You may have seen (here and here) that my fellow blog writer, Charlie Wolcott, has concluded his time writing blog posts. As you perhaps have guessed from the title of this post, I am wrapping up writing blog posts as well, and this is my final post for Worldview Warriors.
My first weekly blog post (which I’m almost embarrassed to link to) was published on September 17, 2011, more than 14 years ago. You are currently reading my 744th blog post. I have published a post every week, with two exceptions – once, we had some theological concerns to work through, and the other time I was on a cruise and didn’t write ahead (as I have done since then). Sometime many years ago (perhaps even before I started writing posts), Jason DeZurik gave me a T-shirt at a Worldview Warriors event that was black with the words “Be Consistent” in white on the front. I still wear it occasionally, and I believe I have lived out that motto quite well in my blog writing!
But rather than focus on my accomplishments here, I believe it’s much more fitting to showcase what God has done in my life and how He has brought all of this about. It was truly God who brought me to this ministry. In 2004, God called me to go to seminary; in 2007, He made that happen. I had to move to Findlay, OH, for seminary (where I ended up staying, thanks to God’s plans), and the first job I had here was absolutely terrible. But God brought about a new job for me, as a design engineer at Ridge & Associates. The owner of the company at the time was a big supporter of the newly-formed Worldview Warriors ministry, so he gave Jason DeZurik office space in our building. Jason walked by my office to get to his, and that’s how God brought us together back in the summer of 2007, along with leading us both to the same church at the time.
After I finished my MDiv in 2010, Jason asked me to be on the radio program, Do Not Keep Silent, which was only about a year old at that time. I had wanted to be on the show since his very first broadcast, but I knew that if God wanted that to happen, it would – and it did. Starting on December 5, 2010, I was on the broadcast just about every month until the show ended in October 2023. God used Jason to stretch me and grow me, both theologically and in my ability to deal with the unexpected. It became a joke that during nearly every show, live on the air, Jason would say, “I didn’t prepare Katie for this, but…”
When Jason first asked me to write a few blog posts in September 2011, I did not know what God would do with that. I wrote stories as a kid, but as an engineer, writing wasn’t really my “thing.” But it felt like what God was directing me to, so I started writing. In late 2012, Jason asked me to proofread his book since I was good at grammar, and I was already proofreading doctoral dissertations for the seminary for a few years by then. In 2014, I took over managing the blog – coordinating posts and writers, making sure all posts were proofread, and then publishing them on this platform. At one point, we had 8 regular weekly writers: one for each day, Monday through Saturday, and two who alternated on Sundays!
God used that to launch me into a side gig of proofreading books, which led to formatting books, designing covers, and helping people publish their work. In January 2019, Worldview Warriors published its first three books – What the Bible Says About, Biblical Foundations, and Heroes of the Faith – all of which were based on blog post series. Since then, we’ve published a total of 13 books, 7 of which I authored. God grew my work in the publishing area so much that at the end of 2020, I left my full-time engineering job at Ridge & Associates and pursued my book editing/publishing business, among other ministry ventures, including starting my Doctor of Ministry degree in Biblical Hebrew teaching methods, which I completed in 2023.
Throughout this entire time, God was consistently growing me in my faith. The consistency of blog writing, the discipline of slowly walking through various Scripture books in my writing, the challenge of listening to what the Holy Spirit was directing me to write about, the adventure of theological discussions on live radio (many of which were also recorded and turned into a podcast), and the opportunity to grow together as a ministry team were all a huge part of my spiritual development as a person.
Through God’s direction years ago, Jason DeZurik took a chance on me – this nerdy engineer who was exploring God’s calling on her life – and helped me grow into the person I am today and the person that the Holy Spirit is still developing me into. We built a deep friendship through all those years and hours spent on the radio together, and we have walked through a lot of life’s ups and downs together. For all of that, I am truly thankful!
But this wouldn’t be a Worldview Warriors blog post without throwing some Scripture in here, so here are a few passages that I feel are especially fitting. Romans 8:37-39 says, “No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.” This is the truth that being a part of Worldview Warriors has truly driven home for me. Writing blog posts for 14 years has sometimes been more academic than spiritual, but the amazing and all-powerful love of God is always there, urging me to follow His leading in my life and recognize what He has done, is doing, and will do.
I would be remiss if I didn’t also quote Qohelet as well: “Not only was the Teacher wise, but he also imparted knowledge to the people. He pondered and searched out and set in order many proverbs. The Teacher searched to find just the right words, and what he wrote was upright and true. The words of the wise are like goads, their collected sayings like firmly embedded nails —given by one shepherd” (Ecclesiastes 12:9-11). All of the words that I’ve written on this blog were not my own; they were given by one shepherd, God Almighty. While I’ve never done a word count on my writings, they’re generally 1000-1200 words each, so I’ve probably written in the ballpark of 800,000+ words for this blog. While my words are not on the level of Scripture by any means, I pray that each one of them was God-ordained and “useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work” (2 Timothy 3:16-17).
We know that “There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens” (Ecclesiastes 3:1), and my season of writing weekly blog posts has come to an end. I strive to continue following God’s leading in my life, wherever that takes me. Right now, that looks like being the “behind the scenes” person to make ministry work happen for Church Doctor Ministries, Church4Today, and the Momentum Network, producing videos and podcasts for The Joshua Center, teaching research courses at the master’s and doctoral levels at Winebrenner Theological Seminary, helping people publish books, doing website design, managing my rental properties, serving various organizations in my community, and whatever else God decides to do with me to fulfill His good purposes in this world. This life is all about God and bringing Him glory, and I pray that I have done that through this blog.
I leave you with a closing from the Apostle Paul, Romans 16:25-27: “Now to him who is able to establish you in accordance with my gospel, the message I proclaim about Jesus Christ, in keeping with the revelation of the mystery hidden for long ages past, but now revealed and made known through the prophetic writings by the command of the eternal God, so that all the Gentiles might come to the obedience that comes from faith — to the only wise God be glory forever through Jesus Christ! Amen.”
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With both sadness and gladness, this is the last blog post I will be writing for Worldview Warriors. As I wrote last week, this has been an incredible journey, and it is a journey that is not over. My life has gotten very busy. I teach physics full-time, and I coach fencing part-time. Not only that, but I am also now teaching a Bible study group at my church, and that doesn’t include writing and other things. It simply is getting to be too much.
Since the summer, halfway through my series on Jesus, I started feeling no heart or energy for this blog. It is not that there was anything wrong with it, but I was starting to get to a point where it was more of a distraction than a joy or pleasure. When I wanted to get working on my Proverbs 3:5 book, the blog posts had deadlines and took priority. And I didn’t have much time during the week to write them, and so I would write en masse during my times off to get ahead. It has become more of a chore than a joy. And one thing I don’t want to do is give half-hearted, no-energy teachings through these blogs. Yes, I get some of the greatest sermons ever preached were when the pastor had no prep time or had no energy and was completely reliant on the Lord, and that has happened with my blogs at times, but I can’t live on that. And God doesn’t operate that way. So to honor the series I had chosen to do, I decided to finish it, which I did last month, and that left me these final posts to be a “closing” for me.
Three weeks ago, I wrote about Biblical manhood and why we must not follow the world’s 11th Commandment of “Thou shalt be nice” at the expense of the other ten. Then I wrote about whether you are going to live as a victim or as a victor. I could have written about the Gospel many times, or about our salvation, but I felt that I should conclude my blog posts with those two topics before I say my farewell to the blog. Worldview Warriors is firing up with a very similar vision but a totally new thrust and engine, and what better way to help launch it than with those two posts? All that said, while this is my final blog post, this is not the end of my ministry with Worldview Warriors.
I still have my Proverbs 3:5 book to finish. I have several other books in mind, and one of them is a Lord of the Rings-style epic that is going to be a multi-book series. A central theme behind it will be the effects of true and false teachings. So I am definitely going to continue my book writing. But I have other projects in mind too.
