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Jan Feb Mar 2015 PROVERBS ADULT SABBATH SCHOOL BIBLE STUDY GUIDE
Contents
1 The Call of Wisdom—December 27–January 2 6
© 2015 General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists®. All rights reserved. No part of the Adult
Sabbath School Bible Study Guide may be edited, altered, modified, adapted, translated, re-
produced, or published by any person or entity without prior written authorization from the Gen-
eral Conference of Seventh-day Adventists®. The division offices of the General Conference of
Seventh-day Adventists® are authorized to arrange for translation of the Adult Sabbath School
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not be used without prior authorization from the General Conference.
1
Words of the Wise
W
hile many books of the Bible are filled with deep spiritual and
theological truths, the book of Proverbs is filled with practical and
down-to-earth advice for daily living.
Brief, well-balanced, poetic, salty, and often humorous, the proverbs are uni-
versal, are easy to memorize, and make their points well, sometimes even more
efficiently than do eloquent speeches and rigorous argumentation.
For instance, “Go to the ant, you sluggard! Consider her ways and be wise”
(Prov. 6:6, NKJV). Or: “It is better to dwell in the wilderness, than with a conten-
tious and an angry woman” (Prov. 21:19). Or: “If your enemy is hungry, give him
food to eat; if he is thirsty, give him water to drink. In doing this, you will heap
burning coals on his head, and the Lord will reward you” (Prov. 25:21, 22, NIV).
Who is going to forget those types of images?
The book of Proverbs is a witness to the wisdom that had been accumulated over
generations. Its human authors are referred to as King Solomon (Prov. 1:1–9:18,
10:1–22:16, Proverbs 25–29); as nonidentified “wise men” from the ancient Near
Eastern world (Prov. 22:17–24:22, 24:23–34); and as the non-Israelite Agur (Prov.
30:1–33). The book even acknowledges King Hezekiah’s editorial contributions
(Prov. 25:1). In some cases, too, the book reflects ancient Near Eastern texts, espe-
cially those from ancient Egypt.
Yet the book of Proverbs is the Word of God, because it was under divine
2
inspiration that the authors pulled their materials together. Although God is rarely
explicitly mentioned in the texts, He is always present: wherever we are in the market-
place, or as we speak, eat, drink, work, buy, sell, socialize, and love, the Lord is there.
The God of Proverbs is not just the God of a religious person, whether a priest or a
worshiper in the pew. Godliness is here put into working clothes.
The book of Proverbs also teaches about what it
means to fear God (Prov. 1:7, 31:30), not just in church
but as we go about our daily lives, because the way we The book of Proverbs is
live speaks louder than the way we preach, pray, or even a witness to the wisdom
sacrifice (Prov. 28:9, 15:8).
that had been accumu-
In Proverbs, “wisdom” is revealed when you acknowl-
edge the Lord “in all your ways” (Prov. 3:6, NKJV); that lated over generations.
is, wisdom is living in faith and in obedience; it’s about
what it means to be human before the God of Creation.
From the book of Proverbs we will learn how to be wise, but concretely, in practical
ways. The book answers such questions as What and how should I teach my children?
How can I be happy and successful? Why do I have money problems? How can I get a
promotion in my job? How can I resist sexual temptations? How should I cope with my
anger or my tongue?
Finally, wisdom isn’t necessarily intellectual might. On the contrary, the one who is
sure of his or her brainpower is in the most danger of playing the fool, because even the
smartest person knows so little. One may think of oneself as already wise and therefore
as having no need to seek more knowledge. The prerequisite for wisdom is, instead, to
be humble, to feel our need and then to ask for wisdom.
Proverbs is deep and rich, and it deals with many topics. Given the limitations of
space, we’ve had to pick and choose which material we could cover. We can’t cover it
all, but all that we have is, indeed, worthy of our prayerful study.
Jacques B. Doukhan is professor of Hebrew and Old Testament Exegesis and direc-
tor of the Institute of Jewish-Christian Studies at the Seventh-day Adventist Theological
Seminary, Andrews University. A French citizen (born in Algeria), Doukhan has a doc-
torate in Hebrew from the University of Strasbourg and a doctor of theology degree from
Andrews University.
3
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Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Proverbs 1–3, Gen. 1:1, Exod.
19:16, 20:20, Prov. 11:30, 13:12, 15:4.
F
rom Eden onward, the root of human tragedy lies in wrong
choices. “Man lost all because he chose to listen to the deceiver
rather than to Him who is Truth, who alone has understanding.
By the mingling of evil with good, his mind had become confused.”
—Ellen G. White, Education, p. 25.
The book of Proverbs is all about helping us to make right choices,
to choose the way of God and not that of the deceiver. The father or
the mother, speaking to their son, not only warns him against wrong
choices but also encourages him to make the right ones. This is so
important because the choices we make are literally matters of life and
death.
The first three chapters of Proverbs illustrate this method of educa-
tion. After having explained the purpose of the book: “to know wis-
dom” (Prov. 1:2), and having laid down the motto of the book: “the fear
of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge” (Prov. 1:7; compare 9:10),
the author moves back and forth from warning us against listening to
foolishness, to urging us to respond to the call of heavenly wisdom.
6
S unday December 28
Read Proverbs 1:7. What is wisdom? What is “the fear of the Lord”?
How do these two concepts relate to each other?
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We are told to love God and also to fear Him. How do these two
concepts relate to your own experience with the Lord?
7
M onday December 29
True Education
Read Proverbs 1:8–19. What two contrasting ways of “education” are
presented in these verses? What’s the basic message here, not just
for parents, but for everyone who fears the Lord?
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_________________________________________________________
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Education is, first of all, a family matter, and true education comes,
first and foremost, from the parents. In these verses, this education is
called “instruction” and even “law.” The Hebrew word for law, torah,
means “direction.” The parents are to point their children in the right
direction. In contrast, the other type of “education” is not identified, not
given a name. It is simply acknowledged as the voice of sinners, which
leads in the wrong direction.
Also, the words “my son,” not to be taken in a gender exclusive
sense, are repeated many times, emphasizing parental instruction. Each
parent—“your father,” “your mother” (NKJV)—is clearly identified
in the singular and is personally involved, while the other camp is an
anonymous plural, “sinners.”
“In His wisdom the Lord has decreed that the family shall be the
greatest of all educational agencies. It is in the home that the education
of the child is to begin. Here is his first school. Here, with his parents
as instructors, he is to learn the lessons that are to guide him throughout
life. . . . The educational influences of the home are a decided power
for good or for evil. . . . If the child is not instructed aright here, Satan
will educate him through agencies of his choosing.”—Ellen G. White,
The Adventist Home, p. 182.
The best argument on behalf of family education is its results. These
are the inner qualities of character, which are like ornaments on the
head and around the neck. In the Middle Eastern culture, precious col-
lars and bracelets were passed on from parents to children as a heritage
of value. Education matters more, though, than material riches. The
time spent with our children will be of much greater value for them
than the time spent at our businesses. Also, the reference to the neck
and the head, which is the individual’s face, suggests that education will
shape his or her personality. In the way of fools or sinners, only the feet
(Prov. 1:15) are mentioned, as if the wayward son had lost his identity.
8
T uesday December 30
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_________________________________________________________
While the sinners “lie in wait” and “lurk secretly” (Prov. 1:11, 18,
NKJV), wisdom “calls aloud outside” (vs. 20, NKJV), “cries out in
the chief concourses” (vs. 21, NKJV), and “speaks her words” (vs. 21,
NKJV). Wisdom is here personified, and her offer is given to the man
and the woman on the street. It is for everyone in the real business of
life. Amid the noise and rancor of so many products and so many sell-
ers, the call of wisdom must be loud; otherwise, she would not be heard
against the clamor of so many other voices.
_________________________________________________________
The reason that people reject wisdom has nothing to do with wisdom
itself and everything to do with the character of those who reject her.
These are described as arrogant and disdainful (Prov. 1:25; compare
vs. 30), as if they know better. The implication is that wisdom is for
the naive and the simple. And yet those who reject wisdom are simple
and naive; they are fools who “hate knowledge” (Prov. 1:22, NKJV;
compare vs. 29).
Those who reject wisdom will reap the fruit of their rejection. Having
refused to choose the fear of the Lord, they will have to be content
with themselves: they will be “full with their own fancies” (Prov. 1:31,
NKJV). When we reject wisdom from above, we often end up with the
fables and lies that we fabricate for ourselves, or the fables and lies that
others fabricate for us and that we so readily accept. In this way, we
replace God with idols. Ironically, those who despise religion, mocking
those they judge as simple and naive, often are superstitious in their
own way, placing value on the most fleeting and useless of things that,
in the end, can never satisfy the most basic needs of the heart.
Read Proverbs 2:6–9. What are the conditions for understanding righ-
teousness? What is God’s responsibility in the acquisition of wisdom?
Note that the phrase “the Lord gives” in verse 6 (NKJV) responds to the
phrase “you will . . . find the knowledge of God” in verse 5 (NIV). Wisdom,
like salvation, is a gift from God. As much as the first paragraph described
the human process, this paragraph describes the divine work: He gives wis-
dom; He stores wisdom; and He guards and preserves the way of the wise.
Read Proverbs 2:10–22. What happens when wisdom has finally found
a home in the heart?
“When wisdom enters your heart,” it marks the final stage of conver-
sion. Not only will we enjoy the knowledge of the Lord, but it will be
a pleasant experience to our souls (Prov. 2:10, NKJV). We will also be
protected from the way of evil (vs. 12) and from the seduction of evil (vs.
16), and we will walk in the path of righteousness (vs. 20).
Read Proverbs 2:13, 17. What is the first step of wickedness, and
where does it lead?
Though we are sinners, we don’t have to fall into evil. The ones
depicted as on the wrong path must have first left the right path.
Wickedness then is understood first of all as a lack of faithfulness. Sin
begins subtly and innocently, but before long the sinner not only does
wickedly but also enjoys it.
What should it tell you about yourself if, heaven forbid, you
enjoy doing evil? Or even worse, if you don’t even deem it evil
anymore?
10
T hursday January 1
Do Not Forget!
Read Proverbs 3:7. What is the trap of being wise in one’s own eyes?
_________________________________________________________
To be wise in one’s own eyes will lead to the illusion that one does not
need God to be wise. This is a hopeless situation. “There is more hope
for a fool than for them” (Prov. 26:12, NIV). Again, wisdom is described
as a religious commitment. To be wise means to keep God’s command-
ments (Prov. 3:1), to display “mercy and truth” (vs. 3), and to “trust in
the Lord” (vs. 5). Wisdom implies an intimate relationship with God.
Note the repeated reference to the heart (vss. 1, 3, 5), the seat of our
personal response to God’s influence. (The heart was already mentioned
in Proverbs 2:10 as the place wisdom should enter.)
Read Proverbs 3:13–18. What reward comes with the gift of wisdom?
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_________________________________________________________
Wisdom is associated with life and health (Prov. 3:2, 8, 16, 18, 22).
One of the most suggestive images is the “tree of life” (vs. 18), a prom-
ise repeated several times in the book (Prov. 11:30, 13:12, 15:4). This
metaphor alludes to the Garden of Eden. This promise does not mean
that the acquisition of wisdom will provide eternal life; instead, the idea
is that the quality of life with God, which our first parents enjoyed in
Eden, can to some measure be recovered. When we live with God, we
get some inkling, some hints, of Eden; even better, we learn to hope in
the promised recovery of this lost kingdom (see Daniel 7:18).
Read Proverbs 3:19, 20. Why is the need for wisdom so vital?
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11
F riday January 2
“The youth need to understand the deep truth underlying the Bible
statement that with God ‘is the fountain of life.’ Psalm 36:9. Not only
is He the originator of all, but He is the life of everything that lives.
It is His life that we receive in the sunshine, in the pure, sweet air, in
the food which builds up our bodies and sustains our strength. It is by
His life that we exist, hour by hour, moment by moment. Except as
perverted by sin, all His gifts tend to life, to health and joy.”—Ellen G.
White, Education, pp. 197, 198.
“Many cherish the impression that devotion to God is detrimental
to health and to cheerful happiness in the social relations of life. But
those who walk in the path of wisdom and holiness find that ‘godliness
is profitable unto all things, having promise of the life that now is, and
of that which is to come.’ They are alive to the enjoyment of life’s real
pleasures.”—Ellen G. White Comments, The SDA Bible Commentary,
vol. 3, p. 1156.
Discussion Questions:
What is the difference between wisdom and knowledge? How
can someone have a lot of knowledge and not wisdom? After all, who
doesn’t know personally, or at least know about, some very knowl-
edgeable people who seem to have no wisdom?
12
i n s i d e
Story
From Humptulips to
Aleknagik
Life was hard in the western Washington town of Humptulips during
the 1930s. Located on the Humptulips River on the Olympic Peninsula,
the town had seen better days for the commercial fishermen trying to earn
a living.
One family, the Moodys, found life so difficult in Humptulips that they
decided to follow Mrs. Moody’s brother to Alaska, where, according to
the brother, the fishing was good, and there was money to be made. The
family of six packed up and traveled the 2,500 miles from Humptulips
to the Canadian border, then on through British Columbia and the Yukon
before heading west to the frontier town of Dillingham, Alaska. From
Dillingham, they headed up the Wood River, finally arriving on the remote
shores of Lake Aleknagik.
Although Aleknagik is a Yupik word meaning “wrong way home,” the
Moody family found a good place to settle beside the lake, where they
built a small log cabin. Mr. Moody and the eldest son took their large fish-
ing boat down into Bristol Bay, home of the world’s largest source of red
salmon, while Mrs. Moody cared for the three younger children at home.
Sadly, just a few months after settling into their new home, tragedy
struck the Moody family. As the father and eldest son headed up the river
from Dillingham, somehow both men ended up in the fast current and
drowned, leaving the mother to raise the two younger sons and a daughter.
Being a family of faith, the mother continued to gather the children for
worship, and on Sabbath they met with the uncle and his family. During
the week, Mrs. Moody carried out the work of the family fishing business
with the help of her two younger sons, Lloyd, 14, and Roland, 13.
“We grew up fast,” remembers Roland. “We had a mother and little
sister to help.”
