Hi, I'm Dr. Abidan Shah, Lead Pastor at Clear V Church and host of the Clear V Today Show. If you're looking for solid biblical truth in a world full of noise, I want to introduce you to our friends at the Truth Network, your home for faithful Christ-centered broadcasting 24-7. From powerful preaching and insightful biblical teaching to engaging talk shows tackling real world issues, the Truth Network brings you programming that strengthens your faith and equips you to stand firm in God's Word. Wherever you are, whatever you're facing, the Truth Network is here to encourage you and challenge you with bold biblical truth. You can listen live or stream on demand at truthnetwork.com.
Or for even more convenience, you can always download the Truth Network radio app for free from the App Store or on Google Play. You're listening to Clear V Today with Dr. Abidan Shah, the daily show that engages mind and heart for the gospel of Jesus Christ. I'm Ryan Hill. I'm John Galantis, and welcome to the show today. We've got a great episode for you guys today talking about doubt, something that all Christians struggle with.
All Christians struggle with doubt. You don't think so? It was a bit. Yeah, but man, welcome to the show. This is Clear V Today with Dr. Abidan Shah. As you guys know, Dr. Shah is traveling to the UK right now. He's going to be back next week, so we've got a whole doc of the shows lined up for you guys.
Already written, just waiting for him to come back and record. But for right now, Ryan, how's it going, man? It's going well. How are you doing? Doing well. Doing well. You want to hit us with the verse of the day real quick?
I would love to. The verse of the day is coming from Philippians 4, verse 11. Not that I speak in regard to need, for I have learned in whatever state I am to be content. You know what I've learned in my 33 short years on this earth is that we live in a world that thrives on more.
We are a world who wants more stuff, more success, more approval, more validation, more comfort. But I think in the middle of all that noise, Paul writes something here that I think is so ingenious, so revolutionary. He's learned whatever state I'm in to be content. I think about Paul. Paul wasn't surfing for the next greatest iPhone.
He wasn't trying to upgrade the tech that he had. Paul was in and out of jail. Right. He wrote this from jail. Right. Paul was beat up on random occasions. He's saying, in whatever state I am, in the highest high where I'm serving God to the lowest low where I'm getting persecuted for my faith, I've learned to be content because my contentment doesn't come from my circumstances. That's right. We see a verse like that and we're like, oh man, imagine Paul's strength.
And it's like, bro, it's really the exact opposite. He's not testifying to his own strength. He's talking about the sufficiency of Christ. There was a song we used to do. It was called Christ is Enough.
I think we only did it a few times. It never really landed congregationally, but I loved that song. My wife really loved that song too. The chorus is just Christ is enough for me. Christ is enough for me. And just the simplicity of that song, man, I think that's really something else. Especially in a world where we don't ever reach enough.
No. We're constantly looking for more and better and bigger and flashier. But Paul says in that verse too, he says that I have learned, which means that it didn't come naturally. So if you're struggling with this, take heart because Paul himself had to learn how to find contentment. It's not about the stuff that we can fill our houses with. It's not about how many things we can pack into our wardrobe. It's not about all the pictures that we take and post to social media.
It's about learning to rest and who God is and who He has created us to be. And you might be listening to this and you might think like, we're describing you, but like rest assured, we're describing me too. Every single person in this room right now, and Dr. Shaw would agree with you, is that I'm a very hard person to satisfy. And I don't mean that I'm like picky or it's got to be exactly my way. It's just that once I get like this studio, for example, right? Like it looks really, really good. It does.
It looks great. Nicholas has put in a ton of work to make this thing look great because I think he knows at the end of the day, it's like every little thing has to be perfect, but it's never enough. You know what I mean? Like even after all this work, I know that in my heart, I'm always going to be like, well, we could have done this or we could do this right here.
Why don't we take it apart and let's start again? And I think that's another mark of leadership and another mark of maturity is knowing when to say, okay, I'm content. I'm happy. I finally have enough to satisfy. Speaking of which, how's the play coming? It's coming very well. Very, very well.
We're nearing the finish line. So the play's coming up first weekend in May. So just a couple more weeks and the cast is doing a great job.
An incredible job. So typically, yes, we have a great, and when I say great, that's really underselling it. We have a phenomenal theater ministry here at Clearview Church. I've never seen a theater ministry like this in any school, let alone a church.
