Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Sabbath School Lesson 6: Prayer Warriors

 Growing in a Relationship With God

Lesson 6 

Prayer Warriors
 

You may use this for presenting and studying the current Sabbath School Lesson.

Sweeter Than Honey: Developing a Taste for Truth - Psalm 119:103-104

 


Sweeter Than Honey: Developing a Taste for Truth

Psalm 119:103–104 says, “How sweet are Your words to my taste, sweeter than honey to my mouth! Through Your precepts I get understanding; therefore I hate every false way” (NKJV). These verses pull you into a powerful idea: God’s Word isn’t just something to study—it’s something to savor.

The psalmist compares God’s words to honey, which in the ancient world was one of the sweetest, most satisfying things a person could experience. That’s not poetic exaggeration—it’s a reflection of real delight. But here’s the catch: most people don’t naturally crave Scripture like that. That kind of taste is developed over time. The more consistently you read, meditate, and apply God’s Word, the more your spiritual appetite changes. What once felt like a discipline starts to become a desire.

Verse 104 takes it a step further: “Through Your precepts I get understanding; therefore I hate every false way.” Real exposure to truth sharpens your ability to recognize what’s false. You don’t drift into discernment—you grow into it. And notice the strong language: hate every false way. That’s not passive avoidance; that’s active rejection. When God’s truth becomes sweet to you, sin and deception lose their appeal.

This connects directly with what Hebrews 5:14 teaches—that mature believers have their senses trained to discern good and evil. It’s not automatic; it’s the result of consistent engagement with truth. The more you feed on God’s Word, the more clearly you see the world—and the less tolerance you have for what pulls you away from Him.

Let’s be honest: if Scripture doesn’t feel “sweet” to you right now, the answer isn’t to wait for the feeling. It’s to keep showing up. Taste develops through exposure. The problem isn’t that God’s Word lacks sweetness—it’s that our appetites are often shaped by other things.

Challenge:
Set aside intentional time each day this week to read and reflect on Scripture—even if it feels routine at first. Ask God to reshape your appetite. Pay attention to how your thinking begins to shift, and where you start recognizing “false ways” you may have overlooked before.


More on: Lesson 5 How to Study The Bible   

Morning by Morning: Learning to Hear God - Isaiah 50:4

Morning by Morning: Learning to Hear God 

Isaiah 50:4 says, “The Lord God has given Me the tongue of the learned, that I should know how to speak a word in season to him who is weary. He awakens Me morning by morning, He awakens My ear to hear as the learned” (NKJV).

This verse paints a clear picture: before we can speak well to others, we must first learn to listen to God. Notice the order—God awakens the ear before He uses the tongue. A healthy relationship with Him begins in quiet attentiveness. It’s not just about gaining knowledge, but about being shaped daily by His voice. “Morning by morning” suggests consistency. This isn’t a one-time moment of inspiration; it’s a steady, growing connection where God teaches us how to think, respond, and care.

When that kind of relationship is real, it inevitably spills into how we treat people. The verse says God teaches us to speak “a word in season to him who is weary.” That means our words can become timely, gentle, and helpful instead of careless or reactive. Think about how often people around you are carrying something heavy—stress, discouragement, grief. A rushed or self-centered response can make it worse. But when you’ve been listening to God, you’re far more likely to respond with patience, wisdom, and compassion.

You can see this principle reinforced in Proverbs 15:23: “A word spoken in due season, how good it is!” And in Colossians 4:6: “Let your speech always be with grace, seasoned with salt, that you may know how you ought to answer each one.” These aren’t just communication tips—they’re the result of a life rooted in God. You don’t manufacture that kind of speech on the spot; it grows out of what you’ve been absorbing.

In real life, this might look like pausing before responding in a tense conversation, asking God for wisdom instead of reacting emotionally. It might mean encouraging a coworker at just the right moment, or choosing silence when words would only inflame a situation. It could even be as simple as sending a message or making a call because you feel prompted to check on someone—and finding out they truly needed it.

Here’s the honest part: if we’re not regularly listening to God, our default is to speak from our own impatience, pride, or distraction. That’s where relationships break down. But when we let Him “awaken our ear” daily, He reshapes what comes out of our mouths.

So the challenge is straightforward: are you giving God space to speak to you before you speak to others? Even a few intentional minutes each morning can start to change the tone of your entire day—and the way people experience you.


More on: Lesson 5 How to Study The Bible   

Coming to the Bible With the Right Attitude

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

How to Study The Bible

Lesson 5 - Friday Further Thought 

Coming to the Bible With the Right Attitude

When we open the Bible, we never come to an ordinary book. We come to the living Word of God, able to teach, correct, guide, and transform us. Hebrews 4:12 says, “For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword.” Because of this, our attitude matters deeply. If we come to Scripture only to defend our opinions, prove others wrong, or simply check a religious box, we may miss what God wants to say to us personally. But if we come with humility, hunger, and surrender, the Holy Spirit can shape our hearts through His truth.