In order to help their family survive, Lloyd and Roland had little time
for school as they worked as commercial fishermen near their home. By
the time they left their teens, the young men had not yet finished at the
rural public school. Early each morning, Roland, who was now 20, built
a fire in the school’s woodstove so the place would be warm when the
students arrived.
During those early mornings, Roland not only warmed up the class-
room—he also took the opportunity to get to know the school’s beautiful
young teacher, Miss Jackie. By the end of the year, they were married and
set up a home beside Lake Aleknagik.
Continued next week
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Proverbs 4, 1 Kings 3:9, Matt.
13:44, Proverbs 5, 1 Cor. 10:13, Prov. 6:1–19.
Memory Text: “Ponder the path of your feet, and let all your ways be
established. Do not turn to the right or the left; remove your foot
from evil” (Proverbs 4:26, 27, NKJV).
S
cience has demonstrated that hearing impacts how we walk, and
that even our balance is influenced by how well we hear. So,
instruction, or education—that is, what we hear—is crucial to
how we live. “Wisdom is the principal thing,” says Proverbs 4:7.
Yet no matter how good the instruction is, the student must pay atten-
tion. Not without some irony an ancient Egyptian teacher noted that
the “the ear of the boy is on his back; he listens when he is beaten.”
(In Egyptian art, the student was often represented with big ears on his
back.)
It’s not enough just to know about right and wrong; we need to know
how to choose right and not wrong. Training in wisdom consists in
hearing proper instruction and in following and obeying what we have
learned so that we don’t end up walking in the wrong direction.
14
S unday January 4
Hear!
Read Proverbs 4. What practical truth is found here, and how can we
apply this to our own lives as we seek to live in faithfulness to God?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Read Matthew 13:44 and Jeremiah 29:13. What link can you find
between these verses and the search for wisdom as it is expressed
in Proverbs 4?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
15
M onday January 5
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
The first danger begins with ourselves; it lies in our own words.
We should watch our tongues to make sure that what we say does not
convey an inappropriate or a mixed message. Our lips should be in
harmony with our knowledge and should reflect our spiritual views.
The second danger comes from the other woman or the other man
(although the text refers to the danger coming from a “strange woman,”
the language should be understood in a generic sense; temptation could
come from either a man or a woman) who interferes in the family.
Either could seduce a spouse into violating the marriage vows, and who
hasn’t seen, or experienced, just how destructive this sin is?
According to the text, the best way to resist these temptations, which
often start with alluring words, is to listen to the words of wisdom. By
heeding and obeying inspired instruction, we are more likely to stay
focused on the essentials and so be protected from adultery or whatever
other temptations come our way.
Of course, not only should we keep ourselves from adultery, we
should also avoid going to the place where the “temptress” stays (Prov.
5:10); we certainly should not approach her door (vs. 8).
Finally, perhaps the best protection of all against the temptation
to love another woman or man is this: just love your own spouse,
“the [wife or husband] of your youth” (vs. 18, NKJV). The author of
Ecclesiastes resonated with this counsel: “Enjoy life with your wife,
whom you love, all the days of this meaningless life that God has given
you under the sun” (Eccles. 9:9, NIV). Be thankful for what you have,
and you won’t be looking elsewhere.
16
T uesday January 6
Read Proverbs 6:1–5. What problem does Solomon refer to, and what
is the solution? What crucial spiritual principle do we find here as
well?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
While the torah urges people to help the poor and to lend them
money without charging interest (Exod. 22:25), wisdom warns us
against unwise financial backing for a friend who is in debt. The
duty of charity does not exclude the duty of justice (Exod. 23:2, 3).
Though we need to be generous when we can, we would be wise to
make sure that our charity will not turn into a fiasco (compare Prov.
22:27).
Hence, the wise counsel given to us in the proverb. The first caution
applies to our words. How crucial that we evaluate the situation and
make sure that we can afford to help our friend. If so, only then speak
and promise. Indeed, the warmth of our relationship or a moment of
emotion may precipitate our commitment, and we may regret it after-
ward.
No matter how well-intentioned you might have been, it’s crucial to
think before you act and commit to something that you can’t fulfill.
The point is that if we get into a bind, we need to do what we can to
fix it, including humbling ourselves, admitting our mistake, and asking
for grace.
17
W ednesday January 7
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Not only do ants work hard (even harder than humans, if one com-
pares the burden they are able to carry to the burden humans can carry
in proportion to their respective weights), but ants work independently
and do not need to be supervised. The main reason for their hard work
is the future. They “anticipate” times of trouble (winter) and prepare
themselves for it. So, the ant teaches us the wisdom of thinking about
the future when making plans or engaging in an activity. “This is a
question that demands consideration by every parent, every teacher,
every student—by every human being, young or old. No scheme of
business or plan of life can be sound or complete that embraces only the
brief years of this present life and makes no provision for the unending
future.”—Ellen G. White, Education, p. 145.
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
It is the sluggard who has something to learn from the ant, not the
other way around: “Go to the ant, you sluggard! Consider her ways and
be wise” (vs. 6, NKJV). While the ants are at work, the sluggards are
asleep. While the ants are productive at the harvest, the sluggards keep
folding their two hands, a symbol of indolence. The ants surpass them-
selves by carrying burdens heavier than themselves and by preparing
for the future; the sluggards live in the present and are occupied only
with themselves.
18
T hursday January 8
Protect Yourself
After having warned us against the particular evils that threaten
three domains of life—our family, our social contacts, and our work—
Proverbs gives us a portrayal of the wicked. It is a satire full of irony
and sharp psychological observation. The two poems (Prov. 6:12–15
and 16–19) are parallel and, with the same poetic rhythm of seven,
cover corresponding motifs. The wicked person’s inside is described as
linked to what is thought in the heart; at the same time, it all becomes
manifested in what is done on the outside.
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
The imagery is ironic. The walking wicked follows the lazy sluggard.
The two attitudes seem to be different, and yet they carry the same
lesson. Both stay within themselves. Neither one is interested in the
instruction coming from outside of themselves. They both follow their
own wisdom and inclinations. The sluggards are sleeping, and neither
their ears nor their feet function; the wicked have only their feet and
their mouths working, not their ears. The result is the same: they will
both go to destruction.
Meanwhile, evil has two effects: it harms not only persons sinned
against, but sinners, as well. The liars will finally believe their own lies.
It is also noteworthy that the ultimate result of wickedness is discord
and conflict, which also can affect society. Indeed, the effects of sin
rarely, if ever, remain confined to sinners. Others are impacted, and
usually only for the worse.
How have the sins of others affected your life? Greatly, no doubt.
What lessons can you learn from this about how careful you need
to be so that your actions don’t hurt others?
19
F riday January 9
Discussion Questions:
Dwell more on this idea of how we can help others, even at a
personal cost to ourselves. How do we look at what this week’s
lesson taught in contrast to this verse: “Greater love has no one
than this, than to lay down one’s life for his friends” (John 15:13,
NKJV)?
What other lessons can we take from the natural world that
we can apply to our own lives? Given, however, that the world is
fallen, why must we be careful in the lessons we do draw?
20
i n s i d e
Story
Camp Polaris: A Guiding Star
After they married, Roland and Jackie Moody started talking about
ways to reach out to the native Alaskan community around them, and
decided to build a Seventh-day Adventist school on their property by
the lake. They called it the Mission School and offered first through
eighth grade. Students and parents were delighted, and kids came from
as far away as Nome just to attend the mission school. In order to
accommodate the students, two dormitories were built. Additionally,
the Moodys started an Adventist congregation and built the first
Aleknagik Seventh-day Adventist Church.
As the school grew, Roland and Jackie wanted to provide more for
their students, so they started a camp. “We just didn’t have any place to
take the young kids for activities and stuff,” recalled Roland, “and kids
like to go someplace.” They named the new place Camp Polaris—after
the guiding light of the North Star.
Roland purchased several old buildings from Crick Cannery, which
had gone out of business. He barged these buildings across Bristol Bay
to Aleknagik, and then 12 miles up the lake to Camp Polaris. More
than 60 years later, these old cannery buildings are still in use each
summer by the children of western Alaska.
For decades, Roland and Jackie enjoyed hosting the children and
ferrying them up the lake by barge to the camp. Each year on the last
Sabbath of camp, the entire Aleknagik Adventist church prepared a
feast for the kids and made the one-and-a-half-hour boat trip up the
lake to Camp Polaris where they enjoyed a special Sabbath by the lake
with the campers. After Jackie passed away, Roland married Beverly,
who helped continue the Camp Polaris traditions.
Over the years, the camp has been a vital ministry to the young
people of western Alaska. Many of the children who attend camp come
from less than ideal homes where poverty, alcoholism, and abuse are
too often the norm. They often exclaim that going to the camp is the
highlight of their year, because it is a place where they feel loved,
accepted, and cared for.
While Roland and Beverly have since retired and moved to Walla
Walla, Washington, the ministry of Camp Polaris continues. You can
become a part of this special ministry to the children of Alaska by
contributing to this quarter’s Thirteenth Sabbath Offering.
To meet some of the children at Camp Polaris, read their stories at
www.adventistmission.org/resources.
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Matt. 5:21–30; Prov. 6:21; 7:3;
Prov. 6:23; 7:2; 6:24; 6:30, 31; Prov. 7:26, 27.
Memory Text: “For the commandment is a lamp, and the law a light;
reproofs of instruction are the way of life” (Proverbs 6:23, NKJV).
T
wo brothers were left home alone, but given a strict warning by
their mother to not eat the cake that she had just baked. To make
sure that the boys would obey, she added the threat of punish-
ment.
When she left, it took the boys only a few minutes to decide to eat
the cake anyway. “This is not a matter of life and death,” they reasoned.
“Our mother would never kill us; so, let’s eat!”
For the teacher in Proverbs, though, the issue he speaks about is
indeed a matter of life and death. His language is strong and sometimes
graphic. Of course, Jesus used very strong language Himself when talk-
ing about matters of eternal life and death (see Matt. 5:21–30). And no
wonder. In the end, our ultimate destiny, our eternal destiny (and what
could be more important than that?), rests upon the choices that we
make here, now. So we should take the urgency of the strong language
at face value.
22
S unday January 11
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23
M onday January 12
_________________________________________________________
In the Bible, the word of God or His law has been compared to light:
“Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path” (Ps. 119:105,
NKJV). In the Hebrew mind, there is a connection between the idea of
“law” and of “light.” Just as the lamp illuminates the path where we
walk, the law will help us stay on track; that is, when we face moral
choices, it will help us to know what the right choice is, even if at times
reason or personal expedience would tempt us to disregard the law.
What examples can you find in the Bible of those who chose to follow
God’s law despite powerful reasons not to? What can we learn from
their obedience? In what cases, if any, did their choice to be faithful
seem to be the wrong one at least from a human perspective?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Along with Proverbs 6:23, read Proverbs 7:2. Why is the law related
to “life”?
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Since the Fall, our hope for eternal life cannot be found in the law,
but only through faith in Christ. However, obedience to the law and
the principles it represents continues to play a central part in the life
of faith (see Matt. 19:17, Rev. 14:12). We obey because, as the Lord
said to Israel thousands of years ago, “I am the Lord your God” (Lev.
18:4). The law of God is related to “life,” simply because of who God
is—the Source of our life. This principle represents true spirituality:
we trust God and His promises for our present life, just as we trust His
promises for eternal life.
24
T uesday January 13
Fighting Temptation
As we have just seen, the author of Proverbs 6:23, under the inspira-
tion of the Holy Spirit, directly links light and life to God’s law. In the
next verse, he gives a solid example of how the law, as light and life,
can offer us powerful spiritual protection.
What are we being warned about in Proverbs 6:24? Besides the obvi-
ous, what more subtle warning is given here?
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_________________________________________________________
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Just think how easily we can be led, even under the guise of faith,
to justify wrong actions of any kind, not just adultery. Why, then,
is an absolute commitment to the law of God our only real pro-
tection against even our own minds and the tricks that they can
play on us?
25
W ednesday January 14
Read Proverbs 6:30, 31. What are these verses saying about what even
a desperate person does?
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Poverty and needs do not justify stealing. The thief is guilty even if
“he is starving” (vs. 30, NKJV). Although the starving thief is not to be
despised, he must still restore seven times what he has stolen; this shows
that even the desperateness of his situation does not justify sin. On the
other hand, the Bible insists that it is our duty to meet the needs of the poor,
so that they don’t feel compelled to steal in order to survive (Deut. 15:7, 8).
How interesting that after going from adultery to stealing, the text
now returns to adultery (Prov. 6:32–35). The two sins are indeed some-
what similar. In both cases, someone is illicitly taking something that
belongs to someone else. A crucial difference, however, between steal-
ing and adultery lies in the fact that the former sin concerns only the
loss of an object, while the latter deals with something much greater. In
some cases, one can make restitution for stealing an object; in the cases
of adultery, especially when children are involved, the damage can be
much more severe than when stealing is involved.
“ ‘Thou shalt not commit adultery.’ This commandment forbids not only
acts of impurity, but sensual thoughts and desires, or any practice that tends
to excite them. . . . Christ, who taught the far-reaching obligation of the law
of God, declared the evil thought or look to be as truly sin as is the unlawful
deed.”—Ellen G. White, Patriarchs and Prophets, p. 308.
26
T hursday January 15
_________________________________________________________
The one who goes “after her” is described as someone who has lost
his personality and will. He is no longer thinking. The word immedi-
ately suggests that he does not give himself time for much reflection.
He is compared to an ox who “goes to the slaughter,” to a fool who
goes to “the correction of the stocks,” and to a bird who “hastens to the
snare.” None of them realize that their life is threatened.
Read Proverbs 7:26, 27. What makes the immoral woman lethal?
_________________________________________________________
It’s possible that the woman here depicts more than a “mere” adul-
terer. In fact, she represents values opposite to wisdom. Solomon uses
this metaphor to warn his pupil against any form of evil. The risk is
huge, for this woman does not just wound; she kills, and her power is
such that she has slain even the strongest of men. In other words, oth-
ers before you, stronger than you, have not been able to survive in her
hands. The universal language of this passage clearly suggests that the
biblical author is speaking about humankind in general. (The Hebrew
word sheol in the text has nothing to do with “hell,” as commonly
thought; it designates the place where the dead now are: the grave.)
