Friday, April 17, 2026

Bible Truth

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

The Role of The Bible

Lesson 4 - Tuesday 

The Word of Truth in a World of Confusion

We live in an age where many voices compete for our attention. Opinions are endless, certainty seems rare, and some even claim that truth does not exist at all. Yet Scripture speaks with clarity and confidence: truth is real, truth matters, and truth is found perfectly in God and in His Word.

Jesus prayed to the Father in John 17:17, “Sanctify them by Your truth. Your word is truth.” Christ did not say God’s Word merely contains truth or points toward truth—He declared that it is truth. God’s Word is the reliable standard by which all other claims are measured. In a changing world, the Bible remains steady, trustworthy, and eternal.

Proverbs 30:5–6 adds, “Every word of God is pure... Do not add to His words, lest He rebuke you, and you be found a liar.” God’s words are flawless, refined, and dependable. Human ideas often become mixed with pride, error, and self-interest, but God’s truth is clean and pure. This also warns us not to tamper with Scripture by adding our preferences or subtracting what convicts us.

Psalm 12:6 says, “The words of the Lord are pure words, like silver tried in a furnace of earth, purified seven times.” God’s truth has been tested and proven. Through centuries of criticism, opposition, and attack, the Word of God still stands. It has comforted the broken, corrected the wandering, and transformed countless lives.

The second group of verses deepens the message. In 1 Thessalonians 2:13, Paul praised believers because they received the message “not as the word of men, but as it is in truth, the word of God.” The gospel is not a human invention—it is divine revelation. Psalm 33:4–5 declares, “For the word of the Lord is right, and all His work is done in truth.” God not only speaks truth; He acts in truth. His character matches His words. Ephesians 1:13 calls the gospel “the word of truth,” through which believers hear, trust Christ, and are sealed with the Holy Spirit.

So what message unites these texts? God is true, His Word is true, the gospel is true, and salvation rests on receiving that truth by faith.

Some argue, “There is no truth.” But that statement defeats itself. If someone says there is no truth, they are presenting that claim as if it were true. In trying to deny truth, they must borrow the very concept they reject. The statement collapses under its own weight. Truth must exist for the denial of truth to even be meaningful.

This matters deeply for everyday life. If truth does not exist, then right and wrong disappear, promises mean nothing, justice becomes impossible, and hope becomes empty sentiment. But because truth exists—and because God is truth—we can live with confidence. We can trust His promises, obey His commands, and stand firm when culture shifts.

Do not build your life on popular opinion or unstable feelings. Build it on the Word of God. Read it humbly. Believe it fully. Obey it courageously. What God says is true whether the world applauds or rejects it.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You that You are the God of truth and that Your Word is completely trustworthy. In a world filled with confusion, anchor my heart in Your promises. Help me to love truth, live truth, and share truth with grace and courage. Guard me from deception, pride, and unbelief. Sanctify me through Your Word, and draw me closer to Jesus, who is the way, the truth, and the life. In His name I pray, Amen.


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Thursday, April 16, 2026

Scripture, the Authority

Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

The Role of The Bible

Lesson 4 - Monday 


 

The Authority and Purpose of God’s Word

Scripture: 2 Timothy 3:15–17 (summary/paraphrase)
From childhood, Timothy had been taught the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make a person wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is breathed out by God and is useful—profitable for teaching truth, exposing error, correcting what is wrong, and training people to live in righteousness—so that the believer may be fully equipped for every good work.


When Paul writes to Timothy, he does not treat Scripture as optional guidance or helpful tradition. He presents it as something living with authority because of its source: God Himself. The Bible is not merely a record of religious thoughts about God; it is God’s own breathed-out Word. That means its authority is not borrowed from human wisdom, but rooted in divine origin.

These verses show us at least four key functions of Scripture.

First, Scripture leads us to salvation. It makes us “wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus.” The Bible is not just for information; it is for transformation. Its central aim is not to make people smarter, but to bring them to Christ.

Second, Scripture teaches truth. It forms the foundation for what we believe. In a world full of shifting opinions, the Word of God provides stable, reliable doctrine.

Third, Scripture corrects us. It does not only inform; it confronts. It exposes where we are wrong—our thinking, our attitudes, our choices—and calls us back into alignment with God’s will. This is where many people resist Scripture, because correction humbles us.

Fourth, Scripture trains us for righteousness. It doesn’t just stop at correction; it rebuilds. God’s Word shapes habits, character, and direction so that a person is equipped for every good work God calls them to do.

The danger comes when we approach the Bible with an arrogant or closed heart. It is possible to read Scripture while assuming we already know what it says, or believing we have outgrown its relevance. That posture slowly distances a person from God. When self-confidence replaces humility, Scripture becomes something we analyze instead of something that analyzes us.

But the right posture is different. The Bible is meant to be approached with humility, dependence, and expectancy. It is not a mirror to confirm our opinions—it is a light that reveals reality.

The question is not whether Scripture is still powerful. It is. The real question is whether we are still teachable.


Prayer
Lord God, thank You for giving us Your Word. Forgive us for the times we have treated it lightly or approached it with pride instead of humility. Open our hearts so that we would be teachable and willing to be corrected. Let Your Word lead us to Jesus, shape our beliefs, confront our sin, and train us in righteousness. Make us people who do not just read the Bible, but are changed by it. Equip us through Your truth for every good work You have prepared for us. Keep us close to You through Your Word. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


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The Most Powerful Weapon

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

The Role of The Bible

Lesson 4 - Sunday 

The Quiet Drift—and God’s Constant Mercy

It rarely happens all at once. No one wakes up and decides to grow distant from God. Instead, it’s subtle. A busy day turns into a busy week. The Bible stays closed “just for today,” then for several days more. And without realizing it, something begins to shift. When God’s Word is absent, it doesn’t just affect our relationship with Him—it spills into everything else. Our patience thins. Small frustrations turn into sharp words. Our marriages feel strained, our interactions feel heavier, and even ordinary responsibilities begin to feel overwhelming. Life hasn’t necessarily gotten harder—but we’ve grown weaker.

