Friday, June 5, 2026

See Jesus

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

Repentance and Forgiveness 

Lesson 11 - Thursday

Fix Your Eyes on Jesus

Scripture Focus: Romans 8:18, 28

Have you ever wished you could sit at the feet of Jesus and tell Him everything that is weighing on your heart? When disappointments pile up, prayers seem unanswered, and the future looks uncertain, it is natural to long for His visible presence.

In Ellen White's beautiful dream, she found herself in deep despair. She thought, If only Jesus were here, I could tell Him all my troubles. Then a guide appeared and offered her the opportunity she longed for—to see Jesus.

But first, there was a journey.

As she climbed the steep staircase, she was told to keep her eyes fixed upward. Looking elsewhere could cause her to become dizzy and fall. What a powerful lesson for us today. Life's setbacks have a way of pulling our eyes downward. We focus on our losses, our fears, our failures, and our circumstances. Before long, discouragement begins to overwhelm us.

Yet heaven's counsel remains the same: Keep your eyes fixed on Jesus.

The climb was not easy, and neither is the Christian journey. There are steep places, difficult seasons, and moments when we wonder if we can continue. But those who keep looking to Christ find strength to take the next step.

When Ellen White finally reached the door, she had to leave behind all the possessions she had carried with her. In many ways, we must do the same. We often cling to things that cannot bring lasting peace—our plans, our expectations, our pride, our desire for control. Before we can fully enjoy the presence of Jesus, we must surrender whatever stands between Him and us.

Then came the moment she had longed for. She stood before Jesus.

What touched her most was not merely His appearance but His understanding. With a single glance, she knew He was acquainted with every detail of her life, every sorrow, every struggle, every hidden thought. Yet instead of condemnation, she found compassion. Instead of rejection, she heard the comforting words, "Fear not."

That is still the message of Jesus today.

He knows everything about your situation. He knows the burden you carry, the tears you have shed, and the questions you cannot answer. Nothing about your life is hidden from Him. And because He knows, He can comfort, strengthen, and sustain you.

This truth helps us understand Paul's words in Romans 8:18: "For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us." The hardships we face today are real, but they are temporary. Jesus sees beyond today's pain to tomorrow's glory.

Likewise, Romans 8:28 assures us that "all things work together for good to those who love God." From our perspective, setbacks often seem meaningless. From God's perspective, they are part of a larger story He is weaving for our eternal good.

The dream gave Ellen White renewed hope and faith because it reminded her that Jesus was not distant. He was aware, compassionate, and trustworthy.

The same is true for us. We may not physically see Jesus, but we can know Him through His Word, trust His promises, and experience His presence every day. When discouragement comes, lift your eyes upward. Fix your gaze on Christ. The One who says, "Fear not" is still leading His children safely home.


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The Road to Emmaus

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

Repentance and Forgiveness 

Lesson 11 - Wednesday

Walking by Faith When Life Doesn't Make Sense

Scripture Reading: Luke 24:13–27

Few scenes in Scripture are as relatable as the walk to Emmaus. Two followers of Jesus were traveling away from Jerusalem, overwhelmed by disappointment and confusion. They had hoped Jesus was the promised Messiah, but His crucifixion seemed to shatter their dreams. To them, the story appeared finished. Their expectations had been buried in a tomb.

As they walked, Jesus Himself joined them, though they did not recognize Him. What is striking is the contrast between the two perspectives in this story.

The two followers saw defeat, while Jesus saw victory.

They saw a tragedy, while Jesus saw the fulfillment of prophecy.

They saw an ending, while Jesus knew it was the beginning of salvation for the world.

Their understanding was limited to what they could see in the moment. Jesus understood the bigger picture. Beginning with Moses and the Prophets, He showed them how everything that had happened was part of God's plan.

How often are we like those two disciples? We face setbacks, disappointments, unanswered prayers, health struggles, financial difficulties, or broken relationships. We look at our circumstances and conclude that God must not be working. Yet God sees the entire story while we see only one page.

This is why Paul could confidently write, "And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God" (Romans 8:28). Notice that Paul does not say all things are good. Rather, God can bring good out of even the most painful experiences.

When life is difficult, Scripture repeatedly calls us to respond differently than the world does.

Paul tells us in Philippians 4:4–13 to rejoice in the Lord, pray instead of worry, and trust that Christ will strengthen us for every circumstance. James goes even further, encouraging believers to count trials as joy because God uses them to develop perseverance and spiritual maturity (James 1:2–4, 12).

This does not mean pretending pain does not exist. The disciples on the road to Emmaus were genuinely hurting. Jesus did not rebuke them for their sorrow. Instead, He patiently helped them see God's perspective.

Likewise, Paul learned through his own hardships that God's grace is sufficient. The Lord told him, "My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness" (2 Corinthians 12:9). Sometimes God removes the trial; other times He gives us strength to endure it. In both cases, His grace is enough.