In the end, the point is that sin, whether adultery or something else,
leads to annihilation, the opposite of the eternal life that God wants us
all to have through Jesus Christ.
No wonder, as we said in Sabbath’s introduction, the language is
strong—we are dealing, literally, with matters of life and death.
Think of some “strong” people who have fallen in a big way. Why
should this make you tremble for yourself? What is your only
protection?
27
F riday January 16
Further Study: “Satan offers to men the kingdoms of the world if they
will yield to him the supremacy. Many do this and sacrifice heaven. It is
better to die than to sin; better to want than to defraud; better to hunger
than to lie.”—Ellen G. White, Testimonies for the Church, vol. 4, p. 495.
“Choose poverty, reproach, separation from friends, or any suffering
rather than to defile the soul with sin. Death before dishonor or the
transgression of God’s law should be the motto of every Christian. As a
people professing to be reformers, treasuring the most solemn, purify-
ing truths of God’s word, we must elevate the standard far higher than
it is at the present time.”—Ellen G. White, Testimonies for the Church,
vol. 5, p. 147.
Discussion Questions:
How can we be serious about the gravity of sin without falling
into the trap of fanaticism? At the same time, how can we be obe-
dient to the law of God without falling into legalism?
Dwell more on the idea of how people might use religion in order
to justify wrong actions. It’s not that hard to do, especially if you
tend to hold up “love” as the ultimate standard of right and wrong.
After all, think about all the bad things done under the pretext of
“love.” How, then, does the law continue to act as a way of protecting
people, either from themselves or others, who might otherwise be
led into sin?
28
i n s i d e
Story
“This Isn’t Yogi Bear!”
Being from the tropical country of Puerto Rico, Paola never dreamed
that she would end up in the wilds of Alaska. “It’s just so out there,”
Paola says. “It’s one of those places that you’re never going to go to
because it’s so far away.”
But when the recruiting team from the Alaska Conference came
to Walla Walla University in Washington State, looking for sum-
mer camp staff, Paola decided to check it out. She was hired, and
that summer she found herself lifeguarding on the shores of Lake
Aleknagik at Camp Polaris.
“It was nothing like I expected,” Paola admits. “I pictured snow and
igloos, but it was gorgeous and green!”
In addition to the natural beauty, Paola experienced other surprises.
During orientation, the staff were warned that bears frequented the
camp. “We were instructed that these bears aren’t like Yogi Bear [a
friendly children’s cartoon character],” Paola remembers. “But even
though we were warned, a lot of us were still thinking, It’s just a
bear.”
One day Paola noticed a bear coming into camp. Wanting a pic-
ture, she quickly grabbed her camera and looked down as she walked
toward the lake. Looking up, she suddenly froze—directly in front of
her was a grizzly bear!
“Everything stopped. I couldn’t hear anything. Everyone else was
in the lodge; no one could see me. The bear was frozen too. The only
thought I had was, This isn’t Yogi!”
Suddenly, the grizzly headed toward a garbage container, and Paola
moved quickly back into the lodge. “Sometimes you don’t know how
bad something is until you come face-to-face with it,” she says.
Working at the camp opened her eyes in many ways, Paola admits.
“I realized that I’m not a kid anymore. These are the kids now, and I
needed to take care of them.”
Sometimes Paola found drawing the line of authority challenging.
“When there were issues, I learned to maneuver around the children,
not making them feel unwelcome or inferior, but working with them
in a way so they could see they needed to stop their tantrums and
come back with the others who were having fun.
“There had to be a certain amount of respect going on so that they
would know you were the authority but would still feel comfortable
coming to you if they had any problems—especially spiritually. At
Camp Polaris, there is a spiritual aspect to everything.”
Divine Wisdom
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Prov. 8:1–21, Matt. 16:26,
Prov. 8:22–31, Gen. 1:31, Prov. 8:32–36, 9:1–18.
A
t this stage in Proverbs, wisdom reappears (see Prov. 1:20,
21), and it’s clear from the texts for this week that wisdom is
truth—the Truth as it exists in God, the Source and Foundation
of all truth.
This accent on the “absolute” character of truth contrasts with some
contemporary thinking, especially in the West, in which truth is seen
as relative, contingent, cultural, with one person’s truth being different
from someone else’s.
But this concept is not biblical. My truth should be the same as yours,
simply because “truth” is universal. It does not belong to anyone in
particular but to all humanity, whether or not all humanity recognizes it.
Interestingly enough, Pilate’s famous question to Jesus, “What is
truth?” (John 18:38), came in response to Jesus’ statement, “ ‘Everyone
who is of the truth hears My voice’ ” (vs. 37, NKJV). Truth, absolute
truth, exists, and it even speaks to us; what matters for us is whether or
not we will listen to, and obey, what it is saying.
30
S unday January 18
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Read Proverbs 8:10, 11. What do these verses say about wisdom?
_________________________________________________________
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So many people have lived, and still live, in ignorance, in folly, and
in darkness. Many live with no hope at all or with false hopes. What
makes this sad state of affairs even sadder is that wisdom and truth are
so wonderful, filled with hope and promise for a better life now and
the surety of eternal life in a new heaven and a new earth, all thanks to
the sacrifice of Jesus. All the wealth in the world means nothing (see
Eccles. 2:11–13) in contrast to the knowledge of God.
Read Matthew 16:26 and ask yourself how well your life reflects
the crucial truth of these words.
31
M onday January 19
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32
T uesday January 20
Rejoicing in Creation
In Genesis 1, we see that each step of the Creation concludes with
the same refrain: “God saw that it was good” (see Gen. 1:4, 10, 12, 18,
21, 25, 31). The last step (vs. 31) goes even further: “It was very good.”
The Hebrew word for “good” contains the idea of enjoyment, and it
also implies relationship. At the end of the whole Creation week, God
pauses to fully enjoy His creation (Gen. 2:1–3). The time of this pause,
the Sabbath, is blessed. Likewise, our poem concludes with wisdom’s
enjoying the Creation.
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33
W ednesday January 21
Wisdom’s Appeal
The last few verses of this proverb return to the personal—to the
practical application of what it means to have wisdom. By contrast,
the intellectual knowledge about wisdom’s preexistence, about wis-
dom’s presence at Creation, is certainly deep. But in the Bible, truth
must always at some point come down to the human level and how we
respond to what we have been given in Jesus.
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Happiness can be an elusive thing; the more we strive for it, the
harder it seems for us to attain it. Why should faithfulness to
God, as opposed to the pursuit of happiness, be our first prior-
ity? Besides, which is more likely to produce happiness (and
why): seeking it, or seeking first the kingdom of God?
34
T hursday January 22
Either/Or
Following wisdom’s appeal, the inspired author of Proverbs 9 urges
his audience to make a choice now between two lifestyles: wisdom or
folly. The first and last six verses (vss. 1–6, 13–18) are symmetrical and
bring out the contrast between the opposite camps.
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Read Proverbs 9:7–9. How do the wise man and the wicked man
respond to the instruction of wisdom? What makes the wise man
wiser than the wicked man?
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The key to wisdom is humility. The wise man is the man who is teach-
able and responds to instruction with an open mind. Wisdom comes only
to the one who, like a child, feels the need to grow. This is why, in the most
explicit manner, Jesus taught that “ ‘unless you . . . become as little children,
you will by no means enter the kingdom of heaven’ ” (Matt. 18:3, NKJV).
35
F riday January 23
Further Study: “The Sovereign of the universe was not alone in His
work of beneficence. He had an associate—a co-worker who could
appreciate His purposes, and could share His joy in giving happiness
to created beings. ‘In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was
with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with
God.’ John 1:1, 2. Christ, the Word, the only begotten of God, was one
with the eternal Father—one in nature, in character, in purpose—the only
being that could enter into all the counsels and purposes of God. . . . And
the Son of God declares concerning Himself: ‘The Lord possessed me
in the beginning of His way, before His works of old. I was set up from
everlasting. . . . When He appointed the foundations of the earth: then I
was by Him, as one brought up with Him: and I was daily His delight,
rejoicing always before Him.’ Proverbs 8:22–30.”—Ellen G. White,
Patriarchs and Prophets, p. 34.
Discussion Questions:
Why is belief in the Genesis Creation account the foundation
of biblical wisdom? Why is the idea of evolution contrary to the
Bible in every way?
36
i n s i d e
Story
“Being Ready for Whatever”
Travis didn’t know what to do with his camper. At the age of 12,
Logan* was the toughest kid in the cabin and wanted to be in charge of
everyone and everything. One night, Logan decided he wasn’t going to
bed, so Travis and his co-counselor came up with a plan.
“OK,” they told the obstinate camper, “you can stay up—as long as
you read the Bible.” Logan agreed, but he didn’t have a Bible; in fact,
he had never read one. So the co-counselor loaned Logan his Bible,
and by the light of the moon and a flashlight, the boy met the heroes
of Genesis for the very first time.
The next morning Logan confided to his counselors, “I actually
found some cool stories in there.” He was especially interested in the
story of Joseph and asked many questions, wondering how Joseph was
able to do all that he did.
“Although Logan still acted tough, you could see the gears starting
to turn as he wondered what we were all about,” remembers Travis.
“It was kind of cool to see the change that took place over the week.”
Most of the kids who come to Camp Polaris don’t know the Bible’s
stories. Travis remembers a time when only one camper knew the story
of David and Goliath. “We’re ministering to kids who don’t grow up
in Christian homes, who don’t read the Bible. It takes a lot of prayer to
help reach these kids . . . to know how to reach them.”
Travis, a senior mechanical engineering student at Walla Walla
University, started working at Camp Polaris in 2011. In addition to
being a counselor, he has taught a variety of classes including wake-
boarding and model rocketry.
“I’ve loved it every summer, that’s why I keep going back,” he says.
“It’s been an absolute blast. On top of that, I’ve learned a lot about
trusting in God, because you get situations where you don’t know how
to make it through the week, but you always do. Then in hindsight, you
see that even the tough things were a positive. It definitely is about
learning to trust God.
“I think I’m a little more comfortable now with just being thrown
into a situation. I’ve learned to be flexible and go with the flow, and
to be ready for whatever—because you don’t know what’s going to
happen next.”
The Blessings
of the Righteous
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Prov. 10:1–14, Matt. 19:19, Prov-
erbs 11–12, John 3:16, Proverbs 13.
Memory Text: “Blessings are on the head of the righteous, but violence
covers the mouth of the wicked” (Proverbs 10:6, NKJV).
A
s the title suggests, this lesson looks at the blessings of the
righteous. The Hebrew word zaddiq, for “righteous,” is the
key word in our texts. Zedeq (also translated “justice”), from
which it is derived, appears in the introduction of the whole book:
“The proverbs of Solomon . . . to receive the instruction of wisdom,
justice [zedeq] . . .” (Prov. 1:1–3). What the book of Proverbs is telling
us is that wisdom is righteousness, and “righteousness” means to walk
according to God’s commands—to walk in faith and obedience to what
the Lord has called us to be and to do. Righteousness is a gift, one that
comes from God. The opposite is folly and unfaithfulness. Wisdom is
justice, or righteousness; folly is sin and wickedness—and in the verses
we will study, the contrast between them is stark.
38
S unday January 25
Righteousness Is Holistic
Read Proverbs 10:1–7. What various principles about life and faith
are revealed here?
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There is a story about a man in a boat who began to drill a hole under
his feet where he sat. When people in the boat demanded that he stop,
he responded: “This is none of your business. This is my place!” This
absurd response is often the excuse used by the sinner to justify his or
her behavior. “This is my life; it has nothing to do with you.” Of course,
anything we do or don’t do has an impact on others, especially on those
nearest to us. Who hasn’t felt, in a big way, the results of other people’s
actions, either good or bad?
The principle of unity between the spiritual-moral life and the
physical-material life is dealt with in verses 3–5. The main idea is that
wickedness or moral deficiency does not pay, even if one is rich; and
that righteousness is always rewarding, in one way or another, even if
one is poor.
In verses 6 and 7, we see here an earlier expression of what Jesus
said about how lust is adultery, or hatred akin to murder. Hiding our
hatred behind our words doesn’t always work, either. Wicked thoughts
are often betrayed in our body language and the tone of our voice. The
best possible starting point for good relations with others is, “You shall
love your neighbor as yourself ” (Lev. 19:18, NKJV; compare with Matt.
19:19, NKJV). As the texts also suggest, the impression you make for
good can have a lasting influence on others. In the end, we’re dealing
with a certain amount of common sense: Isn’t it better to have a good
name than a bad one?
39
M onday January 26
Read Proverbs 10:11–14. What is the contrast there between how the
righteous person speaks and how the fool does?
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40
T uesday January 27
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Read Proverbs 11. Though it touches on so many topics, what are some
of the great blessings that come to the faithful as opposed to what
happens to the wicked?
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_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
The sense of a future and the value of what is not yet seen (see
2 Cor. 4:18) help motivate the righteous to live rightly. Because of
their hope in the future, the righteous behave with humility, honesty,
and compassion.
On the other hand, wicked people live only in the present; they are
concerned only with what they see and with the immediate reward. They
think of themselves before others and will resort to deception and abuse.
For instance, the salespeople who deceive their customers might perhaps
get an immediate reward with a higher price, but they ultimately could
lose their customers, and their business might fail (Prov. 11:3, 18).
Think about some of the decisions you have to make and how
you go about making them. How much long-term planning (as in
eternity) factors into your choices?
41
W ednesday January 28
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
When was the last time you lied? How did you feel when you did it?
42
T hursday January 29
Read John 3:16. What two options does all humanity face?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Read Proverbs 13. How does this chapter contrast the experience and
fate of the righteous with that of the wicked?
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_________________________________________________________
The wise are compared to a lasting lamp, while the wicked are
compared to a lamp that will be put out (Prov. 13:9). The wise person
will enjoy the good fruit of his or her work, while the sinner will reap
evil (vss. 2, 25). Through their children (vs. 22), the wise have a future
even beyond themselves; the wicked, instead, will leave their wealth to
strangers, even to the righteous (vs. 22).
The point is that a life of faith and obedience to the Lord is better
than a life of disobedience and folly.