The problem I had with the blog was that it was basically weekly maintenance. I needed to keep producing content to be released a week at a time, and that is the main reason I need to stop with it. I don’t have the time to do it anymore. That said, I have other content I can give Worldview Warriors. So I am not leaving the ministry at all; I am merely changing my role. The problem with the blogs is that they come every week, but they come and are forgotten unless you know where to look for something. What I will be doing is providing more permanent resources.
A church brother made a comment a couple of months ago after Bible study that I should write an evangelism tract on the “Crown of Thorns” because that is a mini-topic I include in multiple presentations that always tends to blow people away. In a short sentence, when Adam sinned, God cursed the ground to produce thorns and thistles. Then, when Jesus died, He wore a crown of thorns and therefore literally wore the curse of sin to the cross. So now that I am done blogging with this one, I can focus on creating one-time material that can be easily referenced and used. Obviously, I can do more than one tract, but it got me thinking. That’s a whole category of things we can produce. I also plan to write articles for Worldview Warriors as well, but these would be longer and more sporadic. Jason DeZurik has also asked if I would be open to speaking and even going on speaking tours. While it is challenging with my teaching schedule, due to having two weeks off in October, December, and March, with June and July off, that is not unreasonable. So I am not going away. I am simply going in a new direction. What I will be producing through Worldview Warriors will be evangelical tracts, booklets, longer-than-blog articles, books, and hopefully getting back into speaking again.
Also, I am chewing on doing some more scientific research. In a year and a half, the 10th International Conference on Creationism will convene, and I have some ideas I am cooking for a research paper. I will need to have it done by the summer of next year if I want a full paper for the 2027 Conference, and if I do just an abstract (which is more likely what needs to be done), I have a bit more time. I am looking at studying the “Uranium to Lead” decay chain in particular because it’s one of the favorites to showcase millions of years, and I’ve seen enough pieces to know there is a severe reason to question it. But I have some ideas that might put these different pieces together in a way that hasn’t been done yet. So I am still chewing on that, but I can’t do that and do my Proverbs book while doing the blog and my Bible study. Something has to be put aside.
So this wraps up blogging for me with Worldview Warriors. I thank you who have read and followed me for the last 12 years. I can still be followed on my personal Facebook page, where I post a devotional from my daily Scripture readings, and I’ll still be sending stuff to Worldview Warriors. What is going to come out of this is better and richer products than what I had before, and as God leads, we’ll see what else He prompts me to do. Farewell, and keep watching Worldview Warriors for a lot more content and a lot more variety of stuff. The fire has been rekindled, things are taking a new shape, and the zeal is just getting going again. Stay tuned because God is not done with us yet.
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These next two posts are going to be my last ones for Worldview Warriors. It has been a great 12-year journey, and so I want to use this final post to reflect on these 12 years I have spent with Worldview Warriors and then share what direction I am heading. I am not leaving Worldview Warriors, but my role with the ministry is going to be changing. So how did this start?
When I joined Facebook back in 2011, it wasn’t very long before I started getting into Creation debates. While believing the Bible’s direct account and knowing Evolution was a bunch of hooey, I was exposed to the science aspects by Kent Hovind and then Charles Jackson, from whom I credit much inspiration. And it was during a number of these early conversations that I met Jason DeZurik online, and he took a liking to both what I said and also my attitude of “not caring” what people thought about it. I just plain said the truth to the best of my knowledge. After taking some time to chat and get to know each other through our casual posts and messages, Jason asked me about joining Worldview Warriors. This was in the same time window in which Charles Jackson invited a friend of mine to the Creation Truth Foundation for their Cadre training. I started blogging for Worldview Warriors in January 2014, and I began the four sets of four days over two years of training at the Creation Truth Foundation that same month. This would officially begin a significant transition period in my life.
However, that transition was already starting. The previous summer in 2013, I could sense I was entering a new phase in my life, and I chose to get baptized as an adult (I had already been baptized as a child) to signify this transition. I don’t remember exactly when, but sometime around this, I went through a thorough examination of myself because I had serious doubts if I was actually saved. I was born into a church, I was raised in the church and on the mission field, I knew the Gospel, I knew the Bible, I had made my first profession of faith when I was seven, and yet, I had to examine myself because when it all was boiled down, it wasn’t my faith. It was my parents’ faith. It was my church’s faith. It was the mission’s faith. It wasn’t really mine. In this searching, I came to the conclusion that I was saved and now the faith was actually mine. Was I saved as a child? Possibly, but I cannot say with certainty. I can say with certainty that when I came out of that searching, I was saved then. Had I died before this time, I do not know if I would have gone to heaven or hell. But I do know now.
That sparked this 12-year journey with Worldview Warriors. The Cadre training was completed in November 2015, and I was commissioned with the rest of my group to teach about Biblical worldviews, emphasizing the Creation aspect, and I have not backed down. I have truly become a “warrior” for the faith. I began teaching a Bible study at my previous church, and now I am at another church. It’s a place where I can be challenged and grow, a place where they can keep me in check, even without direct discipline; just the preaching has done that. In my zeal, I was approaching a dangerous position; God pulled me out of where I was before I would unintentionally damage the church I was in, and He reeled me back in. I still have much room to grow, but I love where I am because we have the same vision. It’s far from perfect, but we have a singular goal: to be like Christ and to walk in the paths God intended for us.
Twelve years have passed. I have blogged every single week (except one, when I was out of town and wasn’t aware I could pre-write them) for these twelve years, and the growth I have experienced and the knowledge I have gained to be able to teach others has been beyond what I can describe. I know it has been a blessing for many of you who have followed me because you have said so. When we look at the stats for our blog viewership, I still hold the record for the most-viewed post. Besides the blogs, I began to write several books, and I am currently working on my 6th. I have been busy teaching at my church, teaching physics at my school, still fencing competitively, but now also coaching at my school. And all this activity has been awesome.
What have I written on? The topics are almost endless. In my blogs, I have generally had three major themes: basic Christianity, spiritual warfare, and worldview issues, namely on origins. I have done many lengthy series, including on the Armor of God, spiritual warfare tactics, what sin is, what prayer is, what the Gospel is, multiple creation topics, and my longest one concluded this past month on the life of Jesus at 52 posts. Just go to the blog and click the tag for my name, and you will find my nearly 630 posts all in reverse order. And I kept a OneNote page full of topics and ideas I could cover. If I wrote on just that alone and did not do anything new, I would have material for literally 4-5 years without too much stretching. But many of them were not to be, and that is perfectly fine.
I have five books published with Worldview Warriors, one fiction and four nonfiction. My fiction novel, Call to Arms, is on its third publisher, and some of that is due to learning the system. My second book came out with the Worldview Warriors Publishing arm, and we “bookified” 60 of my blog posts at that time. I suspect a second book of this type is overdue. Then I wrote three others. One flowed out of a Bible study topic I had taught: Ten Reasons to Believe the Bible. Another flowed out of inspiration from a question Paul Washer asked: “When was the last time you heard a sermon on the attributes of God?” And I could not think of one, so I made one. That became The God of the Psalms. And my most recent, The Doctrines of Genesis, was to showcase how Genesis has the foundation of every central and core doctrine of the faith. I used the Apostles and Nicene Creeds as the framework and showcased where each tenet had some shadow or seed form or purpose laid out in Genesis. My sixth book doesn’t have a title yet, but the central theme is Proverbs 3:5 to “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding.” As of this post, the first round of editing, which is not complete, has around 25 chapters and 300 pages, all around this one verse.
All that said, as I have mentioned, my time with the blog with Worldview Warriors needs to come to an end. Next week will be my last post, and in that, I will share what I will be doing and the next step of God’s journey for me, as well as a commission for my faithful readers.
This forum is meant to foster discussion and allow for differing viewpoints to be explored with equal and respectful consideration. All comments are moderated and any foul language or threatening/abusive comments will not be approved. Users who engage in threatening or abusive comments which are physically harmful in nature will be reported to the authorities.
One of the things you will hear from Worldview Warriors on a regular basis is the mindset of being a victim versus being a victor. I cannot tell you how many times I hear our president, Jason DeZurik, pressing this matter. Our culture wants nothing more than to make certain people perpetual victims and others perpetual damned.
