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Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Dan. 7:23–25; Rev. 12:6, 14;
Jude 3, 4; Rev. 2:10; Acts 5:28–32; Ps. 19:7–11; 1 John 5:11–13.
T
he modern Turkish seacoast city of Izmir was once the biblical city
of Smyrna, mentioned in the book of Revelation. This ancient city
of approximately 100,000 inhabitants flourished in the late first and
second centuries. It was a prosperous city, and it was fiercely loyal to Rome.
Once a year, all the citizens of Smyrna were commanded to burn incense
to the Roman gods. Evidently, in the second century, Smyrna had a thriv-
ing Christian community, as well, and many were not going to comply.
Polycarp, an early church leader, was martyred in Smyrna’s public square,
burned at the stake for refusing to betray his Lord by burning incense to
the Roman gods. When asked one last time to disavow Christ, the old man
replied, “Eighty and six years have I served Him, and He has done me no
wrong. How can I speak evil of my King who saved me?”
Throughout the centuries, men and women have been willing to expe-
rience martyrdom rather than give up their faith in Christ. Their sacrifice
rekindles our courage. The story of their commitment to Christ renews our
own commitment. This week we will look at some biblical principles that
motivated the Waldenses and later Reformers, such as Huss and Jerome, to
stay faithful to the Lord no matter what—even at the threat of death from
the same power that killed Polycarp: Rome, but now in the papal phase.
* Study this week’s lesson, based on The Great Controversy, chapters 4–6, to
prepare for Sabbath, April 27.
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S unday April 21
(page 31 of Standard Edition)
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M onday April 22
(page 32 of Standard Edition)
Read Revelation 2:10. What promise does God give those who are
faithful to Him in the face of death itself?
These words were written to the church at Smyrna. One of the city’s
patron gods was Dionysius, the god of festivity and fertility. When the
priests of Dionysius died, a crown was placed on their heads in their
funeral procession. John contrasts this earthly crown placed on the
head at death with the crown of life placed on the heads of those who
are victorious over the forces of evil. The crown of life is presented
to those who endured trials, difficulties, suffering, and death itself for
Christ’s sake.
The crown of life inspires these faithful believers to endure death
itself for Christ’s sake. The crown of life always motivates believers in
challenging circumstances. It inspired the Waldenses through pain and
persecution. They knew they would see Jesus one day and live with
Him forever. The crown of life also speaks to us: we may go through
trials now, but a crown of life awaits us as we keep our eyes fixed on
Jesus.
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T uesday April 23
(page 33 of Standard Edition)
Courage to Stand
Compare Acts 5:28–32, Ephesians 6:10–12, and Revelation 3:11.
What basic principle is found in these texts?
How can we, reflecting the light of Christ, shine in our own com-
munity? Do we?
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W ednesday April 24
(page 34 of Standard Edition)
Read 2 Timothy 2:1–3. What counsel did the apostle Paul give to
Timothy regarding sharing the Word of God?
The truth of God’s Word and the joy of salvation in Christ so filled
the hearts of the Reformers that they had to share it. John Wycliffe
spent his life translating the Word of God into English for two reasons
alone: the living Christ changed Him through the Word, and the love of
Christ motivated him to share what he had learned with others.
Before Wycliffe, very little of the Bible existed in English. Though
he died before Rome got to him, the papacy, undeterred, dug up his
remains, burned them, and threw his ashes into a river. But just as
those ashes were dispersed by the water, so God’s Word, the water
of life, spread far and wide as a result of His work. Thus God used
Wycliffe, the “Morning Star of the Reformation.”
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T hursday April 25
(page 35 of Standard Edition)
Cheered by Hope
Read Hebrews 2:14, 15. How did believers in the Middle Ages experi-
ence the reality of the great controversy?
What was it that cheered the faithful Waldenses during the hor-
rible persecutions they faced? What gave Huss and Jerome, Tyndale,
Latimer, and the martyrs of the Middle Ages courage to face the flames
and the sword? Faith in the promises of God. They believed Christ’s
promise: “Because I live, you will live also” (John 14:19). They found
His strength sufficient for life’s greatest trials. They even found joy
through fellowship with Christ in His sufferings. And their faithfulness
was a powerful witness to the world.
They looked beyond what was to what will be. They knew that,
through the resurrection of Christ, death was a defeated foe. For these
courageous men and women, the stranglehold of death was broken.
They clung to the promises of God’s Word and came away victorious.
Read John 5:24, John 11:25, 26, and 1 John 5:11–13. What assurances
do these promises give you personally? How do they help us in the
trials of life?