Putting aside the big issue of the promise of eternal life, what
are some of the immediate, day-to-day advantages that you have
experienced through living a life of faith in Christ?
43
F riday January 30
Discussion Questions:
Discuss how our decisions impact others for good or for evil.
Why is this an inescapable fact of life? This truth was first revealed
in the story of the Fall, where even to this day the impact of Adam’s
and Eve’s choice is felt in each of our lives. It might be tempting
to try to measure the amount of good or bad our decisions might
bring, but that’s risky, because we often don’t know the impact of
our choices. Why, then, in light of God and His law, must we choose
to do what’s right, regardless of what we fear the consequences
might be?
44
i n s i d e
Story
A Light in the World
Heather Ueeck grew up in Delta Junction, a small town at the end
of the Alaska Highway. As a child, Heather loved going to camp every
summer and kept a record of her experiences, listing her daily activi-
ties. Early on she wrote, “And of course we had to do worship, and
that was dumb.”
But as the years went by, camp worships became more meaningful
to Heather. One worship that made a big impression involved a candle
and a balloon. “They held a balloon over a lit candle, and the balloon
popped right away. Then they put water into another balloon and held
it over the candle, and it didn’t pop! The presenter explained that we
are like the balloon and the water represents Christ. If we have Christ
in us, He calms us and gives us peace and strength.He’s a resource that
we can latch on to.”
Heather now tries to pass on these lessons to campers as she works
at Camp Polaris. “The kids aren’t Adventists, and they don’t come
from the best families. They aren’t used to discipline, to structure, and
people caring about them. They often act up. Sometimes it seems as if
they hate camp, but they keep coming back. Even with the struggles,
underneath they realize that we actually care about them.”
Heather admits that working at Camp Polaris has taught her patience.
“It’s my job to lead the kids toward God. Patience and flexibility are so
important, and trusting in God. It’s given me a strong tool for facing
situations that will come up in my life—just learning to deal with the
things that this world throws at you. It’s given me an appreciation for
others who have served me and has given me the attitude that I want to
help other people and be a light in the world.”
Camp Polaris is in need of updated facilities, such as “bear-proof
cabins,” says Heather. And now that the Moodys have left, the only
way to ferry the children to camp is by making several one-and-a-half-
hour trips by small boat. Restroom and bathing facilities include two
outhouses, a steam sauna, and the icy waters of Lake Aleknagik.
But the primitive accommodations are not a deterrent for Heather.
“I’ve lived in Alaska all my life,” she says, “and [Camp Polaris] is the
most isolated I’ve ever been. But it’s definitely a place where you can
feel very close to God. I really love it up there.”
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Proverbs 14; Dan. 7:25; Mark
12:30, 31; Prov. 15:3; Isa. 5:20; Proverbs 15; Matt. 20:26–28.
Memory Text: “There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end
is the way of death” (Proverbs 14:12, NKJV).
A
s Paul had said: “We see through a glass, darkly” (1 Cor.
13:12). We see so little, and what we do see always comes
filtered through our own minds. Our eyes and ears—all our
senses, actually—give us only a narrow view of what’s really out there.
We can be deceived, too, not only about the external world, but about
ourselves, as well. Our dreams, our views, and our opinions can give us
very distorted images of what we are really like, and of all deceptions,
that can be by far the worst.
What should we do then, to protect ourselves from these deceptions?
Proverbs provides us with basic counsel. We should not trust ourselves,
as the fool does. On the contrary, we should trust the Lord, who con-
trols the course of events even when all seems to go wrong. In short,
we need to live by faith and not merely by sight, because our sight can
be exceedingly deceptive, showing only a small portion of what is real,
and then even worse, distorting the little it does show us.
46
S unday February 1
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
The fool speaks proudly (Prov. 14:3). The first depiction of the fool
deals with his “proud speech.” The image of the rod associated with
the fool’s lips implies his eventual punishment. His proud words have
resulted in a blow on his lips, an outcome that is seen in contrast with
the lips of the wise, which are preserved (see also Dan. 7:8).
The fool mocks wisdom (Prov. 14:6–9). Although the fool seems to
seek wisdom, in fact he does not believe in it and is skeptical of it. He
will not find it because, in his own mind, there is no wisdom apart from
himself. Most frightful is his attitude toward violation of the law. What
could be more deadly than mocking the idea of sin?
The fool is credulous (Prov. 14:15). Paradoxically, while the fool
makes fun of those idealists who still believe in the values of wisdom,
he has lost his ability to think critically about what he hears; he believes
“every word.” The irony of this situation strikes at the heart of secular
society. Skeptical people mock God and make fun of religion, claiming
that these beliefs are for children and old people, yet they themselves
often believe in some of the most foolish things, such as the creation of
life on earth by pure chance alone.
The fool is impulsive (Prov. 14:16, 29). Because the fool believes
that he has the truth within himself, he does not take time to think. His
reaction will be quick, dictated mostly by impulse.
The fool oppresses others (Prov. 14:21, 31). The mechanisms of
oppression and intolerance are suggested in the psychology of the fool.
He is intolerant of others and will treat them with contempt (see Dan.
7:25; 8:11, 12).
It’s easy to see the traits of a fool in others, but what about in
our own selves? Which, if any, of these character flaws might
you need first to recognize, and then seek by God’s grace to
overcome?
47
M onday February 2
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_________________________________________________________
The wise speak humbly (Prov. 14:3). The wise restrain the use of
their lips. Their silent reflection is motivated by a lack of arrogant
self-assurance. The wise give consideration to the other person’s ideas;
therefore, the wise will take time to think through and weigh the evi-
dence. They are also silent because they are listening, ready to learn
from others.
The wise value learning and knowledge (Prov. 14:6, 18). It is dif-
ficult for the fool to learn, because it is hard for him to sit at the feet
of a teacher; in contrast, it is easy for the wise to learn because of their
humility. They will thus enjoy the experience of learning and growing.
It is also this search for wisdom, for knowledge that they do not have,
which makes them wise.
The wise are cautious (Prov. 14:15). The wise know that sin and evil
exist. Therefore they will be careful where they walk. They will not trust
their feelings and personal opinions; they will check things out and ask
for advice. Yet they will always be careful about what other people say to
them; they will sort out the good from the bad (1 Thess. 5:21).
The wise are calm (Prov. 14:29, 33). The wise can stay quiet because
they do not rely on their “own ways,” but depend on “above” (vs. 14,
NKJV). It is their faith in God that allows them to relax and exercise
self-control (Isa. 30:15). It is the fear of God that gives them confi-
dence (Prov. 14:26).
The wise are compassionate and sensitive (Prov. 14:21, 31). The two
commandments, “You shall love the Lord your God” and “You shall
love your neighbor,” are linked (Mark 12:30, 31, NKJV). We can’t love
God and at the same time treat other people poorly. The greatest expres-
sion of our faith is how we deal with others, especially those in need.
“We do not realize how many of us walk by sight and not by faith.
We believe the things that are seen, but do not appreciate the
precious promises given us in His Word.”—Ellen G. White, Our
High Calling, p. 85. What does it mean to walk by faith and not
by sight? How are we supposed to do that?
48
T uesday February 3
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
In the next two chapters of Proverbs, the tone changes. These chap-
ters are more theological than the preceding ones. The Lord is refer-
enced more often than in previous proverbs. We are also told something
amazing about Him: that His eyes are in every place (Prov. 15:3).
This acute consciousness of the Lord’s presence is precisely what the
ancient Israelites called “the fear of the Lord.” The same association is
found in the Psalms: “the eye of the Lord is on those who fear Him”
(Ps. 33:18, NKJV). Likewise, Job describes God as the One who looks
to the ends of the earth and sees all that happens under the heavens (Job
28:24). Because of this, Job concludes that “the fear of the Lord . . .
is wisdom” (Job 28:28).
This proverb reminds us of God’s ability to see good and evil, no
matter where they are. As Solomon understood (1 Kings 3:9), true
wisdom is the ability to discern between good and evil. On a human
level, this awareness should help us to remember always to do good and
never evil, for God sees all that we do, even if no one else does. We fool
ourselves, thinking that because, for now, we get away with evil, that we
really do get away with it. In the long run, we never do.
Let us, therefore, be diligent, for “there is no creature hidden from
His sight, but all things are naked and open to the eyes of Him to whom
we must give account” (Heb. 4:13, NKJV).
Read Proverbs 15:3, Isaiah 5:20, and Hebrews 5:14. What crucial
message do these verses have for us, especially in an age when the
very concepts of “good and evil” are often blurred, with people
claiming that good and evil are relative or just human ideas that
have no objective existence apart from what we say they are?
What is so wrong with such a notion of good and evil, and why is
it so dangerous to hold?
49
W ednesday February 4
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Although the biblical text does not explicitly mention the reason for
joy, the parallel thought between verses 13 and 14 suggests that the
“merry heart” is “the heart of him who has understanding” (NKJV). It
is the heart of the one who has faith and sees redemption beyond the
immediate ordeal. This is why faith in God is so important; this is why
it’s so crucial that we know for ourselves, from our own experience,
the reality of God and His love. Then, whatever trials come, whatever
suffering we face, those with understanding can endure, because they
know for themselves God’s love.
Proverbs 15:23 brings us another important idea. Joy comes more
from what we give than from what we receive. It is the good word
shared with others that will bring joy to the giver. Who hasn’t experi-
enced the blessings that come from blessing others, whether in word or
in deed or both? As we have already seen in Proverbs, our words are
powerful. They can do great good or great evil. And how much better it
is when they do great good, not only for the one for whom the good is
done, but for the one who does it.
How well do you know, for yourself, God’s love? What are things
you could do that could help open up your heart to this crucial
truth? Consider how much better life would be if you knew the
reality of God’s love.
50
T hursday February 5
What does Proverbs 16:1 say? How are we to understand this text?
_________________________________________________________
We prepare and make plans, but the last word still belongs to God.
This does not mean that our preparations are worthless. But in the life
of faith, if we just submit our plans to God, He will work with them,
and our plans will be directed (Prov. 16:9) and ultimately established
by Him (vs. 3). Even the work of our enemies will be used in our behalf
(vss. 4, 7).
Though these are not simple ideas to grasp, especially when we face
difficult situations, they should give us comfort and help us learn to
trust God, even when things seem to go terribly wrong, and when our
plans don’t turn out as we had hoped. The key point for us is to learn
to surrender all to God; if we do that, we can be sure of His guidance,
even in the hardest times.
Read Proverbs 16:18, 19. What is the place of ambition in human suc-
cess?
_________________________________________________________
As always, the Bible warns against pride. After all, as fallen beings,
what do we have to be proud of ? What vice is more contrary to God
than pride, the first sin? (See Ezek. 28:17.) Jesus emphatically taught
about the iniquity of seeking to be great, and He urged His disciples to
seek humility instead (Matt. 20:26–28).
The Bible does not make room for chance. For even when one thinks
that the course of events is dictated by chance, we can trust that God
is still in control.
Further Study: “From the beginning Satan has portrayed to men the
gains to be won by transgression. Thus he seduced angels. Thus he
tempted Adam and Eve to sin. And thus he is still leading multitudes
away from obedience to God. The path of transgression is made to appear
desirable; ‘but the end thereof are the ways of death.’ Proverbs 14:12.
Happy [are] they who, having ventured in this way, learn how bitter are
the fruits of sin, and turn from it betimes.”—Ellen G. White, Patriarchs
and Prophets, p. 720.
“Nothing tends more to promote health of body and of soul than does
a spirit of gratitude and praise. It is a positive duty to resist melancholy,
discontented thoughts and feelings—as much a duty as it is to pray. If
we are heaven-bound, how can we go as a band of mourners, groan-
ing and complaining all along the way to our Father’s house? Those
professed Christians who are constantly complaining, and who seem
to think cheerfulness and happiness a sin, have not genuine religion.”
—Ellen G. White, The Ministry of Healing, p. 251.
Discussion Questions:
Discuss the idea that we have only a limited view of reality.
What does this mean? What things are out there that we know are
real, yet we just can’t sense them, in any way? For instance, how
many radio waves (cell phone calls, satellite programs, radio pro-
grams) are in the air all around you right now, and yet you can’t
see, hear, or feel them at all? How should the existence of such
realities help us to understand how limited our senses are? How
should this understanding help us to realize the reality of other
things that we can’t see, such as angels?
52
i n s i d e
Story
“They Deserve a Chance Too”
When Paul and Christie Brown moved into a less-than-desirable
neighborhood in Elkins, West Virginia, they didn’t know that their
home would become a magnet for young people.
“I’ve always been youth focused,” says Paul, “so when the neighbor-
hood kids wanted to hang out with our kids at the house, we said, ‘OK,
but there are rules:
“ ‘1. Respect. You will treat yourself and others respectfully, with no
swearing and no name calling.
“ ‘2. No lying. You lie to me, and it’s done—you are out the door.
“ ‘3. Health and dietary issues—no drugs, no alcohol, no unclean
meat.’ ”
Once the young people understood about clean and unclean foods,
they tried sharing what they had learned with their families. “The grand-
father would be cooking a groundhog,” says Paul, “but the kids would
tell him, ‘No! We’re not going to eat that!’ ”
Before long, the visitors were asking to move in with the Browns.
“Brayden spends every weekend at our house,” says Paul. “It’s his
Sabbath retreat and gets him away from his house.” During the week,
Brayden tries to avoid his abusive, alcoholic stepfather as much as pos-
sible.
Hunter and Wyatt are two others who spend more time with the
Browns than at home. Coming from difficult situations, both of the
boys feel safe with Paul and Christie, whom they consider to be their
surrogate parents.
“I try to treat all the kids as if they’re my kids,” says Paul, “because
they deserve a chance too.” That includes providing clothing, bicycles,
and various other items. “Even the vehicle I drive—an extended-cab
truck—is based on how many kids we’re looking after, so we can take
them to and from school.”
With parental permission, the Browns have taken Brayden and Hunter
with them to Pathfinders and to church and are even paying for them
to attend the local Seventh-day Adventist church school. Unfortunately,
Wyatt’s mother will not give permission for him to join in these activi-
ties; but for Brayden and Hunter, their experience has been life chang-
ing. On November 2, 2013, both boys, along with the Browns’ son, Payton,
were baptized at the Elkins Seventh-day Adventist Church.