If you know someone facing setbacks right now, remember the counsel of 2 Corinthians 1:4. God comforts us in our troubles so that we can comfort others with the comfort we ourselves have received from Him. Often the most powerful ministry comes from people who have walked through suffering and discovered God's faithfulness firsthand.

Perhaps someone you know is discouraged today. They may feel like the Emmaus disciples—confused, disappointed, and unable to see God's hand at work. Your role may not be to explain everything. It may simply be to walk beside them, listen, encourage them with God's promises, and remind them that Jesus is closer than they realize.

The disciples' circumstances had not changed when Jesus began walking with them. What changed was their understanding. Soon their hearts burned within them as they saw God's purpose unfolding.

The same Jesus who walked beside those discouraged travelers still walks beside His children today. When we cannot trace His hand, we can trust His heart. What looks like a setback may be a step in God's greater plan.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You that Your perspective is greater than ours. When we face disappointments, setbacks, and trials, help us remember that You are still working even when we cannot see it. Give us faith to trust Your promises, patience to endure difficult seasons, and confidence in Your unfailing love. Comfort those who are struggling today, and make us instruments of Your encouragement and grace. Help us to share with others the comfort we have received from You. May our hearts burn with renewed hope as we walk with Jesus each day. In His precious name, Amen.


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Clothed in Grace: Understanding Christ’s Robe of Righteousness

 


Clothed in Grace: Understanding Christ’s Robe of Righteousness

One of the most beautiful pictures in the Bible is the idea of being clothed with Christ’s righteousness. To someone who is new to Christianity—or who has never heard the gospel before—this concept can seem confusing. Yet it is at the very heart of the Christian faith.

Imagine standing before a perfectly holy God. Every selfish thought, every wrong action, every failure and regret is fully known. No amount of good deeds could erase our sins or make us worthy of eternal life. The Bible teaches that all people have sinned and fall short of God's glory (Romans 3:23).

The good news is that God does not ask us to earn our salvation. Instead, He offers us a gift. Jesus lived the perfect life that we could never live. He obeyed God completely, loved perfectly, and never sinned. Then He willingly died on the cross to pay the penalty for our sins. Through faith in Him, His perfect righteousness is credited to us.

Think of Christ's righteousness as a spotless robe. Our own attempts to save ourselves are like stained and worn-out garments, but Jesus offers us His perfect robe. When God looks at those who trust in Christ, He sees them covered by Jesus’ righteousness.

Jesus illustrated this truth in several ways throughout the Gospels. In the parable of the wedding feast, a wedding garment was required for attendance at the king’s banquet (Matt. 22:1–14). The garment symbolizes the righteousness God provides. We cannot enter God's kingdom wearing our own goodness; we must receive what He freely gives.

Jesus also taught:

“For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life” (John 3:16, NKJV).

Notice that salvation comes through believing in Christ, not by earning favor with God.

Jesus further declared:

“I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me” (John 14:6, NKJV).

Our acceptance before God is found entirely in Christ.

The apostle Paul expands this truth beautifully. He writes:

“For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God” (Eph. 2:8, NKJV).

Salvation is a gift, not a reward.

Paul also says:

“Being justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus” (Rom. 3:24, NKJV).

To be justified means to be declared righteous before God. This declaration is based not on our performance but on Christ's sacrifice.

One of the clearest explanations comes in:

“For He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him” (2 Cor. 5:21, NKJV).

Jesus took our guilt so that we could receive His righteousness.

Paul also testified of his own desire to abandon confidence in his achievements:

“And be found in Him, not having my own righteousness, which is from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ” (Phil. 3:9, NKJV).

The Christian life begins when we stop trying to earn salvation and start trusting in Jesus.

This gift does more than forgive the past. It changes the present. Those clothed in Christ's righteousness are called to live a new life. We obey God not to earn His love, but because we have already received it.

Paul writes:

“Therefore, having been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ” (Rom. 5:1, NKJV).

The result is peace, assurance, and a restored relationship with God.

If you were explaining Christ's robe of righteousness to a non-Christian, you might simply say:

"God knows I am a sinner and cannot save myself. Jesus lived the perfect life I could never live and died for my sins. When I place my faith in Him, God forgives me, accepts me as His child, and covers me with Christ's perfect righteousness. I stand before God not because of what I have done, but because of what Jesus has done for me."

That is the heart of the gospel. It is not about becoming good enough for God; it is about receiving the perfect righteousness that God freely offers through His Son.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You for the priceless gift of Jesus Christ. Thank You that we do not have to earn Your favor or try to save ourselves. Thank You that Jesus lived the perfect life we could never live and died the death we deserved. Help us to trust completely in His righteousness and not our own. Clothe us daily with Your grace, fill us with gratitude, and help us reflect the character of Christ in our lives. May those around us see the beauty of the gospel through our words and actions. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


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Thursday, June 4, 2026

Job

  Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

Repentance and Forgiveness 

Lesson 11 - Tuesday

Job's Response to Suffering

Life can change in a moment. Health can fail, finances can disappear, relationships can be strained, and dreams can seem out of reach. Job experienced all of these losses and more. Yet in the middle of his suffering, he chose to anchor his faith in something greater than his circumstances.

