingdom are different than the values of the world.  Jesus stood out among other religious leaders of his day because he loved and accepted people that others wouldn’t.  He went places that other leaders wouldn’t go.  He worked for justice and called for forgiveness.  He stood out and because he did, people were drawn to him.  The disciples and the early church stood out and their lives of love and faith drew people in.  It is my hope that in this New Year we will choose to stand out with Jesus so that the world might be drawn not to us but to Him.  

David mentioned last week that we don’t love people to win them to Jesus, we love them to love them.  I read the same thing this week in a devotional by Bob Goff.  He said, No one leads people to Jesus.  He leads people to himself.  All the pressure is off.  All we have to do is give away all the love He’s poured into us.  So all we have to do is love like Jesus, love God with all our heart, soul, mind and strength, and our neighbor as ourself, but that kind of loving and living will cause us to stand out in this world.  

Daniel and his friends stood out because they wanted to love God with all their heart, soul, mind and strength.  The story begins in 589 BC when King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon began a siege of Jerusalem.  For more than a year he blockaded the city so the people of Israel could not get supplies.  This not only destroyed their strength, but it deflated their morale.  They had given up hope.  Two years later, the walls of Jerusalem fell and Nebuchadnezzar began to destroy all the religious symbols in the Temple.  He thought if he could put an end to the religious life of the people, the nation would not be able to regroup and rebuild. 

Nebuchadnezzar also wanted to destroy any hope of Israel rising up in the future so he not only forced the people to leave their homes and settle all across Babylon, he also took the best young men who might one day be leaders in Israel and forced them to enter into his service.  This is where the book of Daniel begins.  Daniel 1:3-6

Then the king ordered Ashpenaz, chief of his court officials, to bring into the king’s service some of the Israelites from the royal family and the nobility— young men without any physical defect, handsome, showing aptitude for every kind of learning, well informed, quick to understand, and qualified to serve in the king’s palace. He was to teach them the language and literature of the Babylonians. The king assigned them a daily amount of food and wine from the king’s table. They were to be trained for three years, and after that they were to enter the king’s service. Among those who were chosen were some from Judah: Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah.

The plan was to fully indoctrinate these young men into the Babylonian culture so that they would completely let go of their faith.  By surrounding them with the Babylonian language, literature, history, traditions, gods, and people, the king hoped that these young men would eventually lose their love for God and let go of their faith.  In trying to change their identity, the king also changed their names.  Daniel 1:7The chief official gave them new names: to Daniel, the name Belteshazzar; to Hananiah, Shadrach; to Mishael, Meshach; and to Azariah, Abednego. 


The power of this name change wasn’t just that they would now have Babylonian names, the king was trying to disconnect them from their God and connect them to the gods of Babylon.  Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah were all names that referenced the God of Israel.  For example, Hannaniah means God has been gracious and Azariah means God has helped us.  Their old names connected them to their God, but their new names referenced the Babylonian gods.  Shadrach means command of Aku, who was the Babylonian moon god, and Abednego means servant of Nebo who was the Babylonian god of wisdom.  So now anytime someone called them, instead of being reminded of the one true God, they were reminded of the new pagan gods they were being told to follow.  The King’s plan was to undermine their faith in God.  

Not only were they given new names, but we heard earlier that they were given a new diet.  They were now to eat only from the king’s table, and while this sounds great because it would be all the best food, the problem was that it was also food that had been sacrificed to the gods of Babylon.  Not only did Nebuchadnezzar want them physically strong, he wanted them to honor, and in some way worship, his god.  

All these changes were part of the process of indoctrination and if Daniel and his friend were going to stand strong in their faith, then at some point they were going to have to stand out.  At some point they were going to draw a line and separate themselves from the those around us and it was with the food that Daniel made a stand.  

Daniel 1:8 Daniel resolved not to defile himself with the royal food and wine, and he asked the chief official for permission not to defile himself this way.  

It’s interesting to think about why Daniel made a stand on the food and not on the name.  While we aren’t given any reason, it’s easy to hear Daniel say, look, you can call me whatever you want, it doesn't matter because I know who I am, and I know who I belong to.  I belong to God and no name will change that, but I will NOT defile myself by eating food sacrificed to your god.  I won’t honor or worship your god in any way.  So Daniel resolved not to eat the food, and what’s important to note is that he made this decision ahead of time.

Daniel didn’t wait for the food to be placed in front of him hoping he would have the strength to not eat it, he made a plan ahead of time so that the temptation wouldn’t even be there.  Daniel went to the officials and asked them to let them keep eating their own food and if they were not in better shape than the others, they would eat the king’s food.  How smart was Daniel to make a plan ahead of time?  He didn’t wait until they were at the table where they would be tempted by all the best food, he removed the temptation and worked out a plan that needed them to trust God.   If we want to stand strong in our faith we need to learn how to stand out and make plans ahead of time so that we can be faithful.  