Many people come to the Bible already decided. Instead of asking, “Lord, what are You saying?” they ask, “How can I make this fit what I already believe?” This is dangerous because pride closes ears that humility would open. Proverbs 3:5 says, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding.” Isaiah 66:2 adds, “But on this one will I look: On him who is poor and of a contrite spirit, and who trembles at My word.” God is drawn to the person who reverences His Word and is willing to be taught.

An attitude of humility is crucial because none of us knows everything. We all have blind spots, traditions, preferences, and assumptions. Even sincere believers can misunderstand truth when they cling too tightly to their own ideas. James 1:21 tells us, “Receive with meekness the implanted word, which is able to save your souls.” Meekness means teachability. It means being willing to say, “Lord, if I am wrong, correct me. If I need to change, change me.”

Surrender to the Word is just as important as humility. It is possible to admire Scripture without obeying it. It is possible to study deeply but never submit personally. Yet Jesus said in John 14:15, “If you love Me, keep My commandments.” In Luke 11:28 He said, “Blessed are those who hear the word of God and keep it!” God does not give truth merely to inform us, but to transform us. Every time we read the Bible, we should ask not only, “What does this mean?” but also, “How should I live because of it?”

Are there established opinions you may need to lay aside? Perhaps traditions passed down for years. Perhaps political ideas that shape how you read Scripture. Perhaps habits you excuse. Perhaps doctrines accepted without personal study. Acts 17:11 praises the Bereans because they searched the Scriptures daily to see whether things were so. They did not blindly accept human teaching. They tested everything by the Word of God.

If the Holy Spirit is bringing something to mind, do not harden your heart. Psalm 119:18 gives a beautiful prayer: “Open my eyes, that I may see wondrous things from Your law.” Ask God to reveal anything in you that resists His truth. Ask Him to remove pride, fear, stubbornness, or bias. Ask Him to make you willing to follow wherever Scripture leads.

Start praying now with honesty. You do not need polished words. Simply say, “Lord, show me where I am holding onto my own opinions more than Your truth. Give me courage to change.” God honors that kind of prayer. John 16:13 promises that the Spirit of truth will guide us into all truth.

The Bible becomes life-changing when we stop trying to master it and allow it to master us. Come as a learner. Come as a servant. Come ready to obey. Then the Word will not remain words on a page—it will become power in your life.

Prayer

Father in heaven, I confess that I sometimes come to Your Word with pride, assumptions, or a closed heart. Forgive me for the times I have wanted my opinions more than Your truth. Give me a humble spirit that trembles at Your Word. Open my eyes to understand what You are saying. Remove any tradition, bias, fear, or stubbornness that keeps me from receiving Your truth. Help me not only to hear Your Word, but to obey it. Make me teachable, surrendered, and willing to follow wherever You lead. Let Your Word shape my thoughts, my choices, and my life. In Jesus’ name, Amen. 


God’s Word Never Returns Empty

 

God’s Word Never Returns Empty

“ ‘So shall My word be that goes forth from My mouth; it shall not return to Me void, but it shall accomplish what I please, and it shall prosper in the thing for which I sent it’ ” (Isaiah 55:11, NKJV).

God’s Word is never wasted. Every promise He speaks carries power, purpose, and life. When God sends forth His Word, it always accomplishes something. It may comfort a broken heart, convict a wandering soul, strengthen a weary believer, or plant a seed of truth in someone who has never known Him. We often measure success by what we can immediately see, but God works far beyond visible results. His Word is active even when the evidence is hidden.

This truth should encourage us when we share what we have learned from the Bible with others. Sometimes we hesitate because we feel unqualified, fear rejection, or assume our words will make no difference. But when we share Scripture, we are not merely offering our own opinions—we are releasing the living Word of God. A simple verse spoken in love, a testimony rooted in truth, or a gentle reminder from Scripture can stay in someone’s mind for years before bearing fruit.

You may never know how deeply one conversation, one message, or one act of faithful witness can impact another person. The Holy Spirit uses God’s Word in ways we cannot predict. Our responsibility is not to force results but to faithfully sow the seed. God handles the harvest.

So do not keep truth to yourself. If God has taught you something through His Word, share it. Encourage a friend, speak hope to a hurting person, teach a child, or remind someone of God’s promises. The Bible in your heart was never meant to stay there alone. God’s Word still goes forth, and it still prospers wherever He sends it.

Today, ask God to give you courage to share one truth from His Word with someone else. What you offer in faith, God can use with eternal power.


More on: Lesson 5 How to Study The Bible