I've never seen a theater ministry that takes it like this. This is the first play that we've done. Correct me if I'm wrong on this, but this is the first play that we've done that's not a well-known story. So what I mean by that, we've done Wizard of Oz, we did Chronicles of Narnia, we did Charlotte's Web, Wonderful Life, Anne of Green Gables.
What was the last one we just did? Christmas Carol, yeah. But these are all stories that's like, oh yes, these are classics. West of Pecos is not a story I've ever heard of. It's relatively unknown.
We've done a couple that are kind of outliers here, but for the most part, we've done literary classics for the past several years. So West of Pecos is a little bit different. What is it? So it's, I'm trying to think of how to summarize it.
It's so much. It's a comedy. So it takes place in a place called Langtree, Texas. Not Pecos, Texas. Not Pecos, Texas, because Judge Roy Bean, our main character, is the law west of the Pecos River. That's why we're west of Pecos.
West of, gotcha, gotcha. So Pecos, Texas is a real place. Langtree might be a real place, too, I don't know.
I don't actually know if it's a real place or not. But it follows the story of these people who live in this town, and this town is sort of run, ruled, and terrorized by Judge Roy Bean. So he's the main character, or he's the villain? He, uh, yes. Okay, okay. He is the main character of the story, and he is also sort of the main antagonist of the story, which is interesting that it's both. Yeah, I've never seen that.
Well, I guess Infinity War was that way. So yeah, the story cinders around him and his interactions with the people in the town, and it's incredible. It's hilarious. It's so funny. There are moments where it's serious.
There are moments where we kind of get into more like emotionally gripping territory, but by and large, it's just a large collection of physical comedy and one-liners. I was talking to, were you gonna say something? Yeah, I was gonna say there is a Langtree, Texas, and one of the number one things you like to do in Langtree, Texas is the Judge Roy Bean Museum. Really? Judge Roy Bean and the actress that we meet in the show, Lily Langtree, are actual people. Those were real people. They were real people.
Okay, okay, okay. Now the story that the Wesapecos tells is probably fabricated, but those two characters are based in reality. I was speaking to some of the cast Tuesday night, a couple nights ago, and they were saying that the plot, because I have no clue. I've not been to any rehearsals. Usually I'm kind of there watching.
So far, I have not been to any rehearsals. I know zero about the story, even recording this episode. And so I asked them, I said, what is the story?
And one of them said that the judge sees someone shoot at a poster of a girl he has a crush on and he wants to hang those people. And that's the plot. That's the plot of the story. That's the opening action. That's the exciting incident. Yes.
Got you. Yeah, 100%. Yeah, there's this guy in town that we meet, Oren Powers, and someone's trying to steal his horse. Poor Oren has terrible aim. So he goes to shoot the horse thief, shoots up two posters of Lily Langtree in the kneecaps both times. And the judge doesn't like that at all.
Well, here's the thing. Judge loves Lily Langtree. Has he met Lily? No. Never met her. Has he ever seen her?
No. He's only seen posters of her, but he's convinced that she's the love of his life. So much so that he has renamed this place Langtree, Texas. He's named it for Lily. So it's a huge celebrity crush. Hold on.
It gets better slash worse. He's also declared one day a year to be Lily Langtree Day. Oh my goodness. In honor of Lily. And not only did Oren shoot up these theater posters of Lily, he did on Lily Langtree Day.
And there's no shooting allowed on Lily Langtree Day. So he's in deep water. He's headed for a hanging. So the plot of the story is him trying to get out of hang or just trying to escape town? Yeah, trying to escape his sentence. Got you.
Got you. And the only hope that he has is that Lily Langtree herself comes to town. Ooh, and convinces the judge to back off. We hope so. But you know. Yeah. But you're not going to spoil it. I'm not going to spoil it. So we got it.
We got to cut to commercial here in a second. But I do want to ask you if you had if you were the judge, if you were what was it? Judge Roy Bean.
Judge Roy Bean. Who would your celebrity poster be? Who would be on your celebrity? Who would you hang someone over shooting?
Ooh, man. Dave, I don't want to ask you to. Who would you who would you what celebrity would you consider sentencing someone to death if they defaced a poster of her?
Oh, Lee, that's a tough question. Probably like a Hillary Duff or something like that. No, Hillary Duff's fine. Christy Carlson Romano.
People are like who? No. Golly, for me, it might be Scarlett Johansson. Scarlett?
It might be. What do you think, David? David didn't like that answer. I would I would pick Rashida Jones. No one's shoot the poster of Rashida Jones. I like her bangs. Oh, man.
I don't know. I don't really keep up with the celebrity crush scene. You'd probably be like a Zooey Deschanel or something.