John Huss would not falter in the face of imprisonment, injustice, and
death itself. He languished in prison for months. The cold, damp conditions
brought on a fever that nearly ended his life. Nevertheless, “the grace of
God sustained him. During the weeks of suffering that passed before his
final sentence, heaven’s peace filled his soul. ‘I write this letter,’ he said to
a friend, ‘in my prison, and with my fettered hand, expecting my sentence
of death tomorrow. . . . When, with the assistance of Jesus Christ, we shall
again meet in the delicious peace of the future life, you will learn how
merciful God has shown Himself toward me, how effectually He has sup-
ported me in the midst of my temptations and trials.’—Bonnechose, vol.
2, p. 67. In the gloom of his dungeon he foresaw the triumph of the true
faith.”—Ellen G. White, The Great Controversy, pp. 107, 108.
The apostle Paul’s admonition speaks to us with increasing relevance
today. “Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering,
for He who promised is faithful” (Heb. 10:23, NKJV). As the promises
of God sustained His people in ages past, so they sustain us today.
Further Thought: “God permitted great light to shine upon the minds
of these chosen men, revealing to them many of the errors of Rome;
but they did not receive all the light that was to be given to the world.
Through these, His servants, God was leading the people out of the
darkness of Romanism; but there were many and great obstacles for
them to meet, and He led them on, step by step, as they could bear it.
They were not prepared to receive all the light at once. Like the full
glory of the noontide sun to those who have long dwelt in darkness,
it would, if presented, have caused them to turn away. Therefore, He
revealed it to the leaders little by little, as it could be received by the
people. From century to century, other faithful workers were to follow,
to lead the people on still further in the path of reform.”—Ellen G.
White, The Great Controversy, p. 103.
“In another letter, to a priest who had become a disciple of the gos-
pel, Huss spoke with deep humility of his own errors, accusing himself
‘of having felt pleasure in wearing rich apparel and of having wasted
hours in frivolous occupations.’ He then added these touching admo-
nitions: ‘May the glory of God and the salvation of souls occupy thy
mind, and not the possession of benefices and estates. Beware of adorn-
ing thy house more than thy soul; and, above all, give thy care to the
spiritual edifice. Be pious and humble with the poor, and consume not
thy substance in feasting. Shouldst thou not amend thy life and refrain
from superfluities, I fear that thou wilt be severely chastened, as I am
myself.’ ”—The Great Controversy, pp. 105, 106.
Discussion Questions:
Ê What is “progressive light”? Why does God reveal truth grad-
ually? How do these principles apply to God’s church today?
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i n s i d e
Story
Tale of Two Neighbors
By Andrew McChesney
Mussa’s religion taught that it is wrong to raise pigs for sale. But Mussa
worked as a pig farmer.
Nicolonaga’s religion taught that it is wrong to divorce for any reason
except sexual immorality. But Nicolonaga married three times and, on top
of that, had three common-law wives at different times.
The two men, who were neighbors, lived lives that were far from their
professed religious beliefs. But God had a plan for them in Mozambique.
One day, one of Mussa’s pigs entered Nicolonaga’s vegetable garden and
caused considerable damage.
Nicolonaga was furious and demanded a fistfight. He won the brawl, and
Mussa limped away bloodied and battered. But Mussa did not intend to give
up. He vowed revenge through witchcraft. “You have thirty days to prepare
for your death,” he told Nicolonaga.
The next day, Nicolonaga woke up seriously ill. He spoke about Mussa’s
threat to his friends from the Seventh-day Adventist church, where he had
once worshipped.
As Nicolonaga’s condition steadily deteriorated, he grew worried. After
15 days, he asked church members to pray for him, and the pastor organized
a prayer team to visit his house.
But Nicolonaga did not get better. Another week passed, and his options
seemed few.
With the clock ticking down on Mussa’s 30-day deadline, the pastor called
for a night of fasting and prayer for Nicolonaga.
Early the next morning, Mussa knocked on the door of the pastor’s house.
He told a fantastic story about how his gods had fought with Nicolonaga’s
God, and Nicolonaga’s God had won. He said he could no longer take
Nicolonaga’s life. He wanted to become a Christian.
“I want to worship Nicolonaga’s God,” he said.
Nicolonaga recovered from his illness, and both he and Mussa joined an
Adventist baptismal class. Both gave their hearts to Jesus in baptism. Today,
both are powerful forces for good in their region of Mozambique.
“God is powerful, and He answers the prayers of those who seek Him in
faith,” said Nelson A. Quenesse, the pastor.
After all, he said, “without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who
comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those who
diligently seek Him” (Heb. 11:6, NKJV).
Thank you for your Sabbath School mission offerings that help spread the gospel in
Mozambique and around the world.
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. 51
teachers comments
Part I: Overview
Key Text: John 3:14, 15
Study Focus: John 14:6; Jude 3, 4; Rev. 2:10; 1 John 1:7; Heb.
11:6; Acts 4:12; Matt. 10:18–20; Rev. 1:9.
