Monday, April 20, 2026

How to Apply the Scriptures in Our Lives

 


Conformed by the Word

Many people want the Bible to fit their lifestyle, opinions, or personal desires. But God did not give us His Word so we could reshape it to match our preferences. He gave it to transform us. Applying Scripture does not mean changing its meaning to suit ourselves—it means allowing its truth to change our hearts, thoughts, and actions. When we come to the Bible humbly, we stop asking, “How can this fit me?” and begin asking, “How can I fit God’s will?”

In 2026, many people still want the Bible to fit their lifestyle, opinions, and personal desires. We may be tempted to adjust God’s truth to match modern culture, social media trends, or what feels convenient. But God did not give us His Word so we could reshape it—He gave it to reshape us. Applying Scripture means allowing God to change our hearts, thoughts, and daily choices.

For example, when online conversations become harsh and divisive, Scripture calls us to speak with grace and kindness (Colossians 4:6). When the culture says success is everything, God reminds us to seek first His kingdom (Matthew 6:33). When we are tempted to compare our lives to others on social media, the Bible teaches contentment and gratitude (Hebrews 13:5). When honesty seems costly at work, God still calls us to walk in integrity (Proverbs 10:9). When stress and anxiety rise in uncertain times, His Word invites us to bring everything to Him in prayer (Philippians 4:6–7).

Romans 12:2 reminds us, “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” God’s Word renews the mind so our lives can reflect His ways. James 1:22 says, “Be doers of the word, and not hearers only.” Scripture is meant to be lived, not merely admired. Psalm 119:105 declares, “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.” The Bible guides our steps when we choose to follow it. Jesus also prayed in John 17:17, “Sanctify them by Your truth. Your word is truth.” God uses His truth to shape us into His image.

Today, let the Bible correct you, guide you, and strengthen you. Do not bend Scripture to fit your life—bend your life to fit Scripture. That is where true growth begins.



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Human Reasong and The Bible


Renewing the Mind Through God’s Word

 Our human minds are gifts from God, designed to think, learn, and seek truth, yet they are also limited and shaped by weakness. That is why studying the Bible is so important. Scripture corrects our faulty thinking, renews our perspective, and teaches us wisdom beyond our own understanding. When we come to God’s Word with humility, our minds are sharpened, our hearts are guided, and our lives are shaped by truth rather than confusion.

When Jesus said, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind,” He reminded us that faith is not mindless. God gave us minds to think, learn, reason, and understand. He wants us to use them—not to drift through life carelessly, but to seek truth, grow in wisdom, and know Him more deeply through His Word. Scripture is full of people like Abraham, Moses, Job, and the disciples who asked questions, wrestled with truth, and learned through conversation with God.

Yet our minds, while valuable, are not flawless. Human reasoning can become proud, self-reliant, and blind to its own limits. When we trust our intellect more than God’s wisdom, we begin placing ourselves above the One who gave us the ability to think in the first place. A sharp mind without humility can become a dangerous guide.

God never asks us to stop thinking—He asks us to surrender our thinking to Him. He invites us to bring our questions, plans, and ideas under the authority of His truth. The strongest mind is not the one that knows the most, but the one that is teachable before God.

Today, ask yourself: Am I using my mind to draw closer to God, or to justify living without Him? Fill your thoughts with Scripture, invite God to shape your understanding, and let your mind become a tool for worship.


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Sunday, April 19, 2026

The Quality of the Scriptures

 


The Quality of the Scriptures

The Bible was first recognized as something sacred and set apart. In the New Testament, Paul uses the phrase “holy Scriptures” to describe the writings Timothy had learned from childhood (2 Timothy 3:15). This title showed that these writings were not ordinary books. They were regarded as special because they came from God and carried His authority.

When Paul wrote those words, the New Testament had not yet been collected as we know it today. So the “holy Scriptures” Paul referred to were the writings we now call the Old Testament. These books were the Scriptures used to teach faith, truth, and godly living in the early church.

Paul also explains why these writings are holy. In the next verse he says that all Scripture is inspired by God (2 Timothy 3:16). The phrase literally means “God-breathed.” This paints a powerful picture: just as God breathed life into Adam in Genesis 2:7, He also breathed His truth into Scripture. The Bible is not merely human opinion or religious reflection. God worked through human writers so that His message would be faithfully given.

Because Scripture comes from God, it has life-giving power. It teaches us truth, corrects our errors, guides our choices, and helps shape our character. It is more than information—it is a living means through which God speaks to His people.

This high view of Scripture also affects how we should approach the Bible. We should not treat it casually or as just another book. We come to it with humility, reverence, and a willingness to listen. If the Bible is truly God-breathed, then reading it is an opportunity to hear the voice of the Creator.

The quality of the Scriptures is found in their source: God Himself. Because they are holy, inspired, and trustworthy, they remain essential for anyone who wants to know God and walk in His ways.