“We’ve been living here for three years now,” Paul says, “and my wife
really feels that the Lord put us in this neighborhood. It’s not where we
would have chosen, but we are sure that the Lord led us here.”
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Proverbs 17, 1 Cor. 13:5–7,
John 8:1–11, Proverbs 18, 19, Deut. 24:10–22.
P
roverbs again denounces the deception of appearances. We may
seem to have everything the world offers—wealth, power, plea-
sure, fame—yet, behind the facade, tension and misery flourish.
It’s even possible that the cause of this tension and misery is precisely
the wealth and pleasure that people strive so hard for. As an Egyptian
proverb notes: “Better is bread with a happy heart than wealth with
vexation.”—Miriam Lichtheim, The New Kingdom, vol. 2 of Ancient
Egyptian Literature: A Book of Readings (Los Angeles: University of
California Press, 2006), p. 156. According to the book of Proverbs, the
first step to solve this problem is to recognize what our priorities are:
peaceful relationships are more important than wealth (Prov. 17:1).
What counts is not so much what we have, but who we are within our-
selves. The advice that follows will help in restoring this priority and
lead us toward an inner peace (shalom in the Hebrew) that will add to
our happiness.
56
S unday February 8
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
When someone messes up, it’s so tempting to spread the story, to tell
others, Have you heard about what so-and-so did? Though we might
act as if we are appalled by the action, we still like telling others about
what happened. In short, we are gossiping, and that’s what we’re being
warned against, because this behavior will generate contention, even
between close friends. After all, if a friend of yours messes up, what
kind of friend are you if you go around telling others about it?
We are advised instead to “cover” the mistake. This is not, however,
to imply that we have to hide the sin, to act as if it never happened, as if
the person never did wrong. The sin that is covered is still present, even
though hidden. In fact, the Hebrew word for “cover” in that expression
has the specific connotation of “forgiving” (Ps. 85:2, Neh. 4:5). Love,
not gossip, should be our response to someone else’s mistake.
Read Proverbs 17:17 and 1 Corinthians 13:5–7. How does love help in
coping with a friend’s mistake?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Think about a time you messed up badly and you were forgiven,
ministered to, and comforted. What does that tell you about how,
if possible, you should do the same for others?
57
M onday February 9
Be Just!
True love is not blind. That we “cover” someone’s mistake through
love does not mean that we do not see the sin and do not recognize it
as such. Love and justice go together. The Hebrew word for “justice,”
zedeq, also means “love,” “charity.” We cannot have real compassion if
we are not just, and we cannot be just if we do not have compassion and
love. The two concepts must be together.
For example, the exercise of charity toward the poor should not be
done at the expense of justice; hence the recommendation not to favor
the poor in court (Exod. 23:3). If love obliges us to help the poor, it
would be unjust to favor them when they are wrong, simply because
they are poor. Justice and truth should therefore go along with love and
compassion. It is this wise balance that characterizes the torah, the law
of God, and which is taught and promoted in the book of Proverbs.
Read Proverbs 17:10, 19:25. What do they say about the need for
rebuke and confrontation?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
The fact that Proverbs 17:10 immediately follows the call to cover
the mistake through love (vs. 9) is not an accident. This mention of
“reproof ” in connection with “love” places love in the right perspective.
The text implies a strong rebuke.
Read John 8:1–11. How do we see Jesus dealing with open sin?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
“In His act of pardoning this woman and encouraging her to live a
better life, the character of Jesus shines forth in the beauty of perfect
righteousness. While He does not palliate sin, nor lessen the sense of
guilt, He seeks not to condemn, but to save. The world had for this
erring woman only contempt and scorn; but Jesus speaks words of
comfort and hope. The Sinless One pities the weakness of the sinner,
and reaches to her a helping hand. While the hypocritical Pharisees
denounce, Jesus bids her, ‘Go, and sin no more.’ ”—Ellen G. White,
The Desire of Ages, p. 462.
58
T uesday February 10
Words, Again
Read Proverbs 18. Though different themes are presented here, focus
on what it has to say about our words. What important concepts are
presented here regarding what we do or do not say?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
We are again confronted with the reality and power of words; in this
case we see how fools use their mouths to their own undoing. Verse 13
is especially enlightening. How easy it is to speak out before carefully
listening and discerning what has been said to us. How many times
might we have spared ourselves, and others, undue pain and strife if
we had only learned to think through carefully what we had just heard
before responding to it. There is indeed a time when silence is the best
response.
Read Proverbs 18:4. Why are the words of the wise like deep waters?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Proverbs again tells us what we should already know: our words are
powerful, and they can be a force for good or evil, even life and death.
How careful we need to be, then, with how we use this powerful tool.
59
W ednesday February 11
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Only God does not need a second opinion, precisely because by His
nature He already has it, for His eyes are everywhere (Prov. 15:3). God
has the capacity to see all sides of any matter. We, by contrast, generally
have a very narrow view of everything; a view that tends to get even
narrower when we get locked into a position, especially on matters that
we think are important.
As we should know by now, however, there are always two or even
more sides to any story, and the more information we have, the better
we can form the right view of a subject.
60
T hursday February 12
Be Truthful
A king needed to appoint a new minister to the highest office of his
kingdom. For this purpose, he organized a special contest on lying:
who could utter the biggest lie. All his ministers applied, and each one
came and spoke their biggest lie. But the king was not satisfied; their
lies seemed lame. The king then asked his closest and most trusted
counselor: “Why didn’t you apply?”
The counselor answered, “I am sorry to disappoint you, Majesty, but
I cannot apply.”
“Why not?” asked the king.
“Because I never lie,” the counselor replied.
The king decided to appoint him to the position.
As sinners, lying comes to us easier than we think; for this reason,
again, how careful we need to be with our words.
Read Proverbs 19. Though many themes are presented there, what does
it say about lying?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
Lying, in and of itself, is bad enough; but doing it in court and under
oath is even worse. In many countries perjury is a crime, and a seri-
ous one at that. The witness must therefore give a truthful testimony.
It is no accident that this verse follows the mention of a “friend to one
who gives gifts” (vs. 6, NKJV), and of the poor who are hated by their
friends and even their brothers (vs. 7, NKJV). The point is, witnesses
must not be influenced by bribes or by the social status of those they
are testifying about.
Discussion Questions:
It’s always hard when those you love or care about mess up.
And it’s so easy to try to cover up for them. How do we strike the
right balance in situations like these? Certainly, we need to show
grace, as we have been shown grace for our errors—that goes
without saying. But does grace always, or ever, mean that a person
can sin with impunity and not face consequences? What then is
the right course to take in situations like these?
As the lesson said this week, most things in life are very com-
plicated and have many facets to them. So, even those things we
happen to be right about will usually be more complex than we
understand them to be. How can we learn to be open-minded
while at the same time not being foolish about it?
What are some ways we can lie without ever using words?
62
i n s i d e
Story
“Your Parents Should Be Very
Proud of You”
“My dog’s been shot!” Brayden blurted out in tears to his friend
Payton. “Would you speak at his funeral?”
Twelve-year-old Payton had never conducted a funeral, but wanting
to help his friend, he agreed to do what he could. “I planned the whole
thing out,” he said. “The dog is buried in my yard—Brayden and I dug
his grave.” After Payton performed the eulogy, the boys added the dog’s
dish, collar, and squeaky toy before filling the grave.
When Payton and his family first moved into the neighborhood,
Payton befriended Brayden and learned about the struggles he was fac-
ing at home. “I told him that I was a Christian and shared my beliefs
with him,” says Payton, “and then he told me, ‘I want to try that out!’ ”
Brayden began spending more time at Payton’s house and often spent
the night—especially on Fridays, so he could go with Payton and his
family to church the next day. Before long, Brayden’s cousin, Hunter,
wanted to stay with Payton too, “So I was housing three people in my
room,” Payton explains.
While Payton’s bedroom may be small, his heart is big. He
befriended another neighbor, Wyatt, whose father committed suicide.
Wyatt had been kicked out of several public schools at the age of 13,
and his mother didn’t know what to do with him. Payton spent time
with Wyatt and invited him to come with him to Pathfinders and to
church, along with the other boys, but Wyatt’s mother would not allow
her son to join in.
During the next three years, Payton often shared his faith with Wyatt,
and one day after hearing that they might be moving, Wyatt handed
Payton and his sister, Stormy, a note. The note is so precious that
Payton keeps it in the family safe.
“Dear Payton and Stormy,
“Before you move, I want to thank you. When you first came, I had
lost my way. I stopped going to church and didn’t plan on coming back.
When we became friends, I was trying to act tough, but on the inside,
I wanted to be more like you, Payton. When the hard times came and
I lost my father, talking to you was a comfort. I learned about God
through you. You were and still are a hero, inspiration, and role model
to me. Your parents should be very proud of you, knowing that you
helped me find Jesus.”
Words of Wisdom
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Proverbs 20; 1 Cor. 12:14–26;
Jer. 9:23, 24; Proverbs 21; Matt. 25:35–40; Proverbs 22.
Memory Text: “Most men will proclaim each his own goodness, but
who can find a faithful man?” (Proverbs 20:6, NKJV).
T
o some degree (a great degree, actually), we are all products of
our environment. Though heredity plays a big role, the values
we hold come to us from what is around us—our home, our
education, our culture. From infancy we are impacted by what we see
and hear.
Unfortunately, what we see and hear isn’t always the best for us; the
world around us is fallen in every way, and it cannot help impacting us
negatively. Nevertheless, we have been given the promise of the Holy
Spirit, and we have God’s Word, which points us to something higher
and better than the world does.
This week we will look at various proverbs and the practical truths
they express, truths that, if taken to heart and followed, can, indeed,
help us to overcome the negativity of this fallen world and prepare us
for a better one.
64
S unday February 15
65
M onday February 16
Read Proverbs 20:6 (see also Jer. 9:23, 24; Mark 9:35). What are these
texts telling us about what is of true value to God?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
It is not the single sensational act of love or sacrifice that will demon-
strate the high quality of our relationships, but the long and regular series
of small actions that we perform day by day, patiently and surely. The
daily meal served to your spouse, the constant attention to a sick parent,
the continued effort in your job; all these humble acts throughout life are
the evidence that your faith is authentic. Enduring faithfulness is more
valuable than intense but rare acts of love.
This principle holds true for our relationship with God, as well. It is
more difficult and more valuable to live for God than to die for Him, if
for no other reason than that living takes more time than dying. The saint
who lives for God is greater than the martyr who dies for Him. Anyone
can claim to believe in God and to serve Him; the question is: Does it
last? Or, as Jesus said, “ ‘He who endures to the end shall be saved’ ”
(Matt. 24:13, NKJV).
66
T uesday February 17
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
The thief who steals bread gets it faster than the one who has to work
for it. Salespeople who lie to sell their bad merchandise may become
rich faster than the honest merchant (compare Prov. 21:5 to the next
verse). Yet, says the proverb, the future will turn the sweetness into
“gravel,” and the hastily acquired wealth will become poverty. The text
gives a number of examples to illustrate the accuracy of this observa-
tion:
1. The Inheritance (Prov. 20:21). The mention of an inheritance
obtained too quickly (implying that the parents are still alive) follows
the condemnation of the one who curses his parents (vs. 20). The asso-
ciation of these two proverbs is significant. It is as if the son (or the
daughter) curses the parents and also wishes them dead. The child may
even have plotted the death of the parents in order to get the inheri-
tance. The prospect of this behavior is tragic: the lamp he is presently
enjoying will become “deep darkness” (vs. 20, NKJV) and his curse
against his parents will turn on him, for he “will not be blessed at the
end” (vs. 21, NKJV).
2. Revenge (Prov. 20:22). This time the proverb addresses the vic-
tim who may be tempted to seek revenge for the evil that has been
committed against him. The counsel is just to “wait for the Lord”
(NKJV). Only then will you be saved, which implies that if you do
seek revenge you are taking a serious risk. Proverbs 25:21, 22 empha-
sizes the same instruction, using the metaphor of heaping coals of fire
on the enemy’s head, an Egyptian ritual expressing repentance and
conversion. If you refrain from revenge, promises Proverbs 20:22,
you will be saved by the Lord and, in the process (adds Proverbs
25:21, 22) you will save your enemy, thus overcoming evil with good
(Rom. 12:21).
67
W ednesday February 18
Read Matthew 25:35–40. What does this tell us about how Jesus iden-
tifies so closely with those in need? How should this truth impact
how we relate to such people?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
For the sake of the poor: The second reason lies within the poor
person, whom God has created just as He has created the rich person
(Prov. 22:2). The equality between humans, based on the fact that God
has created them all, makes the poor as worthy of attention as the rich
person. We should love our neighbors for who they are: beings made
in the image of God.
At the same time, think about how much good it does you to help
those in need. Our basic natures are selfish; by default we tend to look
out for ourselves over and above others. By giving of ourselves, we
learn to die to self and to better reflect Christ’s character, and what is
of more value to us than that?
68
T hursday February 19
Education
The Hebrew word for “education” comes from a word that means
“to build up” and “to begin.” All these meanings are contained in the
Hebrew idea of education: when we “train up a child” (Prov. 22:6), we
build up, we begin, and we lay the groundwork for the future. Parents
and educators are therefore responsible for their children’s future and,
by implication, the future of the world. What we do with our children
today will impact society for generations to come.
Read Proverbs 22:6. What does this say about the importance of edu-
cating children correctly?
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________
It is significant that the Hebrew word for “educate” is the very word
used for the “dedication” of the temple (1 Kings 8:63). Early education
means to dedicate our children to God in the same way that the temple is
dedicated to God. Education has an impact on our salvation, even beyond
our own life. “To parents is committed the great work of educating and
training their children for the future, immortal life.”—Ellen G. White,
Child Guidance, p. 38. Such education has an eternal effect. The apostle
Paul seems to allude to Proverbs 22:6 when he commends Timothy for
his early training in the knowledge of “the Holy Scriptures, which are
able to make you wise for salvation” (2 Tim. 3:15, NKJV).
Discussion Questions:
Dwell more on the idea of Proverbs 22:6. Why must we be
careful in how we apply this? That is, many parents have done a
good job in rearing their children, and yet as adults those chil-
dren make wrong choices. Why must we never forget the reality of
free will and the reality of the great controversy as we look at the
meaning of this text?
