Showing posts with label Doctrine 9. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doctrine 9. Show all posts

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Matthew 7:21-23, 25:31ff, Romans 8, John 3: Who is Jesus?

Presented to Alberni Valley Ministerial Community Men’s Breakfast, 09 May 2026 and TSA AV Ministries, 10 May 2026 by Major Michael Ramsay 

  

As almost everyone is aware now, we will be moving. The Salvation Army has posted us the Burnaby, BC. Our last Sunday here will be June 28th.  I will miss everyone in this community. When I was able to speak at the recent Lenten services, I was chatted about some things that were near and dear to my heart – real social justice issues – so today I thought that I would just speak about who is Jesus? Can I have people just call out some of the titles and roles that we ascribe to Jesus? Today I want to chat about 3 or 4 of these a bit: Lord, Saviour, Son of God, and King (Messiah/Christ). 

 

Jesus is our Lord 


We call Jesus Lord. What does ‘lord’ mean? In today’s language, how do we use the word? We know the House of Lords? That is the senate in the UK. When the UK was a Superpower, the House of Lords had hereditary lords making decisions. Lords typically would be people who owned land. In our language today we still have landlords. When we call Jesus ‘lord’, we are drawing on this image; so, what is a landlord? A landlord owns the building you are in; you are expected to pay him rent and follow the rental agreement or he can evict you. 

 

Jesus is our landlord. He owns the earth and everything in it and He has given us some very specific responsibilities as part of our rental agreements –or, as we call them in the Bible, covenants- that we are bound by. Jesus is our Lord. We need to live up to our rental agreement. 

 

Jesus says, Matthew 7:21-23, “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, [land]Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. 22 Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons and in your name perform many miracles?’ 23 Then I will tell them plainly, ‘I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!’ 

 

I find it interesting that according to Matthew, Jesus tells us that prophesying in Jesus’ Name, driving out demons in His Name, and performing Miracles in His Name is NOT proof of our salvation. People are doing these things today who may not have Jesus as their landlord. Matthew tells us what Jesus says is evidence of salvation later in book. Jesus is our Lord. 

 

Jesus is the Son of God and Jesus is God 


Jesus is God’s son and as part of that is God Himself. I like the way the Bible speaks of us as co-heirs with Christ. Just as Julius Caesar adopted Augustus Caesar and he inherited his kingdom; so, you and I have been adopted as co-heirs with Christ and will inherit the Kingdom of God (Romans 8:17). 

 

Jesus however is the only sired, the only begotten Son of God (John 3:16); therefore he is the only ‘person’ who is actually God. He was born God – and, of course, He was God before He was even born (John 1:1).  


Doctrines 2 and 3 of The Salvation Army affirm that: 


2. ... there are three persons in the Godhead-the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, undivided in essence and co-equal in power and glory. 


3. .. in the person of Jesus Christ the Divine and human natures are united, so that He is truly and properly God and truly and properly man.  


Jesus is our Saviour 


What does/did/will Jesus save us from? Hell? Eternal separation from God? The eternal consequences of our sins? Anything else? Is being saved about more than simply going to heaven? The New Testament / Covenant / Residential Tenancy Act says, “yes, it is.” Jesus has not merely saved us from the consequences of sin; He has also saved us from the necessity of sin. Just like an alcoholic can be free from the reality of drinking even as the temptation may always be there; so too regarding Christians and sin. In the NT letters believers aren’t referred to as Christians. We are referred to as ‘saints’; The word for ‘saints’ literally means to be holy, to be like God. In a letter from Peter (1 Peter 1:16), we are reminded that God tells us to “be holy as I [God] am holy” (Leviticus 19:2). Salvation means that we can be holy. Jesus is our Saviour. He died to save us from sin and that salvation/holiness we can experience this very day, and it will continue forever even into the new heaven and the new earth.  


The Salvation Army, of which I am an Officer, affirms in its 7th through 10th doctrines, that... 


7. repentance toward God, faith in our Lord Jesus Christ and regeneration by the Holy Spirit are necessary to salvation. 


8. we are justified by grace through faith in our Lord Jesus Christ and that he that believeth hath the witness in himself. 


9. continuance in a state of salvation depends upon continued obedient faith in Christ. 


10. it is the privilege of all believers to be wholly sanctified, and that their whole spirit and soul and body may be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. (1 Thessalonians 5:23,24)

 

Jesus is King / Christ / Messiah 

 

Matthew, whom we quoted about Jesus as Lord, tells us in Chapter 7 what does not prove that we are Christ’s followers: prophecy, miracles, casting out demons in His Name; in Chapter 25, referring to Jesus as King, he tells us what does prove that we are saved: 

 

25:34ff: “Then the King will say to those on his right, ‘Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. 35 For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, 36 I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.’ 


37 “Then the righteous will answer him, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink? 38 When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? 39 When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?’ 


  40 “The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’ 

 

The people who do this are rewarded but they are also saved; for those who call Jesus King but who do not do this, God says. Verse 41, “‘Depart from me, you who are cursed, into the eternal fire prepared for the devil and his angels.” 