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teachers comments
very evil nature of Lucifer, distorted by his own lies, now was acting
to suppress any attempt of God’s people to receive, discover, live, and
proclaim the truth.
Second, there is no freedom without God. God Himself is free. He
created us in His image: free, and, therefore, moral and loving. God not
only created us free; as our Provider, He is the standard and the sus-
tainer of our freedom. We cannot have real freedom without, or against,
God. Any undertaking to establish complete autonomy apart from God,
as Lucifer wanted, would mean depriving God of His status as Creator
and Provider. Further, such an undertaking would be to dethrone Him.
So, in order to achieve absolute autonomy, Lucifer originated his rebel-
lion against God. However, Lucifer soon realized that to preserve his
autonomy, he would constantly need to suppress the very existence of
God, who by definition was the Creator and the Provider. Not only that,
Lucifer also would need to suppress any desire, in himself and others,
to return to God and to the principles of His kingdom. For this reason,
Lucifer would need to exterminate any mention of God’s existence.
Thus, because God’s people testify of God’s existence and worship Him
as their Creator and Provider, Satan could not allow the existence of
God’s people to continue unmolested. For to do so would mean acknowl-
edging the collapse of his theories, namely, that there was freedom apart
from God and His government.
Waldensians, Franciscans, and Scripture
By the beginning of the second millennium after Christ, the Roman
Catholic Church had become a fearsome, centralized, and hierarchical
behemoth in Europe. It also was a deeply corrupt institution. Church
members could not overlook these developments. They felt the need to
identify the causes of the church’s corruption and to propose solutions.
This process resulted in numerous religious and mendicant orders.
At the beginning of the thirteenth century, Francis of Assisi (1181–
1226), the rather worldly son of a wealthy family, had a mystical conver-
sion experience, after which he renounced whatever property he had and
declared his intention to imitate Christ’s poverty as much as possible.
Francis founded the order of the Franciscans, which promoted poverty as
a virtue. The Franciscans were known for their street preaching. In 1209,
Francis sought the formal recognition of his order by Pope Innocent III,
who was in power from 1198 to 1216. After an initial hesitancy, the pope
granted Francis’s request in 1210. Francis also founded a women’s order,
that of St. Clare, as well as the Third Order, comprised of laypeople.
Just several decades earlier, by the end of the twelfth century, Peter
Waldo (d. 1205), a successful businessman in southeastern France, also
experienced a conversion, renounced his riches, and preached voluntary
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teachers comments
poverty. He also founded an order for the poor and appealed to the Papacy
for approval. Although Pope Alexander III, who presided from 1159 to
1181, initially accepted Waldo’s vow of poverty, his successor, Pope Lucius
III, who presided over the papal see from 1181 to 1185, condemned Waldo
and his movement, the Waldenses, as heretical, and banned them from
preaching. Worse, over the next several hundred years, the Roman Catholic
Church mounted horrific persecutions against the Waldenses that nearly led
to their extinction.
So, let us consider the similarities before us between these two revivalist
movements and religious orders, which emerged at about the same time in
history. The founders of both movements, Francis of Assisi and Peter Waldo,
had rather similar conversion experiences. Initially, both men founded their
orders on similar spiritual rules: poverty and street preaching. Both men
had similar desires to reform the church, and both appealed to the Papacy
for approval of their orders. However, the two orders had radically different
relations with the Papacy, and, consequently, they had different fates and
endings. The Franciscans’ request for papal approval was initially met with
hesitancy but was later granted. In contrast, Waldo’s vow of poverty, which
was initially approved by the Papacy, was later rescinded. The Franciscans
grew into one of the most influential Roman Catholic orders. (Today, we
can see its influence most notably reflected in the fact that the current pope,
although a Jesuit, honored Francis of Assisi by adopting his name.) On the
other hand, the Waldensians endured one of the cruelest persecutions in
history, persecution directed at their extermination.
The question of why is most pertinent here. What made the difference
between these two movements or orders? The answer is in their ultimate
allegiance. The Franciscans, very likely having learned from Waldo’s expe-
rience, obtained papal approval by giving ultimate allegiance to the pope.
That is, the Franciscans recognized the Papacy as the ultimate spiritual
and temporal authority on earth and vowed to support unconditionally its
authority in matters of doctrine and practice.
The Waldenses, on the other hand, believed that the ultimate authority
for our lives and teachings sprang out of God’s Holy Scripture. For this
reason, they made Scripture the heart of their study, preaching, and living.
Consequently, the Waldenses soon discovered and repudiated an increas-
ing number of the Roman Catholic Church’s falsehoods and compromises,
such as:
• the veneration of the saints,
• most of the seven Catholic sacraments,
• the concept of transubstantiation,
• auricular confession of sins to human priests,
• the practice of infant baptism,
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