70
i n s i d e
Story
Brayden’s Testimony
Paul Brown and his family are a true blessing to me. A few years
ago, when they moved in, my step-grandfather asked Paul if I could
mow Paul’s yard. Paul agreed, and soon a connection grew between
me and his family, and I found out what nice people they are. His
kids, Payton and Stormy, are very upbeat and friendly. Their mother,
Christie, is really nice and is always there to help me.
One day I asked Payton why they were always away on Saturdays. I
thought it was weird that I couldn’t do any work for them on that day.
Payton invited me to come to church with them. I liked it, but after a
while I started slacking off. Six months later I was back—this time to
stay.
I joined the Pathfinder Club. As we were coming back from a
campout, Payton, my cousin Hunter, and I were talking about school.
Hunter and I didn’t like our school because there were so many fights.
Hunter said that he hoped to someday go to a Christian college. Payton
asked, “Why don’t you just go to a Christian school?” Our parents
agreed to let us go to Highland Adventist School here in Elkins, and
Paul found sponsors for us. I like the school a lot. The teachers and
staff are really nice, and the students are friendly, not fighting.
One day as we were going to church, Payton said he wanted to get
baptized. Hunter and I said that we wanted to get baptized with him.
So we all took Bible studies together and were baptized on November
2, 2013.
The church members are the nicest people I’ve ever met. They are
always there for you. And the pastor, Dan, there’s something about his
preaching that just sticks with me. I like the people here a lot; they are
like my second family that I’ve always wanted.
Being able to come here and know about the Seventh-day Adventist
Church has been a real blessing to me. No one else in my family are
Adventists. They don’t understand why I don’t do some things I used to
do. My stepdad can’t understand why I don’t eat pork—all my life I’ve
eaten it, and at first it was hard not to eat it. But I’m glad I went off of
it. I’ve seen a change in my weight and my personality. Everything has
gone up since I was baptized.
Words of Truth
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Proverbs 22, 23, Exod. 22:21–
27, Proverbs 24, Eph. 5:20, Ezek. 33:8.
S
ome of this week’s proverbs show parallels with Egyptian texts.
Under inspiration, Solomon might have shaped these texts
according to a specifically Hebrew perspective. Here, the words
of the Egyptians meet the Spirit of Israel’s God, and thus they became
divine revelation.
This observation is important, for it reminds us of the universal
character of “truth.” What is true for the Israelite should also be true
for the Egyptian; otherwise, it would not be the truth. It is important to
remember that God’s truths apply universally, to everyone.
The domain of these admonitions is common to both communities.
That is, whoever you are, whether a believer or not, and wherever you
live, there are some things that you should not do.
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S unday February 22
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The first duty of the student is to listen and pay attention: “Incline
your ear and hear” (Prov. 22:17, NKJV). In other words: “Concentrate!”
The crucial point is that the seeker of truth must be earnest, must truly
want to learn what is right, and then do it.
But it is not enough for the student to listen or even to understand,
intellectually, what is being taught. Some people who have a lot of
biblical facts in their heads have no real knowledge or experience with
the Truth itself (John 14:6).
Instead, truth should reach the innermost part of the human being.
The Hebrew phrase in Proverbs 22:18, “within you” (NKJV), refers
to the stomach. The lesson should not stay on the surface; it has to
be digested, assimilated, and become an inner part of our beings.
Once the message has gone deep into our system and becomes rooted
within us, it will then rise to our lips, and we can have a powerful
testimony.
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1. Faith (vs. 19). The first goal of the teaching of wisdom is not wis-
dom per se. Proverbs does not aim at making more intelligent and more
skillful disciples. The teacher’s objective is to strengthen the disciple’s
trust in the Lord.
2. Conviction (vs. 21). Students should know why these “words of
truth” (NKJV) are certain; they should know why they believe what
they do. Faith by definition is belief in what we don’t fully understand.
Nevertheless, we still should have good reasons for that faith.
3. Responsibility (vs. 21). The last step of education is to share with
others those “words of truth” (NKJV) we have received. This is central
to our whole calling as a people.
Think about all the powerfully logical reasons we have for our
Seventh-day Adventist faith. What are these reasons, and why
should we never hesitate in keeping them ever before us and shar-
ing them with others? Bring your answer to class on Sabbath.
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M onday February 23
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T uesday February 24
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Why would someone envy the wicked? Most likely it’s not because of
the actual sins that they might be committing. Rather, it’s usually because
of the immediate gain (wealth, success, power) that they achieve through
their wickedness—that’s what people often covet for themselves.
Though, of course, not every successful or rich person is wicked,
some are—and they are probably the kind of people we are being
warned about in these verses. We see their “good” life and, from our
perspective, especially if we are struggling ourselves, it’s easy to envy
what they have.
This, though, is a very narrow and shortsighted view of things. After
all, the temptation of sin is that its reward is immediate: we enjoy the
present gratification. A perspective beyond the present can protect us
from temptation; that is, we need to look beyond the immediate “gains”
of our sin and think through the long-term consequences.
Besides, who hasn’t seen just how destructive sin is? We never get
away with it. We might be able to hide it from others so that no one,
even those closest to us, has a clue about what we are doing (though
sooner or later they catch on, don’t they?); or we might be able to
delude ourselves into thinking that our sins are not that bad. (After all,
look at how many people do worse things!) But sooner or later, one way
or another, sin catches up with us.
We should hate sin because it is sin. We should hate it because of
what it has done to us, to our world, and to our Lord. If we want to see
the real cost of sin, look at Jesus on the cross. This is what our sin has
cost. That realization alone should be enough (though so often it isn’t)
to make us want to avoid sin and to keep away as much as possible from
those who would lead us into it.
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W ednesday February 25
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Who hasn’t seen personally just how devastating alcohol can be? Sure,
not everyone who drinks becomes a drunk in the gutter. But most likely
drunks in the gutter never imagined, the first time they took a drink, that
they would eventually wind up in the gutter.
“The man who has formed the habit of drinking intoxicating liquor, is
in a desperate situation. He cannot be reasoned with, or persuaded to deny
himself the indulgence. His stomach and brain are diseased, his will power
is weakened, and his appetite uncontrollable. The prince of the powers of
darkness holds him in bondage that he has no power to break.”—Ellen G.
White Comments, The SDA Bible Commentary, vol. 3, p. 1162.
_________________________________________________________
This admonition is about more than table manners. The biblical text
is a warning to those who like to eat and who have great appetites (Prov.
23:2). The metaphor of putting a knife to one’s throat is particularly
strong: it not only means curbing the appetite, but also suggests the
risk to your health and even your life that could be caused by overeat-
ing. The Hebrew word (bin), translated “consider carefully,” expresses
the idea of carefully deciding between eating various kinds of food.
The same word is used by Solomon when he asks for wisdom to help
him “discern [bin] between good and evil” (1 Kings 3:9, NKJV). The
inspired writer has more in mind than just the issue of appetite control.
His counsel may also concern banquets and social drinking, when we
are pressured and tempted to “desire his delicacies” (Prov. 23:3, NKJV).
Think about someone you know whose life has been destroyed by
alcohol. Why should that example alone be enough to help you to
understand why you should never put that poison in your body?
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T hursday February 26
Our Responsibilities
“When I say to the wicked, ‘O wicked man, you shall surely die!’
and you do not speak to warn the wicked from his way, that wicked
man shall die in his iniquity; but his blood I will require at your
hand” (Ezek. 33:8, NKJV). What basic spiritual principle is revealed
here? How do we take this concept and apply it to our everyday
lives?
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Read Proverbs 24:11, 12, 23–28. What important messages are here
for us?
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The law of Moses clearly warns that those who fail to report what
they witness will bear guilt (Lev. 5:1). We may not be able to act against
crime, but if we keep silent about what we see, we then share the guilt
with the criminal. By our silence, we become accomplices.
On the other hand, if we report the truth in our testimony, giving the
“right answer” (Prov. 24:26), we respond appropriately and behave as
responsible people. This act is compared to a kiss on the lips, meaning
that the person cares about another person.
Discussion Questions:
In class, go over your answer to Sunday’s final question. What
can we learn from each other’s answers? What are ways that we
can learn to build up our faith in what we believe?
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i n s i d e
Story
Helping Mission Succeed
When Dan Jacko isn’t busy helping people learn to walk again, he’s
assisting his church members with their spiritual walk. Pastor Dan, a
professional physical therapist, is also serving as a lay pastor for the
Mountain View Conference in the two church district of Elkins and
Parsons, West Virginia. He also teaches biology and chemistry to the
academy level students at Highland Adventist School in Elkins. His
wife, Cheryl, is an educator and registered nurse and serves as the
principal of the kindergarten through twelfth grade school. Their son,
Jeremy, teaches Bible, math, and history.
Believing mission is important, every other year, Pastor Dan leads the
students and church members on a mission trip. So far, they’ve been to
Mexico, Panama, Honduras, and, in 2014, Costa Rica.
While in Costa Rica, they built a church during the day and presented
evangelistic meetings and Vacation Bible Schools in four different
churches in the evenings. In spite of his own full schedule, Pastor Dan
was impressed with the dedication of the pastor in Costa Rica, who
shepherds six churches and doesn’t have a car.
Not only do Pastor Dan and his members build churches abroad—
they also build them at home, where they recently completed their own
church and school, located on five and a half acres (2.2 hectares), com-
pletely debt-free.
The most recent challenge for Pastor Dan and the 80-member Elkins
church is keeping up with the many Bible study requests coming from
their community. Over the course of three mailings in 2013 and 2014,
everyone in the state of West Virginia received an invitation for the Voice
of Prophecy’s Discover Bible course. The response was overwhelming—
with 10,000 people indicating that they would like to have Bible studies.
Of that number, more than 200 came from the Elkins and Parsons area.
“Some are face-to-face Bible studies,” explains Pastor Dan, “and oth-
ers prefer to take them by correspondence, which are then graded by our
local church members.” The local churches are responsible for purchas-
ing the lessons and providing postage for correspondence students.
“What makes this area even more of a mission field,” says Pastor Dan,
“is that you’ll get a lot of people who say, ‘I believe this,’ but if their
family isn’t in favor of it, a lot of them just won’t make the commitment.”
Nevertheless, Pastor Dan and the small churches he leads see reaching
people for Jesus in their territory as an important mission and are willing
to give the time, effort, and funds needed to help it succeed.
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Prov. 25:2, 3; 26:11, 12;
1 Cor. 1:20, 21; Prov. 26:13–16; 27:5, 6.
Memory Text: “Do not exalt yourself in the presence of the king, and
do not stand in the place of the great” (Proverbs 25:6, NKJV).
B
ehind the dazzling serpent, who utters sweet words and who
seems so concerned with Eve’s happiness, hides the enemy who
plots her death (Gen. 3:1–6). Disguised as “an angel of light,”
Satan prepares the most dangerous traps for humankind (2 Cor. 11:14).
Even more dangerous and deceitful is self-pretension; when we claim
to be what we are not, we end up cheating others and even ourselves.
There are different ways to deceive. One of the most common is
through language. Some of the proverbs this week deal with words,
lying words, flattering words, pretty words that use nice sounds and
wonderful sentiments to cover ugly thoughts and intentions. We need
to be careful not only about what we say to others, but about how we
interpret what others say to us. Perhaps this week’s message could be
summed up this way: “Behold, I send you forth as sheep in the midst
of wolves: be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves”
(Matt. 10:16).
80
S unday March 1
Read Proverbs 25:2, 3. What point is the author making, and how can
we apply it to a broader situation?
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What makes the glory of God different from the glory of kings is His
“mysterious” nature, and by implication our human incapacity to fully
understand Him. The Hebrew root str (“conceal,” “hide”), from which
comes our word mystery, is often used in the Hebrew Scriptures to char-
acterize what makes God the only true God (Isa. 45:14, 15). There are
things about God that we simply cannot understand. On the other hand,
what makes the glory of kings is their willingness to be scrutinized.
Transparency and accountability should be the first quality of leader-
ship (Deut. 17:14–20). It is the king’s duty to “search out a matter”; that
is, to give an explanation for events and for what he is doing.
81
M onday March 2
Read Proverbs 26:11, 12. (See also Judg. 21:25; 1 Cor. 1:20, 21; 2:6, 7;
2 Cor. 1:12.) What must we all be careful not to do?
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As we can see, this idea of doing what is right in one’s own eyes
is nothing new. Yet it was as wrong then as it is now. As we have
already seen, none of us understands everything; in fact, we don’t
fully understand anything. We all have areas where we need to grow
and learn, so we should always be open to the fact that we don’t have
all the answers.
In the case of fools, as seen in this proverb, the reason to be con-
cerned is that the influence of their folly will go beyond themselves.
They are now more convinced than ever of their wisdom; they will
therefore repeat their folly. They may even be so convincing that others
will think they are wise, will honor them, and consult them for advice,
which can lead to big problems (Prov. 26:8). Folly will spread, but
labeled as “wisdom,” it can be that much more damaging. Furthermore,
fools are so foolish that they are not aware of their folly.
How often are you tempted to compromise on what you know are
core values, core truths? What happens, however, when certain
core values collide? How can we know which ones trump the
others?
82
T uesday March 3
The Sluggard
“The sluggard buries his hand in the dish; he is too lazy to bring
it back to his mouth” (Prov. 26:15, NIV).
Just as with students who spend more time and energy preparing to
cheat on an exam than studying for it, it is ironic that lazy people work
hard to find excuses for their laziness!
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The lazy person may be right: “There is a lion in the road!” (Prov.
26:13, NKJV). Therefore, it is wiser to stay at home and not to confront
the danger. But by doing just that, we miss all the opportunities that life
offers. We will never enjoy the beauty of the rose if we do not run the
risk of being hurt by its thorns. We will not be able to move forward
if we are afraid of obstacles. People who do not dare to commit them-
selves will never taste the fullness of life.
Look at some of the other imagery in those verses. Just as the door
swings on its hinges but doesn’t go anywhere, lazy people turn in their
beds; that is, they just change position, but don’t go anywhere, either.
The other image, in verse 15, is even more startling. They can get
their hands into a dish of food but are too lazy to bring them back to
feed themselves.