 

Jesus is our king; what is a king? Similar to the Landlord that we spoke about, the King (or the Crown) may own everything. They are responsible. In Canada, when you are charged in court, it is “the Crown versus so-and-so". In Canada, if a service is public (for the benefit of the people), rather than (private) to make money, it may be a ‘crown corporation.’ Kings of old, like some countries’ Presidents now, could even pardon people who were convicted of crimes. How much is that like Jesus? We are all guilty of sin, but Jesus offers us the pardon of salvation. The King historically is the boss; the person in charge; the person who has authority over us and power even over our very lives. The Monarch of Canada used to have a lot of power. Even before we were a country, the King permitted the HBC to manage all the lands flowing out of the Hudson Bay. That is much of the land that grew into our country. The ancestors of the King of Canada used to be absolute monarchs, responsible for our very lives. Now King Charles III is mostly just a figure head... my question for us is: Is Jesus still our absolute monarch or has he just become a figurehead in our lives? I am going to finish with a story about a king... 


James V, the King of Scotland used to go around the country disguised as a common person. That is because he wanted to meet the everyday people of the country not just the rich and powerful. He wanted to see how the normal people lived. 

 

One day he was dressed in very old clothes and was going by a place known as Cramond Brig, when he is attacked by robbers who don’t know who he is. There is a fierce struggle and he is nearly overcome when, at just the right moment, a poor farm worker - Jock Howieson - hears the commotion and comes to the disguised king’s aid. 

 

Now Jock, the poor labourer, who works on this portion of the King’s land, Cramond Brig, unawares takes the undercover king home and gives him a dinner of broth and Jock - as the king is recouping – naturally asks the man who he is. 

 

The King responds ‘I’m a good man of Edinburgh.’ 

 

‘And where do you live in that city and where do you work?’ 

 

‘Well,’ says James, ‘I live at the palace and I work there too.’ 

 

‘The palace, is it? I’d like to see the palace; if I could see the King, I’d tell him a thing or two…’ 

 

‘About what?’ asks the man. 

 

‘I’d tell him that I should own this land that I am on. I work it every day and he never comes here & gets his hands dirty working this land.’ 

 

 ‘You’re right enough’, says the man. ‘You come tomorrow to the palace at Holy Rood and I’ll show you around. Come at two.’ 

 

So the next day at two o’clock, Jock Howieson, is washed, dressed and at the palace to meet his new friend at the back door. The good man, whom Jock had saved the day before, shows him around the kitchen, the dining room, the bedrooms – the whole palace. Then, at last, the two of them come to the great rooms of the State. 

 

‘Do you want to see the King?’ the man asks Jock. 

 

‘Oh yes indeed’, says Jock, ‘I do. I do want to see the King.’ 


So they enter the great hall and as they come in, men bow and ladies curtsey. It is really quite a thing to see.  So Jock whispers to his friend, ‘How will I know who the king is?’ 

 

‘He’s the only one who keeps his hat on’ 

 

Jock says, ‘But… there’s only us two with our hats…’ and Jock immediately takes off his hat as he realises that James is indeed the King of Scotland. 

 

And so it is with us today. Jesus is King (as He is God, Lord and Saviour). He is walking around with each of us showing us His domain here on earth and just waiting for us to take off our hats as we realise that indeed Jesus is King. If there are any of us here today who have not taken off our hats and laid them before the Lord, I invite us to do just that – acknowledge the truth that Jesus Christ is King. And as we realise that may always serve Him as the absolute monarch in our life and never just a figure head. 

 

Let us pray. 


 


 

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Matthew 25:1-13, Psalm 146: Lanterns

Presented to the Alberni Valley Ministerial Lenten Service, 01 March 2026, at Arrowsmith Baptist Church by Major Michael Ramsay


The topics I chose from our Lenten list for today are “God has rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness”; “He has Freed Us from the Power of Sin”; the Kingdom of God is at hand. Do we believe that? Do we live that?

 

In theology we use the term ‘prolepsis’ to refer to the time when the Kingdom of God begins, which is now, the time between the resurrection of Christ and His return at the eschaton. This is the time in which we are living and as Christians it is our responsibility to be willing instruments of God to display what it means that He has rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; He has Freed Us from the Power of Sin, that the Kingdom of God is at hand. But do we even actually believe that He has already done this? And if He has why does it not seem that the Sin and Darkness still reign?

 

We know the parable of the bridesmaids (holy ones) in the Bible who needed to keep their lanterns lit – because lit lanterns were to be there when the Bridegroom Jesus returns? That is us now. In the darkness of our world, do we have our lanterns lit? He has already rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; He has already freed us from the Power of Sin, are we living like it – or are we sitting in the darkness, with our lanterns out, like those who aren’t part of His Kingdom

 

The Bible repeatedly tells us what a holy people, sanctified nations, the Church looks like, what we as Christians will be working towards in our country, our world, our city and our congregations, if indeed we are Christians. Psalm 146, among many other passages, declares what God’s Kingdom is like and what His servants, if they are serving Him, will work towards.

 

5 Blessed are those whose help is the God of Jacob,

whose hope is in the Lord their God.

6 He is the Maker of heaven and earth,

the sea, and everything in them—

he remains faithful forever.

7 He upholds the cause of the oppressed

and gives food to the hungry.

The Lord sets prisoners free,

8     the Lord gives sight to the blind,

the Lord lifts up those who are bowed down,

the Lord loves the righteous.

9 The Lord watches over the foreigner

and sustains the fatherless and the widow,

but he frustrates the ways of the wicked.

10 The Lord reigns forever,

your God, O Zion, for all generations.

Praise the Lord.

 

If we are His people, He will do this through us. If we are citizens of His Kingdom, then that my friend is what we will do. if indeed He has rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; freed us from the Power of Sin, and if the Kingdom of God is at hand, like Jesus claims. Jesus, Luke, Isaiah, the Bible speaks about a salvation society as one where the sick are healed, the captives are free, the hungry are fed, the lonely are visited, the perpetrator is forgiven, relationships are healed. Isaiah 2:4 speaks of Salvation as where:

 

He (The Lord) will judge between the nations

and will settle disputes for many peoples.

