Sunday, June 28, 2026

Two Enemies That Destroy Faith: Loneliness and Depression

 One of Satan's oldest tactics has never changed. He knows he cannot steal your salvation, but he will do everything within his power to rob you of your joy, weaken your faith, and make you feel as though God has forgotten you. Two of his greatest weapons are loneliness and depression.

People are sitting in church every Sunday, surrounded by others, yet they feel completely alone. They smile on the outside while carrying a heavy burden on the inside. Some have lost a spouse. Others have watched children leave home. Some have lost their health, their purpose, or dear friends. As the years pass, the circle of life grows smaller, and loneliness quietly settles into the heart.

Then comes depression. It whispers lies that no one cares, that tomorrow will never be better than today, and that God has somehow abandoned His child. If those lies are believed long enough, faith begins to weaken.

The Bible reminds us that we are not the first to fight these battles.

David often poured out his heart before the Lord.

"Why art thou cast down, O my soul? and why art thou disquieted in me? hope thou in God: for I shall yet praise him for the help of his countenance."

Psalm 42:11 (KJV)

David did not deny his discouragement. Instead, he preached to his own soul and reminded himself where hope was found—in God.

Even Elijah, one of the greatest prophets who ever lived, became overwhelmed after his victory on Mount Carmel. He fled into the wilderness, sat beneath a juniper tree, and asked the Lord to let him die.

"It is enough; now, O LORD, take away my life."

1 Kings 19:4 (KJV)

Elijah believed he was the only faithful servant left. Yet God gently reminded him that there were seven thousand who had not bowed their knee to Baal. Elijah's loneliness had distorted his vision. His feelings were real, but they were not telling him the truth.

How many Christians today believe the same lie? They think they are fighting alone when God has faithful people they have never even met who are praying, serving, and standing for the truth.

That is one reason the writer of Hebrews gave this command:

"Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another."

Hebrews 10:25 (KJV)

Christian fellowship is not optional; it is one of God's medicines for the lonely heart. We need one another. Sometimes a handshake, a hug, a kind word, or someone saying, "I've been praying for you," can lift a burden that has become almost unbearable.

An Illustration

Many years ago, while camping in the mountains, I learned an important lesson about fire. Before going to bed, I stirred the campfire until it was burning brightly. One glowing coal rolled away from the others. At first, it looked just as hot as the rest. But within a few minutes, it became dark, cold, and lifeless.

The other coals remained together and continued to burn with great heat.

I picked up that lonely coal with a stick and pushed it back into the middle of the fire. Within moments, it began to glow again.

That is exactly what happens to many Christians.

When they separate themselves from God's people, they slowly lose their spiritual warmth. Prayer becomes difficult. The Bible gathers dust. Joy disappears. Hope begins to fade.

But when they return to fellowship with believers, hear the preaching of God's Word, pray with God's people, and worship together, the fire begins to burn again.

Satan wants to isolate you because isolated Christians are easier to discourage.

God's Answer

Jesus gave us a promise that has comforted believers for centuries.

"I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee."

Hebrews 13:5 (KJV)

Loneliness may tell you no one is with you, but Christ says He will never leave you.

Depression may tell you there is no hope, but Christ says:

"Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest."

Matthew 11:28 (KJV)

The answer is not found in withdrawing from God but in drawing closer to Him.

Open your Bible.

Bow your knees in prayer.

Find faithful Christian fellowship.

Speak with a trusted believer.

Sing the old hymns.

Count your blessings.

The devil wants you sitting beneath the juniper tree, believing all is lost. God wants you standing upon the Rock, looking unto Jesus, "the author and finisher of our faith."

Friend, if loneliness or depression has found its way into your life, don't fight the battle alone. Reach out to another believer. Let someone pray with you. The same Lord who restored David, strengthened Elijah, and encouraged the Apostle Paul is still walking beside His children today.

The fire has not gone out.

Move back toward the fellowship of God's people, and let the Lord warm your heart once again.

The Silence of an Empty House


When Laverna was in the hospital, I found myself sitting alone in the house. It was a strange feeling. The walls had not changed. The furniture was still in its place. Everything looked the same, yet something was missing. The house that had always been filled with conversation, laughter, and the simple sounds of another person moving from room to room suddenly seemed empty and quiet.

That silence began to speak to me.

As I sat there, my thoughts turned to those who live with that silence every day. I thought about the widow who returns home after losing the love of her life. I thought about the widower who still reaches across the bed, only to remember that no one is there. I thought about those whose children have grown and moved away, leaving behind bedrooms that once echoed with laughter but are now still. I thought about those who have never married and those who have become isolated because of illness, age, or disability.