I was going to say, like, Emma Watson. OK. Yeah. Yeah. Respectable. Respectable. Yeah. Go out. Shout out Hermione.
Yeah. You guys let us know if who would be your celebrity crush that you would put posters of all over town and then sentence someone to death if they do if they shot him in the kneecap. Write in and let us know. We'd love to hear from you guys.
Two five two five eight two five zero two eight. Don't go anywhere. We're going to take a quick break and be right back with more Clearview Today. Hi, I'm Dr. Abidan Shah, lead pastor at Clearview Church and host of the Clearview Today show. Every day we bring you bold biblical truth to help you navigate life with clarity and confidence. We tackle the tough questions, dive deep into God's work and bring a fresh perspective on faith, culture and the world around us.
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That's right. Today's check in is coming to us from Rhonda Jay over in Georgia. Hey Clearview Today team, I hope you're doing well. I just wanted to reach out because I've been struggling lately. My faith feels shaky and I've been wrestling with doubts that I didn't have when I was younger.
Isn't it funny how that works out? I remember I had the exact same thing happen. I didn't doubt until well after I was saved. She says, I always thought the older I got, the more solid I'd feel in my faith, but I find myself questioning things and honestly, I feel guilty about it.
I don't want to be like Thomas the Doubter needing proof when I should just trust, but some days it's just too hard. I really appreciate your prayers for clarity, peace, and for a heart that stays anchored in the truth even when my mind and heart wavers. Thanks for listening. It means a lot.
Rhonda Jay. Wow. Well, you're not alone. 100% you are not alone. And you're also not alone in feeling guilty for doubting because there are definitely times where I doubt and I feel like I shouldn't be doing this.
Yeah. We feel like as Christians, you know, we should just have it all together. We should, we should trust God a hundred percent, a hundred percent of the time. And the reality is that's, that just doesn't happen.
Right? I mean, based on life circumstances, based on what's going on in, in, in your world, based on some, you know, significant circumstances come up. We all struggle with doubt from time to time. But I, but I, you know, I'm with her though because I definitely, when I thought it would be that I would doubt before, and then once I see the light of Christ, I'm all in now. My life has changed and now I'm saved. But it was definitely like when I was 15, I heard the gospel. I got saved over, what was that? It was the parable of the, the four seeds, you know, the four, the sower, the parable of the sower. And I was like, oh man, it makes sense.
I mean, I'm on board. I got saved. And then in adulthood, like, like years down the line, doubt started coming in. And so I was like, man, that was something that I didn't expect.
And it caught me off guard. You know, I remember a while back, Dr. Shaw preached a message on doubt. It was about the, this, this man who he seemed to have it all.
It was this nobleman in Capernaum. You remember what I'm talking about in John four? His boy, his, his son became really sick and he wanted, he, he came to Jesus even though he was a man that was struggling with doubt.
Yeah. It says, it says in verse 46, it says there was a certain nobleman whose son was sick at Capernaum. When he heard that Jesus had come out of Judea and to Galilee, he went to him and implored him to come down and heal his son. For he was at the point of death. Then Jesus said to him, unless you people see signs and wonders, you will by no means believe. Then the nobleman said to him, sir, come down before my child dies. And Jesus said to him, go your way. Your son lives.
That's a, that's a man. Those words from Jesus, I can tell you right now, that's convicting even to me. He was living in a time where people wanted those signs and wonders cause he was doing them and, and I'm sort of that way. I want to, I want my faith to be rewarded if that makes sense. I know that's a selfish thing, but it's like, I want to see, number one, I just want to see all the things that those people see. Like I want to see the red sea split apart.
You know what I mean? I want to see time stand still and, and for the earth to stop spinning so the dude can raise his hands. I want to see all those miraculous wonders. But it's, it's like a selfish wanting to see it. It's like, I want to have faith, but I don't really want to have faith.
I just want to know. Yeah, I think that's a great point. And what we, what we often miss and what I, what I've missed before is that those people, their faith preceded those things, like they had faith and then God did those things, not to give them faith, not to give them evidence of their faith, but because of the faith of those people, it resulted in these miraculous things. And you know, we can, we can struggle with that.
I've struggled with that before. Like God, if you would just, why don't you just do something miraculous so that people would just flock to you so that they would, you know, without question they would believe in you. You know, I don't think, I don't think we would really, I don't think it would bolster our faith. Right.