They will beat their swords into plowshares

and their spears into pruning hooks.

Nation will not take up sword against nation,

nor will they train for war anymore.

 

In our world, in our country, in our province, in our city there is still conflict, abuse, addiction, poverty, homelessness, murder, mental illness, hate, violence, unforgiveness... darkness…and we still pick up our swords. But He has rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; He has freed us from the Power of Sin, the Kingdom of God is at hand now! Jesus said (recorded in Luke 4, citing Isaiah 61:4) that the time is now! What if we didn’t have to wait until we die, or until Christ returns, to experience a world without all of this? What if Christ was right and he wasn’t lying to us? What if the Kingdom of God is actually at hand? What if the Church (and our churches) is actually the body of Christ and what if we actually do this? - feed the hungry, free the prisoners, etc.?

 

It has been said that poverty isn’t a matter of scarcity: God has provided more than enough for the whole world; poverty is a matter of distribution. Countries, organizations, and people with resources simply do not share. I understand that the payroll of the NY Yankees alone could feed and clothe the world – how many sports teams are there in Canada and the US alone? Baseball? Hockey? Football? I often watch the games with my daughter … Is that what we choose instead of feeding a starving child?

 

Swords and Plowshares: America is seemingly always at war with someone and Canda is whenever they tell us to be. They just invaded Venezuela, are threatening Greenland and Cuba and are positioned to attack Iran again. I read an article about a bombing of Iran a few months ago. It was a very small American attack – nothing like Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya. etc. They only used four planes: each plane cost one billion dollars, the missiles they launched each cost 1 million dollars. How many American children could they feed, shelter and educate for that? Not even considering the money they (we) are spending killing people in Palestine and the Ukraine War.

 

They (we) would rather spend money killing other people’s children than providing the needed care and education to save their (our) own children. It seems that they (we) would rather their (our) children die in poverty than pass up the opportunity to kill their (our) enemies’ children. Jesus says we will forgive our enemies; Isaiah says God’s nations will beat swords into ploughshares. Jesus has rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; He has freed us from the power of Sin, the Kingdom of God is at hand! So why are we instead beating ploughshares into swords. I pick on the US because I read the article about them and they are the world’s only remaining superpower: Israel, Britain, France, China, Russia, India, Canada, etc., etc. etc.… it all applies. Our countries: if we are sheep nations rather than goat nations, if we are saved, we will beat our swords into ploughshares and we will put more effort into saving people than we do in killing them. Afterall, He has rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; He has freed us from the Power of Sin, the Kingdom of God is at hand – but are we part of the Kingdom of God or do we prefer this Dominion of darkness? Do we serve Him or do we still serve darkness and sin?

 

Psalm 146:7 says, “The Lord sets the prisoners free”; you can also see this sentiment in Zechariah 9:11, Psalm 68:6, Psalm 102:20, Isaiah 42:7 and elsewhere. Jesus, as recorded in Luke, quotes Isaiah 42 letting people know that the time to set the prisoners free, if we believe that Jesus is Lord and His Kingdom is at hand, is now. I think this is important. I think we do need to do what the Bible tells us to do. I was reading one African Liberation Theologian’s essay (I believe it was Bongajalo Goba) in Hammering Swords into Plowshares, a book dedicated to the Archbishop Desmond Tutu. He said that one main difference between capitalist western churches and the Universal Christian Church is that western churches either spiritualize everything (for example: God doesn’t’ really want us to let people out of jail, that is just a metaphor for something else…maybe being free from our personal bad habits) or they try to say that the things that God tells us to do as a society are only in the future and God will do it later; it is not our responsibility (we shouldn’t try to give sight to the blind now; we shouldn’t end hunger or homelessness now – even though we can!- God will do that when Jesus returns). But the real Church including the churches in the third world, realizes that when God tells us to make it so that no one is hungry; no one is lonely; no one is homeless; no one is thirsty, and no one is in prison; He is telling us to do it now! The is no excuse: He has rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; He has Freed Us from the Power of Sin, the Kingdom of God is at hand – so we should act like it. We are not supposed to go on propping up systems that are opposed to the expressed will of God and just say “oh well, when we all get to heaven we will all be okay” -both me who has so much and my neighbour who doesn’t. When we all get to heaven what a day of rejoicing that will be.

 

I have been really convicted and cut to the quick with the sentiment I shared at the Summer Rain festival in the Summer: Jesus speaks about a salvation society as one where the sick are healed, the captives are freed, the hungry are fed, the lonely are visited, the perpetrator is forgiven, relationships are healed. In our world, in our country, in our province, in our city there is still conflict, abuse, addiction, poverty, homelessness, murder, mental illness, hate, violence, unforgiveness… Really, what if we didn’t have to wait until we die to experience a world without all of this? What if Christ was right and he wasn’t lying to us? What if the Kingdom of God is actually at hand? What if the Church (and our churches) is actually the body of Christ and what if we actually do as he has commanded us? 

 

In 2025, I read the books Wrongfully Convicted by Canadian lawyer and Founder of Innocence Canada, Kent Roach and Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption by Bryan Stevenson, an American lawyer who has spent his career working with death row inmates. The horrors that people suffer behind bars in the USA are as bad as you imagine and even worse. Think of the TV shows you have seen and then place yourself or your loved ones in the place of the prisoners being abused by prisoners or guards, or judges, or whomever. When I studied Restorative Justice from Simon Fraser University more than a decade ago, we read stories of inmates who were actually lost in American prisons – it came time to release them and they had no idea where they were.