For many people, loneliness is not something they experience for a few hours or a few days. It has become their daily companion.

An empty house can become one of the loneliest places on earth. Every chair reminds them of someone who once sat there. Every family photograph recalls happier days. Even preparing a meal for one person can remind them of what has been lost. The evenings seem longer, the nights darker, and the silence almost overwhelming.

As I reflected on this, I realized many people are sitting in our churches every Sunday carrying that burden. They smile. They shake hands. They ask how everyone is doing. Yet inside, they long for someone to notice that they are hurting. When the service is over, they return to an empty home with no one waiting for them.

The Lord never intended His people to live in isolation. The church is more than a building where we gather once a week. It is a family. It is a place where the lonely should find friendship, encouragement, and love.

The writer of Hebrews reminds us:

"Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another..." (Hebrews 10:25, KJV)

The early church understood this truth. They worshiped together, prayed together, ate together, and cared for one another. They knew that Christian fellowship was one of God's greatest gifts for strengthening weary hearts.

David wrote:

"God setteth the solitary in families..." (Psalm 68:6, KJV)

What a beautiful picture! God sees those who are alone, and one of the ways He ministers to them is through His family—the church.

Perhaps one of the greatest ministries any church can have is not another program but simply caring enough to notice those who are lonely. A phone call. A visit. A dinner invitation. Sitting beside someone during the service and remembering a birthday or anniversary. These simple acts of kindness may seem small, but to someone living alone, they can mean the world.

Loneliness has become one of the greatest hidden burdens in America. We are more connected through technology than ever before, yet many people have never felt more isolated. Social media can never replace a warm handshake, a shared meal, a caring conversation, or a brother or sister in Christ who says, "I've been thinking about you."

As I sat in that quiet house waiting for Laverna to return home, I realized how blessed I have been through these many years. The Lord has given me a faithful companion with whom to share life's joys and sorrows. That brief season of silence helped me understand, in a small way, what many people endure every day.

May God help us open our eyes. There may be someone sitting only a few pews away who is carrying the heavy burden of loneliness. A kind word, a visit, or a simple expression of Christian love may be the very thing God uses to remind them that they are not forgotten.

Let us be the hands and feet of Christ to those who sit in silent houses, waiting for someone to care.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

People Matter More Than the Lesson

I spent thirty-eight years of my life in education. People often asked me, "What do you teach?"

My answer usually surprised them.

"I teach students."

The subject was important, but the student was far more important than the subject. If the student never learned, it did not matter how much I knew.

One lesson I learned very early in my teaching career was that students do not all learn the same way. Some learn by listening, others by seeing, and still others by doing. If I stood in front of the classroom and lectured every day, I would reach only a small number of students. The rest would leave frustrated, believing they simply could not learn.

The problem was not always with the student. Often it was with the teacher.

I discovered that most of my students were visual learners. They needed illustrations, demonstrations, stories, diagrams, and hands-on experiences before the lesson truly became their own. I learned that if my students were going to succeed, I had to adapt to their learning styles. They were not going to adapt to mine.

That meant I needed to understand more than the subject I was teaching. I needed to understand the student. What interested them? What were they struggling with? What experiences shaped their lives? What motivated them to keep trying?

Many of those young people went on to become successful in their careers and in life, not because I had all the answers, but because someone took the time to understand how they learned.

After more than fifty years in the ministry, I discovered that the church is no different than the classroom.

People come into the sanctuary carrying burdens the preacher may never see. One family is grieving the loss of a loved one. Another is struggling to pay the bills. A young couple is trying to save their marriage. An elderly widow wonders if anyone even notices she is there. A teenager is fighting temptations no one else knows about.

Yet many preachers walk into the pulpit determined to impress people with deep theological knowledge while failing to meet the needs sitting before them.

There is certainly a place for sound doctrine. The church must never abandon biblical truth. But doctrine should never become so complicated that the average believer leaves wondering, "What was the preacher talking about?"

The Apostle Paul reminded the church:

"Let all things be done unto edifying."
(1 Corinthians 14:26, KJV)

The purpose of preaching is not to impress people with knowledge. It is to build them up in the faith.

Paul also instructed Timothy:

"Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with all longsuffering and doctrine."
(2 Timothy 4:2, KJV)

Notice that Paul combines doctrine with exhortation and patience. Truth must be taught in a way that people can understand and apply to everyday life.

Jesus was the greatest Teacher who ever lived.

He certainly understood the deepest truths of heaven, yet He rarely taught through complicated theological discussions. Instead, He spoke about farmers sowing seed, shepherds caring for sheep, fishermen casting nets, women searching for lost coins, fathers welcoming prodigal sons, and builders laying foundations.

