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Etq221 10
Etq221 10
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Jer. 31:31–34; Matt. 5:17–
28; Hos. 2:18–20; Isa. 56:6, 7; Heb. 8:7, 8; Heb. 10:4; Matt. 27:51.
Memory Text: “ ‘Behold, the days are coming, says the Lord, when
I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of
Judah’ ” (Jeremiah 31:31, RSV).
A
cartoon in a magazine years ago showed a business executive
in an office standing before other executives. He was holding a
box of detergent in his hands, showing it to the other men and
women. He proudly pointed to the word “New” that was displayed in
large red letters on the box, the implication being, of course, that the
product was new. The executive then said, “It’s the ‘New’ on the box
that is new.” In other words, all that changed, all that was new, was sim-
ply the word New on the box. Everything else was the same.
In a sense, one could say that the new covenant is like that. The basis
of the covenant, the basic hope that it has for us, its basic conditions,
are the same as what was found in the old covenant. It has always been
a covenant of God’s grace and mercy, a covenant based on a love that
transcends human foibles and defeats.
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S unday May 30
(page 81 of Standard Edition)
Focus on the last part of Jeremiah 31:34, in which the Lord says that
He will forgive their iniquity and the sin of His people. Even though
the Lord says that He will write the law on our hearts and place it
within us, He still stresses that He will forgive our sin and iniquity,
which violates the law written in our hearts. Do you see any contra-
diction or tension between these ideas? If not, why not? What does
it mean, as Romans 2:15 puts it, to have the law written within our
hearts? (See Matt. 5:17–28.)
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Looking at the verses for today, how could you use them to answer the
argument that somehow the Ten Commandments (or, specifically, the
Sabbath) are now made void under the new covenant? Is there any-
thing at all in those texts that makes that point? On the contrary, how
could one use those texts to prove the perpetuity of the law?
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M onday May 31
(page 82 of Standard Edition)
Heart Work
At the time when the southern kingdom of Judah was about to end and
the people were to be taken into Babylonian captivity, God announced
through His prophet Jeremiah the “new covenant.” This is the first time
this notion is expressed in the Bible. However, when the 10-tribe north-
ern kingdom of Israel was about to be destroyed (some one hundred
fifty years before the time of Jeremiah), the idea of another covenant
was mentioned again, this time by Hosea (Hos. 2:18–20).
Read Hosea 2:18–20. Notice the parallel between what the Lord said
there to His people and what He said in Jeremiah 31:31–34. What
common imagery is used, and, again, what does it say about the
basic meaning and nature of the covenant?
Ezek. 11:19
Ezek. 18:31
Ezek. 36:26
The Lord will provide “ ‘a heart to know that I am the Lord’ ” (Jer.
24:7, RSV). He will “ ‘take the stony heart out of their flesh and give
them a heart of flesh’ ” (Ezek. 11:19, RSV), and will give “ ‘a new
heart’ ” and “ ‘a new spirit’ ” (Ezek. 36:26, RSV). He also says, “ ‘I will
put My Spirit within you’ ” (Ezek. 36:27, NASB). This work of God is
the foundation of the new covenant.
If someone came to you and said, “I want a new heart, I want the
law written in my heart, I want a heart to know the Lord—but
I don’t know how to get it,” what would you say to this person?
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T uesday June 1
(page 83 of Standard Edition)
Jeremiah states that the new covenant is to be made with “ ‘the house
of Israel’ ” (Jer. 31:33). Does this mean, then, that only the literal
seed of Abraham, Jews by blood and birth, are to receive the covenant
promises?
No! In fact, that was not even true in Old Testament times. That the
Hebrew nation as a whole had been given the covenant promises is, of
course, correct. Yet, it was not done to the exclusion of anyone else. On
the contrary, all, Jew or Gentile, were invited to partake of the prom-
ises, but they had to agree to enter into that covenant. It is certainly no
different today.
Read the above texts in Isaiah. What conditions do they place on those
who want to serve the Lord? Is there really any difference in what
God asked of them and what He asks of us today? Explain your
answer.
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W ednesday June 2
(page 84 of Standard Edition)
Where did the fault lie with the “failure” of the old covenant? (Heb. 8:7, 8).
