Special Insights No. 4
First Quarter 2006
Adult Sabbath School Lessons
“Families in the Family of God”
(Produced by the Editorial Board of the 1888 Message Study Committee)
Living With Lambs
We are living in the last moments of earth’s history. Society’s plunge
into evil has even left many secularists aghast. The devil has come
down with great wrath because he knows his time is short. And nowhere
is this struggle for souls seen more fully than in the present generation
of children and youth.
In 2 Timothy 3, the Apostle Paul wrote a stinging description of what
the state of things would be in the last days. Specially noted was the
fact that children would be “disobedient to parents.”
This week’s lesson, “Living with Lambs,” discusses some of the typical
issues facing parents—responsibility, discipline, stewardship, and momentous
decisions. It rightly points us to Christ, who “tends his flock like
a shepherd” and “gathers the lambs in His arms” (Isaiah 40:11).
It brings to mind the heart of the Shepherd and how He must feel as
millions of children are abused, neglected, and enticed to evil each
day. This is not something for scholarly discussions in walnut-paneled
board rooms. From heaven’s view we are in crisis.
We are living in an age in which righteousness and evil are both developing
to their fullest extent. As Seventh-day Adventist Christian parents,
we of all people on earth should be most alert to the sophistries of
Satan. But many of us sleep while the devil seduces our children. May
God help us!
The principle of Satan’s kingdom from the very beginning has been self-exaltation.
Pride, self-worship, and the desire to be first are his trademarks.
But the Lord has not left us helpless.
Commensurate with the times in which we live and the unthinkable temptations
to which we are exposed daily, the Lord in His mercy sent a “most precious
message” to our church beginning in 1888, a message powerful enough
to overcome the devil in all his artful forms.
It was the simple yet infinite message of the cross. At no time in
the history of the universe has the self-denying love of God for our
race been more fully revealed than in that terrible, unspeakable event.
Leaving the loving companionship of His Father and heavenly hosts, our
precious Savior did not despise the shame but humbled himself, taking
the form of a servant and finally experiencing the complete darkness
and separation from the Lifegiver that sin brings, even the death of
the cross.
How does this emphasis on the cross of Christ impact our study about
“Living with Lambs” this week?
Sunday’s lesson discusses our responsibility to God as stewards of
His children. Children are a most sacred trust. At most we have but
a few years to shape and mold their characters for this life and the
next. We have the priceless opportunity of sharing with our children
the story of Jesus, of reading to them from His Word, of repeating lessons
from nature, of teaching them to pray, and of studying lessons from
sacred history. The family circle is sacred and embraces the very throne
of heaven. It is our privilege to unite the hearts of our children in
love to each other and to our Maker.
The gospel message gives courage to those struggling to decide whether
or not to have children (Monday’s lesson). It is possible to raise godly
children in a godless age because the grace of God is so much greater
than the power of sin. Satan is not the winner. He has already lost
this battle. In faith, we claim Christ’s victory as our own and for
our children. Indeed, we are called to have children in order that they
might bear witness to the saving power of the cross to our dying world.
The story of the cross reveals the heart of our heavenly Father (Tuesday’s
lesson) toward our fallen race. He suffered with His Son as Jesus died
on the cross. The heart-wrenching agony that the Father experienced
in losing His Son makes Him the most sympathizing, understanding Father
this world has ever known. His Father’s heart sees ever tear and feels
every injustice heaped upon His children. We are precious in His sight.
Raising children (Wednesday’s lesson) enables us to experience the
gospel in very practical ways. It is our privilege to pray for and claim
the fruits of the spirit as a promise in our lives and the lives of
our children. How often do you see a family in which love, joy, peace,
self-control, temperance, order, and patience are manifested? These
all result from living a life of self-denial.
The cross also provides the key to discipline (Thursday and Friday’s
lessons) for it is here that we see mercy and justice mingled together.
When our children fall to temptation, it is our privilege to lead them
to the cross. We teach them of One who was rich but became poor for
our sake, that we who are poor, might experience the riches of His saving
love and win others for His sake.
When Jesus comes again, will He find faith on the earth? Will there
be any children who have followed Him in the path to the cross?
Here is a promise that such will be the case: “Here I am and the children
whom the Lord has given me! We are for signs and wonders in Israel from
the Lord of hosts, who dwells in Mount Zion” (Isaiah 8:18).
—Patricia L. Guthrie
Read Special Insights #5
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