Sunday, May 31, 2015

Lesson 10 Following Jesus in Everyday Life May 30 June 5. 2015

Lesson 10May 30-June 5

Following Jesus in Everyday Life

Sabbath Afternoon

Read for This Week's Study: Luke 11:37-5412:4-21,35-53Amos 6:1Luke 8:4-1522:24-27.
Memory Text: And the apostles said to the Lord, Increase our faith (Luke 17:5, NKJV).
Though a great teacher, Jesus did not establish a school of theology or philosophy. His purpose was to seek and to save that which was lost (Luke 19:10). He came to reveal the character of God, a revelation that culminated in the cross, where He not only showed humanity and unfallen worlds what God was really like but He also paid the penalty for sin so that human beings, despite their fallen nature, could be redeemed.
In doing this, He also created a redeemed community, a community of those who, having been saved by His death, have chosen to model His life and teachings.
The call to be part of this redeemed community is a call, not to a preferred status in life but to an absolute allegiance to the One who calls, to Christ Himself. What He says becomes the disciple's law of life. What He desires becomes the disciple's sole purpose in life. No amount of outward goodness or doctrinal perfection can take the place of total allegiance to Christ and His will.
Discipleship, which we owe exclusively to the indwelling Christ, makes certain imperative requirements. No competition and no substitute is permitted.
Study this week's lesson to prepare for Sabbath, June 6.
SundayMay 31

Flee Pharisaism

Of the more than 80 references to Pharisees in the Gospels, approximately 25 percent of them are found in Luke. Pharisees were noted for their doctrinal conservatism, as opposed to Sadducees, who were known for their liberal ideas. Pharisees were often legalists who, while professing to believe in grace, taught salvation by the keeping of the law.
Read Luke 11:37-54. What is Jesus warning about, and how is this same principle manifested today? How can we make sure that we, in our own ways, don't reflect some of the things that Jesus warned against?


A review of the woes (Luke 11:42-54) pronounced on the Pharisees and the scribes shows how much the call to true religion crosses every generation, including our own.
For example, while tithing is a joyful acknowledgment of God's provision, it can never be a substitute for the basic demands of love and justice in human relations (vs. 42).
These same ones who neglect justice and the love of God love, instead, the most important seats in the synagogues (vss. 42-43, NIV). Talk about missing the point of true faith!
Jesus warned, too, that those who equate true religion with outward rituals alone are really unclean, somewhat like those who come in contact with the dead (Luke 11:44; see also Num. 19:16). How easy to confuse what's trivial with what's sacred in the eyes of God.
Also, Jesus pronounced a woe on the experts in the law who used their education and experience to place intolerable religious burdens on others while they themselves do not touch the burdens with one of [their] fingers (Luke 11:46, NKJV).
Meanwhile, the Pharisees honored the prophets no longer alive but worked against the living ones. Even as Jesus spoke, some were plotting to kill the Son of God. What is important is not the honoring of prophets but the heeding of their prophetic message of love, mercy, and judgment.
The last woe is a terrible one. Some who had been entrusted with the key to God's kingdom had failed in their trusteeship. Instead of using the key wisely and letting God's people come into the kingdom, they had locked them out and thrown away the key.
MondayJune 1

Fear God

Fear God and give glory to Him (Rev. 14:7, NKJV) is the first of the three angels' messages, so central to Seventh-day Adventists' life and faith. Fearing God is not being afraid, as it is often thought to be. It is realizing just who God is and what His claims on us are. It is an act of faith that involves total allegiance to Him. God becomes the sole definer and arbiter of our life-our thoughts, actions, relationships, and destiny. Discipleship based on that kind of fear stands on unshakable ground.
Read Luke 12:4-12. What is Jesus saying to us here about fear?


The passage shows us whom to fear and whom not to fear. We need not fear forces that can affect only our body in the present world. Instead, we must fear and obey God because in His hands is our eternal destiny. But our God-whose eyes are on the sparrow (Luke 12:6) and who has numbered the hairs on our heads (vs. 7)-is loving and caring; hence, each one of us is infinitely precious in His sight. If we truly believed that, how many earthly fears would vanish?
Read Luke 12:13-21. What is Jesus warning us about here?


While Jesus refuses to intervene between two brothers quarreling over the division of property, He does emphasize the relevance of the tenth commandment (Exod. 20:17) against the evil of covetousness and points out a significant truth for all time: life is not made up of things (Luke 12:15). The rich foolish man lived in a little world restricted to himself. Nothing else mattered to him. How careful we need to be not to fall into this same trap; this is especially crucial for those who have been blessed with an abundance of material goods.
Though we all enjoy material things, think how little ultimate satisfaction they can really give you, especially in light of eternity. Why, then, is it still so easy to make the mistake that Jesus warned about in Luke 12:16-21?
TuesdayJune 2

Be Prepared and Watchful

Vigilance and fidelity have been required of Christ's followers in every age; but now that we are standing upon the very verge of the eternal world, holding the truths we do, having so great light, so important a work, we must double our diligence.-Ellen G. White,Testimonies for the Church, vol. 5, pp. 460,461.
Read Luke 12:35-53 and summarize what these verses mean specifically to you, especially if you have been waiting a long time for the second coming of Jesus.


