Introduction
Memory Text: “ ‘You are worthy, O Lord, to receive glory and honor and power; for You created all things, and by Your will, they exist and were created’ ” (Revelation 4:11, NKJV).
‘Our universe
exists because God, the Creator, has made it and everything in it.’
What is the message in Revelation 1:9, Matthew 13:21, and Acts 14:22 for all
who seek to follow Jesus in this world?
The message in these passages is that as a person or people
who seek to follow Christ, there will be tribulations, John faced it, but there
is hope for these persons/people, and that hope can be found in the Revelation of Jesus
Christ to John on the isle of Patmos.
What is the central issue in the Book of Revelation?
‘The central issue in the book of Revelation is worship.’
Where is the root of Revelation’s final appeal?
Revelation’s final appeal is rooted in the Bible’s first
book, Genesis because to understand the issues in the cosmic battle over
worship we should understand the significance of creation, “In the beginning
God created the heavens and the earth” (Genesis 1:1, NKJV).
What small idea can we see of God’s unlimited power?
The sun produces more energy in a second than humanity has produced
through oil, gas, coal, or fire since the beginning of time. It has a diameter
of approximately 865,000 miles and could hold one million planets the size of
the Earth but the sun is just one of at least 100 billion stars in our galaxy,
the Milky Way. The Pistol Star gives off as much as ten million times the power
generated by the sun and one million stars the size of our sun can easily fit
within the sphere of the Pistol Star.
What does the wonder of creation teach us?
It teaches us that our God with unlimited might and power
who created these vast creations, can also do as much as to die for us. God also
knows and cares about even the minutest of our problems.
What is the great news about our God in Tuesday’s lesson?
The great news about our God is that His greatness and power
are so vast that it reaches across the cosmos and into each of our lives.
What can we learn from Ephesians 3:9, Colossians 1:13-17, Revelation 4:11,
and Romans 5:17-19 about Jesus as our Creator and Redeemer?
There is a link between Jesus as our Creator and Redeemer,
when we question the fact that God created us, then we question also God as our
Redeemer, because as Evolution teaches, we are to be saved from sin, but how
can Jesus come to redeem us from something we are created from.
What is the role of the Seventh-Day Adventists in the midst of the errors
of evolution?
The Seventh-Day Adventists, by calling the world to worship
the Creator, stands as a living witness against the error of creation. We
proclaim the foundational truth of God as our Creator and Redeemer.
The same Jesus who created us is the one who died on the cross, how are we
to respond to this?
The heavenly beings worship Jesus they knew Jesus before He
came to this earth, as for us, redeemed by His blood, what else could we do but
worship our Creator and Redeemer?
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