This is not accidental. If Satan can keep God’s people from Scripture, he doesn’t need to do much else. A disconnected believer is a vulnerable one. Without the steady truth, correction, and comfort of God’s Word, we begin to rely on our own strength—and that strength runs out quickly.

What’s most dangerous is how easily we can deceive ourselves in the process. We may still think we’re “doing okay” spiritually. We might pray occasionally or attend church, but if days or weeks pass without opening God’s Word, our foundation is quietly eroding. The drift feels small, but its effects are not.

And yet, in the middle of our inconsistency, we’re met with something remarkable. “Through the Lord’s mercies we are not consumed, because His compassions fail not. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness” (Lamentations 3:22–23).

God is not like us. Where we are inconsistent, He is constant. Where we drift, He remains steady. Where we fail, His mercy does not. Every single morning, without exception, His compassion is renewed toward us. He does not ration grace based on our performance. He does not grow impatient with our weakness. His faithfulness stands in sharp contrast to our instability.

That contrast should do two things. First, it should humble us. If we’re honest, most of us are far more inconsistent than we’d like to admit. Our devotional lives can be “wishy-washy”—strong one week, neglected the next. We prioritize what feels urgent and push aside what is essential. And it shows, not just spiritually, but relationally and emotionally.

But second, it should call us higher. God’s consistency is not an excuse for our complacency—it’s an invitation to return. His daily mercy means we always have a fresh starting point. No matter how inconsistent you’ve been, today is new. The question is whether you’ll respond.

If your time in the Word has been irregular, don’t overcomplicate the solution. You don’t need a perfect system—you need a real commitment. Set aside time. Open the Bible. Be honest before God. Let His Word shape your thinking before the day shapes your reactions. Consistency won’t come from intention alone—it comes from choosing, daily, to show up.

Because the truth is simple: when you stay rooted in God’s Word, you don’t just become more “spiritual”—you become more patient, more grounded, more able to love others well. The change may not feel dramatic in a single day, but over time, it’s unmistakable.

So ask yourself honestly: How consistent am I, really? And more importantly: What needs to change?

Don’t ignore the answer. Act on it.

Prayer:
Father, I confess that I have often been inconsistent in seeking You. I let busyness, distraction, and even laziness pull me away from Your Word. Forgive me for drifting and for relying on my own strength. Thank You that Your mercies are new every morning and that Your faithfulness never fails, even when mine does. Help me to be disciplined and intentional in spending time with You each day. Renew my desire for Your Word, and let it shape my heart, my thoughts, and my relationships. Strengthen me where I am weak, and draw me back when I begin to drift. In Jesus’ name, amen.


Sabbath School Lesson 4: The Role of The Bible

 Growing in a Relationship With God

Lesson 4 

The Role of The Bible
 

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Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Living in the Shadow of the Cross


 
Living in the Shadow of the Cross: 

Lessons from Philippians 2:3–8

In Philippians 2:3–8, we’re given one of the clearest pictures of what the Cross is meant to produce in a believer’s life. This passage doesn’t just explain what Christ did—it shows how His mindset should reshape the way we live every day.

Paul begins with a direct challenge: “Let nothing be done through selfish ambition or conceit, but in lowliness of mind let each esteem others better than himself.” That cuts against our natural instincts. We’re wired to promote ourselves, protect our image, and look out for our own interests. But in light of the Cross, that approach doesn’t hold up.

Why? Because of what Jesus did.

Verses 5–8 shift our focus to Christ: “Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus.” What follows is a stunning description of humility. Though He was fully God, Christ did not cling to His rights or status. Instead, He “made Himself of no reputation,” took on the form of a servant, and came in the likeness of men. He didn’t just lower Himself—He humbled Himself to the point of death, even the shameful death of the Cross.

That’s the standard.

The Cross reveals that true greatness is not found in self-exaltation, but in self-giving love. Jesus didn’t demand recognition; He chose sacrifice. He didn’t grasp for power; He surrendered for the sake of others.

So what does that mean for us?

First, it means we are called to reject selfish ambition. Living in light of the Cross means asking hard questions about our motives. Are we serving others, or are we trying to elevate ourselves? Are we doing good for God’s glory, or for our own?

Second, it means valuing others above ourselves. That doesn’t mean ignoring responsibilities or pretending we have no worth. It means intentionally choosing to consider others’ needs, perspectives, and well-being as important—sometimes more important—than our own preferences.

Third, it means embracing a servant’s mindset. Jesus didn’t just act like a servant; He became one. In practical terms, that shows up in everyday decisions: how we treat people who can’t benefit us, how we respond when we’re overlooked, and whether we’re willing to do unnoticed, uncelebrated work.

Finally, it means accepting that humility often comes with a cost. The Cross was not comfortable, convenient, or admired in its time. In the same way, living humbly may mean being misunderstood, overlooked, or even taken advantage of. But the Cross reminds us that obedience to God matters more than public recognition.

Here’s the bottom line: you can’t truly grasp the Cross and still live a self-centered life. The two don’t fit together.

If Christ was willing to lay aside everything for you, the only reasonable response is to lay aside your pride, your need for recognition, and your self-focus—and follow His example.

Living in light of the Cross isn’t about occasional acts of humility. It’s a complete reorientation of how you see yourself, others, and your purpose. It’s choosing, day after day, to adopt the mindset of Christ—one that serves, sacrifices, and trusts God with the outcome.