I agree. I think we would, it would just lead to more doubts. Well God, if you did this, then why don't you do this? God, if you did this, then why don't you do this? I don't think it would have the effect that we think it would. It would, it would become this one off thing, this really miraculous thing that everybody's talking about. And it's like, well, you could have done that all along.
Right. So, but I think about like even this nobleman, right? Like who this man is and the, the power and the influence that he had. Like this guy probably worked for the king. Like he wasn't a servant.
You know what I mean? And all this, by the way, all this information is not something that we're, we're researching. This is all in Dr. Shah's sermon.
We'll link it in the description. But this nobleman probably worked for the king. He had servants himself, so he was probably someone of status. And also being from Capernaum, David and I have, you've, you have not been to Israel, have you? I have not. Okay.
Okay. You went to Egypt. No, you went to Greece and David, you went to Egypt and Greece, but you also went to, you were in Capernaum.
Yeah. So Capernaum is this fishing village, right? It was this little fishing town on the coast. So it wasn't more than likely not a Roman emperor, like Roman royalty ruling over Capernaum. Probably it was like Herod Antipas.
And if you don't know who Herod Antipas is, Herod Antipas is King Herod's son. He's the one that diced up John the Baptist. He's the one that had a real beef with John the Baptist. So if this nobleman works for him, more than likely, he knows that Jesus was in leagues with John the Baptist.
He does not, he already is coming into this encounter, not thinking a whole lot of Jesus. And it's crazy because he goes way out of his way. It says he goes from Capernaum to Cana. Like if you've been to Israel, you know, that's like 16 miles.
That's a, that's a long way. He's doing this for a man he doesn't really think highly of, but because his boy is sick, you know, his son is sick. And it kind of leads me to think that he may have been working for a bad person. He may have even been a bad person himself, but he had faith enough at least to seek out Jesus. Yeah.
And that's a starting point. Well, that gives a positive spin. When we're talking about doubt, that gives a positive spin on situations that infuse doubt into your life, right? Because his son was sick, he was maybe a little bit more open to what Jesus had to offer. Whereas before, you know, if his son was well, and he had everything that he wanted, he would have continued to maybe be resistant to Jesus. Well, yes, but because there's this sense of struggle, there's a softening of his heart that's happening. And I think that illustrates doubt can go one of two ways. It can either soften us and make us more receptive to God and make us more open to see with eyes of faith what God is doing, or it can harden us and say, Well, God, why didn't you? And God, why couldn't you? And God, why haven't you? And then that just kind of sort of pushes us further away.
Yes, 100%. And I think you're onto something really big there, which is that most people in life, maybe not all people, because it wasn't true for me, and I don't know if it was true for any of us, but most people look for God when they're in crisis mode. You know what I mean? They're in some sort of health crisis or finance crisis or relationship crisis.
And maybe you're listening to this and you know, like when I said that, someone came into your mind. They're a confident person, they've got everything well put together, but when crisis hits, they're turning to God. They're looking like someone drowning off a sinking ship or something like that. That's the time where you normally would be like, Hey, look, it's going to be okay. That's the time to throw the gospel to them. Not pat them on the back, not console them, not be a shoulder to cry on, but be ready to throw them the lifeline of the gospel.
And I thought that was such a great point. Dr. Sean made that point in his sermon. That's the time that you're waiting for, is that crisis mode. Not that you're praying for them to go into crisis, but that's the time to strike.
Because a lot of people think that. They're like, well, I've got the gospel and I don't want to go too heavy, but I just don't know when the best time to present it is. And I mean, there's always a great time to present the gospel, but that's the critical time is when people are in times of crisis. You've got your counseling degree and you know what it's like when people go through crisis. They're ready to try anything.
Yeah, absolutely. I took a course in seminary on dealing with crisis and trauma and people who are in intense situations. And when you come out of the gate and a person is in the midst of an intense crisis, maybe they've just lost a loved one, or they've just received a devastating diagnosis, or there's been a car accident, some intense crisis that has immediately dropped. Usually you don't come in swinging with the gospel.
Typically you don't like, well, let me tell you about Jesus, because they're really not ready to hear it at that point. That's when you start building a foundation of relationship with that person. You start listening, you're compassionate, you're present. That's a big thing when somebody's going through crisis is that you're there to walk alongside with them, even just to sit with them.
Sometimes you just need someone physically there with you. And it's in the context of that relationship that you then can soften them to the gospel. You can soften them to the things of God. And that crisis has made them already more receptive to your voice. So that's a great point, because you actually see that in the text of this story. If you look at verse 50, when Jesus says to him, go your way, your son lives, number one, this is a man who is a nobleman, right? Like he's used to ordering people around. And so now Jesus is commanding him.