 

I have a story relating to that – when I was just a new Salvation Army Officer, I was appointed to the small town of Nipawin, Saskatchewan. One Sunday a congregation member asked me if I could go see another congregation member, Zerah. “Sure” I said. “He is in cells” they said. Apparently, shortly before we had arrived to town Zerah had gone on an arson spree, lighting the town on fire. I spent the next weeks and months meeting Zerah whenever he was in town for the circuit court. In between court dates they would ship him off to prisons in Prince Albert or Regina – his court cases were in Nipawin, Carrot River, or Tisdale. I would meet him in whatever community courthouse the circuit court was meeting on that day of the week.

 

One time I was in the court room in Carrot River and they called Zerah’s name to stand before the judge. No answer. They called it again. No answer. The judge said, “We will need to issue a warrant for his arrest for not showing up for court.” At this point I popped up from my seat and awkwardly raised my hand. I was in uniform; he asked me, “do you know where Zerah is?” “Yes. He is in prison in PA” I said. Everyone in the courtroom laughed. I didn’t. The judge didn’t. “Then we better not issue a warrant for his arrest” the judge said as he instructed the bailiff to try to find Zerah and figure out how they lost him in the system. Eventually they did find Zerah in prison; but can you imagine if I wasn’t there? This warrant issued from the bench would be on his record. They lost Zerah in prison.

 

Did you know that quite a few people in U.S. jails, federal and state prisons have never even been convicted of a crime? What percentage of people in US jails do you think have never been convicted of a crime? These stats are before the current ICE storm btw. 80%! 80% of people suffering all that they are suffering in prison have never been convicted of an offence and some of them never will be and some of them will have their convictions overturned on appeal. I didn’t find the stats for Canada but, from experience, I wouldn’t be surprised if they are similar.

 

A member of our church in Toronto when he immigrated to Canada from Dubai about 15 years ago, they held him and his sister in jail until they processed them – I am not sure how many months they were in jail. He was separated from his sister (she was put in a different jail). I wound up going to the consulate with him to figure out a whole bunch of things – this is Canada.

 

I spoke to my friends in Stony Mountain Penitentiary when I was there for two years. They told me that the prison organized the wings by gangs: the Indian Posse had one wing, the Hells Angels another. They set the rules. They told me that you never make eye contact with anyone. It was hard not to be part of a gang. We put people who have never been convicted of a crime through this and more in Canada – we almost make them join a gang and/or get abused in prison. And then they can lose you in this system, like they did Zerah. Can you imagine if it was the day of your release and no one knew where you were to release you?

 

In 2023, in Canada, 61 people died in custody.  According to StatsCan, from 2017-2020 there were 169 deaths in our prisons: there were 20 suicides, 11 confirmed homicides, 19 drug overdoses and many other natural and suspicious deaths. In 2019 alone in the USA 143 were murdered while in the care of the State.

 

But God has rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; He has Freed Us from the Power of Sin, the Kingdom of God is at hand. We, the Church, are called to free the prisoners; we, the Church, are supposed to be good stewards of the money God entrusts us with as well. The estimated total court spending in Canada for 2014 was $1,614,017,311. That is not even including the incarceration and other costs! We could provide everyone the mental health and addiction support they need in this country for that amount of money. The average hotel cost across this country is $211.00 per night. The daily average cost of keeping someone in prison here is $326.00 per night which works out to $9780.00 per month. We could afford to put everyone in a hotel and give them the mental health and addiction help they need for less than putting them in prison – and there are lots of safer cheaper ways to contain someone. The average rental cost in Canada is $2200 / month which works out to $74 a day (as opposed to the $326 /day that it costs to put someone in a cage!); the average mortgage in Canada (including Vancouver, etc.) is just $2100 a month which works out to just $70 a day. We can feed and house people for a lot cheaper than that – with all the supports to keep themselves and others safe too! So why do we lock people in prisons? It doesn’t help them. It doesn’t help us! – oh and btw I read that over 70% of those in Canadian prisons are diagnosed with mental health conditions.

 

Instead of locking someone up to be tortured in the cages we call prisons, we could send them somewhere safe and secure for the mental health and addiction support they need – for a lot cheaper! This would help them and reduce or eliminate recidivism, keeping society safe – we just choose not to! Derek, one of our regular friends at the Army and the Bread of Life, every time he gets out of jail he is healthy-ish, well fed and not visibly fighting his demons for a week or so – but when they toss him out of prison they toss him out on the street with no support; so his own mental health demons torment him so much until he hurts himself and others in unimaginable ways and then winds up back behind bars where he suffers everything that one suffers there. That doesn’t make society safe. That doesn’t make Derick safe.

 

That doesn’t need to be the case. My friend Zerah was eventually sentenced to mental health care and weekly injections for his schizophrenia instead of jail and he was able to contribute to society. Why don’t we help everyone who needs help like that? Why do we torture people like we do Derrick instead? Why? Just because Zerah ‘lucked out’ and had a compassionate judge? Because he had a TSA Officer with him the whole time? We are called to set the captives free. There is no reason for anyone to be tortured in a cage, let alone the 80% of the people we are doing this to who have never been convicted of a crime, 70% of whom have mental health issues. How can we punish people with mental health and addiction issues for acting in manners consistent with their mental health and addiction issues?

 

Of the over 35 million people in Canada today, 35 485 of us are locked in cages, prisons. There are homeless people right here on the streets of our town today. In BC addiction is more in your face than anywhere else in Canada. I did not see as many people on the streets in Regent Park, Toronto, Canada’s first ghetto, as I did in front of the OPS here when I first arrived.