Christians cannot afford to be lax or lethargic. The context of His sure return, and the unknown hour thereof, should drive us to have our robes girded and our lamps trimmed and burning. The eschatological hope must be the driving force of our life and work, our readiness and faithfulness. It is this faithfulness to do His will on earth and readiness to meet Him in peace that distinguishes between good and evil servants.
Any neglect of faithfulness on the pretext that My master is delaying his coming (Luke 12:45, NKJV) is placing oneself under the severest form of God's judgment (vss. 45-48). The more the privilege the greater the responsibility, and hence, from those who are given much, much will be expected (vs. 48).
The ancient prophet's judgment Woe to you who are at ease in Zion (Amos 6:1, NKJV) seems reflected in Christ's warning that Christian discipleship is not a state of ease. Paul explains the Christian life as one of spiritual warfare (Eph. 6:12). The focal point is that every Christian is involved in the cosmic conflict between Christ and Satan, and the Cross draws a clear line between the two. Only by continual faith in the Christ of the cross can one win the final victory.
For everyone to whom much is given, from him much will be required; and to whom much has been committed, of him they will ask the more. (Luke 12:48, NKJV). What should this text mean to us as Seventh-day Adventists?
WednesdayJune 3

Be a Fruitful Witness

The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, in their eternal council before the foundation of the world (Eph. 1:4), laid the plan of salvation. That is, even before the first human was created and, of course, before the first humans sinned, God had a plan in place to rescue the world. The plan is rooted in the cross, and the good news of the cross must be told to everyone in the world. The responsibility of that witness is placed on every Christian.
You shall be witnesses to Me in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth (Acts 1:8, NKJV). The final charge of Jesus underscores the importance the Lord placed on the witnessing role of His followers.
What lessons must those in Christian witness learn from the parable of the sower and the soil? Luke 8:4-15.


What and when is the reward of the one who witnesses? Luke 18:24-30.


What does the parable of the minas (Luke 19:11-27) teach about faithfulness and responsibility in witnessing?


In each of these texts, and others, the dangers, the responsibilities, and the rewards of witnessing and faith are revealed. We have been charged with a solemn responsibility; but considering what we have been given, how little is really asked of us?
ThursdayJune 4

Be a Servant Leader

Read Luke 22:24-27. Even as the disciples were preparing for the Last Supper, they were arguing about who among them would be the greatest in the kingdom. How does Jesus respond to their foolishness, and what is so revolutionary about His reply?


Jesus' answer is unique in the history of leadership. Pharaoh, Nebuchadnezzar, Alexander, Julius Caesar, Napoleon, and Genghis Khan all saw leadership in terms of power and authority over others. That's pretty much how the world has always worked in regard to power.
But not so among you; on the contrary, said Jesus, he who is greatest among you, let him be as the younger, and he who governs as he who serves (Luke 22:26, NKJV). In so saying, the Lord of the universe reversed the definition of leadership: Whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first must be your slave-just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many (Matt. 20:26-28, NIV).
In so defining servanthood and self-denial as the core principles of His way and His leadership, Jesus introduced a new dynamic to human relations: fulfillment comes not from power but from service; leadership derives its authority not from position but from servanthood; transformation begins not with the throne but with the cross. To live is to die (John 12:24).
In Luke 9:46-48 something similar arose among Jesus' disciples about who would be the greatest. The principles of the world were still firmly entrenched in His disciples' minds.
The Master's answer gets to the heart of the problem and poses one of the most difficult challenges in life in general and in the Christian life in particular. Jesus' words, especially the part about being the least among you (vs. 48) show how completely backward the world's priorities are.
With the principles of the world so utterly opposite of what Jesus taught here, how are we to survive if we implement His principles in our own lives?
FridayJune 5
Further Study: Who has the heart? With whom are our thoughts? Of whom do we love to converse? Who has our warmest affections and our best energies? If we are Christ's, our thoughts are with Him, and our sweetest thoughts are of Him. All we have and are is consecrated to Him. We long to bear His image, breathe His spirit, do His will, and please Him in all things.-Ellen G. White, Steps to Christ, p. 58.
In our life here, earthly, sin-restricted though it is, the greatest joy and the highest education are in service. And in the future state, untrammeled by the limitations of sinful humanity, it is in service that our greatest joy and our highest education will be found-witnessing, and ever as we witness learning anew the riches of the glory of this mystery; which is Christ in you, the hope of glory.Colossians 1:27.-Ellen G. White, Education, p. 309.

Discussion Questions:

  1. Jesus called the rich and successful farmer a fool (Luke 12:20). One may not be rich or successful, but what makes one a fool in the sight of God?
  2. In some of our churches, we see two groups: first, the professionals, business executives, church and community leaders, and the influential, all who get respect, notice, and regard; second, the silent and the insignificant ones who just come and go without anyone taking note of them. What can you do to make the latter feel just as important as the first group?
  3. Though it's easy today to deride the Pharisees for the way that they perverted the faith, how can we be sure that we, who are zealous for the faith, are not in danger of making the same mistakes? How do we stand firm for what is right without becoming a Pharisee? Or, even more important, how do we determine what is right and what is worth fighting for, as opposed to straining at gnats?
  4. How do we maintain an attitude of vigilance and readiness for the return of Jesus when, with each passing year, it gets easier and easier to become less vigilant?
Inside Story~  China Tan Yuen and Tao Yeh