Why?

Because Jesus met people where they were before leading them where they needed to go.

He took heavenly truth and wrapped it in earthly illustrations.

No wonder "the common people heard him gladly."

"And the common people heard him gladly."
(Mark 12:37, KJV)

Every Believer Is Different

One mistake many ministers make is assuming everyone in the church has the same gifts, the same interests, and the same spiritual needs.

God never designed His church that way.

Paul writes:

"Now there are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit."
(1 Corinthians 12:4, KJV)

Later he explains:

"And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers;"
(Ephesians 4:11, KJV)

In another passage we read:

"Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us..."
(Romans 12:6, KJV)

Some believers are teachers.

Some are evangelists.

Some are encouragers.

Some are servants.

Some have the gift of mercy.

Some lead.

Some quietly work behind the scenes.

Each gift strengthens the body of Christ.

The wise pastor recognizes those differences and learns to minister to each person according to their needs rather than preaching only what he enjoys preaching.

An Illustration

Years ago I planted a small garden.

I quickly learned that every plant required something different.

The tomatoes needed support from a stake.

The beans climbed a trellis.

The lettuce preferred cooler weather.

The peppers needed more warmth.

The carrots grew beneath the surface where no one could see them.

If I treated every plant exactly the same, some would flourish while others would wither.

The problem would not be with the seed.

It would be with the gardener.

The church is much like that garden.

God has planted different people with different gifts, different personalities, different levels of spiritual maturity, and different struggles.

The faithful shepherd learns how to feed each one according to their need.

A Challenge to Every Minister

Our calling is not merely to preach sermons.

Our calling is to shepherd people.

A sermon may satisfy the preacher, but only a shepherd feeds the sheep.

The question we should ask after every message is not, "Did they admire my knowledge?"

It should be, "Were God's people strengthened? Did the discouraged leave with hope? Did the lost understand the Gospel? Did believers grow closer to Christ?"

The greatest compliment a preacher can receive is not that he is brilliant.

It is that people understood God's Word, were encouraged in their faith, and left wanting to walk more closely with Jesus.

As I often told my students, "I teach students."

After all these years in the ministry, I can say the same thing from the pulpit.

"I preach to people."

When we love people enough to meet them where they are, God can lead them to where He wants them to be.

The Value of Every Child

 "Suffer little children, and forbid them not, to come unto me: for of such is the kingdom of heaven." — Matthew 19:14 (KJV)

There are times when the heart of a preacher becomes so burdened that words seem too small to express the grief within. We are living in a generation that speaks loudly about justice, freedom, and human rights, yet far too often remains silent when innocent children become the victims of war.

As Christians, our first loyalty is not to a political party, a nation, or a military alliance. Our first loyalty is to Jesus Christ and His Word. If we claim to be His disciples, then His teachings—not the opinions of politicians or the demands of governments—must guide our conscience.

Jesus never taught His followers to celebrate the death of children. He never instructed His disciples to rejoice when innocent lives were destroyed. Instead, He gathered children into His arms and blessed them. He declared that the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.

That truth ought to shape the heart of every believer.

One of the great moral battles in America has been the fight against abortion. Millions of Christians have stood faithfully for decades proclaiming that every unborn child is created in the image of God and deserves the right to live. I believe that conviction is rooted in the Scriptures.

But our commitment to the sanctity of life cannot end at the delivery room.

If we rightly mourn the death of an unborn child, we must also mourn the death of a child caught beneath falling bombs. If we grieve for babies in the womb, we must also grieve for children in hospitals, schools, refugee camps, and homes destroyed by war.

The value of a child's life does not change because of nationality.

A Jewish child is precious to God.

A Palestinian child is precious to God.

An Iranian child is precious to God.

A Lebanese child is precious to God.

Every child bears the image of the Creator.

When Christians oppose abortion because children are innocent, yet become indifferent when innocent children die in war, we should pause and examine whether we are applying the same moral standard consistently. The command, "Thou shalt not kill" (Exodus 20:13, KJV), and the biblical call to protect innocent life should shape our hearts wherever innocent lives are at risk. Christians have long differed over how those principles apply in questions of war, but no follower of Christ should become hardened to the suffering of children.

Jesus gave us another command that is often forgotten in times of conflict:

"Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God." — Matthew 5:9 (KJV)

Notice He did not say, "Blessed are those who cheer for war."

He did not say, "Blessed are those who hate their enemies."

He said, "Blessed are the peacemakers."

