Etq224 03
Etq224 03
Etq224 03
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: John 8:44; Prov. 23:23; Acts
20:27–32; 2 Thess. 2:7–12; Ps. 119:105, 116, 130, 133, 160; Prov. 16:25;
2 Cor. 4:3–6.
Memory Text: “Then Jesus said to them, ‘A little while longer the
light is with you. Walk while you have the light, lest darkness over-
take you; he who walks in darkness does not know where he is going’ ”
(John 12:35, NKJV).
I
n the Bible’s last book, Revelation, the devil is pictured as a dragon
and a serpent (Rev. 12:9). He is a dragon because he desires to destroy
God’s people, and he is a serpent because he uses all his cunning lies
to deceive them. In the years after Christ’s death, thousands were tortured,
thrown to lions, and burned at the stake by imperial Rome for refusing to
worship its deities. Yet, in the face of this cruel punishment, many stayed
faithful, the gospel continued to spread, and the church grew.
As a result, Satan changed his strategy. Scores of pagans were bap-
tized but without thorough instruction in Bible truth. Error flooded
into the church as leaders merged the truths of Scripture with popular
customs. The fourth and fifth centuries were eras of compromise when
church prelates blended pagan practices with Christian teachings.
Yet, even in life’s most difficult times, God was continually with His
people. They found Jesus, “the way, the truth and the life,” and through the
power of the Holy Spirit, they stood firm, even in the face of overwhelming
pressure to yield their conscientious convictions. They stayed loyal to God’s
revealed will in Scripture and unflinchingly stood for the truth of His Word,
regardless of the pressure placed on them, either overtly or subtly.
What Jesus says is true because He is the author of truth. Truth pro-
ceeds from the heart of an all-wise, all-loving, all-knowing God. He is
the foundation of reality and of all truth.
In contrast, Satan is a liar and the father of lies. He is prepared to use lies,
deceit, misinformation, and a distortion of the truth to lead God’s people
astray. He deceived Eve in Eden by distorting truth, creating doubt, and
blatantly denying what God said. Satan’s statement, “You shall not surely
die,” in the context of eating the fruit, was a clear contradiction of what
God had said. Throughout the centuries, Satan has used the same strategy.
He undermines confidence in God’s Word, contradicts God’s revealed will,
distorts Scripture, and at times misquotes the Bible to his advantage.
Read Proverbs 23:23, John 17:17, and John 8:32. What similarity do
you see in these Bible passages regarding the truth of God’s Word?
What is their central message?
“Satan well knew that the Holy Scriptures would enable men to
discern his deceptions and withstand his power. It was by the word
that even the Saviour of the world had resisted his attacks. At every
assault, Christ presented the shield of eternal truth, saying, ‘It is writ-
ten.’ To every suggestion of the adversary, He opposed the wisdom and
power of the word. In order for Satan to maintain his sway over men,
and establish the authority of the papal usurper, he must keep them in
ignorance of the Scriptures. The Bible would exalt God and place finite
men in their true position; therefore its sacred truths must be concealed
and suppressed. This logic was adopted by the Roman Church. For hun-
dreds of years the circulation of the Bible was prohibited. The people
were forbidden to read it or to have it in their houses, and unprincipled
priests and prelates interpreted its teachings to sustain their preten-
sions. Thus the pope came to be almost universally acknowledged as
the vicegerent of God on earth, endowed with authority over church and
state.”—Ellen G. White, The Great Controversy, p. 51.
32
M onday April 15
(page 24 of Standard Edition)
Savage Wolves
Read Acts 20:27–32. What specific warnings did the apostle Paul give
to the church leaders from Ephesus regarding the coming apostasy?
The purpose of Paul’s counsel was to prepare the church for what was
coming. In these passages, he describes his major concern.
His concern is that “savage wolves will come in among you, not spar-
ing the flock” (Acts 20:29, NKJV). In other words, believers would face
fierce persecution from within the church.
The apostle expressed his concern when he said, “Also of your own
selves shall men arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples
after them” (Acts 20:30). Heresies would enter the church. False doc-
trines would be substituted for divine truths. Pagan practices would
prevail. In the fourth and fifth centuries, compromise subtly crept into
the Christian church, with mission advance being the probable justifi-
cation. But the terrible result was a departure from the truths of God’s
Word.
Read 2 Thessalonians 2:7–12. How does the apostle Paul describe the
coming apostasy? What characteristics should believers look for?
Read Psalm 119:105, 116, 130, 133, and 160. What insights does
the psalmist give us regarding the significance of God’s Word in
the plan of salvation?
34
W ednesday April 17
(page 26 of Standard Edition)
Read Proverbs 16:25, Judges 21:25, and Isaiah 53:6. What do these
texts reveal about Satan’s strategy of deception?
Why is the human mind without the aid of the Holy Spirit
incapable of discovering divine truth? Discuss the relationship
between human reason and divine revelation. How does reason
actually help us understand divine revelation? For example, look
at Daniel 2, a prophecy that covers world history from the time
of Babylon to the Second Coming. How does a prophecy like this
powerfully appeal to human reason?
35
T hursday April 18
(page 27 of Standard Edition)
Read John 1:4, 5, 9 and 14. How do these verses describe Jesus? Note
particularly John 1:14.