Searching for Peace, Part 2

(Continued from last week)
Tan didn’t plan to stay for long, but since no one sent him home, he stayed and studied. As he and the elderly pastor studied the Bible together, Tan learned new truths about God. He had heard about the Sabbath, but had thought that Sunday was the Sabbath. Other Christians worshiped on Sunday; why did this group worship on Saturday?
Patiently Pastor Xo studied and prayed with Tan. Tan prayed too, asking God to show him His truths. Little by little God opened Tan’s mind to truth, and he accepted it.
Tan stayed and studied with Pastor Xo for seven months. During this time he was baptized and dedicated himself to work full-time for God. Pastor Xo assigned Tan to work in a village nearby, where there was a small congregation of believers.
One day Tan answered a knock at his door and found Tao standing there. I had to find you, Tao said. I want to know your God.Surprised, Tan invited him in and learned that three days after he had left town, Tao and his friends got into a fight with a man who was the leader of a powerful gang. The young man managed to escape, but the next day someone told him that the gang leader was searching for him to kill him. His mother, distraught over her son’s evil ways, begged him to leave town.
While packing to go, Tao found the Bible Tan had given him. He picked it up, and it opened to Matthew 6. Tao began to read, Do not worry about your life. . . . But seek first [God’s] kingdom. . . . Do not worry about tomorrow. . . . Each day has enough trouble of its own (verses 25-34, NIV). Tao remembered Tan’s peace and wished he knew God as Tan did, so he decided to buy a one-way ticket to find his Christian friend.
Tan introduced Tao to Pastor Xo. Pastor Xo helped Tao find work and in the evenings they studied the Bible together. Tao absorbed the truths and accepted Christ as his Saviour and was baptized. Now a new desire burned in Tao’s heart-he wanted to become a Bible worker.
He decided to return home and share his new faith with the people there. His first convert was his mother, who saw the deep change in her son’s life. But few others were interested enough to listen. Tao’s mother feared that if he remained in the village, he might fall back into his old ways. She urged him to return to the city and continue studying, but Tao explained to her that Jesus changes lives forever.
Tao did return to the city to receive more training. He knows that it is by God’s grace that he is alive, and by God’s grace he wants to live for Him. Both Tan and Tao are grateful for how God has led in their lives and they continue to share their faith with others as lay pastors in southern China.
This quarter part of our Thirteenth Sabbath Offering will go to help establish house churches in some of China’s largest cities. Thank you for giving generously to support this wonderful opportunity.
You can learn more about how God is working with people in China, and other countries in the Northern Asia-Pacific Division by visiting www.adventistmission.org and checking under the Resources menu.

Produced by the General Conference Office of Adventist Mission.  email: info@adventistmission.org  website: www.adventistmission.org

Friday, May 22, 2015

Lesson 9 Jesus, the Master Teacher May 23-29 .

Lesson 9May 23-29

Jesus, the Master Teacher

Sabbath Afternoon

Read for This Week's Study: Luke 8:22-25,4:31-37,6:20-49,8:19-21,10:25-37Deut. 6:5.
Memory Text: And they were astonished at His teaching, for His word was with authority (Luke 4:32, NKJV).
When Christ came to the earth, humanity seemed to be fast reaching its lowest point. The very foundations of society were undermined. Life had become false and artificial. . . . Disgusted with fable and falsehood, seeking to drown thought, men turned to infidelity and materialism. Leaving eternity out of their reckoning, they lived for the present. 
"As they ceased to recognize the Divine, they ceased to regard the human. Truth, honor, integrity, confidence, compassion, were departing from the earth. Relentless greed and absorbing ambition gave birth to universal distrust. The idea of duty, of the obligation of strength to weakness, of human dignity and human rights, was cast aside as a dream or a fable. The common people were regarded as beasts of burden or as the tools and the steppingstones for ambition. Wealth and power, ease and self-indulgence, were sought as the highest good. Physical degeneracy, mental stupor, spiritual death, characterized the age.-Ellen G. White, Education, pp. 74,75.
Against such a background we can better understand why Jesus taught the things that He did.
Study this week's lesson to prepare for Sabbath, May 30.
SundayMay 24

The Authority of Jesus

As a physician and scholar, Luke was acquainted with the role of authority. He was familiar with the authority of philosophy in Greek scholarship and education. He knew the authority of the Roman law in civil matters and government function. As Paul's traveling companion he knew the ecclesiastic authority that the apostle commanded with the churches he founded. Thus, Luke understood that authority is at the core of a person's position, an institution's role, a state's function, and a teacher's relationship to his or her followers. Having rubbed shoulders with all kinds of authority at all levels of power, Luke shared with his readers that there was something matchless about Jesus and His authority. Born in a carpenter's home, brought up for 30 years in the little Galilean town of Nazareth, known for nothing great by worldly standards, Jesus confronted everyone-Roman rulers, Jewish scholars, rabbis, ordinary people, secular and religious powers-with His teaching and ministry. His fellow townspeople marveled at the gracious words which proceeded out of His mouth (Luke 4:22, NKJV). He once brought hope to a widow in Nain by raising her dead son to life (Luke 7:11-17). The entire town went into a shiver of fear, and exclaimed: God has visited His people. (vs. 16, NKJV). The authority of Jesus over life and death electrified not just Nain, but Judea and all the surrounding region (vss. 16-17, NKJV).
Read Luke 8:22-25,4:31-37,5:24-26,7:49,12:8. What do these texts reveal about the kind of authority that Jesus wielded?