But his response is that softening. It says, so the man believed the word that Jesus spoke to him. And there's even a change in the narrative because up till this point, he's been the nobleman did this and the nobleman did this, but now the man is the one who's believing.
So there's a softening in even his identity. Because even if you read on in verse 51, and now as he was going down, his servants met him and said to him, your son lives. Then he inquired of the hour when he got better. And they said to him yesterday at the seventh hour, the fever left him.
Verse 53 says, so the father knew it was the same hour in which Jesus said to him. So he goes from being the nobleman to now he's the man to now there's a father. There's a softness coming into his demeanor. This person who had everything put together and was so in control and in command is now broken. But in that brokenness, there's healing.
His son actually gets better. So when you said that, I was like, man, that's actually a really good point that the doubt gives way to the gospel coming in and softening us. Yeah, I talk with especially students, but not just students all the time about people who are struggling without like, I'm struggling to reconcile God's mercy and love and his holiness and his wrath, or I'm struggling to believe that God would allow bad things to happen to good people.
I mean, you name it any number of things that I've struggled with. I mean, many of us have struggled with doubts like that before. And I always remind them that doubting is good. Doubting is not a bad thing. So I think sometimes as Christians, especially if we've grown up in the church, we feel guilty for doubting.
I mean, Rhonda hinted at that in her in her check in with us. You feel guilty for doubting, like I should just believe I should just believe in God without question. But it's in the doubting that our faith is actually stronger. It's actually galvanized because we, you know, if you seek answers from God in those moments of doubting, you'll find them there. There is answer.
There is hope out there. There is truth in God's word that you can stand on. So don't feel guilty about doubting. Use those doubts as an opportunity to have your faith strengthened.
That's right. And it also reminds you that you live in a real world. You know what I mean? Like the faith that you have is not a fairytale. When people say like I should just believe and I should just have faith and I did nothing. But you're not a storybook character, you know? And even if you were like, think about all the people who are in scripture, like, yes, their lives are a story, but their lives were plagued with hardship. Their lives were plagued with doubt. I'm sure every single one of those characters that you read about in the, I mean, think about like Jonah, right? Like, I know I always, I always kind of bring it back to Jonah, but like he doubted God so hard that he ran away to another country. Like these people all doubted and yet they're immortalized in scripture as example, maybe not Jonah, but they're immortalized in scripture as examples of how to be, of how to follow God. And so it reminds you that our faith is contextualized in a real world with real people and real situations.
Yeah. We also, I want to go back to what Rhonda said. She said, I don't want to be like Thomas. We give Thomas a bad rap sometimes because he's known as Thomas the doubter, right? But the Bible doesn't ever condemn him for doubting.
He doesn't ever talk bad about Thomas for asking for proof. Jesus just says, blessed are you who have seen and believed, blessed even more are those who haven't seen and yet they still believe. Well, even then, like think about the reward for his doubt. Jesus is like, okay, you doubt touch me, touch my side.
So he's saying, literally engage with me. If you doubt, come over here and see, and let me prove myself. And I think about even with us, like Jesus is inviting you, if you're doubting to engage with him, touch him, see that he's real, dive into his heart, give it some time and you don't have to, and it's not like stay in your doubt as long as possible so the revelation will be better, but it's like, don't sit in doubt, act on your doubt, open up that Bible, read it, pray and ask God, you know, God, I don't even know if you're hearing me right now, but I just pray that you would take this doubt away. Who's the one that said, I believe, but help my unbelief. I love that verse.
I can never remember where that is. David, if you want to find it. Cause I think that's a great, someone said it to Jesus, Lord, I believe, but help my unbelief. That's a song, isn't it? Uh, yeah, it's a, uh, it's, um, uh, it's a hymn. It's a savior, savior do not pass me by while on others thou are calling. It's a Mark 9, 24. What is the context of that verse? I'm thinking of it.
Uh, let's see, I'm gonna go to just Mark 9. There's a hymn that says, Lord, help my unbelief. But anyway, while he's looking at that, I just think that's such a, that's such a, um, appropriate prayer.
I think that's really the, the, and we think that, that it's, it is not, but you can certainly ask God to help your doubt. Well, go ahead, David. So it is, the context is, uh, a boy is healed, uh, and says, when he came to the disciples, he saw a great multitude around them and scribes disputing immediately when they saw him, all the people greatly amazed running him, greeted him, scribes asks, what are you discussing?