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The problem with the old covenant was not with the covenant itself but
with the failure of the people to grasp it in faith (Heb. 4:2). The superiority
of the new to the old lies in the fact that Jesus—instead of being revealed
only through the animal sacrifices (as in the old covenant)—now appears in
the reality of His death and high-priestly ministry. In other words, the salva-
tion offered in the old covenant is the same offered in the new. In the new,
however, a greater, more complete revelation of the God of the covenant
and the love that He has for fallen humanity has been revealed. It is better in
that everything that had been taught through symbols and types in the Old
Testament has found its fulfillment in Jesus, whose sinless life, His death,
and high-priestly ministry were symbolized by the earthly sanctuary service
(Heb. 9:8–14).
Now, though, instead of symbols, types, and examples, we have
Jesus Himself, not only as the slain Lamb who shed His blood for our
sin (Heb. 9:12) but also as the One who stands as our High Priest in
the heavenly sanctuary ministering on our behalf (Heb. 7:25). Though
the salvation He offers is the same, this fuller revelation of Himself
and the salvation found in Him, as revealed in the new covenant,
make it superior to the old.
Read Hebrews 8:5 and Hebrews 10:1. What word does the author use
to describe the old covenant sanctuary services? How does the use of
that word help us to understand the superiority of the new covenant?
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Think about this: Why would knowing about Christ’s life, death,
and high-priestly ministry on our behalf give us a better under-
standing of God than one would get merely from the earthly
sanctuary service ritual of animal sacrifices?
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T hursday June 3
(page 85 of Standard Edition)
Read Matthew 27:51, which tells how the veil in the earthly sanctuary
was torn when Jesus died. How does that event help us to under-
stand that the earthly sanctuary had been superseded?
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How does it make you feel, understanding that, even now, Jesus
is ministering His blood in heaven on your behalf? How much
confidence and assurance does that give you regarding salvation?
.
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F riday June 4
(page 86 of Standard Edition)
Further Thought: “In partaking with His disciples of the bread and
wine, Christ pledged Himself to them as their Redeemer. He committed
to them the new covenant, by which all who receive Him become children
of God, and joint heirs with Christ. By this covenant every blessing that
heaven could bestow for this life and the life to come was theirs. This cove
nant deed was to be ratified with the blood of Christ. And the administra
tion of the Sacrament was to keep before the disciples the infinite sacrifice
made for each of them individually as a part of the great whole of fallen
humanity.”—Ellen G. White, The Desire of Ages, p. 659.
Discussion Questions:
What is the advantage of having the law written in the heart
rather than on tablets of stone alone? Which is easier to forget, the
law written on stones or the law written in the heart?
Ever since the fall of humanity, salvation has been found only
through Jesus, even if the revelation of that truth varied in differ-
ent epochs of history. Do not the covenants work the same way?
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i n s i d e
Story
A Church for Tourists
By Andrew McChesney, Adventist Mission
The new pastor was shocked when he showed up at the Bucharest
International Seventh-day Adventist Church—the only English-speaking
church in Romania’s capital—and found only three people present. All three
were Romanians.
Three weeks later, Pastor Benjamin Stan learned that one of those three,
a 21-year-old woman, was leaving. He wondered why God had led him to a
dead church. “Why am I here?” he prayed. “Why did You give me this call?”
At that moment, two American tourists walked in the door. Benjamin
realized that tourists need a place to worship. He kept praying.
A couple weeks later, he found a man dressed in a suit and tie waiting outside
the church. The man lived with his family in Poland and worked in Romania.
He belonged to another Christian church but, after studying the Bible, wanted
a Sabbath-keeping church. Benjamin realized that there are foreigners who
work in Romania but don’t speak Romanian. They need a place to worship.
After several months, Benjamin suggested holding Sabbath School and
the divine worship service on Sabbath mornings. Until then, the church
didn’t have a Sabbath School, and its hour-long worship service took place
on Sabbath evenings. The two members opposed the proposal. They went
to Romanian churches on Sabbath mornings and didn’t want to lose those
friends. But Benjamin was insistent. “We do not come here to study English,”
he said. “We come here to study the Bible. We need to be a church.”
Visiting other churches, Benjamin invited two teens and a man of about
30 to help organize the worship program. He advertised the new morning
worship schedule on social media. That first Sabbath, 32 people showed up.
“You should have seen the expressions on the faces of the two members
when they arrived,” Benjamin recalled. “Their eyes were big. They were
surprised when they saw so many people, especially young people, in the
church.”