A key component of Marxist ideology, particularly through the recent popular “Critical Race Theory,” is the marking of certain people based on a combination of race, economic position, AND religious/political affiliation as “oppressed” and “oppressors.” It is worth noting that the biggest factor here is more religious and political affiliation than actual race or economic status. In Critical Race Theory, the white evangelical is the oppressor because it was that demographic that ruled the slaves and who invaded from Europe. This completely ignores the Arab slave trades, the black slave trades, and the Chinese slave trades, let alone that whites were enslaved just as much. The reality is that no people group has ever escaped the issue of slavery; every people group has engaged in slavery, and every people group has been enslaved at some point in their history. But these teachings only emphasize white slave masters and black slaves, never acknowledging anything else, because that would end their influence. Because of the sins of the past, the white evangelical today, who has nothing to do with that, is still an oppressor because we are living on the oppression of years past. And the black person is a perpetual victim because they were held as slaves in early American history – again, ignoring actual historical context through the ages.
So, we have the blacks and the Hispanics who, because of their low status compared to the whites (according to these policies), need the help of the socialists with grants, scholarships, and hiring diversity exclusively on the basis of skin color and for “reparations,” because clearly, they cannot actually make it on their own. And the whites cannot do anything to make up for sins they never committed because even if they confessed to the ancient sins of the past, they are only doing it to protect their “white privilege,” so they are the abject evil that must be destroyed at all costs.
What is going on here? Among many other things, what I will focus on here is a group of people who, on their own self-declaration of being “experts,” are putting labels on people that define them as they want. And because they are “experts” (who made them an expert? They did.), they are to be trusted. So they label anyone they want, however they want, to fit their agenda. If they chose a certain group to be this, they label them as this and never let them escape from said label. It’s much like the caste system of India. Once you are born into it, there is no escape from it. The point I am trying to drive here is that this world system seeks to label you and never let you out of that label. And that labeling is to make you a perpetual victim and a perpetual slave to their ideals. They follow Georg Hegel, who said, “No man can surpass his own time, for the spirit of his time is also his own spirit.” And for anyone who lives in this world, that is absolutely true.
But as Christians, we are not ordinary people. We are not to be defined by this world; we are to be defined by God. And as Christians, we are more than conquerors. We are not to settle for defeat because some self-deciding people want to play God in our lives. We are to defeat them and overcome them. And I am not merely talking about politically. My very testimony was aptly described this way by a Facebook friend recently: “The ceiling the world put on me became my floor.”
When I was six years old, experts said I would never be able to run, barely walk, and to expect no improvement. I had to have physical therapists walk me through every action I knew at the time, including kicking a soccer ball. Yes, I had to have someone physically take my leg through the motion of kicking a ball because I could not figure out how to do it by watching. When I was 15, I learned two things without a physical therapist: hacky-sack and fencing. And 27 years later, while I don’t do the hacky sack thing anymore, I am still fencing and coaching. While never at an elite level, I have finally become respectable. When I was 18, I was told I would never drive, never go to college, and never live on my own – all things that I have done and am doing. When I was 12, I had no reading comprehension, and while I could recognize words, I had no idea what they were saying. I am a writer (obviously, by writing this post) and an author of five books, with number six soon coming, not to mention my 600+ blog posts. That’s just a sampling. Where every expert said I could not do it, I did it. And people who have gotten to know me have learned that once I set my mind to something, get out of my way because it is going to get done. How did I do all that? Not by my own strength and not by the wisdom of this world. But by and through the power of God.
The world is turning darker and darker. Politically, Trump is nearing the end of his ability to stave off the wicked agenda of the left. And the Church chose to rely on Trump to save them instead of repenting of their sins and turning to Christ. Because they put their hope in a false savior, they will get a false salvation. The most we ever got from Trump and could get from him is a short reprieve from the tightening of the noose. But will we lie down and moan and groan that we are losing the battle? Or are we going to rise up and take the battle where it truly is and hit the enemy in the teeth? Are we made of chocolate (as I wrote about last week), pathetic, weak, softies that melt at the slightest hint of oppression? Or are we the warriors God designed to fight this spiritual battle, to overcome the labels thrown at us, and to stop being victims with no escape and become victors? God saved us to be victors – to overcome sin and to overcome the world.
As Worldview Warriors is firing up again, we will seek to teach this next generation how to fight and how to overcome in Christ and to be someone this world can try to label but can never subdue or control. Don’t be a victim. Be a victor. Don’t let the world dictate your ceiling. While you may have the reality of right now, let that be your floor and let God take you where even wings and Red Bull could never take you.
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After His resurrection, Jesus spent 40 days showing His resurrected body to His apostles and to other disciples. He appeared to His disciples multiple times and had this ability to show up wherever and whenever He wanted, and locked doors were no problem for Him. In one incident, Thomas was not with the other ten, and they all believed, except Thomas. Thomas needed to physically see and touch Jesus to believe it. A week later, Jesus showed up and specifically called out Thomas to touch His wounds; there, Thomas made the first declaration of Jesus as God recorded.
But before these two incidents, on the very day of Jesus’ resurrection, Jesus met two disciples walking away from Jerusalem, noting their very somber state. They were totally stunned at how Jesus was hailed a hero and executed in a span of a few days, and then Jesus, who hid His identity from them, began to explain how all these events were the fulfillment of Scripture, starting with Moses. It was the greatest Bible study of all time, and the two insisted on Jesus staying to eat with them. So He did, and the moment He broke the bread, He disappeared, and they realized it was Him.
Paul reports these sightings and then adds that at one time, 500 had seen Him at once, and at the time of the writing of 1 Corinthians, most of these 500 were still alive. What does that mean? It means Paul said to check him out if someone didn’t believe him.
Many skeptics will go out of their way to say, “Why didn’t Jesus show Himself publicly?” Answer: He did. But why didn’t the Romans take notice? The Roman Empire didn’t care about any of this. Those in Judea were only concerned about law and order. They didn’t care about any of the Jewish religion or rituals as long as they brought in tax dollars and stayed peaceful. And they certainly weren’t going to be bothered with the claims of a man coming back from the dead, except maybe those who saw Him and ended up directly involved in what Jesus was doing. I imagine the centurion who realized who Jesus was when He died would have been very intrigued when the resurrection claims started going around.
It is also worth noting that people didn’t go spreading word about Jesus until Pentecost after Jesus ascended. They all talked among each other, but there was no widespread public sharing about it for those first 50 days. Why? Several reasons. One is that they were still in shock about the whole thing. They were not waiting at the tomb for Jesus to rise as He predicted, so the mere fact that He did rise was just so stunning to them that they could only share with each other. Another reason is that just a few days before, the whole city was shouting for Jesus’ death, and just mentioning Him in public would draw the attention of those who had just gotten Jesus killed. So they weren’t about to go publicly share about this either. But then Pentecost comes and the Holy Spirit comes down, and then it was training wheels off and they went and went BIG. The way historians record the spread of the church matches precisely with how the Bible describes it.
Jesus was not about proving to everyone that He was God, but He provided enough evidence that no one honestly evaluating it could deny its validity. The resurrection of Christ is the most verifiable ancient historical account, and frankly, I would argue even more verifiable than today’s events. Jesus appeared to many different witnesses, and among them were unbelievers. What does that mean? Jesus had hostile witnesses, which means it wasn’t just people who only believed in Him who saw it. No conspiracy could be claimed because a hostile witness could easily refute what was claimed if they were there. But no one ever could stand up and give an eyewitness testimony of anything being faked. Unlike any other myth, counterfeit messiah, or false prophet, Jesus did His events publicly so there would be witnesses. There were no witnesses for Joseph Smith or Muhammad. Everyone else had a private revelation that could not be accounted for, but Jesus showed Himself publicly and went above and beyond any quorum needed for validation.
It is impossible for 500 people to have the same hallucination. It is impossible for multiple people to get the same hallucination multiple times. Jesus did not have a twin brother who pretended to be Him. The body was not stolen, and Jesus did not actually avoid death and came back resurrected at full strength if he just “swooned.” It’s also worth noting that nothing is said about any scars from the whips or even the crown of thorns, just the nails and spear. Jesus showed up in His physical body over 40 days, but He had two jobs to do before He would ascend to heaven. That’s for next week.