Blah, blah, blah. Goes down. So then Jesus said, Oh, faithless generation, how long shall I be with you?
And how long shall I bear with you? Bring him to me. This is talking about the little boy. And they brought him to him. And when they saw him immediately, the spirit convulsed and he fell to the ground and wallowed. So he asked his father, how long has this been happening? And then the father said from childhood, and then Jesus said to him, if you can believe all things are possible to him who believes.
And immediately the father of the child cried out and said with tears, Lord, I believe, help my unbelief. Yeah. Yeah.
Think about that. He went his whole life. They went that little boy's entire life hoping things would get better, just trying his best. And I think that prayer, I don't know why, but that prayer always has got me because it's true of us Christians. I believe, help my unbelief. And it's like, but how can you believe if you have unbelief? And it's like, we're complicated, man.
This life is messy. And there are things that happen in life that will just shake your belief and rock your belief. And you know that you believe in your heart. The gospel is there. The Holy Spirit is there.
But man, you can be turned away from it by the circumstances of life. The people we read about in the Bible too are a lot more complicated than we think because we're just getting a one dimensional view of them. We get to hear some of their struggles.
We get to hear some of the things that they were thinking about, especially like when we go to the New Testament, we get Paul's letters, we get more of his inner dialogue and more of his inner, you know, the workings of his mind and of his heart. But they're much more complicated because they're people just like we are. They have hopes and they have desires and they have struggles and they have doubts that were not outlined in scripture. We get one side of them, but don't think that they're just this one dimensional character.
They were complex people who struggled at times. Like think about your life, like even Ryan, like your life, like the complexity of your life and how much your life has has like amounted to all your thoughts, your fears, your desires, your growth. Like imagine if I took one story from your college days of something you did dumb, put it in the Word of God and that and that is the only part of you that anybody ever saw. They'd be like, Oh, okay, this dude's like this. It's like, it's true, but it's a very small facet of my life. Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Like I think about all the mistakes that I've made in life or the things that I've done and if someone just read that and they never read the rest of my like years on this earth, they'd be like, okay, so that's who he is at the core. But it's not true. You know, these people were not always doubters. They were not always cowards. They were not always rebellious. God used them in great and mighty ways. And I think about that sometimes, all the things that amounted to their life that's not recorded in scripture, how God used them.
So also with us. Yeah. So when you have doubt, don't beat yourself up about it and don't feel guilty about it, but also don't sit in it.
That's right. Do some work, pursue God, pursue his truth, and you'll find answers for it and pray, man. Pray. You can, you can tell God that you're doubting. You can tell, you can tell God, Hey, I don't know what's going on with me. I don't know where my mind's at.
I don't know where my heart's at. You can tell him he wants to hear that from you because he already knows it. He knows that you're down before you confess it.
Yeah, but he wants to hear you and he wants to help you. Yep. Guys, make sure you join us tomorrow. Same time, same station. We're going to be diving into another great topic here on the Clear View Today Show. Thanks again to our sponsors for sponsoring today's episode. And don't forget that you can support us by subscribing to the show on iTunes if you want to re-listen. You can always support us financially at ClearViewTodayShow.com.
Jon, what do you want to leave our listeners with as we head into the weekend? Definitely just want to encourage you guys, all of you guys, even those of you who aren't struggling with doubt, just man, just find God this weekend. Go to church. Make sure that you're part of a church. Make sure that you're worshiping alongside a body of fellow believers. If you don't have a church to go to, if you're local, you can always come visit us here at Clear View Church.
If you're not local and you'd have nowhere to go, you can always visit us online, ClearViewBC.org. We stream every single one of our services there at 8 o'clock, 830 and 11 a.m. You can also find all of Dr. Shah's work on Pray.com. Dr. Shah is a featured leader on Pray.com. It'd be good to have him back in the studio, especially if this is your first time ever listening to the show.
He'll be back next week. But you can go subscribe to all of his work on Pray.com. You can follow him. You can give to the ministry.
Thank you to all of you guys who have been giving. We're seeing the follower account go up, so that's really, really great. If you're not following Dr. Shah on Pray.com, download the app.
If you're on the app right now, go and follow him. Trust me, you're going to be glad you did. All of our exclusive content is up there. That's right. I have no doubts that you'll be glad to do that. There you go. Bring it home. Love you guys. We'll see you Monday on Clearview Today.