Luke took time to record, not only for his friend Theophilus but also for generations to come, that Jesus, through His ministry, had established the uniqueness of His authority. As God in the flesh, He indeed had authority as no one else ever did.
Lots of people do things in the name of God, which would then of course give their actions a lot of authority. How can we be sure that when we say, God led me to do this, He really did? Discuss answers in class on Sabbath.
MondayMay 25

Christ's Greatest Sermon

The Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7) is often hailed in literature as the essence of Christianity. Luke provides selections of the sermon in Luke 6:20-49 and elsewhere. Because Luke placed the sermon immediately after the official choosing of the disciples (Luke 6:13), some scholars have called it the Ordination Charge to the Twelve.
As presented in Luke 6:20-49, the sermon begins with four blessings and four woes and outlines other essential characteristics of the Christian way.
Study the following sections of Luke 6:20-49 and ask yourself how closely your life embraces the principles expressed here.
  1. The Christian blessedness (Luke 6:20-22). How can poverty, hunger, weeping, and being hated lead to blessedness?
  2. The Christian's reason for rejoicing in the midst of rejection (Luke 6:22-23).
  3. Woes to guard against (Luke 6:24-26). Review each of the four woes. Why should a Christian guard against these?
  4. The Christian imperative (Luke 6:27-31). No command of Jesus is more debated and is considered more difficult to keep than the golden rule of love. The Christian ethic is fundamentally positive not negative. It does not consist of what not to do but what to do. Instead of saying Don't hate your enemy, it insists, Love your enemy. Instead of the law of reciprocity (tooth for a tooth), the golden rule demands the ethic of pure goodness (turn the other cheek also). Mahatma Gandhi developed out of the golden rule an entire political philosophy of resisting evil through good and eventually used this principle to win independence for India from British colonialism. Likewise, Martin Luther King, Jr. employed the ethic of the golden rule to break the evil of segregation in the United States. Where love reigns, blessedness ascends the throne.
  5. The Christian way (Luke 6:37-42). Note Christ's insistence on forgiveness, liberal giving, exemplary living, and on tolerance.
  6. The Christian fruit-bearing (Luke 6:43-45).
  7. The Christian builder (Luke 6:48-49).
TuesdayMay 26

A New Family

Great teachers before and since Jesus have taught about unity and love, but usually it is about love within the parameters of a single group; a family defined by the exclusivity of caste, color, language, tribe, or religion. But Jesus broke down the barriers that divide humans and ushered in a new family, one that made no distinction between the usual things that divide people. Under the banner of agape love-unmerited, nonexclusive, universal, and sacrificial-Christ created a new family. This family reflects the original, universal, and ideal concept enshrined in the Genesis creation, which attests that every human being is created in the image of God (Gen. 1:26-27) and, therefore, equal before Him.
Read Luke 8:19-21. Without in any way minimizing the ties and obligations that bind parents and children, brother and sisters, within a family, Jesus looked beyond flesh and blood and placed both of them at the altar of God as members of the whole family in heaven and earth (Eph. 3:15, NKJV). The family of Christian discipleship ought to be no less close and binding than the ties of having common parents. To Jesus the true test of family is not blood relationships but doing the will of God.
What do the following texts teach about the walls that Christ tore down in regard to the distinctions that so often divide humans (and often with bad results too)?








The mission and the ministry of Jesus, His forgiving heart and embracing grace, did not exclude anyone but included all who would accept His call. His everlasting love brought Him in touch with the entire spectrum of society.
What are ways that, as a church, we can better follow this crucial principle?
WednesdayMay 27

Love Defined: The Parable of the Good Samaritan: Part 1

Of the four Gospels, only Luke records the parables of the prodigal son and the good Samaritan (Luke 10:25-37). The first one illustrates the vertical dimension of love, the extraordinary love of the Father toward sinners; the second one shows us the horizontal dimension-the kind of love that should characterize human life, refusing to acknowledge any barrier between humans but living instead within Jesus' definition of a neighbor: that all human beings are children of God, and deserve to be loved and treated equally.
Read Luke 10:25-28 and reflect on the two central questions raised. How is each question related to the main concerns of Christian faith and life?


1. Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life? (vs. 25, NKJV).
Note that the lawyer sought for a way to inherit eternal life. To be saved from sin and to enter into God's kingdom is indeed the noblest of all aspirations one can have, but the lawyer, like so many, had grown up with the false notion that eternal life is something one can earn by good works. Evidently he had no knowledge that the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord (Rom. 6:23, NKJV).
2. What is written in the law? What is your reading of it? (vs. 26, NKJV).
During the time of Jesus, it was the custom of prominent Jews, such as this lawyer, to wear a phylactery on the wrist. It was a little leather pouch in which were written some great portions of the Torah, including the one that would answer Jesus' question. Jesus directed the lawyer to what was written in Deuteronomy (Deut. 6:5) and Leviticus (Lev. 19:18)-the very thing that he might have been carrying in his phylactery. He had on his wrist, but not in his heart, the answer to His question. Jesus directed the lawyer to a great truth: eternal life is not a matter of keeping rules but calls for loving God absolutely and unreservedly and likewise all God's creation-the neighbor, to be precise. However, either out of ignorance or out of arrogance, the lawyer pursued the dialogue with another query: Who is my neighbor?
What outward evidence reveals that you have truly been saved by grace? That is, what is it about your life that shows you are justified by faith?
ThursdayMay 28

Love Defined: The Parable of the Good Samaritan: Part 2

But he, wanting to justify himself, said to Jesus, And who is my neighbor? (Luke 10:29, NKJV).
An expert in the Jewish law, the lawyer must have known the answer to the question. Leviticus 19:18, where the second great commandment is spelled out, defines neighbors as children of your people. (NKJV). Hence, instead of providing an immediate answer to the lawyer's question or getting into a theological dispute with him and those observing the episode, Jesus lifts the lawyer and His audience to a higher plane.
Read Luke 10:30-37. What are the key points to this story, and what do they reveal about how we are to treat others?