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Because you have made the Lord, who is my refuge, even the Most High, your dwelling place,
No evil shall befall you, nor shall any plague come near your dwelling;
For He shall give His angels charge over you, to keep you in all your ways.
In their hands they shall bear you up, lest you dash your foot against a stone.
You shall tread upon the lion and the cobra, the young lion and the serpent you shall trample underfoot.
“Because he has set his love upon Me, therefore I will deliver him;
I will set him on high, because he has known My name. He shall call upon Me, and I will answer him;
I will be with him in trouble; I will deliver him and honor him.
With long life I will satisfy him, and show him My salvation.”
- Psalm 91:9-16
Today was our monthly men’s meeting. Part of our time at the very end was centered around, “Why is it that there’s this sense or feeling we’ve lost our passion?” Of course, I had to speak up.
“We can’t blame God or anyone else for this loss of passion except ourselves. You see, if individually, each of us, in our vertical relationship isn’t there or is almost non-existent, to have a horizontal relationship with each other can be confusing and literally, impossible.”
Seeing questioning looks in the room, in essence saying, “What are you talking about?” excited me to share more.
You see, in today’s life of all the business with our schedules just so full, we don’t take time to read God’s Word, let alone pray and talk with Him. Basically, we seek Him when a crisis hits. We pray when it’s convenient for us.
All along, we spew out our know-it-all attitudes, and then when the ceiling falls in on us, the finger-pointing begins. The “He said, she said” verbiage begins.
We’re confused and don’t know what to do because we have not stayed in control with the One who has the answers for us. Also, most of the time we don’t like His answers because they’re so unrealistic, so simple, or they’re not in line with our thinking.
We can’t show up for a one-hour time frame or less per week and walk out the front door of God’s house thinking and/or saying, “Well, I’ve done my duty for the week. You know this Christian thinking, it’s not so hard.” Think about that for a moment, in this light – just because I go and sit in my garage overnight doesn’t make me a car by morning.
We need to remember that sin brings pain to us and to God. Just because God isn’t physically right here, we have a hard time believing He’s experiencing pain. In Judges 10:15, Israel knew they had sinned, they let God know, and asked to be delivered from the day in whatever way God would choose. In Judges 10:16, it tells us that God’s soul could no longer endure the misery of Israel.
Does God hurt? Does God feel pain? You bet! And not just heart pain, it went to the depths of His soul.
The misery we suffer because of spiritual rebellion will always cause pain to the Lord. Isaiah 63:9 says, “In all their affliction, He was afflicted.”
The greatest pain God suffered was when His Son went to the Cross for our sins.
When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and through the rivers, they shall not overflow you.
When you walk through the fire, you shall not be burned, nor shall the flame scorch you.
- Isaiah 43:2
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Last week, I emphasized Jesus’ final teachings from what’s known as the Upper Room discourse, and today, I’ll finish that by emphasizing John 16-17, which is a final teaching on the Holy Spirit and Jesus’ great prayer, the longest recorded single prayer in Scripture.
Jesus spoke of all these things so His disciples would not stumble. The world would come after them because they were associated with Jesus. The authorities would arrest them, beat them, slander them, and seek to do all they could to destroy them. And understand this: the authorities and the church were synonymous in those days. If applied today, the government would be arresting us, but some of the very people we think we should trust are those who will turn us in. The biggest enemies of the Church have been the counterfeits in the Church.
But Jesus said we are not to fear these things, but to know that when they happen, do not be surprised. When Peter and John were arrested in Acts 4 for preaching the name of Jesus after healing a lame man, they sang for joy because they were counted worthy to suffer for Christ. But this joy can only come from the Holy Spirit. It will never come from the flesh. It also must be practiced and prepared before you can actually do this. Richard Wurmbrand told people in the West that we need to practice suffering. One way he would do that was to go through an American grocery store and say, “I can go without that.” And would end up leaving and getting nothing. Yes, he would get food to eat, but 14 years of prison in Communist Romania teaches you to cherish what you have, but also not to indulge in things even when you can. Jesus told us we would suffer, and the US church is the only one so far to not have gone through actual persecution in the way the rest of the world has. Even when the Church had moments of peace from Roman emperors, it was short-lived. So if Jesus says we will suffer, guess what, if we are living the Christian life, we will suffer, and people won’t like us. We need to get used to that.
However, in this promise is another promise of help: the Holy Spirit. The reason why the world is going to hate us so much is not merely because of Christ in us. They will hate us because the Holy Spirit has a primary job of convicting the world of sin, and you don’t even have to say anything for this to happen. Why? Because the Holy Spirit will convict you of sin and warn you against sin, and when you don’t engage in sin when the world seeks to, that action will tell them, “Oh, you are one of those Christians.” Understand that these reactions are actually a cover for their FEAR of God because they know that God is real and that judgment is coming. They don’t just want you to know that this is what is going on. But when this happens, the Holy Spirit will guide us to all truth and even what to say and what not to say.
Then Jesus warns of His death and resurrection again. There will be great sorrow within 24 hours, but great rejoicing just a couple of days later. And when that happens, the disciples won’t need to question what God is saying due to a lack of understanding, because when they ask what they need, they’ll get what they need in prayer. Yet tribulation is imminent.
From there, Jesus goes to His epic prayer of John 17, first praying for Himself, then praying for His disciples, and then for all believers. Jesus prays for Himself for the moment He was about to go through, and that He would be glorified in receiving the judgment of God for the sin of the world. He prays for His disciples that they would be able to endure the trials to come and to be kept and protected. He prays for the rest of the believers for endurance and protection during the times of persecution that they may be good witnesses. And Jesus ended it with the knowledge of God and that the love of God would be on full display among the church.
With this, Jesus finished teaching His disciples and headed for the Garden of Gethsemane, where He would have the battle for His life: the internal battle about whether He would go to the Cross or seek another way.
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John 13-17 contains the final teachings of Jesus’ life before His crucifixion. It was a very difficult time for Jesus because from that point on, Jesus’ disciples would effectively be on their own… except they would not be left on their own. For three years, Jesus had trained His disciples to be teachers and preachers of a new message and to lead a new Kingdom, but none of them got it. None of them would understand what Jesus had been saying all along for another fifty days, and this was the hardest message for them. Because Jesus was leaving and they were going to suffer greatly. In this post, I’ll cover His teachings in John 13-15.
After washing His disciples’ feet, Jesus told everyone that He was about to be betrayed. Then Jesus immediately identified Judas by giving him the dipped bread and told him to do what he was about to do. Once Judas left, no one suspected him. Judas had the money box and suspected Jesus was sent to get something. With that, Jesus announced that He was leaving, and where He was going, they could not come. This was a total heartbreak for the disciples. They knew Jesus was their Messiah, their Savior, and they loved Him and knew He had everything they could ever need and had nowhere else to go. Peter said he would go anywhere, including dying for Jesus, and Jesus simply sighed and told Peter he would deny Him three times that very night.
But Jesus then began to comfort the disciples by telling them what He was going to do while away: prepare a place for them and then come back for them, and they would know where and how to meet Him. Thomas and Philip tried to get clarification on this and never understood that Jesus was not merely the Messiah, but was one with God; by knowing Jesus, they knew the Father. But then Jesus said He would not leave them alone but would give them something far better than His physical presence: the Holy Spirit. And it would be the Holy Spirit who would do more than just comfort them.
The Holy Spirit is called “the Helper,” the “parakletos,” and is so much more than the “helper” that Eve was to Adam. The Holy Spirit is the very engine that makes the car called mankind operate as intended. It is the Holy Spirit who teaches us how to love one another. It is the Holy Spirit who teaches how to obey the Lord. It is the Holy Spirit who overcomes the world and enables us to rise above our culture and live the supernatural life.