 

Matthew 25:31ff says that the sheep nations, the ones that are saved are ones who feed the hungry, water the thirsty, visit the lonely, sick and imprisoned, house the unhoused stranger…. God has rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; He has Freed Us from the Power of Sin, the Kingdom of God is at hand; so are we sharing His light? Are we a saved nation or do we have unhoused, hungry, lonely people in prison and on the streets? Do we care? Are we the church doing our part? Are we members of the Kingdom of God fighting to overthrow the powers, principalities and systems of this world? Or are we the bridesmaids whose lamps have gone out long ago?

 

Who here professes Christ as our saviour? When we look at Matthew 25:31ff – even the goat nations that don’t go to spend eternity with our Lord do that! Matthew 7 says that not everyone who calls Jesus Lord is saved. Salvation is more than that. I read a poem that was shared at a ‘poor persons conference’ in Albergue years ago. Here is a modified excerpt:

 

I was hungry

and you formed a … club

and discussed my hunger.

Thank you.

 

I was imprisoned

And you crept off quietly

To your chapel in the cellar

And prayed for my release

[Thank you]

 

I was sick

And you knelt

and thanked God

for your health

[Thank you]

 

I was homeless

And you preached to me

Of the spiritual shelter of

The love of God

[Thank you]

 

I was lonely

and you left me alone

to pray for me.

[Thank you]

 

You seem so holy;

So close to God

But I’m still very hungry

And lonely

And cold…

 

Theologian Albert Nolan asks, “How can one speak about the church as the body of the crucified Jesus of Nazareth when church people are so healthy, well-fed and have no broken bones?”  Are we complicit with the systems of this world or are we fighting to expand the Kingdom of God? What can we do? How can you and I at least, beat our swords into ploughshares? How can you and I, at least, act like sheep? First, we must advocate for real change! (to de-commodify our nation and the world for starters) Then we must do it!

 

Now there is a glimmer of hope. This Thursday, as every Thursday, there was a prayer meeting at the Bread of Life Centre. Friends who eat with us there, friends who sleep there, friends who live and visit us there – they pray. You should see the tears. You should hear the testimonies. The Spirit is moving (preaching Good News through the poor); God is transforming lives.

 

I saw a Christian friend, cleaning weeds from the sidewalk downtown this week; Nathan is leading community dinners and eating regularly at the soup kitchen with us. He has even joined us at the shelter for a time. John, Carol, Sally and others are part of Neighbourlink Read and Feed Society reading to children and feeding them in the schools. Pastor Bruce at the Elim team are making meals and serving them from the food truck each and every week for years. People from Arrowsmith are opening a Christian recovery centre in town. Volunteer chaplains for the Legion, the fire departments and/or the RCMP are here. This is Kingdom of God stuff! This is what it looks like when we are saved!

 

When I was in the Cypress Heath region, people were dying in the hospital without the congregations or their pastors even knowing they were there. People were not getting any support. The Lord used His people to set up a chaplaincy program where a pastor would everyday visit everyone in the hospital and reach out to the pastors of the other churches when their congregation members were in the hospital.

 

When I was in Southwest Saskatchewan it was put on hearts, the number of people going to prison over and over again – and the number of victims of crime who never had the opportunity to face their accuser and never had the opportunity to be free of unforgiveness. Before my time, God used TSA set up restorative justice there where the victim and offender were able to see each other, the victim would be able to have their questions answered and the victim would be given the opportunity to be freed from unforgiveness which can kill us all.

 

During my time there, God used His people to set up a transition through incarceration program where we sat with the offender (and victim) in court, kept in touch with them in prison, set them up with a place to stay, a job, a social group that was different than the one they had when they went into prison. Of all the people we sat with only one person ever re-offended. Societies can be changed. God does transform lives and He will transform the world. God has rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; He has Freed Us from the Power of Sin, the Kingdom of God is at hand! (We do need to get rid of prisons altogether! In the Kingdom of God people aren’t locked in cages!)

 

Since I have been in town here, I have seen God use ministerial to save the Bread of Life Centre and use His people to set up the shelter at there, providing food and shelter 24 hours a day, seven days a week through staff, volunteers, and community partners (including the ministerial association and various churches) past and present. (We do need to provide supportive housing; there is no homelessness in the Kingdom of God)

 

I have seen God rescue human-trafficked individuals from town here – whisked them away to the TSA in Victoria where they can be helped and saved temporally and hopefully eternally.

 

God has rescued us all from the Dominion of Darkness; He has Freed Us from the Power of Sin, the Kingdom of God is at hand. My friends, this is what the kingdom of God looks like; this is what Salvation looks like. It is people being transformed as they come to know our Lord and Saviour; it is societies being transformed as they come to follow our Lord and Saviour. Are you a part of God’s transformative church in our society? Do you want to be? Do you want to help those in need through your congregation? You can. Do you want to offer food and prayer to people on the food truck? You can. Do you want to serve people at the food bank or the soup kitchen? You can. Do you want to lead a Bible Study somewhere: your church, your home, at the shelter, the Bread of Life? You can. If service, study, or hospitality are not your gifts… maybe you would like to organize an event? Maybe God has given you two coats and you can donate one to the Thrift Store - so that it can either be given to someone in need, or sold to someone in need so that they can have the dignity of selecting and purchasing it themselves, and/or sold to generate funds for services to those in need? Maybe you don’t think that you have anything to offer but maybe beyond your tithes to your local congregation, God is leading you to feed the hungry in your own community in some way. There are a million ways or more to serve and be used by God to transform our whole society into a salvation society where everyone is welcome to participate! Pray! He will tell you how He can use you to serve. After all, He has rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; He has Freed Us from the Power of Sin, the Kingdom of God is at hand!

