
November 27, 2024

Thanksgiving often brings us together with family and friends, but it’s more than a festive gathering. It’s an opportunity to celebrate God’s goodness within the community He’s placed us. Gratitude is multiplied when shared—it has a way of turning meals into feasts and conversations into sacred moments.
As you gather with loved ones, take time to share stories of God’s faithfulness. Celebrate victories, offer support in struggles, and remind one another of the hope we have in Christ. Gratitude, when shared, becomes a beautiful chorus of thanksgiving to the Lord.
Prayer: Father, thank You for the gift of community. Bless my time with loved ones and guide my words to encourage and uplift. Help us to celebrate Your goodness together and to build one another up in faith. Amen.
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November 26, 2024

Gratitude isn’t just a feeling—it’s a call to action. When we acknowledge God’s blessings, we’re compelled to share that goodness with others. Acts of kindness, words of encouragement, or simply lending a listening ear can become tangible expressions of thanksgiving.
This week, find one way to put your gratitude into action. Perhaps it’s preparing a meal for a neighbor, writing a thank-you note, or offering forgiveness. Each act becomes an offering of thanks to God, who has so generously poured His love into our lives.
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November 25, 2024

“Give thanks to the Lord, for He is good; His love endures forever.” —Psalm 107:1
Gratitude is more than a response to good fortune—it’s a gift that reorients our hearts toward God. In moments of abundance, it’s easy to say “thank you,” but true gratitude shines brightest when life’s path is uncertain or challenging. Thanksgiving invites us to pause and reflect on God’s goodness, even in seasons of trial. It reminds us that His love endures, unshaken by our circumstances.
As you enter this season of thanksgiving, take a moment to quiet your soul. Make a list of God’s blessings, both big and small, and thank Him for each one. Gratitude has a way of shifting our focus from what’s lacking to what’s already been given.
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November 22, 2024

Mary Magdalene may have had a mind possessed at one time by seven demons, but she also had a good memory. She never forgot the healing and compassion she received from Jesus. She showed her thankfulness to him by serving him throughout his ministry even to the cross and grave. He rewarded her gratitude with the even greater blessing of seeing him as the risen savior.
Thankful hearts come from minds that remember the blessings of the past received through others. “Be careful never to forget what you yourself have seen. Do not let these memories escape from your mind as long as you live!” Deut 4:9
Pastor Andy
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November 21, 2024

Deborah had reached the highest office her people, the Jews, had to offer her. She was a judge of Israel who led in matters of law and war. When her people faced the attack of a Canaanite ruler, Deborah agreed to lead them but gave the ultimate credit to the Lord, “14…, “Get ready! This is the day the Lord will give you victory over Sisera, for the Lord is marching ahead of you.” Judges 4:14 When the battle was one she honored God alone, “Praise the Lord.”
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November 20, 2024

Anna, a prophetess of God serving in the temple, had spent much of her 84 years of life praying for and patiently waiting for God to send a savior to his people. When Mary and Joseph bring the infant Jesus into the temple “She began to give thanks to God and to speak of him to all who were waiting for the redemption of Jerusalem” (Luke 2:38). Jesus had been “worth waiting for” and she had been blessed to see him.
Some of the greatest blessings in our lives may come near the end. Let us be thankful in anticipation of future blessings and in receiving them when they arrive.
Pastor Andy
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November 19, 2024

Over three thousand years ago a woman named Hannah knew the pain of being unable to bear a child. Not only did she suffer personally but she was ridiculed for her barrenness. Then God chose to give her a child. She dedicated the child Samuel to the priesthood. He would be the one to anoint Saul and David as the first Kings of her people. She lifted up her voice in a song of thanksgiving that Mary, the mother of Jesus would later echo, “My heart rejoices in the Lord; the Lord has made me strong.” 1 Samuel 2:1
Would Hannah have given thanks if she never had a child? Let us seek to give thanks no matter what occurs in our lives.
Pastor Andy
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November 18, 2024

I recently had the privilege to participate in a Freedom Challenge Event in Spain. We walked the medieval pilgrim path called the Camino de Santiago. The 40 women and 2 men in our group raised over $400,000 to fight human trafficking. We are so thankful to all who supported this effort to “set people free!”
Miriam was so grateful to the God who had “set her free.” She had lived her whole life as a slave in Egypt but was now free of her chains and heading toward God’s promised land. Standing on the other side of the Red Sea God had parted to let them through, she began a song of thanksgiving ““Sing to the Lord, for he has triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider he has thrown into the sea” (Exodus 15:21).
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November 15, 2024

“I can’t do this!” I shouted back at my instructor. He simply smiled and said, “You have all you need. You need to trust me and trust yourself. Take one step back and believe this rope has you.” I was standing seventy-five feet off the ground on a ledge of a rock with a harness around my waist and my rope tied into my instructor. It was up to me to take the step off the ledge and believe that I could rappel down the side of this mountain. I had all I needed but I had to take that scary step of faith.
Peter writes in 2 Peter 1:3-4 “His divine power has given us everything we need for a godly life through our knowledge of him who called us by his own glory and goodness. 4 Through these he has given us his very great and precious promises, so that through them you may participate in the divine nature, having escaped the corruption in the world caused by evil desires.”
Faith is believing God is powerful and good. He is like a rope tied around you as you dangle above whatever fears and uncertainties that are in your life. Yet you will not know if that rope really has you until you take the step of faith and put your weight into it. The first step is the hardest because it has the most uncertainty. When I am not willing to take the first step and trust God, it is usually because I either question HIs power or His goodness.
Peter reminds us that we have all we need to live this life and escape its corruption. God is powerful and He is good. Though we tend to break promises, God is a promise keeper. Remember, a rope does not work until it is under tension. Faith does not work until it is under tension. The first step is the hardest. God has you and His promises are always true.
Pastor Aaron
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November 14, 2024

Going back to our story of Ruth, we learn that Naomi’s daughter-in-law is from Moab. A nation just east of the Dead Sea which is now the country called Jordan. A Moabite at that time had received their name from the story of Lot’s incestuous relationship with his daughters from the Moab area “Mo`abi” which was similar to the Hebrew word “me`abi” which means “from my father”. So the Hebrews gave them a disgusting name calling them people who came from an incestuous relationship. In the book of Ruth we learn that the daughter-in-laws of Ruth were unfavorable to Isreaelites and not deserving of recognition. Yet, at the end of the story we see they are redeemed into the line of royalty of the line of King David.
Ruth 1:3–8 (NIV): 3 Now Elimelek, Naomi’s husband, died, and she was left with her two sons. 4 They married Moabite women, one named Orpah and the other Ruth. After they had lived there about ten years, 5 both Mahlon and Kilion also died, and Naomi was left without her two sons and her husband.
Ruth 4:13 (ESV): 13 So Boaz took Ruth, and she became his wife. And he went into her, and the LORD gave her conception, and she bore a son.
Ruth 4:17 (ESV): 17 And the women of the neighborhood gave him a name, saying, “A son has been born to Naomi.” They named him Obed. He was the father of Jesse, the father of David.
Names matter. The bearer of the name must believe from whom the name was given. Many receive names that are despised and bring negative connotations to them. Yet when one is adopted their name can be changed or given new meaning. Even when this happens, the one bearing the name must believe in the new calling on their life.
So you who have been redeemed by Christ are given a new name. You are now the son or daughter of the most high. Yet most of us still see ourselves by our old name, son or daughter of perdition or dead man walking from sin. To live in the new glory of a son or daughter of the king is to first believe that you are now the son or daughter of a king. Names have meaning and can change your life if you are willing to step into the calling of your new life.
Pastor Aaron
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