But even worse is their intellectual laziness, their closed-mindedness
and certainty about their own positions. Therefore, they will always be
right, wiser than seven wise men (vs. 16), and will not be open to other
views, perhaps wiser than their own. Those who think they have all the
answers usually don’t.
“In the judgment men will not be condemned because they con-
scientiously believed a lie, but because they did not believe the
truth, because they neglected the opportunity of learning what
is truth.”—Ellen G. White, Patriarchs and Prophets, p. 55. How
do we understand our role in giving others the “opportunity” to
learn what is truth? Where does our responsibility begin, and
where does it end?
83
W ednesday March 4
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Love is not just about kisses and sweet words. Love will sometimes
oblige us to rebuke our friend or our child, and it can run the risk of
appearing unpleasant, judgmental, and critical. We might even lose
friends if we speak out. Yet if we do not warn our friends about what
they are doing, especially if it will bring them harm, then what kind of
friend are we?
Open rebuke is also a sign that our love is not built on illusion and
pretension, but is based on truth and on trust.
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Have you ever been rebuked for something that could have really
hurt you? Suppose you hadn’t been warned about it? Keeping
this in mind, if you need to do the same for someone else, how can
you do it in a redemptive manner, rather than in a judgmental
and critical way?
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T hursday March 5
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Proverbs, again, gets into the power of words, this time dealing with
the harm caused by slander and quarreling. Those who slander your
enemy before your face, to make you think they’re on your side, are
really like “charcoal”: they feed the quarrel and lead you into the fire
of more troubles (vs. 21, NKJV).
Likewise “fervent lips,” which sound so eloquent, can hide a “wicked
heart” (vs. 23, NKJV). The politician who wants to be elected, the sales-
man who wants to sell his wares, the playboy who wants to seduce a
woman—all of them know about the power of eloquence.
This passage’s lesson is that we should be careful not to believe in
every nice speech we hear. They can be dangerous precisely because
they are nice. Some people are very good speakers; they can sound
so persuasive, so sincere, and so caring, when inside, something
completely different is going on. Though we have all been victims
of people like this, who hasn’t at some point been guilty of doing the
same thing: saying one thing to a person but thinking or feeling some-
thing completely different? Proverbs, here, speaks strongly against this
deceptiveness.
“Everything that Christians do should be as transparent as the sun-
light. Truth is of God; deception, in every one of its myriad forms, is of
Satan. . . . It is not a light or an easy thing to speak the exact truth. We
cannot speak the truth unless we know the truth, and how often precon-
ceived opinions, mental bias, imperfect knowledge, errors of judgment,
prevent a right understanding of matters with which we have to do! We
cannot speak the truth unless our minds are continually guided by Him
who is truth.”—Ellen G. White, Reflecting Christ, p. 71.
How open and transparent are you in what you say? How much
of a disconnect, if any, is there between your words and your
thoughts? Do you really think that such duplicity can be main-
tained indefinitely? (See Matt. 10:26, 27.)
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F riday March 6
Further Study: “The agency of the Spirit of God does not remove from
us the necessity of exercising our faculties and talents, but teaches us
how to use every power to the glory of God. The human faculties, when
under the special direction of the grace of God, are capable of being used
to the best purpose on earth. Ignorance does not increase the humility or
spirituality of any professed follower of Christ. The truths of the divine
word can be best appreciated by an intellectual Christian. Christ can be
best glorified by those who serve Him intelligently. The great object of
education is to enable us to use the power which God has given us in
such a manner as to represent the religion of the Bible and promote the
glory of God.
“We are indebted to Him who gave us existence, for the talents that
have been entrusted to us, and it is a duty we owe our Creator to culti-
vate and improve these talents.”—Ellen G. White, Counsels to Parents,
Teachers, and Students, pp. 361, 362.
Discussion Questions:
Discuss more about the mysteries that we find in everyday life,
whether in nature, in human interactions, or in questions about
faith and the nature of God and salvation. It’s one of the great
ironies of life that the more we learn, the more we realize how little
we know. Why is that even more true when it comes to spiritual
truths?
It has been said that smart people keep their friends close and
their enemies closer. What does that mean? As Christians, how are
we to relate to such a sentiment? In what way can Matthew 10:16
help?
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i n s i d e
Story
Opening “a Lot More Doors”
In Bridgeport, West Virginia, the only Seventh-day Adventist church
in Harrison County meets each Sabbath in the local Presbyterian church.
Although they don’t have their own building yet, members of the Central
Hills Seventh-day Adventist Church are certainly building relationships.
In response to the Discover Bible School mailings, the Central Hills
church has received more than 300 requests for Bible studies just from
within Harrison County. Pastor James Volpe and his 30 church mem-
bers are doing their best to keep up. Some of the most active members
include Angela, 21, Heather, 20, and Lee, 22.
“We were driving from house to house,” remembers Heather, “handing
out the first two lessons, and asking people if they wanted to have per-
sonal visits or continue the lessons through the mail. One of the ladies
we met requested that we return so Angela and I decided that we would
do it. We studied with her every week.
“That winter, her son committed suicide. We quit doing Bible stud-
ies, but we’d still visit her. We helped her around Thanksgiving and
Christmas. Sometimes she comes to church.” Heather and Angela have
since resumed the Bible studies with this student.
While Lee doesn’t give personal Bible studies, he jumped in and orga-
nized the mailings. “I make sure the completed lessons get graded and
sent back so that person can start on the next lesson. If a month goes
by and we haven’t heard from the Bible student, then we follow up and
make sure that we keep in contact with them.”
While the members of the Central Hills church have been supportive,
the church’s young people have especially enjoyed being involved.
“Our youth group has gotten a lot stronger,” says Angela. “I’ve always
liked to be involved in some way; I just didn’t know how.”
“I think this is one of the first times we could put into practice all of
the stuff we hear every week, we could actually be a part of something
and watch the church grow,” adds Lee.
Heather believes that giving personal Bible studies is one of the best
methods for church growth and spiritual commitment. “All of the youth
were together, delivering the lessons. Then once Angela and I started
giving Bible studies, I enjoyed it. It made me grow spiritually.
“We had an [evangelistic] seminar coming to the area, but by us doing
the Bible studies and getting out—that helped our church to grow. It
opens a lot more doors.”
Living by Faith
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Prov. 28:4, 7, 9; Rom. 1:16, 17;
Gal. 3:24; Prov. 28:5; 1 John 2:15–17; Prov. 29:13.
Memory Text: “The fear of man brings a snare, but whoever trusts in
the Lord shall be safe” (Proverbs 29:25, NKJV).
S
o many voices call to us from so many directions. How do people
know what is right and what is wrong? The answer is found in
God and His written revelation. We must learn to rely on God and
to obey His Law. The rest then will follow by itself.
Jesus told us this when He said to “ ‘seek first the kingdom of God,’ ”
and then all that we need will be supplied (Matt. 6:33, NKJV). We
are to make trusting and following God our first priority; otherwise,
we will make something else that priority, which is idolatry, pure and
simple. And we can learn to trust God only by living a life of faith. The
Christian walk is just that, a walk; we have to make the choices to do the
things that the Lord has told us to do, and then leave the consequences
to Him.
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S unday March 8
Read Proverbs 28:4, 7, and 9. What do these verses tell us about the
importance of the law in how we live?
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What made the people of Israel different from other nations was not
so much their way of thinking, or even their “spiritual” and abstract
theological views. It was their concrete choices in life about, among
other things, food, rest, the natural environment, and their relationships
with neighbors and family that made them “holy,” or “set apart” from
all the other nations. And, ideally, those choices were to center on the
law and the principles found in it.
After all, we humans cannot be wise by ourselves; we can’t always
even distinguish between good and evil (1 Kings 3:9). So, we need the
divine law to help us to acquire discernment. In other words, the acqui-
sition of wisdom does not depend on intellectual or spiritual exercises;
it is essentially related to obedience to a law that lies outside ourselves,
our culture, our personal psychology, and our desires.
This law is, of course, God’s eternal law. And to follow that law is
indeed an act of faith. “For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ:
for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; to
the Jew first, and also to the Greek. For therein is the righteousness of
God revealed from faith to faith: as it is written, The just shall live by
faith” (Rom. 1:16, 17).
What troubles and problems have you been spared because you
have made a commitment by faith to keep God’s law? How dif-
ferent would your life be were you not keeping it?
89
M onday March 9
Read Galatians 3:24 in context. How does the law point us to Jesus, so
that we can indeed be “justified by faith”?
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The book of Proverbs is not just a book of wisdom; it is, first of all,
a book about the God who has revealed wisdom. Seeking wisdom by
obeying the law will draw us nearer to the Lord and to the salvation He
freely offers us by faith in Jesus.
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The word understand is used twice in verse 5, just as the word law is
in verse 4. The two verses are related: keeping the law (vs. 4) and seek-
ing the Lord (vs. 5) belong together. The scope of this activity, however,
is not just knowing and doing what is right (“justice” [vs. 5, NKJV]).
This understanding concerns “all” simply because it derives from the
God of “all.” For ancient Israel, knowledge of all things was not sepa-
rated from religious experience. Faith was closely tied to intelligence
and rational understanding. It was inconceivable to have faith without
thinking or thinking without faith, because God was the foundation of
both domains.
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Though the idea of what it means to be “rich” varies greatly, the book
of Proverbs comes with some instructions on how to get “rich” and then
how to deal with your “riches” once you get them.
1. Do not get rich at the expense of the poor (Prov. 28:8). Your wealth
is not justified if you obtain it at the expense of the poor. As we have
already seen, the Bible speaks very strongly against those who exploit
the poor for their own gain.
2. Give to the poor (Prov. 28:27). In contrast to the “greedy” of
Proverbs 28:25 (NIV, literally, “broad of soul/appetite”), the person who
is generous to the poor will be blessed.
3. Work hard (Prov. 28:19). Wealth should not come as the result of
stealing or by chance, but as a reward for our hard work. What is obtained
depends on the quality of our labor. If we are rich, we should deserve it.
4. Do not try to get rich fast (Prov. 28:20, 22). Our proverbs present
two potential scenarios: (1) when we close an eye to some dishonest
action and, as a result, become complicit in that action (vs. 22); (2)
when we are so eager to enjoy the wealth of our parents that we rob
them of what they need to live now (vs. 24). Even worse, those who do
those things can justify the wrong deeds in their own minds until they
convince themselves that they have done nothing wrong. Therefore,
they say, “it is no transgression” (NKJV).
91
W ednesday March 11
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The poor and the rich are equal (Prov. 29:13, NKJV). The image of
light used in this proverb places this issue in perspective of Creation.
Both the rich and the poor have been created by God (Prov. 22:2). They
both enjoy the gift of life, and the sun shines upon both. Just as the rich
have been warned about how they treat the poor, the poor are to love even
their oppressors, which could in some cases be the rich (Matt. 5:44, 45).
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The poor have the same duties as the rich (Prov. 28:3). Poverty should
not be an excuse for iniquity. The fact that you may have been oppressed
does not give you license to oppress others. Jesus’ parable of the unfor-
giving servant who oppresses the one poorer than himself shows that this
reaction, although unexpected on the part of the poor (whom one might
think would be more sympathetic to other poor people), is not unusual
(Matt. 18:22–35). In Proverbs 28:3, the image of the rain, which usually
is a blessing, turns out to be a destructive torrent; this imagery illustrates
the abnormality of that behavior and the disappointment it brings.
The righteous poor are better than the wicked rich (Prov. 28:6).
According to traditional wisdom, the righteous person is not supposed
to be poor, for poverty is supposedly the just punishment for the lazy
(Prov. 24:34). Yet, the reality of life is more complex. The poor may be
the victims of injustice or of circumstances beyond their control. This can
often be the case. Nevertheless, the scale of values defended by the book
of Proverbs is clear and unambiguous. Righteousness is more important
than riches, and success is not a foolproof indicator of righteousness.
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T hursday March 12
Read Proverbs 29:15 (see also vs. 19). What important principle is seen
here, not just in education but in life in general?
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What are some of the lessons you learned as a child that have
stuck with you as an adult? How has that knowledge helped to
make your life better now?
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F riday March 13
Further Study: “The laws of God have their foundation in the most im-
mutable rectitude, and are so framed that they will promote the happiness
of those who keep them. . . . Religion brings man into personal relation
with God, but not exclusively; for the principles of heaven are to be lived
out, that they may help and bless humanity.”—Ellen G. White, Sons and
Daughters of God, p. 267.
“The utter neglect of training children for God has perpetuated evil
and thrown into the ranks of the enemy many who with judicious care
might have been co-laborers with Christ. False ideas and a foolish,
misdirected affection have nurtured traits which have made the children
unlovely and unhappy, have embittered the lives of the parents, and
have extended their baleful influence from generation to generation.
Any child that is permitted to have his own way will dishonor God and
bring his father and mother to shame. . . . By neglecting their duty and
indulging their children in wrong, parents close to them the gates of
the city of God.”—Ellen G. White, Testimonies for the Church, vol. 5,
pp. 325, 326.
Discussion Questions:
Russian author Leo Tolstoy, though raised in a Christian
home, abandoned his faith for many years. When older, he faced
a crisis: What did life mean, especially a life that will certainly end
in death? Though he sought answers in all areas of knowledge,
he found none there. He eventually realized that the only logical
answer to the question of life and its meaning had to be found in
faith—in something that went beyond logic itself. That is, his logic
told him to step beyond logic, into the world of faith, in order to
get answers to the meaning of life. Why, then, is faith in Jesus
really the most logical choice we can make regarding the meaning
and purpose of life?
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Story
Kindness Always Comes Back
Miranda Starr, principal and teacher at Parkersburg Academy in West
Virginia, wanted to do an experiment with her first- and second-grade
students.
“In Bible class, we were studying about kindness, and how it is conta-
gious,” she says. “We wanted to see if it really works.”
Then Miranda had an idea; why not go to Eagle Pointe, a local nursing
home, where the students could practice their reading skills and make
friends with the residents? “This was something I had always wanted to
do,” she admits. “We like to sing, but [I wondered] what else could we
do for them to make relationships.”
The idea was a hit, and by January the students were reading well
enough to read on their own.