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Friday, April 17, 2026

State of the Heart

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

The Role of The Bible

Lesson 4 - Thursday 


A Heart Ready to Receive

“Receive, please, instruction from His mouth, and lay up His words in your heart.” — Job 22:22

God’s Word is always true, powerful, and life-giving, but our ability to receive its instruction often depends on the condition of our heart when we come to it. The problem is never with Scripture—it is with the posture of the reader. A closed heart can sit before an open Bible and still walk away unchanged. But a humble, willing heart can open even a familiar passage and hear the voice of God afresh.

Paul explains this clearly in 1 Corinthians 2:14: “But the natural man does not receive the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him; nor can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned.” A person who approaches God’s Word only through human reasoning, pride, or self-will will miss its deepest meaning. Spiritual truth is not merely analyzed—it is received through the work of the Holy Spirit in a surrendered heart. This is why two people can read the same passage, yet one is transformed while the other remains unmoved.

Our attitude toward Scripture matters deeply. If we come only to defend our opinions, justify our behavior, or confirm what we already believe, we place ourselves above God’s Word rather than under it. But when we come with humility, asking God to teach us, correct us, and lead us, the Bible becomes a channel of grace and truth.

Paul praised the believers in 1 Thessalonians 2:13 because they received the message “not as the word of men, but as it is in truth, the word of God, which also effectively works in you who believe.” Notice the connection: they received it as God’s Word, and it worked powerfully in them. When Scripture is welcomed with faith, it changes the heart, renews the mind, strengthens the soul, and shapes the life.

So the real question is not only, “Did I read the Bible today?” but, “How did I come to it?” Was my heart soft or stubborn? Was I listening or arguing? Was I eager to obey, or only searching for support for my own ideas?

This answer is important because growth in our relationship with God depends on it. A teachable spirit invites transformation. A proud spirit resists it. God can do much with a heart that says, “Speak, Lord, for Your servant hears.”

Before you open the Bible, ask the Lord to open you first.

Challenge

The next time you read Scripture, pause first and pray:
“Lord, show me truth, even if it corrects me. Teach me what I need, not just what I want.”

Come with childlike faith, ready to listen, ready to trust, ready to obey.

Prayer

Father, thank You for giving me Your Word. Forgive me for the times I come to Scripture with pride, distraction, or a desire to defend myself instead of hearing You. Give me a humble and teachable heart. Open my eyes to understand Your truth, and help me receive it with faith and obedience. Let Your Word work powerfully in me, changing my thoughts, desires, and actions. Teach me to come before You with childlike trust, ready to listen and follow. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


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Bible Claims

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

The Role of The Bible

Lesson 4 - Wednesday 


Treasuring the Word Within

David gives simple but life-changing counsel in Psalm 119:11: “Your word I have hidden in my heart, that I might not sin against You.” He understood that God’s Word is not meant to remain on a shelf or only in our hands—it is meant to dwell in our hearts. To “hide” Scripture in the heart means to treasure it, memorize it, meditate on it, and allow it to shape our thoughts and choices. When God’s truth is planted deeply within us, it becomes a shield in temptation, a guide in confusion, and a source of strength in weakness.

Hebrews 4:12 reminds us why this matters: “For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword.” The Bible is alive. It pierces through excuses, reveals motives, corrects our path, and transforms the inner life. Unlike ordinary words, God’s Word carries divine power to convict, heal, and renew.

Jeremiah felt this personally when he declared, “Your words were found, and I ate them, and Your word was to me the joy and rejoicing of my heart” (Jeremiah 15:16). He did not treat God’s truth as information alone, but as nourishment and delight. Peter echoes the same thought: “As newborn babes, desire the pure milk of the word, that you may grow thereby” (1 Peter 2:2). Spiritual growth does not happen by accident. It happens when we hunger for Scripture and feed on it consistently.

Jesus Himself showed us the priority of God’s Word when facing temptation in the wilderness. He answered Satan by saying, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God” (Matthew 4:4). Physical bread sustains the body, but God’s Word sustains the soul. If Jesus relied on Scripture, how much more do we need it daily?

How Can You Follow David’s Advice?

You can hide God’s Word in your heart by:

  • Reading the Bible every day, even if only for a few focused minutes.
  • Memorizing key verses that strengthen weak areas in your life.
  • Meditating on what you read instead of rushing through it.
  • Praying Scripture back to God.
  • Applying one truth each day in practical obedience.

Challenge

How much time do you spend daily in the Bible, and how do you spend that time? Is it rushed, distracted, and occasional—or intentional, prayerful, and consistent? What changes could you make today to make that time more spiritually profitable? Perhaps waking earlier, turning off distractions, journaling insights, or reading with a teachable heart could transform your routine.

The truth is simple: if you feed your soul casually, you will grow slowly. If you feed it faithfully, you will grow steadily.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You for giving me Your living Word. Forgive me for the times I neglect what my soul desperately needs. Create in me a deeper hunger for Scripture. Help me to hide Your Word in my heart, to meditate on it daily, and to obey what You show me. Let Your truth guide my decisions, strengthen me against temptation, and draw me closer to You. Make my time in the Bible fruitful and life-changing. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


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