In Job 19:23–27, Job made one of the most remarkable declarations in Scripture: “I know that my Redeemer lives.” Though he had lost nearly everything, Job was confident that God had not abandoned him. He looked beyond his pain to the certainty of a living Redeemer and a future hope that could not be taken away.

In Job 23:8–12, Job admitted that he could not always sense God's presence. He searched for God but could not find Him. Yet instead of concluding that God was absent, Job trusted God's knowledge and care: “He knows the way that I take.” Job understood an important truth: even when we cannot see God at work, God still sees us. Even when His purposes are hidden, His love remains unchanged.

The apostle Paul echoes this same confidence in Romans 5:3–5. He explains that suffering produces perseverance, perseverance produces character, and character produces hope. This hope does not disappoint because “the love of God has been poured out in our hearts through the Holy Spirit.” Notice that Paul does not say believers are spared hardship. Rather, he says that God's love remains constant through hardship.

Job's experience and Paul's teaching point to the same reality: circumstances are unstable, but God's love is not. Feelings rise and fall. Situations improve and worsen. People may disappoint us. Yet God's love is the surest and most stable factor in our lives. It is a love demonstrated at the cross, sustained by the Holy Spirit, and guaranteed by the living Christ.

When life feels uncertain, remember Job's confidence: “I know that my Redeemer lives.” When you cannot trace God's hand, trust His heart. When trials test your faith, let them drive you closer to the One whose love never changes. The same God who carried Job through suffering and filled Paul's heart with hope is carrying you today.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You that Your love is constant even when life is uncertain. When I cannot see Your plans or understand my circumstances, help me trust that You know the way that I take. Strengthen my faith during trials, develop perseverance and character within me, and fill my heart with the hope that comes from Your Spirit. Thank You for Jesus, my living Redeemer, whose love will never fail. Help me rest in that certainty each day. In Jesus' name, Amen.


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Be Made Well

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

Repentance and Forgiveness 

Lesson 11 - Monday

Reaching Out in Faith

Mark 5:21–34 tells the powerful story of a woman who had suffered from a bleeding condition for twelve years. She had spent all she had on physicians, yet instead of improving, her condition only grew worse. Physically exhausted, financially drained, and likely isolated from others because of ceremonial laws, she seemed to have reached the end of her options. Yet she had not reached the end of God's mercy.

When she heard that Jesus was passing by, she pushed through the crowd with a simple but remarkable faith. She believed, "If only I may touch His clothes, I shall be made well" (Mark 5:28, NKJV). As soon as she touched the hem of His garment, she was instantly healed.

Jesus stopped and asked who had touched Him. Trembling with fear, the woman came forward and told Him the whole truth. Instead of rebuking her, Jesus spoke words of grace and acceptance: "Daughter, your faith has made you well. Go in peace, and be healed of your affliction" (Mark 5:34, NKJV).

What can we learn from this story? First, Jesus cares deeply about those who suffer. This woman may have felt forgotten by society, but she was not forgotten by Christ. Second, faith is not measured by how strong we feel but by where we place our trust. Her faith was not perfect, but it was directed toward the perfect Savior. Third, no situation is beyond Christ's power. Twelve years of suffering were overcome in a moment by His touch.

This woman's experience also illustrates the truth found in Romans 5:3–5. Paul writes that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. For twelve long years, this woman endured hardship. Through her suffering, she developed perseverance by continuing to seek help rather than giving up. Her perseverance shaped a character that was willing to trust Jesus despite disappointment after disappointment. And that faith-filled character led her to hope—a hope that was not disappointed because it rested in Christ.

The same process often unfolds in our lives. We may pray for an answer that seems delayed. We may struggle through illness, loss, financial difficulties, or relationship challenges. During these seasons, God is working in ways we cannot always see. As we continue trusting Him, perseverance grows. As perseverance grows, our character is strengthened. And as our character is refined, our hope in God's faithfulness becomes deeper and more secure.

What might this look like in your life? Perhaps it means continuing to pray even when answers seem distant. It may mean remaining faithful when circumstances are discouraging. It may mean trusting God's promises when emotions tell you to give up. Like the woman in Mark 5, we can bring our deepest needs to Jesus and believe that He sees, cares, and responds according to His perfect will.

Whatever burden you carry today, remember that Jesus notices every act of faith. He sees the quiet prayer, the persistent trust, and the hand that reaches out to Him in hope. And He still calls His children to come near and find peace in His presence.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You for the story of the woman who reached out to Jesus in faith. Help us to trust You even during long seasons of difficulty and waiting. When suffering comes, give us perseverance. Through perseverance, build Christlike character within us, and fill our hearts with hope that does not disappoint. Teach us to reach out to You with confidence, knowing that You see our needs and care for us deeply. Strengthen our faith today and help us rest in Your love and power. In Jesus' name, Amen.


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