 

I often think of Randall from my time in Toronto. He is blind. I think he grew up in quite an abusive home. He lived in 220 Oak, the worst building in one of the worst areas of Toronto. Randall is a soldier in our Salvation Army. Randall played music. He was a blind man carrying a tuba (or baritone) on his back, his white cane in his hand, finding his way on subways, busses, and through the roughest most crime ridden areas of Toronto by himself to play music at churches, funerals, Christmas kettles, anywhere he went he shared the gospel in music. And every Friday morning at 7am he would join me and others as we walked around regent park and prayed for people living in the neighbourhood that was once North America’s first ghetto. This is Salvation and it begins now and continues on forever. I have friends of mine from my time serving at Stoney Mountain Penitentiary in Winnipeg who, even though they were behind bars, led people to a saving relationship with our Lord who then brought that Salvation they found behind bars to the outside world – He for now and forever set the captives free! God can use each and everyone of us to change this world, to grow His Kingdom!

 

Most of our employees at The Salvation Army are what in contemporary vernacular we call ‘piers’ or people with ‘lived experience’ – most of us come from backgrounds of addiction, abuse, homelessness. I can’t tell you the number of people we have working with us right now who have their first ever jobs and they are in their 30s 40s and 20s, parents, people who God is using to do wonderful, amazing things.

 

God will transform Our world – He promises whole new heavens and a whole new earth. The question for us is will we be a part of it? Are we a part of it? He wants us to be. And many of us here are serving God through Breakfast clubs, street outreach, community meals, cleaning sidewalks, reading to children, other service projects, through our congregations or some other way as the Lord leads.

 

This is good for He has rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; He has Freed Us from the Power of Sin, the Kingdom of God is at hand; So, let us ask to the Lord where and how He would like each of us to live out our salvation, to be a part of His Kingdom? Let us ask Him how He can use each of us to point our neighbour to salvation both now and forever? As the Lord is leading you to help out in your church, go talk to your pastor today while it is still on your heart. As the Lord is leading you to help at the soup kitchen, shelter, foodbank, food truck, or other ways, you are welcome to chat with me today. As we all share the Gospel of Christ in word and deed, then the Lord can and will save us all and He will use even us to transform our society into His Kingdom, to make our whole world anew because He has already rescued us from the Dominion of Darkness; He has freed us from the Power of Sin, the Kingdom of God is at hand

 

Let us pray





Saturday, January 31, 2026

Daniel 4: Tree Four (not 6,7); Whatever it Takes.

Presented to TSA Alberni Valley Ministries by Major Michael Ramsay, 01 February 2026

 

Chapters 1-4 of Daniel are primarily about the salvation of Nebuchadnezzar, who was the brutal leader of a Superpower and as Susan said last week, maybe a megalomanic like maybe another world leader today that we all know. Daniel Chapter 4 is the final chapter in the Nebuchadnezzar story. Chapter 4 comes in 3 distinct parts:

1.               God gives King Nebuchadnezzar another dream to inform him of the future

2.               Nebuchadnezzar seeks Daniel to reveal God’s message 

3.               God’s message comes to fruition

 

Part 1: God Gives Nebuchadnezzar a Dream (Daniel 4:1-18)

4 King Nebuchadnezzar sent this message to the people of every race and nation and language throughout the world:

 

“Peace and prosperity to you!

2 “I want you all to know about the miraculous signs and wonders the Most High God has performed for me.

3 How great are his signs,

how powerful his wonders!

His kingdom will last forever,

his rule through all generations.

 

4 “I, Nebuchadnezzar, was living in my palace comfort and prosperity. 5 But one night I had a dream that frightened me; I saw visions that terrified me as I lay in my bed. 6 So I issued an order calling in all the wise men of Babylon, so they could tell me what my dream meant. 7 When all the magicians, enchanters, Chaldeans, and fortune-tellers came in, I told them the dream, but they could not tell me what it meant. 8 At last Daniel came in before me, and I told him the dream. (He was named Belteshazzar after my god, and the spirit of the holy gods is in him.)

 

9 “I said to him, ‘Belteshazzar, chief of the magicians, I know that the spirit of the holy gods is in you and that no mystery is too great for you to solve. Now tell me what my dream means.

 

10 “‘While I was lying in my bed, this is what I dreamed. I saw a large tree in the middle of the earth. 11 The tree grew very tall and strong, reaching high into the heavens for all the world to see. 12 It had fresh green leaves, and it was loaded with fruit for all to eat. Wild animals lived in its shade, and birds nested in its branches. All the world was fed from this tree.

 

13 “‘Then as I lay there dreaming, I saw a messenger, a holy one, coming down from heaven. 14 The messenger shouted,

“Cut down the tree and lop off its branches!

Shake off its leaves and scatter its fruit!

Chase the wild animals from its shade

and the birds from its branches.

15 But leave the stump and the roots in the ground,

bound with a band of iron and bronze

and surrounded by tender grass.

Now let him be drenched with the dew of heaven,

and let him live with the wild animals among the plants of the field.

16 For seven periods of time,

let him have the mind of a wild animal

instead of the mind of a human.

17 For this has been decreed by the messengers;

it is commanded by the holy ones,

so that everyone may know

that the Most High rules over the kingdoms of the world.