Notice that Jesus said that a certain man (vs. 30) fell among thieves. Why did Jesus not identify the man's race or status? Given the whole purpose of the story, why did it matter?


The priest and the Levite saw the wounded man but passed him by. Whatever their reasons for not helping, for us the questions are: what is true religion, and how should it be expressed? Deut. 10:12-13Mic. 6:8James 1:27.


Hatred and animosity marked the relationship between Jews and the Samaritans, and by the time of Jesus the enmity between the two had only worsened (Luke 9:51-54John 4:9). Hence, by making a Samaritan the hero of the story, Jesus brought home His point, in this case to the Jews, even stronger than it otherwise might have been.
Jesus described the Samaritan's ministry in great detail: he took pity, he went to him, bandaged his wounds, poured oil and wine, carried him to an inn, paid an advance for his stay, and promised to care for any balance on his way back. All these parts of the Samaritan's ministry together define the limitlessness of true love. The fact, too, that he did all these to a man who was, possibly, a Jew, reveals that true love knows no frontier.
The priest and the Levite asked themselves the question: What would happen to us if we stopped and helped this man? The Samaritan asked: What would happen to this man if I didn't help him? What is the difference between the two?
FridayMay 29
Further Study: In His life and lessons, Christ has given a perfect exemplification of the unselfish ministry which has its origin in God. God does not live for Himself. By creating the world, and by upholding all things, He is constantly ministering for others. He maketh His sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust. Matthew 5:45. This ideal of ministry God has committed to His Son. Jesus was given to stand at the head of humanity, that by His example He might teach what it means to minister. His whole life was under a law of service. He served all, ministered to all. Thus He lived the law of God, and by His example showed how we are to obey it.-Ellen G. White, The Desire of Ages, p. 649.
The parable of the good Samaritan is not an imaginary scene, but an actual occurrence, which was known to be exactly as represented. The priest and the Levite who had passed by on the other side were in the company that listened to Christ's words.-The Desire of Ages, p. 499.

Discussion Questions:

  1. Go over the important question asked at the end of Sunday's study. Who hasn't heard people say that they did whatever they did because God told them to? What are ways that God does talk to us? At the same time, what are the dangers involved in invoking the authority of God in order to justify our deeds?
  2. Go back over the four woes in Luke 6:24-26. How are we to understand what Jesus is saying there? What is He really warning us to be careful of in this life?
  3. Think about the whole question of authority. What is authority? What are different kinds of authority? What kinds of authority trump other kinds? How should we relate to different kinds of authority in our life? What happens when the authorities over us clash?
Inside Story~  China Tan Yuen

Searching for Peace, Part 1

Tan grew up in a small city in southern China. Plagued with shyness, he found it difficult to talk to others and often felt intensely lonely. He thought religion was just superstition, and yet he somehow felt a spiritual longing. He decided to set out on an pilgrimage in search of peace.
He journeyed to a distant city, where he met a Christian pastor, who introduced him to the Bible. For several days the two studied together, and Tan felt drawn to the God of the Bible. However, he decided to search further before committing himself to one philosophy, so moved on in his search.
Two months later Tan returned, wanting to learn more about God. The pastor helped Tan find work, and the two resumed their Bible studies. This time Tan’s heart was touched and he decided to become a Christian. Now Tan wanted to work for God. He learned of some meetings being held in a distant city and decided to go. When he could earn a little money, he took the train, but for most of the trip he walked. It took him a month to get there.
Tan stayed in the city several months and worked with another Christian man. Then he decided to return to his hometown to share the gospel with his family and friends.
When he arrived in his village, he began sharing his faith, but the villagers were not eager to listen. Some rejected his message; others made fun of him. Tan fasted and prayed. God, is there no one here who will listen? Tan found no one—except a local troublemaker named Tao Yeh.
Tao belonged to a gang that terrorized the town. Four members of the gang were jailed and another was killed during some of their more violent activities. Although Tao had a reputation as a hardened gambler, fighter, and drinker, Tan talked with him about his spiritual condition and offered to pray with him. But Tao laughed and said that if he ever needed God, he would let Tan know.
No one will listen to me, Tan thought. He decided to leave town and find some believers with whom he could study. As he started out, Tao saw him and fell into step beside him. As the two walked down the road, Tan felt impressed to pray for Tao. Tao tried to brush aside Tan’s request to pray, but finally he agreed. They stopped along the road, and Tan prayed.
Before they parted, Tan gave Tao a small Bible, hoping he would read it. Then they said goodbye. Tan wondered if he would ever see Tao again-or would he hear that Tao had died in some fight?
Tan set off for a large city where he had heard there was a group of active Christians. When he arrived in the city, he was warned that he should return to his home province or risk being arrested. Although he bought a train ticket home, Tan decided to remain and try to find the Christians he had heard about.
He got a map and began searching. He found an Adventist church and met Pastor Xo [shoh] and several young people who were studying to become lay church leaders. Tan was delighted when Pastor Xo invited him to stay and study the Bible.
To be continued in next week’s Inside Story.