I want to dwell on this for a moment because we have a severe problem in our time today. We have a massive movement of making a huge emphasis on the Holy Spirit that attributes practically anything and everything to Him, no matter how ridiculous it is. And we have a reaction to that movement that practically denies anything to do with Him. The Charismatics very well acknowledge the action of the supernatural, but they rarely check what they say or think against Scripture to know what is actually Him or not. But the Reformed cessationists, while doing an excellent job at checking this movement, all but practically deny the actual nature of the supernatural in the process. Many truly think that the nature of spiritual warfare is ONLY regarding teachings, and they miss the mark on that one. What they end up with if they are not careful is a very well-constructed theology, but one that is dead. Both sides have a severe problem: no real power.
The world does not give them the time of day. The world has always had to respect the true Church when she has had power, often to the point of taking it very seriously to try to shut it down. But with only a few exceptions, the government has been very subtle in its opposition to the church. They go after Creationists because that is where a severe threat to worldly ideals lies, but they aren’t going after the church as a whole. Not openly. Just gradually setting things up so that the Church will not raise her head above an accepted level. And I am asking: Why has the church allowed this? And I have to ask myself, why have I been part of “keeping the status quo”? We are to live supernatural lives, and we are satisfied with pure academic lives. That’s not what Jesus intended. Jesus intended for us to be a force that no one could stop, and the source of that force is the Holy Spirit.
After that, Jesus emphasizes making sure our source is Him. We must be attached to the vine and get our source of life from the vine; otherwise, we are merely dead branches, and dead wood is only good for the fire. And worse are branches that don’t produce fruit and are just wasting the vine’s energy. So those will be pruned. It’s a severe warning that those who are supposed to be Christians can’t just get a free ride. But those who engage in the Father’s mission will have a joy beyond anything that we can describe. The mission we are sent to do cannot be done without our power source: the Holy Spirit.
Jesus repeatedly emphasizes to the disciples to love one another. He says this many times in this final teaching. Jesus calls them “friends,” and for God to call you a friend is something special. Never forget, He is still the King, and we are still His servants. We see throughout Acts and the Epistles that the Apostles never lost sight of this. They never forget that Jesus was King and they were but His servants, yet Jesus called them His friends. And that is a severe problem with the world, because the world hates Jesus.
The world has been in rebellion against God from the very start. The world does not want God to rule, and the ultimate reason is that Jesus points out that they are sinners who deserve judgment. The world hates us because we are no longer of them, of their same likeness. We are representatives of God, and they hate God. So why would we want to curry their favor? Now, understand this. They don’t hate God because of ignorance of Him. They hate God because they DO know Him. They DO know that God exists, and they hate Him; they hate God without a cause. But when we have the Holy Spirit, we need to not fear them or their silly arguments or their attempts to weaponize the law against us. Let them try. We go preach Jesus because that is what a Holy Spirit-filled person will do.
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On April 22, 2025, the greatest man I ever knew went to be with his heavenly Father in glory. He wasn't a perfect man while on the earth, but he would strive to know his Savior and Lord in all that he did while on the earth. Even with physical death knocking on his door, he strived to be joyful in the Lord, worshipping Him with family and friends all around him in his last days here on the earth. He taught me so much about what Biblical love really is, even though in my youth, I was quite intemperate and unwilling to receive from his words and actions about Godly wisdom.
Typically, as one gets older, though, they begin to realize those who came before them really aren't as foolish as one thought. As I am older now, I realize that his tough love toward me in my youth was a huge gift. He taught me more than anyone in my life about true biblical love. Love is long-suffering. Love isn't always nice, but it is kind. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth of God. Love can get angry, but in your anger do not sin because love is not easily angered. When you do sin, own up to it, confess the sin, and ask for forgiveness of the one you sinned against. Then it's up to the one you sinned against to forgive. If they don't forgive, that's between them and God. Leave it be, and genuinely pray for them.
He taught me the importance of sacrificing and loving the family God has given to you, and to honor them in action and in word. Love always protects, love always trusts, and love always perseveres. Love never fails. I am so thankful for the Lord allowing me to be the son of the greatest man I ever knew – my father, Frank Joseph DeZurik. Why is he the greatest? Because he pointed me to the absolute greatest man ever, Jesus Christ. See you in Heaven.
Frank Joseph DeZurik, 79, was taken to glory while surrounded by family on April 22, 2025, in North Branch, Minnesota.Born on July 25, 1945, in St. Cloud, Minnesota, he was the firstborn son to Jerry and Mary DeZurik (Gallus) (both deceased). He had 2 younger sisters, Annette (deceased) and Carol, who survives and lives in Zimmerman, Minnesota. He grew up in Royalton, Minnesota. He married Judy Rose Ginter on October 19, 1968, in North Prairie, Minnesota. They had two (2) children together, Jason (Jaya Greenberg) born on May 18, 1970, and Rebecca (Gary Rakow) born on November 4, 1972.
Frank is survived by his wife, children, and six (6) grandchildren: Ezra Frank, Elijah Paul, Anika Jewel, Katerina Rose, Eva Marie, and Theresa Grace.
He started working for the Northern Pacific Railroad in 1964 and retired from the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad in 1999… 35 years later. While working on the railroad in Steele, North Dakota, in 1972, he was nearly electrocuted when 7,200 volts of electricity ran through his body. The Lord was watching over him that day. In 1976, while driving home from the bar, Frank fell asleep, hitting a culvert head-on. The engine of the car was found 25 feet away from the car, and the jaws of life were needed to cut him out of the car. The only injuries he received in this accident were a broken collarbone, a concussion, and a gash in his head. It was at this time, in the hospital, that Frank surrendered his life to Jesus Christ. He never took another drink of alcohol again.
After this time, he started to not only become outspoken about his faith in Jesus Christ but strived to live his life for the Lord in everything he did. In 1978, he was promoted to management on the Burlington Northern Railroad and worked out of the shop in St. Paul, Minnesota. During this time, he was also a part of the music group “The Potter's Clay” with his friend, Lowell Olson. They traveled and performed in churches all around Minnesota.
In 1988, the traveling began for Frank and Judy. With his loving and loyal wife by his side, they began a new adventure together, moving to Snohomish, Washington, for his new position in Seattle, Washington. In 1992, they were transferred to Springfield, Missouri, where Frank could be found at Bass Pro Shop quite often. As he put it, “I thought it was great, as Bass Pro Shop was just starting out.” In 1997, they moved just east of Kansas City to Blue Springs, Missouri, and in 1999, Frank retired from the railroad.
Frank was blessed to lead Bible studies, sing in the church choir, and sing tenor in a 10-man singing group called the “Circuit Riders,” which was blessed to perform in Missouri, Kansas, and even in Pennsylvania. He and Judy traveled to Israel in 2000, to which Frank said, “This was an amazing trip.” He and Judy made mission trips to Juarez, Mexico, and were blessed to build homes and share the love of Jesus while there. In retirement, they bought a lake home near Emily, Minnesota. All were welcome to join him to fish on the lake and help him monitor rogue ATV activity as they jumped his driveway on a regular basis. He loved playing games with the family. Some of his favorites were Cribbage, Rook, and Hearts. Frank was known for holding high standards for himself and encouraging others to do the same. He will be remembered as a man of God who strived to do God's will in all that he did. He will be remembered as a man who loved, in his own words, “This Great Nation.”
He will be remembered as a man who loved his wife with his actions as a protector and provider. He loved his children and grandchildren greatly and will be remembered as a man who showed them and everyone the example of always striving to follow the one true King, Jesus Christ.
A Celebration of Life will be held from 1 pm – 4 pm on Saturday, June 28, at Maranatha Church * 24799 Forest Lake Boulevard North, Forest Lake, Minnesota, 55025. An informal service will be held at 2 pm. A light lunch will be served.
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There is only one time in all of recorded Scripture that left Jesus stunned, shocked, and amazed. If there ever was a time that it ever be said Jesus was caught off guard, it was a single moment described in Matthew 8 and Luke 7: the healing of the servant of a Roman Centurion. It’s a famous passage and it is the only one at all in which Jesus was “astonished” at a human response. Jesus was amazed, wowed, and impressed. If the list of Hebrews 11 was extended to the entirety of Scripture, this centurion would be on the list of Hebrews 11 Hall of Faith. What impressed Jesus so much about this man?