Later in that same sermon He declared:

"But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you." — Matthew 5:44 (KJV)

Those words are difficult. They challenge every generation of Christians. They call us to see every human being through the eyes of Christ rather than through the lens of politics, ethnicity, or national allegiance.

That does not mean governments have no responsibility to defend their citizens. Scripture recognizes the role of civil authorities. But even in war, Christians should never lose sight of the dignity of every person made in God's image or cease to ask whether every reasonable effort has been made to protect innocent life.

The church must never allow political loyalty to become greater than loyalty to Christ.

When Christians defend every action of earthly governments without examining those actions in light of Scripture, we risk replacing the Gospel with political allegiance.

The cross must always stand higher than the flag.

Our greatest mission has never been to win wars. It has always been to win souls.

One day every president, every prime minister, every general, every king, and every citizen will stand before the Judge of all the earth. On that day political arguments will disappear, and only truth and righteousness will remain.

Until that day, may the Church be known not for its love of war, but for its love of Christ.

May we defend the unborn.

May we defend the born.

May we pray for peace.

May we weep for every innocent child.

And may we never forget that the same Savior who died for us also died for the children of every nation.

"Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this... To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction..." — James 1:27 (KJV)

May God give His people hearts that reflect the compassion of Jesus Christ.

Put Yourself in Their Place

 "Rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that weep." — Romans 12:15 (KJV)

There are some thoughts that refuse to leave a preacher's heart. They follow you through the day and awaken you in the middle of the night. This is one of them.

The Lord has richly blessed my life. I have fifteen grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. They are among the greatest blessings God has ever entrusted to me. Like every grandfather, I rejoice when they laugh, pray when they are sick, and thank God for every day He gives them.

If one of my grandchildren became seriously ill or suffered a terrible accident, my heart would be burdened beyond words. Every parent and grandparent understands that feeling.

But I have asked myself an even harder question.

What if one of them were killed in an act of violence?

What if they were not soldiers but innocent children whose only crime was being born where a war was being fought?

I know what my first response would be. My heart would cry out to God. I would ask why such evil had been allowed, and I would pray that God, the righteous Judge of all the earth, would bring justice upon those responsible. The pain would be almost beyond bearing.

Now let us place ourselves in the shoes of parents and grandparents who live where war has become a daily reality.

Imagine hearing explosions every night.

Imagine wondering if your child will return home from school.

Imagine carrying your son or daughter to a hospital only to discover there is no medicine, no electricity, and no doctor available.

Imagine standing beside a small grave that should never have been dug.

Can we honestly say we would feel differently than they do?

Many of those parents have watched not one child die, but several. Many have lost entire families. Their grief is beyond anything most of us have ever experienced.

If a Christian who knows the grace and mercy of Christ struggles with feelings of sorrow, anger, and a longing for justice after the violent death of a child, what should we expect from those who do not yet know Christ?

Would they not also cry out for justice?

Would they not struggle with anger?

Would they not find it difficult to love those they believe have taken everything from them?

This does not justify hatred or revenge, but it helps us understand the depth of human suffering. It reminds us that behind every casualty report is a father, a mother, a grandfather, a grandmother, brothers, sisters, and friends whose lives have been forever changed.

The Scriptures call us to something different.

"Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ." — Galatians 6:2 (KJV)

Bearing another person's burden begins by imagining ourselves in their place.

Too often we view war through statistics, headlines, political speeches, and military maps. God sees individual souls.

He sees every frightened child.

He hears every mother's cry.

He knows every grandfather whose heart has been broken.

As followers of Jesus Christ, we should never become so attached to political causes or national loyalties that we lose the compassion Christ commands us to have.

The Lord taught us:

"And as ye would that men should do to you, do ye also to them likewise." — Luke 6:31 (KJV)

That simple command changes the way we look at the world.

If our own children were living beneath falling bombs, would we still speak so casually about war?

If our own grandchildren were among the innocent victims, would we not plead for mercy, for peace, and for every possible effort to protect them?

It is easy to support a war when the suffering belongs to someone else's family.

It is much harder when we imagine our own family in the same situation.

As Christians, we are called to look beyond national borders and political divisions. Every child is created in the image of God. Every grieving parent matters to Him. Every brokenhearted grandparent is known by Him.

May the Lord give us hearts that are slow to speak of war, quick to pray for peace, and willing to see every suffering family through the eyes of Christ.

For when we learn to put ourselves in their place, we begin to understand why Jesus was called the Prince of Peace.

Friday, June 26, 2026

Have We Exchanged the Gospel for a Political Kingdom?

"For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect."Matthew 24:24 (KJV)

As I look across America today, I find myself deeply troubled. I am amazed by the number of people who profess to follow Jesus Christ while embracing an ideology that, in my understanding of Scripture, stands opposed to the very Gospel Christ preached.