What plans do you need to make today so that you can stand out and stand strong in the New Year?  If you want to commit to worshiping every week, then make a plan today to make it happen.  Don’t wait until next Sunday and hope you feel like attending, put it on your calendar and a reminder or notification on your phone.  If you want to read through the Bible this year, download a reading plan today and join me in making it happen.  I chose the 5 day plan because I know something might happen one or two days a week when I won’t be able to read and I don’t want to feel like a failure before I start. 

If you want to improve your marriage, make a plan now for date nights, quiet times alone, and space for important conversations, and then make it happen.  If you want to be a better parent, a better student, a better musician or athlete, then make a plan now so that when temptation comes to pull you away from your goals and dreams you will be able to stand strong.  

When Daniel made a plan to stand strong in his faith, he knew that he was going to stand out from those around him.  Remember, there were many young men in this program, but only these 4 took a stand.  Daniel and his friends were going to be seen as different, but it was what they needed to do to be faithful.  Faithfulness was more important than fitting in.  

As we make plans to stand strong in our faith, we have to be ready to stand out because our decisions and commitments will make us look different from those around us. If we make the decision to not gossip at work but only allow our words to encourage and lift others up, we will stand out when the stories begin and we excuse ourselves and walk away.  If we carve out time to be part of a small group, and share with our friends the joy we are finding being part of the church, we will stand out.  In a world that calls us to conform, it is difficult to stand out.  It’s not always easy being the light in darkness but it is worth it.  It changes us and it inspires others.      

I spent a summer working in Rocky Mountain National Park and I was there with a ministry program that called us to be the light of Jesus among our coworkers.  Every evening, most of my coworkers went to the bars to drink.  At first I didn’t go because I didn’t want to drink every night and watch people get drunk, but I soon found myself sitting alone.  I realized I was never going to shine the light of Jesus if I didn’t go with them.  So I went out but I resolved ahead of time to not get drunk.  I would go and hang out, I would talk and dance, but would not get drunk.  That often meant I walked home alone when things got out of hand, but I had made that decision ahead of time and while I stood out, I was able to stick to it.  

All summer I simply tried to love God and love people the best I could.  I knew I stood out and I hoped that people were seeing Jesus in me, but I honestly didn’t know.  At the end of the summer, one of the women I worked with who did drink a lot most nights was leaving and she wrote notes to everyone.  Mine said this, don’t let anyone change you.  I was stunned.  I had no idea she even noticed me, let alone noticed how I lived differently.  I didn't make a big deal out of the choices I made, and I didn’t put anyone down or condemn the choices they made, I just lived out my faith the best way I could and tried to love the people around me, and at least one person noticed.  At least one person experienced a little bit of Jesus’ light in the darkness.    

Following Jesus, shining the light of Christ in the world, loving God and loving others the way God calls us to means we will stand out.  Where do you need to resolve today to stand out?  At work?  At school?  Among your family or friends?  Do you need to decide now how to more faithfully use your time or money in this New Year?  Make the decision today even if it means standing out from those around you.  Honor God and allow God to honor you and use you to shine His light into the world.  That’s what happened with Daniel and his friends.  Daniel 1:17-20

To these four young men God gave knowledge and understanding of all kinds of literature and learning. And Daniel could understand visions and dreams of all kinds.  At the end of the time set by the king to bring them into his service, the chief official presented them to Nebuchadnezzar.  The king talked with them, and he found none equal to Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah; so they entered the king’s service.  In every matter of wisdom and understanding about which the king questioned them, he found them ten times better than all the magicians and enchanters in his whole kingdom.

To honor God, Daniel and his friends made a decision to be faithful, which called them to stand out from the rest.  When they did this, God honored them.  How is God calling you to honor Him?  What plan do you need to make so that you can remain faithful?  Make the plan today because being faithful to God often means standing out from those around us, and standing out is difficult in a world that calls us to conform.  Make a plan today to be the light of God in this dark world.  Make a plan to love God and love others in a clear and intentional way, and then trust that as you stand out, God will honor you with His strength, and power, and peace and use you for His glory.  


Next Steps

Stand Out


How have you welcomed 2021?  

What do you want to see changed in your life this year?  

What plans have you made to make this change happen?

What plans do you need to make?


Read Daniel 1


How did Daniel and his friends choose to stand out?  

Why do you think they chose to stand out when it came to their diet but not to their new names?  

What did their old names mean?  New names?

What would have happened if they chose to blend in?


When and how have you chosen to stand out for your faith?

What difference did it make in you?  Iin others?

Did anyone notice?  If they did or didn’t, how did this make you feel?  


When have you seen someone else stand out for their faith?

How did this make you feel? 

Did they do it for show or for God?

Did it make a difference?


Where can you make a plan to stand out this year and deepen your faith?  

Worship?  Serving Others?  Financial Giving?

Join Pastor Andy and read the Bible in 2021.  Here is the 5 day plan: https://fivedaybiblereading.com/


For further study, read about the full armor of God that can help us stand strong in faith.  Ephesians 6:10-18