Thursday, May 28, 2026

Real Repentance

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

Repentance and Forgiveness 

Lesson 10 - Tuesday 


The Refreshing Power of Repentance

In Acts 3:18–19, Peter preached a powerful message to the people after the healing of a lame man at the temple. He declared that Jesus fulfilled the prophecies concerning the suffering Messiah and then gave this urgent invitation: “Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord.”

Repentance is essential to spiritual growth because it is the doorway to transformation. A person cannot grow closer to God while clinging tightly to sin, pride, or self-will. Repentance means more than simply feeling bad about wrongdoing. It means turning away from sin and turning toward God with a surrendered heart. It is a daily posture of humility before the Lord.

Peter connects repentance with conversion and forgiveness. When we repent, God does not merely cover our sins temporarily; He blots them out completely through the blood of Jesus Christ. What an incredible promise. The guilt, shame, and burden of sin no longer have authority over those who come honestly before God in repentance.

Acts 3:19 also speaks about “times of refreshing.” This refers to spiritual renewal that comes from the presence of the Lord. When we repent sincerely, God brings peace where there was turmoil, joy where there was heaviness, and strength where there was spiritual dryness. Sin drains the soul, but repentance refreshes it. God restores what sin has damaged.

Acts 11:18 says that “God also to the Gentiles granted repentance unto life.” Repentance leads to life because it reconnects us with the Source of life Himself. Without repentance, the heart grows cold and distant from God. But with repentance comes healing, restoration, and renewed fellowship with Him.

The process of surrender and spiritual pruning is not always easy. God often reveals attitudes, habits, relationships, or desires that need to change. Sometimes the hardest step is letting go of control. Other times it is admitting we are wrong, forgiving someone who hurt us, or trusting God enough to obey Him fully. Spiritual growth requires honesty and humility.

Yet pruning is never punishment for God’s children; it is preparation for greater fruitfulness. Just as a gardener cuts away dead branches so a plant can grow stronger, God removes things in our lives that hinder spiritual maturity. Though the process may be uncomfortable, it ultimately leads to deeper joy, stronger faith, and a closer walk with Christ.

God does not call us to repentance to shame us. He calls us because He loves us and desires to refresh our souls with His presence. Every time we respond to His conviction with humility, we make room for spiritual growth and renewal.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You for Your mercy and patience with me. Thank You for calling me to repentance and offering forgiveness through Jesus Christ. Search my heart and reveal anything that is keeping me from fully surrendering to You. Help me not to resist Your pruning, but to trust that You are shaping me for spiritual growth. Refresh my soul with Your presence and renew my love for You each day. Give me humility to repent quickly, faith to obey completely, and strength to walk closely with You. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


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Holy Spirit Promptings

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

Repentance and Forgiveness 

Lesson 10 - Monday 


A Heart Ready to Return

Hosea 6 reveals the incredible mercy and compassion of God toward His people, even after their repeated rebellion. God’s people had wandered far from Him, chasing sin and false worship, yet God still lovingly called them back to Himself. One of the most striking truths in this chapter is how God describes His desire for His people. In Hosea 6:6, He says, “For I desired mercy, and not sacrifice; and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings.”

God was not interested in empty religion or outward ceremonies without true heart surrender. The people continued performing religious acts, but their hearts were cold and divided. Their loyalty faded quickly “as a morning cloud” and “as the early dew” that disappears with the sunrise (Hosea 6:4). God wanted something deeper: genuine repentance, steadfast love, and a real relationship with Him.

Throughout Hosea 6, we see both God’s justice and His mercy. He rebukes sin because He loves His people too much to leave them in destruction. His correction was not meant to push them away but to bring healing and restoration. Hosea 6:1 says, “Come, and let us return unto the Lord: for he hath torn, and he will heal us.” Even in discipline, God’s heart is full of redemption.

This chapter challenges us personally. When was the last time you heard correction from God’s Word, a sermon, a friend, or the conviction of the Holy Spirit? How did you respond? Sometimes our first reaction to rebuke is defensiveness, excuses, or avoidance. Pride often hardens the heart and resists conviction. Yet a soft heart welcomes correction because it recognizes that God disciplines those He loves.

Repentance is not merely feeling guilty; it is turning back to God with humility and sincerity. It means allowing God to expose areas in our lives that need surrender. True repentance leads to healing, restoration, and renewed fellowship with Him.

God still speaks today through His Word. He still calls His people to return to Him wholeheartedly. The danger is not that God stops speaking, but that we stop listening. A hardened heart becomes spiritually numb, but a softened heart remains teachable and sensitive to the Holy Spirit.

This week, spend intentional time in prayer and Scripture. Ask God to reveal anything that is keeping you distant from Him. Ask Him to soften your heart so that you will not ignore His voice. The Lord’s rebukes are not meant to destroy you; they are invitations to come closer to Him and experience His grace.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You for Your mercy and patience toward me. Thank You for loving me enough to correct me when I wander away from You. Forgive me for the times I have ignored Your voice or hardened my heart to conviction. Create in me a humble and teachable spirit. Help me to desire a real relationship with You more than outward religion or routine. Soften my heart, open my ears to Your Word, and lead me in true repentance. Draw me closer to You this week, and help me walk faithfully in Your ways. In Jesus’name, Amen.