The Polish man was baptized several weeks later.
Today, Benjamin has no doubt that the church, started by Pastor Adrian
Bocaneanu in 2010, serves an important role in Bucharest. It has 26 mem-
bers, and weekly attendance ranges from 30 to 50 people, including tourists,
foreign workers, and international students.
What happened to those three people who attended
the church on Benjamin’s first Sabbath? They are now
very involved, including the young woman who left.
She is now a church leader.
Connect with the Bucharest International Seventh-day Adventist
Church at facebook.com/englishadventist.
Provided by the General Conference Office of Adventist Mission, which uses Sabbath School
mission offerings to spread the gospel worldwide. Read new stories daily at AdventistMission.org. 131
teachers comments
Part I: Overview
The original premise of the “covenant” has not changed through time.
Each time the covenant has been offered, however, humanity, with its
fallen, sinful nature, has broken the contract. But God has not given up on
us. He still offers us salvation if we choose to accept it.
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to Me with their mouth, and with their lips honor Me; but their heart is
far from Me. But in vain they worship Me, teaching as doctrines the ordi-
nances of men.’ And calling near the crowd, He said to them, Hear and
understand.”—The Interlinear Hebrew-Greek-English Bible, vol. 4, p. 44;
emphasis supplied. (See Matt. 15:7–10.)
Old and New Covenants
The Sinaitic covenant was not a covenant of works. In Exodus 5:22, 23,
Moses’ question was posed in the form of a unique cosmic inquiry, which
sought out the power, qualities, and character of Yahweh. God’s answer
revealed the meaning of His name, rather than a title or designation (see Exod.
6:1–8). Yahweh’s name points to a relationship. To know the meaning of the
Lord is to know what He can do for Israel. They had heard the name Yahweh,
but they did not show faith in trusting what He could do for them as their God.
In Exodus, the covenant was based on two possible motivations. The
first related to whether Israel, out of its own strength, would do what God
had spoken. The second related to whether Israel would obey the covenant
obligations by faith through the empowering grace mercifully provided by
the supernal I AM.
Dispensationalism also limits the time of the covenant of grace. It
divides Bible history into seven periods and teaches that God works dif-
ferently in each of these periods. A dispensation is a period of time dur-
ing which humankind is tested in respect to some specific revelation of
God’s will. Each dispensation ends with divine judgment. Thus, there is
dispensation of the law and a dispensation of grace among dispensations.
Thus, those who hold tenaciously to this view vainly attempt to divide the
biblical harmony between the law and the gospel.
A Better Covenant
“The new covenant functions better than the old covenant for God’s
people. . . .
“In contrast with Israel’s old covenant, . . . Christ effects three basic
promises of God: (1) He internalizes God’s moral law in the hearts of His
people . . . ; (2) He individualizes the saving knowledge of God, so that
each Israelite, without exception, has a personal, immediate relation with
God (Hebrews 8:11); and (3) He forgives the sins of God’s people and
“will remember their sins no more” (Hebrews 8:12). . . .
“According to Hebrews 8–12, the Church of Jesus represents the true
fulfillment of Jeremiah’s predicted new covenant. Far from being an abroga-
tion of Israel’s new covenant, it is rather a type and guarantee of the final
consummation of the new covenant, when true Israelites of all ages will join
the wedding supper of the Lamb in the New Jerusalem (Matthew 8:11, 12;
25:34; Revelation 19:9; 21:1–5).”—Hans K. LaRondelle, Israel in Prophecy:
Principles of Prophetic Interpretation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews
University Press, 1983), pp. 114–121.
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3. Why should we, today, with the knowledge of Christ, and of His
sacrifice, be more faithful to God than were the people of old? That
is, because we have the amazing revelation of God’s character as
revealed in Jesus, which they didn’t have (at least as clearly as we
have), why should we be even more faithful than they were? Discuss
this idea in class.
4. Some people may ask, “How do you know that access to God
depends not on achievement or obedience but simply on accepting
God’s gift of grace and loving favor”? What examples could you use
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teachers comments
from your own life to answer their question? How important are
our life stories in the actualization of the new covenant?
5. Why was it so hard for people to accept the new covenant when
Jesus presented it originally? Is it easier or harder for people to
accept it today? Explain.
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