Jesus came preaching the Kingdom of God, not the supremacy of any earthly nation.

He came to save sinners—not to build a political empire.

Yet much of what passes for Christian teaching today seems to place greater emphasis on defending a modern nation-state than proclaiming salvation through Jesus Christ.

That ought to concern every believer.

I have listened to ministers who speak more passionately about defending Israel than they do about preaching repentance. They spend more time discussing military campaigns, foreign policy, and geopolitical alliances than they do calling men and women to the Cross.

When that happens, something has gone terribly wrong.

Jesus never told His disciples to preach support for a nation.

He commanded them:

"Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature."Mark 16:15 (KJV)

The Gospel has never changed.

It is still about repentance.

It is still about the Cross.

It is still about the resurrection.

It is still about eternal life through Jesus Christ alone.

Sadly, there are influential ministers today who have made unwavering political support for Israel a defining mark of faithful Christianity. In my view, this elevates a particular political theology to a place Scripture reserves for the Gospel itself.

The New Testament repeatedly teaches that Jesus Christ is the fulfillment of God's redemptive plan.

"For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ."1 Corinthians 3:11 (KJV)

The foundation is not a government.

It is not a capital city.

It is not a political movement.

The foundation is Jesus Christ.

As Christians, we should certainly love Jewish people.

We should love Palestinian people.

We should love Muslims.

We should love our enemies.

We should pray for all people to come to repentance.

That is exactly what Jesus commanded.

"But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you..."Matthew 5:44 (KJV)

Our loyalty belongs first to Christ.

Whenever any political ideology—whether on the right or the left, American or foreign—begins to demand the allegiance that belongs to Jesus alone, Christians must exercise discernment.

The Apostle John gave a simple but profound warning:

"Beloved, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether they are of God..."1 John 4:1 (KJV)

Every doctrine must be tested by Scripture.

Every preacher must be measured by Scripture.

Every movement must be measured by Scripture.

No preacher is above the Word of God.

No political cause is above the Gospel.

No nation is above Jesus Christ.

The Church's mission has never been to build earthly kingdoms.

Our mission is to point men and women to the Savior.

If we become more passionate about defending governments than proclaiming Christ crucified, we have lost our first love.

The Apostle Paul warned the church:

"Though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you... let him be accursed."Galatians 1:8 (KJV)

That warning still stands today.

My prayer is not that Christians would hate anyone.

Far from it.

I pray that we would return to the simple Gospel of Jesus Christ, love all people enough to tell them the truth, and remember that our citizenship is in heaven.

The kingdoms of this world will one day pass away.

The Kingdom of Christ will never end.

May we never allow our devotion to any earthly cause to overshadow our devotion to the King of kings and Lord of lords.

There Is No Christianity in Zionism

There was a time when I used the phrase "Zionist Christians." I no longer use that term, because I believe it joins together two beliefs that are fundamentally different.

The Christian faith is centered upon one truth:

"Whosoever denieth the Son, the same hath not the Father." (1 John 2:23, KJV)

The Apostle John leaves no room for compromise.

"Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ? He is antichrist, that denieth the Father and the Son." (1 John 2:22, KJV)

Christianity stands upon the confession that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, the promised Messiah, crucified for our sins and raised again for our justification.

Political movements and national identities cannot replace that foundation.

When any religious or political system rejects Jesus Christ as the Son of God and the promised Messiah, it stands outside the Christian faith. Scripture describes the denial of Christ as the spirit of antichrist, regardless of who holds that belief.

The Church was never called to place its faith in an earthly nation. Our hope is not found in Jerusalem, Washington, Rome, or any other capital. Our hope is found in the Lord Jesus Christ.

"For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ." (1 Corinthians 3:11, KJV)

My loyalty is not to a political ideology.

My loyalty is not to a government.

My loyalty is to the King of kings.

The Gospel does not teach us to defend governments unconditionally. It teaches us to preach repentance, justice, mercy, and salvation through Christ alone.

"Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved." (Acts 4:12, KJV)

If we call ourselves Christians, then our beliefs, our politics, and our loyalties must all bow before the authority of Jesus Christ and His Word. Any ideology that asks us to excuse injustice, ignore the teachings of Christ, or place allegiance to a nation above allegiance to the Savior has departed from the pattern laid down in the New Testament.

The Church has only one message to every nation and every people—Jew and Gentile alike:

Repent, believe the Gospel, and follow Jesus Christ. There is no other way of salvation, no other foundation, and no other King worthy of our complete allegiance.