This Roman officer had to have seen Jesus do things that were beyond human comprehension, and I think it was things he personally saw, not merely heard about. I would not be surprised if he witnessed the healing of the paralytic, heard some of the sermons, and saw how Jesus handled Himself with both people and enemies, holding an authority that was beyond any manmade authority. He realized that any time Jesus said something, it got done and it wasn’t just a show. Jesus spoke a word, and it was done. While there had to be some wrestling going on in his mind, this centurion finally came to a point where he believed Jesus could heal his servant, but he didn’t want Jesus to come to his home. He recognized Jesus was at a level of holiness above him that he could not comprehend, but also there was a general social rule held on both sides that Romans and Jews would not associate with each other. So, this officer knew Jesus could do the job but didn’t want him to come to his house for shame or public appearance or whatever. And so he went to Jesus.
This Roman officer knelt before Jesus and pleaded for Him to save his servant. Jesus gladly was willing to do that, especially when this Gentile, this Roman who would have only known of the Jewish God by being stationed there, made his request. The centurion held Jesus back from actually coming and told Jesus He didn’t even need to come in person. Jesus only needed to say the word. This officer understood authority and knew Jesus had it. All Jesus needed to do was say the word and it would get done. He didn’t know how, nor did he care how. Just as the orders issued to him were to get done, and the officers above him didn’t care how, as long as it got done. And when he issued orders, his concern was “get it done.” He saw this authority in Jesus. He didn’t understand the workings; he simply knew it would be done. This astonished Jesus. A Gentile, someone who did not have access to the works of God of the past or the hope of a coming Savior, understood how faith operated more than any Jew He had come across, and Jesus was blown away by this.
Jesus wasn’t this impressed with Peter claiming Him to be the Christ. Jesus knew it wasn’t Peter who figured it out. It was the Father revealing it. Throughout all of Jesus’ earthly ministry, His disciples were the least of those who ever understood the message, despite receiving so much direct instruction, living with Him, and seeing His actions. Jesus was used to seeing such total dullness and faithlessness, and it grieved Him. Yet here was a Roman embracing this faith – a Gentile, a man who was friendly towards the Jews, but definitely did not embrace their faith until that point. We don’t know why the Centurion helped out with the synagogue because it certainly wasn’t part of his job description. It may have been just to help keep the peace, and it also may have been orders, or to help the Romans with their job as occupiers. In either case, he knew of the true God from them, but he didn’t see much reason to believe He was the true God until Jesus came along. Everything about Jesus showed this Gentile that He was the real deal. He knew Jesus merely needed to say the word and the job would be done.
This amazed Jesus. He got it and showcased to the disciples that this was the kind of faith to go after. They are not to be presumptuous and declare that God will do something. But the faith that amazed Jesus is the kind that says, “God, if you give the word, it shall be done and I will plead with you until I get an answer.” Remember, Jesus is the Creator and when God spoke, the creation obeyed. Here, the Roman told Jesus to just speak, and it would be done.
When are we going to believe God’s promises? When will we set up our lives to submit to Christ to not only get our prayers answered, but to be an instrument to answer others’ prayers? Think about that. The centurion had soldiers ready to answer his orders that came from above him. Jesus not only has angels ready to obey Him, but He also has us, His bride, who is supposed to be ready to obey Him. How many prayers of others have gone “unanswered” because we didn’t listen or obey? God will still find someone who will if we don’t, but why let that delay someone’s blessing or cut us ours? If the faith of the centurion could amaze Jesus, how much more should we want to amaze our Father in heaven? Let us believe Him, truly believe Him.
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When Naomi heard in Moab that the LORD had come to the aid of his people by providing food for them, she and her daughters-in-law prepared to return home from there. With her two daughters-in-law she left the place where she had been living and set out on the road that would take them back to the land of Judah.
Then Naomi said to her two daughters-in-law, "Go back, each of you, to your mother’s home. May the LORD show you kindness, as you have shown kindness to your dead husbands and to me. May the LORD grant that each of you will find rest in the home of another husband."
- Ruth 1:6-9a
As with any time you’re reading the Bible, it’s important to understand the context of this passage. In the 5 verses before this section, there has been a famine in Bethlehem, Naomi and Elimelech moved their family to the foreign land of Moab, Elimelech died, their two sons married foreign women, and then those sons died. Naomi and her two daughters-in-law were left with no one to care for them economically.
This passage introduces us to the deep relationships between Naomi and her Moabite daughters-in-law, Ruth and Orpah. It also raises questions about cultural norms, family loyalty, and the pressures facing women in the ancient Near East. While it appears that Naomi first starts out bringing Ruth and Orpah on the journey back to Bethlehem (verse 7), she then changes her mind and instructs them to go back to their families of origin (verse 8). Why should Ruth and Orpah have stayed in Moab with their families, as Naomi suggested?
The story takes place during a patriarchal era when a woman’s identity, security, and social standing were intricately tied to her family and husband. In Moab, as in much of the ancient Near East, women typically relied on male relatives for protection and provision. Ruth and Orpah, as widows, faced significant challenges: loss of financial support, diminished societal status, and uncertainty about remarriage. Without husbands to provide for them, widows’ survival often depended on the charity of relatives or the community. Returning to their families in Moab would have allowed Ruth and Orpah to access the support of their kinship networks. These networks were essential for widows, providing food, shelter, and the possibility of remarriage within the family or clan.
Naomi’s appeal to Ruth and Orpah to return to their "mother’s home" highlights this cultural expectation. While men were usually the heads of households, widowed daughters often found refuge with their mothers. This phrase might also suggest the possibility of remarriage, as mothers played a crucial role in arranging marriages for their daughters.
Naomi’s plan to return to Bethlehem introduced another layer of complexity. Ruth and Orpah were Moabites, a group often viewed with suspicion and hostility by the Israelites. According to Deuteronomy 23:3, Moabites were excluded from "the assembly of the Lord" because of their ancestors' actions against Israel during the Exodus. This cultural and religious divide would have made it challenging for Ruth and Orpah to integrate into Israelite society, where they risked being marginalized as outsiders.
Remaining in Moab, where they shared language, customs, and religion, would have been a safer and more logical choice. Naomi’s suggestion for them to stay underscores her awareness of the difficulties they would face in Judah. She did not want to impose further hardship on her daughters-in-law, whose loyalty and kindness she deeply appreciated.
Naomi, too, was a widow who would have had difficulty providing for herself. Her decision to return to Bethlehem was driven by the news that "the Lord had come to the aid of his people by providing food for them" (verse 6). She hoped to find sustenance and perhaps kinship support in her homeland. However, Ruth and Orpah’s situation was different. As Moabites, they could not expect the same welcome or resources in Judah.
While Naomi’s advice to Ruth and Orpah to stay in Moab was practical, it also reflected her understanding of God’s hesed – a Hebrew word that we don’t have a good English translation for. It’s often translated as mercy, love, or lovingkindness; see this post for more on that concept. She invoked God’s blessing on them, saying, "May the Lord show you kindness, as you have shown kindness to your dead husbands and to me" (verse 8). Naomi’s prayer acknowledged their past loyalty and expressed hope for their future well-being, even if they chose to part ways.
This passage challenges us to consider the tension between practicality and faith. Naomi’s advice to Ruth and Orpah reflects the wisdom of her time, prioritizing their immediate security and prospects. Yet Ruth’s eventual decision to accompany Naomi (spoiler alert!) demonstrates a willingness to step into the unknown, trusting in God’s provision.
Even though today’s culture and society are very different from the ancient Near East, we should recognize that following God’s calling on our lives still requires sacrifices and risks. At the same time, it’s important to respect diverse paths and choices, as Orpah’s return to Moab was not condemned but understood within the context of her circumstances.
While Naomi’s advice for Ruth and Orpah to remain in Moab was practical and compassionate, Ruth’s choice to journey to Judah demonstrates extraordinary faith and commitment. The historical context enriches our understanding of these women’s choices and invites us to reflect on the ways God’s hesed can guide and sustain us in life’s uncertainties.