Produced by the General Conference Office of Adventist Mission.  email: info@adventistmission.org  website: www.adventistmission.org

Friday, May 15, 2015

Lesson 8 The Mission of Jesus May 16- 22. 2015

Lesson 8May 16-22

The Mission of Jesus

Sabbath Afternoon

Read for This Week's Study: Luke 15:4-7,11-32Luke 16:19-3118:35-4319:1-10.
Memory Text: The Son of Man has come to seek and to save that which was lost (Luke 19:10, NKJV).
If we were to write a mission statement for Jesus, we could not do any better than to repeat His own words: To seek and to save that which was lost.
What was lost? It was humanity itself, which was alienated from God, subject to death, and filled with fear, disappointment, and despair. If nothing were done in our behalf, all would be lost.
Thanks to Jesus, though, we all have great reasons to be hopeful.
In the apostasy, man alienated himself from God; earth was cut off from heaven. Across the gulf that lay between, there could be no communion. But through Christ, earth is again linked with heaven. With His own merits, Christ has bridged the gulf which sin had made . . . Christ connects fallen man in his weakness and helplessness with the Source of infinite power.-Ellen G. White, Steps to Christ, p. 20.
From Genesis to Revelation, the Bible is a story of God seeking after lost humanity. Luke illustrates this truth by using three important parables: the lost sheep (Luke 15:4-7), the lost coin (Luke 15:8-10), and the lost son (Luke 15:11-32).
Study this week's lesson to prepare for Sabbath, May 23.
SundayMay 17

The Lost Sheep and the Lost Coin

Read Luke 15:4-7. What does this tell us about God's love for us? Why is it so important to understand that it was the shepherd who went looking for the lost sheep?


In a world that can appear uncaring and indifferent to us, this parable reveals a startling truth: God loves us so much that He Himself will come after us, in order to bring us to Him. We often talk about people seeking God; in reality, God is seeking us.
The soul that has given himself to Christ is more precious in His sight than the whole world. The Saviour would have passed through the agony of Calvary that one might be saved in His kingdom. He will never abandon one for whom He has died. Unless His followers choose to leave Him, He will hold them fast.-Ellen G. White, The Desire of Ages, p. 483.
Read Luke 15:8-9. This parable is found only in Luke. The lost coin could have one of two meanings. First, Judea during the time of Jesus was full of poor people, and in most homes one coin (drachma) could have been more than a day's wage, barely enough to keep the family from starving. Second, as a mark of being married, some women wore a headdress made up of ten coins-a huge sum, saved over a long time in the case of poor families.
In either case, the loss was a serious matter. So, the woman, utterly broken and in deep grief, lights a lamp (the house perhaps had no windows or perhaps only a small window), picks up a broom, and turns the house upside down until she finds that coin. Her soul is filled with overflowing joy, and the overflow floods to all her friends.
The coin, though lying among dust and rubbish, is a piece of silver or gold still. Its owner seeks it because it is of value. So, every soul, however degraded by sin, is in God's sight accounted precious. As the coin bears the image and superscription of the reigning power, so man at his creation bore the image and superscription of God; and though now marred and dim through the influence of sin, the traces of this inscription remain upon every soul.-Ellen G. White, Christ's Object Lessons, p. 194.
So much modern science and philosophy tells us that we are nothing but chance creations in a meaningless universe that does not care at all about our fate or us. What completely different worldview is presented in these two parables?
MondayMay 18

The Parable of the Lost Son: Part 1

Hailed in history as the most beautiful short story ever told on the forgiving nature of love, the parable of the prodigal son (Luke 15:11-32), narrated only by Luke, may well be called the parable of the loving father and two lost sons. One son chose the lawlessness of the distant land over the love of the father. The other son chose to stay in the home but did not fully know the love of the father or the meaning of a brother. The parable may be studied in seven parts, four dealing with the prodigal, two with the Father, and one with the elder brother.
  1. Give me (Luke 15:12). The younger son's decision to demand of his father his portion of the property was no sudden, impulsive urge. Sin often results after a long time of brooding over misplaced priorities. The younger son must have heard from friends about the glitter and glamour of distant lands. Life at home was too rigid. Love was there, but it had its own boundaries; the distant land offered him life without restrictions. The father was too protective, his love too embracing. The son wanted freedom, and in the quest for unhindered freedom was the seed of rebellion.
  2. Why me? (Luke 15:13-16). The son cashed in his entire share and set off to the far country. The far country is a place far away from the father's home. Love's caring eyes, law's protective fence, grace's ever-present embrace are foreign to the far country. It is a distant land of riotous living (Luke 15:13). The Greek word for riotous (asotos) appears three other times as a noun in the New Testament: for drunkenness (Eph. 5:18), rebelliousness (Titus 1:6), and debauchery that includes lewdness, lusts, drunkenness, revelries, drinking parties, and abominable idolatries (1 Pet. 4:3-4, NKJV). Such pleasures of godless living wasted away his health and wealth, and soon he became moneyless, friendless, and foodless. His glittering life wound up in a gutter. Starved to the point of being in perpetual want, he found employment in caring for the pigs, a harsh fate for a Jew.
  3. Make me (Luke 15:17-19). But even the prodigal is still a son, with the power of choice to turn around. So, the son came to his senses and remembered a place called home, a person known as father, a relational bind called love. He walked back home, with a speech in his hand, to plead with the father: Make me. That is, make me whatever you want, but let me be within your watchful eyes, within the care of your love. What better home is there but the Father's heart.
The world can appear very alluring. What specific things of the world do you find yourself particularly tempted by, that you find yourself thinking, Oh, that's not so bad, when deep down you know it is?
TuesdayMay 19