He gives them to anyone he chooses—

even to the lowliest of people.”

 

18 “‘Belteshazzar, that was the dream that I, King Nebuchadnezzar, had. Now tell me what it means, for none of the wise men of my kingdom can do so. But you can tell me because the spirit of the holy gods is in you.’

 

Does this passage sound familiar to you? This is very similar to chapter 2 that we looked at two weeks ago with the dream. One difference we should notice though is that this chapter is read in the voice of the king himself – this is important. He is telling the story. He is sharing his testimony to the whole world; the king personally here is telling the ‘miraculous signs and wonders’ the Lord has done for him. Chapter 4 is Nebuchadnezzar’s testimony Sunday.

 

King Nebuchadnezzar has this dream and -again like chapter 2- the magicians, enchanters, Chaldeans, and fortune-tellers were unable to interpret it. This time though, unlike chapter 2, the king from experience has faith that God will use Daniel to interpret the dream that God gave the king to tell him about what God is going to see done in Nebuchadnezzar’s life. 

 

Part 2: Daniel Relays God’s Message (Daniel 4:19-27)

19 Then Daniel (also called Belteshazzar) was greatly perplexed for a time, and his thoughts terrified him. So the king said, “Belteshazzar, do not let the dream or its meaning alarm you.”

 

Belteshazzar answered, “My lord, if only the dream applied to your enemies and its meaning to your adversaries! 20 The tree you saw, which grew large and strong, with its top touching the sky, visible to the whole earth, 21 with beautiful leaves and abundant fruit, providing food for all, giving shelter to the wild animals, and having nesting places in its branches for the birds— 22 Your Majesty, you are that tree! You have become great and strong; your greatness has grown until it reaches the sky, and your dominion extends to distant parts of the earth.

 

23 “Your Majesty saw a holy one, a messenger, coming down from heaven and saying, ‘Cut down the tree and destroy it, but leave the stump, bound with iron and bronze, in the grass of the field, while its roots remain in the ground. Let him be drenched with the dew of heaven; let him live with the wild animals, until seven times pass by for him.’

 

24 “This is the interpretation, Your Majesty, and this is the decree the Most High has issued against my lord the king: 25 You will be driven away from people and will live with the wild animals; you will eat grass like the ox and be drenched with the dew of heaven. Seven times will pass by for you until you acknowledge that the Most High is sovereign over all kingdoms on earth and gives them to anyone he wishes. 26 The command to leave the stump of the tree with its roots means that your kingdom will be restored to you when you acknowledge that Heaven rules. 27 Therefore, Your Majesty, be pleased to accept my advice: Renounce your sins by doing what is right, and your wickedness by being kind to the oppressed. It may be that then your prosperity will continue.”

 

This dream is very similar to Nebuchadnezzar’s earlier dream, (as well as the ways that we have already mentioned) in that the King is this wonderful tree in the dream like he is the head of gold in the earlier dream. And then like the statue falls so the tree is cut down – but this new dream’s message, instead of relating to those who will inherit his kingdom, this new message is a very personal message to Nebuchadnezzar. It is giving Nebuchadnezzar a heads up about what is going to happen in his own life personally – and why, and what to do about it.

 

I find it interesting as well that Verse 19 says Daniel was ‘perplexed’ and ‘terrified’. God is reaching out to Nebuchadnezzar with a very scary warning – so much so that when Nebuchadnezzar finally convinces Daniel to tell him what the dream means, Daniel replies, “My lord, if only the dream applied to your enemies and its meaning to your adversaries!” Daniel then tells the king what will happen to him. The king “will be driven away from people and will live with the wild animals... eat grass like the ox and be drenched with the dew of heaven”. 

 

This reminds me of some of the folks we live and work with at TSA shelter and soup kitchen at the Bread of Life Centre. Think of folks who are homeless, addicted, and suffering from mental health issues. Nebuchadnezzar becomes like some of our friends that we walk with every day (for literally for 7 ‘seasons’... maybe years, weeks, months). Many of our friends led “normal” or “successful” lives until addiction, mental health or something else got a hold of them. God says that Nebuchadnezzar will suffer all of that and then Nebuchadnezzar will “acknowledge that the Most High is sovereign over all kingdoms on earth and gives them to anyone he wishes” and he will be returned to sanity and to his position safe in the knowledge and comfort that “Heaven rules”. Daniel then offers Nebuchadnezzar this advice before any of this happens, Verse 27, he says, “Your Majesty... Renounce your sins by doing what is right, and your wickedness by being kind to the oppressed. It may be that then your prosperity will continue.” God has patience for an entire year, allowing the king every opportunity It seems, but Nebuchadnezzar still does not do this, thus...

 

The Dream Is Fulfilled (Daniel 4:28-37)

28 All this happened to King Nebuchadnezzar. 29 Twelve months later, as the king was walking on the roof of the royal palace of Babylon, 30 he said, “Is not this the great Babylon I have built as the royal residence, by my mighty power and for the glory of my majesty?”

 

31 Even as the words were on his lips, a voice came from heaven, “This is what is decreed for you, King Nebuchadnezzar: Your royal authority has been taken from you. 32 You will be driven away from people and will live with the wild animals; you will eat grass like the ox. Seven times will pass by for you until you acknowledge that the Most High is sovereign over all kingdoms on earth and gives them to anyone he wishes.”

 

33 Immediately what had been said about Nebuchadnezzar was fulfilled. He was driven away from people and ate grass like the ox. His body was drenched with the dew of heaven until his hair grew like the feathers of an eagle and his nails like the claws of a bird.