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The Rush of Life

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

Repentance and Forgiveness 

Lesson 10 - Sunday 


Clothed in His Righteousness

In Luke 10:40–42, Jesus visited the home of Mary and Martha. Martha was busy serving and preparing everything for the guests, while Mary sat quietly at Jesus’ feet, listening to His words. Frustrated and overwhelmed, Martha asked Jesus if He cared that she was doing all the work alone. But Jesus lovingly replied, “Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things: but one thing is needful: and Mary hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from her.”

This story reveals a powerful spiritual truth. Martha represents the human tendency to focus on works, performance, and outward activity, while Mary represents a heart resting in Christ’s presence and depending fully on Him. Martha was trying to serve Jesus, but Mary understood that being with Jesus mattered most.

This connects beautifully with Isaiah 64:6, which says that “all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags.” No matter how hard we try, our goodness, achievements, and efforts can never make us righteous before God. Like Martha, we can become consumed with trying to prove ourselves worthy. But salvation is never earned through human effort.

Zechariah 3:4 gives us a picture of God’s grace. Joshua the high priest stood before God clothed in filthy garments, symbolizing sin and guilt. Yet God commanded, “Take away the filthy garments from him,” and declared, “I have caused thine iniquity to pass from thee, and I will clothe thee with change of raiment.” God Himself removes our sin and clothes us with righteousness. We cannot cleanse ourselves; only Christ can do that.

Isaiah 61:10 continues this beautiful promise: “He hath clothed me with the garments of salvation, he hath covered me with the robe of righteousness.” Jesus offers us His perfect life in place of our sinful one. His righteousness becomes our covering before God. This is the great hope of the gospel.

Mary understood something Martha missed in that moment: before we can truly serve Christ, we must first sit at His feet and receive from Him. Christianity is not about anxiously trying to earn God’s acceptance. It is about trusting completely in Jesus Christ and clinging to His promises.

We must hold firmly to these promises because Satan constantly tries to discourage us with guilt, shame, and feelings of unworthiness. If we focus only on ourselves, we will always fall short. But when we look to Christ, we find peace, forgiveness, and assurance. Our hope is not in our own righteousness but in His perfect righteousness credited to us by faith.

The more we stay near Jesus like Mary did, the more our lives will naturally reflect His love, obedience, and character. Good works are the fruit of salvation, not the cause of it. Christ alone is our righteousness.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You for sending Jesus to be my righteousness. I confess that I often become distracted like Martha, trying to rely on my own efforts instead of resting in Your grace. Thank You for removing my filthy garments of sin and clothing me with the robe of Christ’s righteousness. Help me to sit daily at Jesus’ feet, to trust fully in His promises, and to cling to Him in every trial and temptation. Fill my heart with peace, assurance, and gratitude for Your saving grace. May my life reflect Your love as I walk closely with You each day. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Sabbath School Lesson 10: Repentance and Forgiveness

 Growing in a Relationship With God

Lesson 10 

Repentance and Forgiveness 


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

Built on a Rock

 


Built on the Rock

At the close of the The Gospel of Matthew Sermon on the Mount, Jesus leaves His listeners with a powerful challenge. In Matthew 7:24–29, He compares two builders—one wise and one foolish. Both men hear His words, but only one obeys them.

The wise man built his house on the rock. When the rain fell, the floods came, and the winds beat against the house, it stood firm because its foundation was secure. The foolish man, however, built on sand. He may have worked hard and built something that looked strong on the outside, but when the storm came, everything collapsed.

Jesus makes it clear that the difference was not hearing His teachings. Both builders heard the same words. The difference was obedience. One applied the truth; the other ignored it.

This is the final challenge Jesus gives after teaching about anger, forgiveness, prayer, purity, love for enemies, generosity, judging others, and true righteousness. Hearing truth is not enough. Agreeing with truth is not enough. Even admiring Jesus’ teachings is not enough. A life built on Christ must actually obey Him.

Storms will come to every life. Trials, temptations, disappointments, suffering, and uncertainty are unavoidable. The question is not whether storms will come, but what foundation we are standing on when they arrive. A foundation built on feelings, culture, popularity, wealth, or self-reliance will eventually crumble. Only a life rooted in Jesus Christ and His Word can endure.

Jesus also taught with authority unlike the religious leaders of His day. The crowds recognized that His words carried truth and power because He was not merely sharing opinions—He was revealing the very heart of God. His message demanded a response.

Today, Christ still calls us to build wisely. Every decision, habit, and priority is like laying another brick in the foundation of our lives. When we trust His Word, obey Him faithfully, and remain close to Him daily, we build on the Rock that cannot be shaken.

Prayer:
Father, help me not only to hear Your Word but to obey it. Build my life on the solid foundation of Jesus Christ so that when trials come, my faith will remain strong. Teach me to trust You, follow You faithfully, and live according to Your truth each day. Amen.


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