“We go to Eagle Pointe every other Friday,” explains eight-year-old
Ben. “We sing to the whole group, and we read to our partners.”
“It wasn’t hard to pick our partners,” chimes in seven-year-old Reagan.
“We saw them, looked at their faces, and then chose one because we
liked them!”
The students also get to choose the book or books that they want to
read to their partner and are welcome to exchange books with other
students if they finish their own.
As the students read, they are also developing friendships. “My part-
ner’s name is Miss Jane,” says six-year-old Sophia. “I was reading about
animal tracks, and I read about a red fox. She told me that she once had
a red fox as a pet!”
The residents clearly enjoy the visits and comment on what good read-
ers the students are. “I like seeing my partner smile,” Ben adds.
The students in grades three through eight also participate. “I really
like going there,” says nine-year-old Ryleigh. “There’s one man I read
to—Mark. He’s always happy to see me, and says, ‘God loves you.’ I
really like him and wish we could go more often.”
In appreciation of the students’ visits, Eagle Pointe held a banquet
in their honor and presented Miranda with an award plaque: “Junior
Volunteers of the Year—Parkersburg Academy. You’ve warmed the
hearts of many by the caring that you show. Volunteers are Shining
Stars.”
Reflecting on their kindness experiment, Miranda knows it was a suc-
cess. “Kindness did come back. We tried to give them joy, but they gave
more to us.”
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Proverbs 30, Luke 18:9–14, Job
38–40:2, 1 John 1:9, Rev. 3:14–18, Ps. 104:24.
Memory Text: “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom
of heaven” (Matthew 5:3, NKJV).
I
n the Bible, humility is considered an important virtue. The greatest
of prophets, Moses, is singled out as the most humble person who
ever lived (Num. 12:3, NKJV). According to Micah 6:8, the main
duty that God expects from people is “to walk humbly with your God”
(NKJV). Jesus, too, insists that humility is an ideal that the Christian
should adopt: “ ‘Whoever humbles himself as this little child is the
greatest in the kingdom of heaven’ ” (Matt. 18:4, NKJV).
After all, what does anyone have to boast about? Every breath, every
heartbeat, every gift, every talent, comes only from God, in whom “we
live, and move, and have our being” (Acts 17:28). And in light of the
cross, even all our righteousness is as “filthy rags” (Isa. 64:6); how,
then, can we boast?
This week Proverbs looks at humility; considering our situation, how
foolish is it to be anything but humble?
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S unday March 15
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The self-negation seen in these texts is quite a break from the usual
self-exaltation of kings in the ancient Near East, who often liked to
boast of their wisdom, achievements, and military victories. Solomon
himself is recorded as surpassing “all the kings of the earth in riches
and wisdom” (1 Kings 10:23, NKJV; Eccles. 2:9). And then, of course,
there’s Nebuchadnezzar, who proclaimed: “ ‘Is not this the great
Babylon I have built as the royal residence, by my mighty power and
for the glory of my majesty?’ ” (Dan. 4:30, NIV).
Because our author understands his own ignorance, he calls boast-
ing “foolish.” The Hebrew word for “foolish” here is nabal, which is
the name of Nabal, whose behavior exemplified foolish pride, as well
(1 Samuel 25). Such boasting, which implies pride, also carries the
potential for humiliation and thus, for anger and strife. The apostle
Paul also called some of his church members “fools” who considered
themselves wise and were, even worse, boasting about it (2 Cor.
11:18, 19).
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You have to feel sorry for people who boast (usually it’s a cover for
insecurities, anyway); it shows just how self-deceived and foolish they
really are.
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M onday March 16
A Knowledge of God?
Pride arises in those who don’t know the Lord in a personal way. In
contrast, the person who lives in communion with God will be humble,
for he or she is constantly in touch with the One who is infinitely
greater than any of us. When we think about the size of the universe
and realize that we are worshiping the One who created that universe,
and that this same God suffered in the person of Jesus on the cross for
us—it’s hard to imagine how we could struggle with pride while keep-
ing these thoughts before us.
Read Proverbs 30:3–6. What do these verses tell us about the power,
majesty, and mystery of God?
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Because God is the Creator (the first four questions), He remains far
beyond our understanding (the fifth question). In the book of Job, God
challenges Job with the same questions so that Job would realize that
he could not comprehend God or His ways (Job 38–40:2).
The fact that God is the Creator, and that we cannot fully understand
Him, gives us a crucial lesson regarding how we should receive His
written revelation, which scholars are always questioning. Who are
we—whose understanding of even the simplest things in nature is
clouded and full of mystery—to challenge the Word of God, even the
parts that baffle or disturb us?
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Think about just how dependent you are on God. How can keep-
ing that stark fact ever in your mind help you grow in faith?
What dangers come when we forget this dependence?
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W ednesday March 18
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T hursday March 19
Read Proverbs 30:18, 19. What is it saying here, too, about the limits
of human understanding?
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Read Proverbs 30:24–28. What other mysteries from nature catch the
author’s attention and awe?
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Further Study: “We should reverence God’s word. For the printed
volume we should show respect, never putting it to common uses, or
handling it carelessly. And never should Scripture be quoted in a jest,
or paraphrased to point a witty saying. ‘Every word of God is pure’; ‘as
silver tried in a furnace of earth, purified seven times.’ Proverbs 30:5;
Psalm 12:6.”—Ellen G. White, Education, p. 244.
“Christ’s first words to the people on the mount were words of bless-
ing. Happy are they, He said, who recognize their spiritual poverty, and
feel their need of redemption. The gospel is to be preached to the poor.
Not to the spiritually proud, those who claim to be rich and in need of
nothing, is it revealed, but to those who are humble and contrite. . . . The
Lord can do nothing toward the recovery of man until, convinced of his
own weakness, and stripped of all self-sufficiency, he yields himself to
the control of God. Then he can receive the gift that God is waiting to
bestow. From the soul that feels his need, nothing is withheld. He has
unrestricted access to Him in whom all fullness dwells.”—Ellen G.
White, The Desire of Ages, pp. 299, 300.
Discussion Questions:
Dwell on the plan of salvation and what was required to save
us. That is, we are so fallen, so corrupt, so evil, that mere regenera-
tion would not be enough to redeem us from sin. No matter how
much we are changed and restored, that regeneration and resto-
ration cannot save us. We need a substitute, someone who legally
stands in our place and whose righteousness alone is enough to
make us right with God. What should this reality itself tell us
about why arrogance and pride have to be some of the worst sins
in fallen beings like us?
What are some of the different ways that our very existence
depends upon God? What are the things in nature itself that show
us how God sustains our existence?
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Story
Thrice Saved
At the age of four, Jesse lost his mother. By the time he was nine, Jesse
lived in foster homes. As a teen, he met a young man who played bas-
ketball. When Jesse shared his name, the young man looked surprised.
“Your mother and my father were brother and sister!”
Taking Jesse home, the cousin introduced him to the rest of the fam-
ily. That’s when Jesse learned that his mother had died of complications
caused by his father’s beatings.
Jesse moved in with his uncle; and as his anger over his circum-
stances simmered, he joined the U.S. Air National Guard then switched
to the U.S. Marines. He married, had three children, but later divorced.
“I felt hurt and empty inside,” he recalled. “Once more I had no family
and felt completely alone.”
Feeling life wasn’t worth living, Jesse took his rifle and ammunition
down to the beach with plans to end his life. Wading into the sea, he
sat down on a rock. Soon a police officer came, but Jesse raised his
rifle, warning him to stay away. Then the colonel from the Marine base
arrived, ordering him to put the gun down. Jesse refused. But when he
saw his father approaching, Jesse put the gun into his mouth and pulled
the trigger. There was an explosion and he fell backward—still alive.
The bullet had jammed halfway through the barrel.
Jesse was discharged from the Marines and tried again to commit
suicide. This time he ended up in the hospital emergency room where
he met Dr. Nozaki, a Seventh-day Adventist physician determined to
save him. When he awoke after surgery, Jesse found a Bible by his bed,
placed there by Dr. Nozaki. He hid the Bible, but each day he found
another one.
When Jesse was released from the hospital, Dr. Nozaki urged him to
read the book of John. Finally, Jesse agreed. The doctor called him each
day, making sure that he had food and clothing. In time, Jesse realized
that Dr. Nozaki really cared, and he learned to trust him. He started Bible
studies, and the doctor invited him to church.
One day Jesse returned to the rock where he had tried to kill himself
and thanked God for saving his life. He continued studying and was
baptized into the Seventh-day Adventist Church. “For the first time in
my life,” he said, “I felt peace.”
Later, with the doctor’s encouragement, Jesse and his wife reconciled.
They remarried in Dr. Nozaki’s home.
Sabbath Afternoon
Read for This Week’s Study: Proverbs 31, Job 29:15, Prov-
erbs 8, 1 Cor. 1:21, Rev. 14:13.
Memory Text: “Do not give your strength to women, nor your ways to
that which destroys kings. It is not for kings, O Lemuel, it is not for
kings to drink wine, nor for princes intoxicating drink” (Proverbs
31:3, 4, NKJV).
T
he book of Proverbs began with the teachings of a father (Prov.
1:1, 8; 4:1) and ends with the teachings of a mother (Prov. 31:1).
The name Lemuel may allude to Solomon; if so, then Lemuel’s
mother is Solomon’s mother, and she warns her son against the two
most serious threats to the king: wine and women.
The association of wine and women is deliberate. To be efficient as
a ruler, the king has to be careful of the influences he faces, and these
two factors can be very powerful. Though the right woman could be
beneficial, alcohol is only trouble.
The father’s introduction was concerned with the spiritual acquisition
of wisdom. Now, the mother’s conclusion is concerned with applying
wisdom in real life. For the spiritual principles taught by the father
would mean nothing if the practical advice offered by the mother were
not followed.
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S unday March 22
Read Proverbs 31:4, 5, 8, 9. Together, what do they say, and how does
their message apply to every follower of the Lord, not just the king?
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M onday March 23
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T uesday March 24
A Virtuous Woman
“Who can find a virtuous woman? for her price is far above
rubies” (Prov. 31:10).
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Read 1 Corinthians 1:21. What does it say to you, and how can
this idea help you live by faith?
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W ednesday March 25
She Works
The virtuous woman in Proverbs 31 is not lazy; she works hard and
is very active. The poem insists on this quality (Prov. 31:27), which
characterizes the wise versus the fool (Prov. 6:6; 24:33, 34). The field
of her activities is comprehensive and concrete. To be spiritual does not
mean that we should be idle, all under the pretext that we are concerned
with highly important religious issues, and thus do not have time to
take care of “trivial” matters. (See Luke 16:10.) The woman “willingly
works with her hands” (Prov. 31:13, NKJV). It is interesting that this
very spiritual person is never depicted praying or meditating. She is
shown only as an efficient and productive woman, like Martha of the
Gospels (Luke 10:38–40).
Read Proverbs 31:12, 15, 18. Why is the woman always working?
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The woman works “all the days of her life” (vs. 12), even during the
night (vs. 15, 18). Her active and watchful presence is effective all the
time. The reason for her constant attention is her responsibility.
Read Proverbs 31:20, 25. What is the temporal scope of her projects?
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T hursday March 26
She Cares
Read Proverbs 31:26–31. What other important characteristics are
seen in this woman? Why are these important for all of us, regard-
less of who we are?
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All too often women are rated only in terms of outward appearance;
that’s such a shallow and superficial marker. The Bible points out just
how “vain,” how empty, that kind of attitude ultimately is. This woman’s
true beauty is found in her character and how that character is made
manifest in her life and works. Beauty will always pass away; character
can endure forever. “A great name among men is as letters traced in
sand, but a spotless character will endure to all eternity.”—Ellen G.
White, God’s Amazing Grace, p. 81.
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F riday March 27
Discussion Questions:
Why is total abstinence from alcohol the only right option?
After all, what possible good can arise from any kind of alcohol
consumption? On the other hand, think about all the damage that
it often causes.
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Story
“Sabbath Shoes”
Becky needed a new pair of shoes. Going to her favorite shop near
Newport Beach, California, she picked out a pair but discovered her size
wasn’t in stock.
Dwight McKeever, the sales rep, assured her that her size could be
ordered, and the shoes would be in by Wednesday afternoon.
Becky returned on Wednesday, but the shoes hadn’t arrived. On Thursday,
still no shoes. When Becky came into the shop late Friday afternoon,
Dwight explained that the delivery truck hadn’t arrived but would any time
soon. Becky waited a few more minutes, but then said she had to go. Fifteen
minutes after she left the store, the shoes arrived.
Quickly phoning Becky’s home, Dwight left a message. Sometime later,
she returned his call, explaining that she would wear her old shoes the next
day and pick up the new ones on Saturday night.
Just a few minutes later, Becky returned to the store. “I just came to let
you know that I’m not angry that the shoes didn’t arrive on time and that
I’m very impressed with all you’ve done to help solve this problem.” Then
she turned to leave.
“But what about your shoes?” Dwight asked. “I’ll get them tomorrow
night,” came the response as Becky walked out the door. Thinking that
maybe she needed money, Dwight offered her a loan, but money wasn’t
the problem. Frustrated, Dwight couldn’t understand what the problem was.
Finally Becky explained, “I’m a Christian. I want to honor God on the
Sabbath.”
“Sabbath?” The only Sabbath Dwight knew of was the rock group Black
Sabbath.
“I’m a Christian too,” he told her, “but what does that have to do with
buying shoes?”
“If you’re a Christian,” she replied with a smile, “then you know that the
Ten Commandments tell us to keep the Sabbath holy and that means we
shouldn’t buy or sell.”
Intrigued, Dwight wanted to learn more. Becky invited him to a
Revelation Seminar being held nearby, and he accepted. “I had picked up
the Bible a few times and wanted to know how it would all end, so I went
straight to the last book but couldn’t understand a thing,” he recalls. “There
was a beast with all these heads, but I wasn’t too worried because I knew
with nuclear warfare we could just blow up all those heads.”
When he told that to Becky, she laughed. “You might want to come to the
seminar and learn what it’s really all about.”
To see how Becky’s faithfulness led Dwight and many of his family to
accept Bible truth, continue reading the story in Mission magazine, for first
quarter 2015, or online at www.adventistmission.org/mqa-home.
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