 

34 At the end of that time, I, Nebuchadnezzar, raised my eyes toward heaven, and my sanity was restored. Then I praised the Most High; I honoured and glorified Him who lives forever.

 

His dominion is an eternal dominion;

His kingdom endures from generation to generation.

35 All the peoples of the earth

are regarded as nothing.

He does as He pleases

with the powers of heaven

and the peoples of the earth.

No one can hold back His hand

or say to Him: “What have you done?”

 

36 At the same time that my sanity was restored, my honour and splendour were returned to me for the glory of my kingdom. My advisers and nobles sought me out, and I was restored to my throne and became even greater than before. 37 Now I, Nebuchadnezzar, praise and exalt and glorify the King of Heaven, because everything He does is right and all his ways are just. And those who walk in pride He is able to humble.

 

This is Nebuchadnezzar’s testimony, his salvation story.

To recap: We remember the first 3 chapters of this book; what is happening. Chapter 1, God brings His servants Daniel, Shadrach, Meshack, and Abednego into the service of King Nebuchadnezzar.

 

Chapter 2, God reaches out to King Nebuchadnezzar via a dream that he can’t interpret and possibly can’t even remember. The king asks his advisors, wise men, to tell him his dream and what it means; they can’t. God then tells Daniel the dream and Daniel tells the dream and its meaning to the king. God reveals Himself to Daniel, his friends and the king. The King then realizes that God is the God Most High and orders people to serve Daniel’s God. 

 

In that first dream, as we’ve already said, Nebuchadnezzar is represented as a head of gold on a giant statue, and that is good; it represents a powerful leader and nation. In the very next chapter, chapter 3, Nebuchadnezzar sets up a giant nine story / 90 ft / 30 m tall and wide statue. It is almost like he took the gold head from his dream in Chapter 2 and made it into a whole gold statue in Chapter 3, one without the flaws of the dream. (trying to rectify the problems of the dream himself – at least symbolically)

 

He then asked all the officials to bow down to it. This would be like if the statue was this building here (and maybe had a mural of the PM on it) and the Prime Minister came to town and ordered all the government officials and all the government employees from all the branches of government to come out for the dedication of the building and then asked everyone to pay respect to the building, the statue. It would be like... If anyone here goes to sporting events... you know how before the game, we are all supposed to stand up and take our hats off and sing a song praising our country (and a foreign country if we are playing an American team). 

 

Some people then notice Shadrack, Meshack and Abednego in the crowd – that they did not do their culture’s equivalent to removing their hats and standing up; they did not bow down, and they tell the king. The king is upset at this defiance – their words seem rather defiant too! It would be even worse than if we refused to stand and take our hats off for the national anthem and then when we were asked why, answered “we only stand and take off our hats for God, not for the national anthem, not for this country, and not for you” to the PM.

 

Nebuchadnezzar was mad! ...and threw them into a fire. God –right in front of Nebuchadnezzar - miraculously saves their lives and then it seems that Nebuchadnezzar begins again to understand what God is telling him. God can save anyone AND God decides who lives and dies, not Nebuchadnezzar or anyone else.

 

Susan compared Nebuchadnezzar to Trump in that he seems to be a megalomaniac and showed us pictures of ICE and ICE protests last week. God loves Nebuchadnezzar, even though he was the President of their era, leading the USA of their era. 

 

Even more, these first four chapters remind me of the Exodus story. Do we remember why God said that he sent the plagues to Egypt? He could have just freed the Hebrews but He did it this way so that Pharoah – who did all the bad stuff that Pharoah did – and all the Egyptians might know God. In Daniel 1-4, God makes Nebuchadnezzar – who threatened to kill all his advisors and all the wise men, who threw 3 leaders into the fire, who did so much more    God gives him dreams that God interprets and God sends an angel to protect Shadrack, Meshack and Abednego from the flames and then God, fulfills a personal dream to the king by making Nebuchadnezzar live like an animal. God does all this so that Nebuchadnezzar may know the Lord, humble himself before Him, repent, and experience salvation.

 

So if God loves Nebuchadnezzar this much and God loves Pharoah this much and as God probably loves world leaders today this much, then how much does God love every one of us – the parables of Luke 15: the 99 sheep who did not go astray, God loves them too; the coins still in the wallet, God loves them too; and all the non-prodigal children, God loves them too. I do think of the lost sheep, the lost coin, and the lost son. Maybe leaders of superpowers then, now, and always are those lost ones... Maybe we are. 

 

My encouragement to us from the message today is twofold: 1) Let us not let hate for world, our, or other leaders overtake us. God loved Pharoah and Nebuchadnezzar. God loves the world leaders today (pick your favourite villain, if not Trump then maybe Carney, Putin, Zelinsky, Netanyahu, whomever) and 2) God loves us. Just like God went out of his way to show Nebuchadnezzar the way to salvation, so too He does not wish that a single one of us – or any of our loved ones or anyone else  - will be lost; so I encourage us to keep praying for the salvation of our loved ones, our leaders, and our adversaries; and I encourage each of us to live a life worthy of repentance because God loves you just like he loves everyone – even you know who, whomever ‘you know who’ is to you  – John 3:16-18:  "For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved."

 

I believe this. And I believe that as chapters 1-4 of Daniel show the great extent to which God goes to secure the repentance and salvation of Nebuchadnezzar; so too God will do whatever it takes; giving each of us, and all our family members, and all our friends, and all our enemies, everything that we need so that we all, like Nebuchadnezzar, can humble ourselves, repent, and experience God’s Salvation both for now and forever.