![]() |
Campion Seventh-day Adventist Church |
|
Adult SS: Trujillo/Acton Class ____________________________ Our Class will meet at the usual time and place this week (Fellowship Hall, north side). Ben will be teaching the Class. The Quarterly Lessons this Quarter deal with "Redemption in Romans" (link is further down the page.) ____________________________ Current Events Discussion this week includes: developing...
____________________________ Our class starts every Sabbath morning right at 9:30. We spend 15 minutes discussing current events (usually less than 15 minutes when Tom teaches the class) as they apply to Christian living and to our society, or to our understanding of end-time events. The rest of our class time is spent in a study of the Lesson from the Sabbath School Quarterly (See links below). We do not follow the Lesson question by question. Our hope is that you have already studied and are prepared to comment or ask probing questions on the topic of the day. __________________________________________________ If you would like online access to the Adult Quarterly, go to www.ssnet.org. You can study the Lesson there, with access to online Bibles. The link will open the document which you can then save to your computer. I try to keep the file updated at least two weeks ahead of the current lesson. It also includes the Lesson Outline from Bruce N. Cameron, J.D., and the weekly Mission Story, and the the Lesson Outline from Michael Fracker. Once you open the document, try clicking on "View", then toggle "Document Map" on or off for an easy way to go directly to the lesson you want to access. Teachers Edition in PDF format. For those who desire more depth from their study, here is the address for the Teachers' Quarterly. All lessons for the Quarter are posted here: http://www.absg.adventist.org/Teachers.htm _________________________________ Introduction
"Redemption in Romans" No matter his works and mortifications, however, the monk never sensed acceptance with God, never believed that he was good enough to be saved. His personal despair was so great that it was destroying him mentally and physically, because-believing in the reality of God's wrath-he feared the prospect of ever having to face it. After all, who wouldn't? Then one day, through his study of the Bible, a text jumped out at him that changed not only his life but the history of the world. "The just shall live by faith" (Rom. 1:17). His eyes had been opened: his acceptance with God was based, not on his works, not on his bodily mortifications, not on his deeds but on the merits of Christ. Never again would he be open to the delusions of a theology that placed the hope of salvation in anything other than the righteousness of Christ given to the believer through faith alone. The monk, of course, was Martin Luther, who was used by God to start the greatest religious revolt in Christian history: the Protestant Reformation. For Luther, it all began in the book of Romans, the topic of this quarter's study. It's not surprising that the Protestant revolt against Rome began in Romans (ironically enough), because this book has played a key role in the history of Christian thought. All great movements in Christianity back to the pure gospel and to the theme of "justification by faith" have found their starting point in Paul's epistle to the Romans. The epistle contains a complete theological presentation of the gospel and of the hope it presents to fallen humanity. As we study Romans, we'll follow a crucial rule, and that is: we'll seek to discover what the words of Scripture were meant to say to those to whom they were first addressed. We'll look at them in their immediate context; then, after that, we'll seek their meaning for us today. This doesn't imply that the texts themselves change meanings; it implies, instead, that the truths taught by the Scriptures need to be applied to the present circumstances of those reading the texts. We must, therefore, first discover what the words of Paul meant to the Roman Christians. What was he saying to them, and why? Paul had a particular reason for writing to that congregation. There were certain issues he wished to clarify, but the great truths that he taught as he clarified those issues were not restricted to only his first readers. On the contrary, these words have reverberated across the centuries, teaching millions the wonderful news of the gospel and its foundational doctrine, justification by faith. It was this light, light from the book of Romans, that scattered the darkness which had enveloped Luther and millions of others, light that revealed to them not only the great truth of Christ pardoning sinners but also the power of Christ to cleanse them from sin. And it's light from these pages that we, this quarter, will seek to uncover for ourselves as we study the great theme of salvation by faith alone as revealed in the book of Romans. This quarter is based on previous work by Don Neufeld (1914-1980), who served as associate editor of the Adventist Review for 13 years (1967-1980) and as one of the editors of The SDA Bible Commentary Series. Home | About Us | Pastor's Message | Calendar | Ministries | Bible Study | Prayer | Online Giving | Video Content | Bulletins & Audio | Campmeeting Recordings | Newsletters | Elders' Page | Contact Us |
|
|