The Parable of the Lost Son: Part 2

  1. The return home (Luke 15:17-20) was a journey of repentance. The journey began when he came to himself. Recognition of where he was, in comparison with what his father's home was, drove him to arise and go to his father. The prodigal son returns home with a four-part speech that defines the true meaning of repentance.
  2. First, there is an acknowledgment of the father as my father (vs. 18). The prodigal son now needs to lean upon and trust his father's love and forgiveness, just as we must learn to trust in our Heavenly Father's love and forgiveness.
    Second, confession: what the prodigal did is not an error of judgment, but a sin against God and his father (vs. 18).
    Third, contrition: I am no longer worthy (vs. 19). Recognition of one's unworthiness, in contrast to the worthiness of God, is essential for true repentance to take place.
    Fourth, petition: Make me (vs. 19). Surrender to whatever God wills is the destination of repentance. The son has come home.
  3. The waiting father (Luke 15:20-21). The wait and the vigil, the grief and the hope, began at the moment the prodigal son stepped out of the home. The wait was over when the father saw him a great way off, and then had compassion and ran, and fell on his neck, and kissed him (vs. 20). No other image captures the character of God as that of the waiting father.
  4. The rejoicing family (Luke 15:22-25). The father embraced the son, clothed him with a new robe, put a ring on his finger and shoes on his feet, and ordered a feast. The family was in celebration. If leaving the home was death, the return was a resurrection, and worthy of rejoicing. The son was indeed a prodigal, but nevertheless a son, and over every repentant son there is joy in heaven (vs. 7).
  5. The Elder Son (Luke 15:25-32). The younger son was lost when he stepped out of the home to go to a distant land; the older son was lost because, though he was home in the body, his heart was in a distant land. Such a heart is angry (vs. 28), complaining, and self-righteous (vs. 29), and refuses to recognize a brother. Instead, it recognizes only a son of yours, a spendthrift without character (vs. 30, NKJV). The elder son's attitude toward the father is the same as that of the Pharisees who accused Jesus: This Man receives sinners and eats with them (vs. 2, NKJV). The father's final word with his elder son reflects heaven's attitude to all repentant sinners: It was right that we should make merry and be glad, for your brother was dead and is alive again, and was lost and is found (vs. 32, NKJV).
Put yourself in the older brother's shoes. However wrong his thinking, why does it make so much sense that he would feel that way? How does this story reveal ways in which the gospel goes beyond what makes sense?
WednesdayMay 20

Lost Opportunities

Although Jesus came to seek and save those lost in sin, He never forces anyone to accept the salvation He offers. Salvation is free and available to all, but one must accept the free offer in faith, which results in a life in conformity with God's will. The only time we have for such an experience is while we live on earth; no other opportunity exists.
Read Luke 16:19-31. What's the main message of this parable?


The parable is recorded only in Luke, and it teaches two great truths with respect to salvation: the importance of today in the process of salvation and the absence of another opportunity for salvation after death.
Today is the day of salvation. The parable does not teach that there is something inherently evil in riches or something inescapably good in being poor. What it does teach is that the opportunity of being saved and living saved must not be missed while we are on this earth. Rich or poor, educated or illiterate, powerful or powerless, we have no second chance. All are saved and judged by their attitude today, now, to Jesus. Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation (2 Cor. 6:2).
The parable also teaches that eternal reward has nothing to do with material possessions. The rich man was clothed in purple and fine linen and fared sumptuously every day (Luke 16:19, NKJV) but missed the essential of life: God. Where God is not recognized, fellow human beings are not noticed. The rich man's sin was not in his richness but in his failure to recognize that God's family is broader than he was prepared to accept.
There is no second chance for salvation after death. The second inescapable truth that Jesus teaches here is that there is no second chance for salvation after death. It is appointed for men to die once, but after this the judgment (Heb. 9:27, NKJV). Another point of this parable is to show people that we have been given enough evidence now, in this life, to make a conscious choice for or against God. Any theology that teaches some kind of second chance after death is a great deception.
We love to talk about how much God loves us and all that He has done and is doing to save us. What should this parable teach us, though, about the danger of taking God's love and offer of salvation for granted?
ThursdayMay 21

Was Blind but Now I See

The mission statement of Jesus that He came to seek and save that which was lost is an affirmation of a holistic ministry. He came to make men and women whole, to transform them physically, mentally, spiritually, and socially. Luke gives us two instances that illustrate how Jesus restored two broken men into wholeness. One was blind physically, the other spiritually; both were outcasts-one a beggar and the other a tax collector. But both men were candidates for Christ's saving mission, and neither was beyond His heart or reach.
Read Luke 18:35-43. What does this teach about our utter dependence upon God? Who among us at times has not cried out, Have mercy on me?


Mark names the man as Bartimaeus (Mark 10:46). He was a beggar outside of Jericho. Physically challenged, socially of no consequence, and poverty stricken, he suddenly found himself in the sweep of heaven's wonder: Jesus of Nazareth was passing by(Luke 18:37, NKJV), and his faith surged upward to cry out, Son of David, have mercy on me! (vs. 39, NKJV). Faith requires neither eyes nor ears, neither feet nor hands, but only a heart that connects to the Creator of the world.
Read Luke 19:1-10. Who was the blind man in this story?