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As we begin a new year, it’s time to begin a new blog post series! After spending nearly two years writing through 1 and 2 Corinthians, I wanted to jump back into a book in the Old Testament. After some prayer and perusing the various books, the book of Ruth stood out to me. While I’ve studied this book multiple times before, and read through it in Hebrew a few times, I’ve never written blog posts about it.
The book of Ruth is only 4 chapters long. Being primarily narrative, it’s fairly easy to read in Hebrew, but it’s packed with meaning. Even the names of some of the characters have significant meanings to them. The themes of loyalty, redemption, and God’s providence are evident throughout the book.
Before we dig into the text itself starting next week, it’s important to set the stage with the background and historical context.
The story of Ruth unfolds "in the days when the judges ruled" (Ruth 1:1), a period marked by political instability, moral decline, and spiritual waywardness in Israel’s history. The era of the judges, roughly spanning the 14th to 11th centuries BC, is characterized in the Biblical narrative by a recurring cycle: the Israelites rebel against God, fall into oppression under foreign powers, cry out for deliverance, and are rescued by a judge whom God raises up. (Check out this book for more on the time of the Judges.) Yet, the cycle of disobedience and deliverance repeats, painting a picture of a nation struggling to remain faithful to its covenant with Yahweh.
Against this turbulent backdrop, the book of Ruth presents a contrast—a story of personal faithfulness, familial devotion, and divine providence. While much of the book of Judges highlights the chaos of a nation adrift, Ruth offers a glimpse of ordinary people living out extraordinary faith in their everyday lives.
The central characters in the book of Ruth (Naomi, Ruth, and Boaz) are not kings, prophets, or warriors. Instead, they are everyday individuals navigating loss, uncertainty, and hope.
Naomi is a widow who has lost her husband and two sons. She returns to Bethlehem bitter and empty-handed, yet she becomes a vessel of God’s restoration. Ruth is a Moabite widow and Naomi’s daughter-in-law. She demonstrates steadfast loyalty by choosing to leave her homeland and align herself with Naomi and her God. Boaz is a wealthy and kind landowner who serves as the kinsman-redeemer, a pivotal role that not only brings resolution to Ruth and Naomi’s plight but also foreshadows the ultimate redemption found in Christ.
Geography plays a significant role in the narrative. The story begins in Bethlehem during a time of famine. Naomi’s family migrates to Moab, a neighboring nation historically at odds with Israel. After the deaths of her husband and sons, Naomi hears that the Lord has provided food in Bethlehem and decides to return, accompanied by Ruth. This journey from Moab to Bethlehem is more than a physical relocation; it symbolizes a return to God’s provision and covenant promises.
We don’t know the author of the book of Ruth. Jewish tradition believes it was written by Samuel, but there is no clear evidence for that. There is some similar language and style between Ruth and the book of Judges, but we do not know the author of Judges for certain either.
In our traditional English Bibles, the book of Ruth occurs after Judges and before 1 Samuel. However, in the Hebrew Bible, Ruth occurs between Proverbs and Song of Songs, which is significant. The book of Proverbs ends with the description of the wife of noble character in Proverbs 31. So if you were reading in the Hebrew Bible, immediately after reading all about this noble woman, you’d begin the story of this woman named Ruth, who isn’t even a member of the people of Israel. Ruth demonstrates commitment and faithfulness to Naomi, like the Proverbs 31 woman. In Ruth 3, we see the love story part of the narrative beginning, which feels connected to the Song of Songs, occurring immediately after Ruth in the Hebrew Bible. The love described in Song of Songs seems to spring forth from the love between Ruth and Boaz.
In the Jewish tradition, the book of Ruth is often read during the Jewish festival of Shavuot, which celebrates the giving of the Torah and the harvest season. For Christians, Ruth is a key part of the lineage of Christ, bridging the Old and New Testaments and showcasing God’s redemptive plan. Our redemption in Jesus came through Ruth's faithfulness and Boaz's faithfulness, but God's faithfulness is even greater than that, working in this narrative and in all the world to accomplish His purposes.
The four chapters of Ruth beautifully lay out the narrative. In Chapter 1, we see both loss and loyalty. Naomi and her family leave Bethlehem due to famine, and tragedy strikes them in Moab. Ruth’s decision to stay with Naomi sets the stage for the story that unfolds. In Chapter 2, we see God’s providence. Ruth gleans in the fields of Boaz, who shows kindness and protection to her. This meeting was not a coincidence but clearly orchestrated by God. In Chapter 3, we see Naomi’s plan unfold for Boaz to be their kinsman-redeemer. At the conclusion in Chapter 4, Boaz fulfills that role to redeem Naomi and Ruth, and we see the genealogy that puts Ruth as a direct ancestor of King David, and thus of Jesus.
In a world that often feels as chaotic as the time of the judges, the book of Ruth offers a message of hope, faithfulness, and redemption. It reminds us that God is at work in the ordinary and the extraordinary, weaving our stories into His narrative. As we study Ruth, we are invited to trust in God’s providence, emulate the loyalty and love displayed by its characters, and rejoice in the redemption offered through Christ.
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When someone is getting himself started in the public eye, the first thing he is always taught he must do is win the crowd with a good first impression. Every speaker knows this. Every author knows this. If you want any audience to buy into what you are offering, that first impression is a must. But Jesus does not follow the advice of men and is not concerned about His platform nor the public view of Him. He is concerned with the job assigned by His Father, empowered by the Holy Spirit. What we see Jesus do from the outside is set Himself up for rejection; He does so by going home.
In Luke’s account, when Jesus returns from the wilderness, empowered by the Holy Spirit, one of the first stops He makes is Nazareth. And in Nazareth, Jesus does what no one who wants a platform would ever do: cut Himself off from His homeland. We don’t exactly know if Jesus started doing some healings and teachings before this stop in Nazareth as Mark 1 would indicate, but one thing is clear: Jesus was known and respected enough to be given the privilege to teach that Sabbath when the regular rabbi would normally do the job. And what did Jesus do? Jesus quoted a passage from Isaiah 61 and basically said, “I am the one this is talking about.”
The response was initially met with awe because Jesus spoke with an authority that no one alive had ever heard before. I am certain that what is given in the text is not the whole dialogue that took place, but the tone soon changed very quickly. Jesus grew up with these people. They knew Him in His childhood and those very awkward teenage years. Jesus was without sin but never one of those over-pious “goody two shoes.” He had respect among the community, despite being known as an illegitimate child, and now He started proclaiming to be the fulfilment of a passage that for at least decades the people thought was going to be about the deliverance from Rome. I’m sure Jesus’ own friends and family began to wonder, “Who does this guy think He is?” And then Jesus lowered the boom, declared their reaction to Him, and basically insulted them by saying their rejection of His gift of salvation would lead to that gift being given out to those they deemed lesser than them. This led to Jesus’ own friends seeking to throw Him off a nearby cliff for blasphemy. There is no record of Jesus ever returning to Nazareth after this.
In one of Jesus’ first opportunities to get a following, He sets the standard of what He was about: seeking true and genuine followers and pushing away any who had no real intention of following Him and doing things His way. This is a charge frequently made by those who stand on the single message of Scripture. As a young earth creationist, I often get charged with chasing people away from the faith because we draw a hard line that there is no justification for being a Christian and holding hands with worldly thinking of “millions of years.” We get accused often of being un-Christ-like yet here we have Jesus chasing people away by driving home a point about the exclusive truth. Jesus does not care about numbers. He cares about true and genuine faith. He does care when those reject Him, and it grieves Him that they will be lost, not knowing what they are rejecting, but He is not going to change His message so that He could have a superfluous following. Jesus was going after the true follower, and He would give many different teachings and descriptions on what that would mean and entail.
This was not the only time Jesus would intentionally chase away people who had little interest in following Him anyway. In John’s gospel, there are two major instances when Jesus confronted the very crowds He had just been ministering to. In John 6, Jesus had just fed the 5000, sent the disciples across the sea, walked on water, and the crowd followed Him around the sea and met Him there. Jesus refused to give them another bite and instead offered the true Bread of Life – Himself. He told the people that to get eternal life, we are to eat His flesh and drink His blood. About 20,000 people, assuming it was the same crowd from the day before, left. Then in John 8, Jesus confronted another group of people who professed to believe Him. Jesus flat out called them children of the devil, haters of God, murderers, and sealed the deal by declaring Himself to be the “I AM.”