During the early centuries of the Christian church, the New Testament
believers were totally committed to Christ as the One who was the light
in their darkness. They were redeemed by His grace, transformed by His
power, and motivated by His love. Even death could not break their bond
of loyalty to Christ. They recognized the devil’s deceptions in the glo
rious light of the gospel. Christ has always had men and women who, by
His grace, have stood courageously for His truth. In these early centuries,
the light of Christ’s love, grace, and truth shone through the darkness.
36
F riday April 19
(page 28 of Standard Edition)
In many parts of the world, especially where people have free access
to the Bible, Satan has employed other means to weaken its influence.
One very effective way has been through various scientific endeavors
or even biblical scholarship, which sometimes takes positions that, if
accepted, would undermine trust in the Word of God. For example,
though the book of Daniel dates itself to more than 500 years before
Christ, many Bible scholars date it, instead, to the middle of the second
century b.c. They argue that it had to be written at this time; otherwise
the prophet would have been accurately telling the future, and that can’t
happen. Therefore, they argue, Daniel was not written when it says it
was but, rather, hundreds of years later. Unfortunately, this lie about the
Bible is one of many that modern scholarship seeks to foist upon us.
And more unfortunately, many people accept this error because, after
all, Bible scholars are teaching it. No wonder Paul warns us, “Test all
things; hold fast what is good” (1 Thess. 5:21, NKJV).
Discussion Questions:
Ê Refer to the quote in Tuesday’s study and then consider the
following: How is Satan using similar methods today to subtly
undermine the authority of the Scriptures?
37
i n s i d e
Story
Faithful Student in Italy
By Andrew McChesney
In Italy, schoolchildren have the option of attending an hour of religion
classes every week in public school. As a small girl, Sara decided to attend
because she wanted to know more about the Bible.
Her classmates quickly realized that she knew the Bible well. So, when
the teacher asked a question, they would say, “Sara knows the answer!”
After hearing the children say this for many months, the teacher asked
Sara, “How is it that you know the Bible so well?”
“I go to the Seventh-day Adventist Church,” Sara said.
The teacher wanted to know more, so she went to church with Sara.
Sara got a new religion teacher in the sixth grade. Again she was able to
answer the teacher’s questions. Impressed, the teacher invited her to give an
hour-long class presentation about the Adventist Church. Sara prepared with
help from her pastor and other church leaders. At the end of the presenta-
tion, classmates peppered her with questions about the seventh-day Sabbath.
Today, Sara is in high school, and her religion teacher is a nun. Once, she
impressed the nun by writing a Bible verse on an exam. Other teens rarely
cited the Bible. The nun asked for an explanation, and Sara told her about
her faith. Afterward, the nun came to her church.
In another high school class, the teacher grew upset when Sara could not
answer a question about religion in Italy. Sara explained that she did not
know because she was not a member of Italy’s largest denomination. The
teacher asked several questions and invited Sara to give the class a lesson
about the Adventist Church. Sara’s presentation pleased the teacher, and she
said, “It is wonderful to learn about another faith in our class.”
The next year, however, Sara had a Saturday class from the same teacher.
The teacher pressured Sara to attend, and when she didn’t, teased her.
“Please come to school,” she said. “We won’t tell anyone that you came.”
Week after week, she mocked Sara. “I also could stay home on Saturdays,”
she said. “It would be better than coming to school.”
To Sara’s surprise, her classmates began to defend her to the teacher.
Then one Sabbath, when Sara was in church, the teacher praised her to
the class. “Even though Sara is only here half the time, she gets better marks
than the rest of you,” she said.
Sara believes God has blessed her for being open about her faith.
“I never have hidden my faith from my classmates,” she told Adventist
Mission. “My classmates respect me and know my faith is serious for me.”
This mission story illustrates Spiritual Growth Objective No. 7 of the Seventh-day
Adventist Church’s “I Will Go” strategic plan: “To help youth and young adults place
God first.” For more information, go to the website: IWillGo2020.org.
Provided by the General Conference Office of Adventist Mission, which uses Sabbath School
38 mission offerings to spread the gospel worldwide. Read new stories daily at AdventistMission.org.
teachers comments
Part I: Overview
Key Text: John 12:35
Study Focus: Rev. 12:7–9, John 8:44, Prov. 23:23, Prov. 4:18,
John 12:35, Ps. 119:30, Acts 20:27–32, 2 Thess. 2:7–12, John 8:32.
39
teachers comments
40
teachers comments
41
teachers comments
42
teachers comments
We must not confuse compromise with God’s patience, love, and grace.
Rather, salvation and the new opportunity for life spring from God’s
sacrifice. Precisely because God did not, and could not, compromise, He
sacrificed. But He did not sacrifice us. Rather, He sacrificed His own
life. If compromise were possible, He would not have needed to die in
our place. But because He did not compromise, He chose rather to die
in our place in order to uphold His truth, to manifest His love and righ-
teousness, and to save us from the guilt and power of sin. Moreover, He
did not compromise because He knew the consequences of compromise:
suffering, misery, and death of the entire humanity and universe.
For the same reasons, God’s true people do not compromise. True,
traditional Christianity compromised the revelation of God’s truth in
Scripture. However, God worked to restore His truth in order that He
might save as many as possible. For this reason, His faithful remnant
church happily collaborates with Him to help spread His truth by reflect-
ing His light.
3. Examine your life. Do you think there are areas in your life that
are the result of compromising God’s truth? If yes, what are
they? What can you do to rectify this situation?
43