Only Luke records the story of Zacchaeus, the last of Jesus' many encounters with outcasts. Christ's mission, to seek and save that which was lost, was gloriously fulfilled in this encounter with Zacchaeus. Zacchaeus was Jericho's chief tax collector, a chief sinner in the judgment of the city's Pharisees, but a chief sinner sought and saved by the Savior. What strange places and methods Jesus used to accomplish His mission. A sycamore tree, a curious man seeking to see who Jesus was, and a loving Lord commanding the man to come down, for He had a self-invited lunch appointment with him. But more important, Jesus had a delivery to make: Today salvation has come to this house (Luke 19:9, NKJV) but not before Zacchaeus made things right (vs. 8).
It's easy to see other people's faults and shortcomings, isn't it? But we can so often be blind to our own. What are some areas in your life that you need to face up to, confess, and get the victory over what you have been putting off for way too long?
FridayMay 22
Further Study: By the lost sheep Christ represents not only the individual sinner but the one world that has apostatized and has been ruined by sin.-Ellen G. White, Christ's Object Lessons, p. 190.
On the value of one soul: The value of a soul, who can estimate? Would you know its worth, go to Gethsemane, and there watch with Christ through those hours of anguish, when He sweat as it were great drops of blood. Look upon the Saviour uplifted on the cross. . . . At the foot of the cross, remembering that for one sinner Christ would have laid down His life, you may estimate the value of a soul.-Christ's Object Lessons, page 196.

Discussion Questions:

  1. While all religions portray the human being in search for God, Christianity presents God as the seeker: Adam, where are you (Gen. 3:9)? Cain, where is your brother (Gen. 4:9)? Elijah, what are you doing here (1 Kings 19:9)? Zacchaeus, come down (Luke 19:5). What has been your own experience with God seeking you out?
  2. Look again at the final question at the end of Tuesday's lesson. What was the fatal mistake that the older son made? What spiritual defects were revealed in his attitude? Why is it easier to have that same attitude than we might think? See also Matthew 20:1-16.
  3. In the story of the rich man and Lazarus, Jesus said that even if someone were to come back from the dead, there would be those who would not believe. In what ways did this parable foretell the reaction of some to the resurrection of Jesus, in which some still didn't believe despite the powerful evidence for His resurrection?
  4. One of the most impressive aspects of Jesus' saving ministry is the equality with which He treated all people, such as the blind beggar and Zacchaeus or Nicodemus and the Samaritan woman. The Cross, more than anything else, shows the equality of all people before God. How should this crucial truth impact how we treat others, even those whom-because of politics, culture, ethnicity, whatever-we might have previously held ill feelings toward? Why is that attitude so anti-Jesus?
  5. Compare the story of the prodigal son with the story of the rich man and Lazarus. How do the two balance each other out?
Inside Story~  South Korea Daesung Kim

Food for the Soul

When I started pastoring the Seoul Central Seventh-day Adventist Church, office buildings surrounded the church and it was very difficult to meet people in the surrounding vicinity. As I was thinking about how to make contact with the people who work nearby, I thought that it could be very practical if we operated a restaurant because most of the people would want to eat lunch. I was thinking that if we provide very fresh food, friendly food-like a family, the people would like it.
When I first approached the church about starting a vegetarian restaurant, most members were against it because they had already tried to operate a restaurant several times but had failed. I assured them that I wouldn’t use the church budget, and that many times Ellen White had said that if we established this kind of restaurant in the middle of the city, it would be very successful. At last the members agreed.
Legally as a church, we were not permitted to own a restaurant because the church is a non-profit organization, so I decided to organize a health association, and invite those working in the surrounding offices to join so that they could eat very fresh vegetarian food in our restaurant. During the next three months I visited office by office in the surrounding buildings, and invited each person to become a member of our health association. I explained that we would provide the freshest vegetarian food and that by becoming a member of the association that could eat this delicious vegetarian food every day, Monday through Friday. The membership fee was the equivalent of US$100 per month. There was a lot of interest and many people signed up.
In addition to personal office visits, the church members and I distributed between 500 and 600 free meal tickets to the surrounding businesses. Each recipient was entitled to one free meal on a certain day at our newly opened vegetarian restaurant. Thinking that perhaps only 300-400 would come, we were happily surprised when nearly 500 guests arrived.
As they were enjoying their free meal, I announced that if they became members of the health association, they could eat this kind of food every day. Many joined.
To operate this kind of restaurant is not easy. It is important to have a good building. The church pastor should have a good relationship with the community. But while starting this restaurant may be difficult, once started, it will be successful.
We also learned that the taste of the food is very important! If the taste is not so good, the guests will not continue coming. A few years after we started, we lost our cook, and her replacement wasn’t as skilled. As food quality went down, so did the number of guests. Once we replaced her, food quality improved and again membership in the health association rose.
We found that there are many benefits to the church for hosting a vegetarian restaurant. For example, in Korea, most of the other denominations believe that the Seventh-day Adventist church is heretical-an unwanted sect, and because of this mindset, most were reluctant to visit the restaurant.
But as our vegetarian restaurant became more and more well-known, other Christian church pastors, monks, and priests decided to come too. After getting to know us, these people now have no prejudice for our church, and instead have only praise. Many of our guests have a high status in the community and they enjoy eating lunch here.
By God’s grace, our vegetarian restaurant at the Seoul Central church has been successfully operating for more than 12 years now. It is one of 117 centers of influence in South Korea.

Produced by the General Conference Office of Adventist Mission.  email: info@adventistmission.org  website: www.adventistmission.org