Again, Jesus refused to play the crowd. Every time He sensed there were half-hearted followers, He raised the stakes to make sure there were no hesitations. Jesus did not want any fair-weather fans. He wanted genuine disciples who would pursue and chase after Him no matter what their circumstances were. Jesus set the bar so high that He would take precedence over family, over jobs, over the comfort of a home, over an income, over absolutely anything that would enable someone to rely on their flesh. Jesus never lowered the bar for anyone. He gave messages so hard that it would be literally impossible for any person to be able to carry them out. And that was the point.
Christianity is not like any other religion that has man seeking and pursuing God. It is a religion and a faith (among much more) that requires that man cease trusting in themselves and only depend upon the mercy of God. While Jesus did give teachings about how we should live, He also made clear that following Him will not happen by one’s own ability. The Christian lifestyle is only livable, and even attemptable, in the power of the Holy Spirit. Jesus shut down any low-level thinking about the Christian faith, and He was not going to tolerate any attempt to use Him for any personal gain or in any following of Him just for what He could offer. He knew the hearts of these people; the moment anything would turn rough, which would happen quickly and frequently to those who did follow Him, they would turn on Him and walk away. So Jesus, just like with the fig tree He cursed, simply showcased the inevitable quicker and did not let anyone get disillusioned with false hopes. He set the expectations excessively clearly so anyone who did choose to follow Him knew what they were leaving behind and what they were going into.
The life that Jesus calls us into is one where we do not have control; He does, and we walk in implicit trust that He will lead us to and through the very things we were designed for. Next week, we’ll look at what kind of people Jesus chose to be His apostles.
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This is something that has been cooking inside me for some time, and I have been trying to figure out where, when, and how to let it out. Many of you who have followed me know I am actively engaged in apologetics and defending the faith. I’ve been at this for over 20 years, and one thing I am so grateful for is being at a church that understands the value of defending the faith but also is learning when to reel it in. I moved to my current church nearly four years ago, and I am very glad for the change. I had something stirring in me at my previous place that had I remained there much longer, it may have erupted in a not-good way. God pulled me out in part to rescue me from staying in that environment. Where I am now, the sermons have been doing an excellent job at putting a leash on me and pulling me back to keep me from going too far with certain things.
One of them is regarding apologetics. When I moved to my current church, we were in a state of making sure we were on sound doctrine. We have not departed from that, but we saw something in us that we didn’t like: deadness. We had intellectualism, but it was dead. It was stone-cold and had no life in it. And we saw it and didn’t like it, and so we have been shifting, not away from sound orthodox and quality doctrine or even the rigidness of the doctrine, but away from “intellectualism.” One post I was going to write was regarding Ecclesiastes on this topic: Meaningless! Meaningless! I was going to write about the futility of modern evangelistic methods and even modern preaching, including the good stuff. I’m still going to write on that but with a different emphasis and angle.
It is important to know our Bible and to be able to explain our faith, but I have seen a very unhealthy trend in evangelical circles and especially in academics of trying to explain the supernatural with the natural. There are times when I will get on the scientists on my side for this, trying too hard to explain evidence when there really isn’t a need to. Especially with evidence that doesn’t have any weight to begin with. For example, I applaud the work that the “R.A.T.E.” Team did in analyzing and critiquing the radiometric dating methods on their own merit and showcasing the discrepancies in the system. However, I do not agree with their conclusions that there must be a way to account for billions of years into a 6000-year time frame when the studies showed legitimate reasons that the billions of years weren’t real figures we have to account for, to begin with.
But it gets worse. There are very famous apologists for the faith: William Lane Craig, Frank Turek, Charlie Campbell, Greg Koukul, now popular Cliffe Knechtel, Charlie Cambell, Josh McDowell, Sean McDowell, and many others. Some are better than others, and some have produced some excellent works for why Christianity is true. Some others, not so much. I’m not going to get into that here. My concern is the drive for intellectualism, the attempt to make Christianity acceptable on an intellectual level, and the idolizing of these scholars as being the chief authority instead of God Himself. While God did indeed leave very powerful evidence that would compel even the halfway-thinking person, such that no one has any excuses, the problem I am seeing is the “appeal to the academic.” This is where Christianity isn’t true because the Bible (the ultimate authority on every topic it speaks on) says so but because scholarship shows it to be true. And when the scholarship shows it, many of them don’t turn to the Bible as having the authority but keep with the scholarship. I say this having written a book titled Ten Reasons to Believe the Bible, and the more I think about this, the more I almost question my approach to that book. God still left the evidence I show in my book, so any rational person can follow that to the truth, but there must come a point when we realize the Bible does have everything we need.
What is lacking in evangelism is that we just have “rationalism.” We make intellectual arguments that can showcase that the Bible is true, and yes, many people have been converted that way. But one thing I like about Josh McDowell’s testimony is that he did his research and realized the Bible was true after attempting to refute it. However, that isn’t what converted him. What converted him was the love of the saints that he never got at home or at school, especially at home with a drunk father and suffering at the hands of a homosexual pedophile for seven years. He was dealing with his anger and pride, and when he saw true, genuine love from among the believers, that is what pushed him over. He still needed the intellectual part, which made him see the love, but it was the supernatural love of God that won him to Christ.
We are missing the supernatural element. We have abandoned God’s method of evangelism. God has chosen the weak things of this world to share the truth. He uses the uneducated. He uses the poor. He uses preaching. Now God has also used the educated, and he has used the rich, and he has used eloquence, but very rarely, and only when said people have given up that very skill to surrender to Christ for Him to use.
The worst of it all is the total lack of Christ in so many people’s evangelistic and apologetic efforts when He is only brought up as a footnote. Listen to the testimonies of “I am Second” – there is no “second” of self in many of those because it’s all about them. After listening to those testimonies, after listening to our apologists today, who walks away knowing or hearing anything about Jesus? Isn’t Christ supposed to be our message? Isn’t He supposed to be central to everything? Then why aren’t we making Him central?
Eric Ludy described how his sister brought him to a correct understanding of evangelism. When we evangelize, we need to be like the servant of Abraham who went to get Rebecca to be a bride for Isaac. The servant spent very little time talking about himself. He spent his time talking about Isaac. And when we finish with someone, they should not be thinking about us; they should be thinking about Jesus. While we can appeal to how Jesus deals with sin and such, the real appeal should be what spending eternity in heaven with Him should be like and what that relationship is. Instead, we just think it’s about getting to paradise or out of Hell, and God beyond that is an afterthought. That is not how evangelism should be. That is making converts, and we are called to make disciples and to teach them how to follow Christ. And with that message is the most difficult part of it all: the denial of self and everything you once knew.
We need to get back to doing things God’s way. We need to stop thinking we have to “figure out a way to reach them.” We need to do what God said and let God deal with the results. No, God’s methods are not going to be popular. They are intended not to be. They are intended to show that God is the one doing the work, not you; you are just a tool He is using, not the star of the show. Once you do your part, you get out of the way. We need to stop thinking we actually have control over these things. We don’t, and every time we try, we end up being the fool.
Let me remind all of us: there is a true academic study, and there are useless academics. What the world teaches is only a counterfeit of the true study of God and how to use the mind of Christ to learn and study things. There is nothing wrong with learning history, science, or math, but studying Christ and using what God has given us to learn more about Christ is everything.
I am writing a book on Proverbs 3:5, and I’m leaning towards doing a series to give you a preview of the book. We have got to learn to stop trying to do things our way and according to man’s “best practices” and start doing things “God’s way” once again, especially with evangelism and apologetics.
This forum is meant to foster discussion and allow for differing viewpoints to be explored with equal and respectful consideration. All comments are moderated and any foul language or threatening/abusive comments will not be approved. Users who engage in threatening or abusive comments which are physically harmful in nature will be reported to the authorities.
















