Clothed in Christ
June 24, 2011
S T O R Y
“Today we studied the second law of thermodynamics,” Robert said at mealtime.
“You’re getting a lot of knowledge in your head. What is the second law of thermodynamics?” Dad said.
“Um, I’m not sure, Dad. It’s about something called time’s arrow, so we know how things change over time.”
“Can you tell me how an arrow tells us about change?”
“Sure, Dad. If you take a lot of pictures of the same person or mountain or rock and you live long enough, you would see it change. Let’s say it’s a dead rabbit. Take a picture every week and if nothing eats it, the rabbit eventually looks like garbage and then dirt. That’s the time arrow from a dead rabbit to dirt. You can always tell what is older by how much it has changed. The more rot and destruction, the more time has gone by.”
Dad smiled. “And does the law of thermodynamics apply everywhere?”
“Um, I don’t know, Dad. I don’t think it applies to me because I keep growing stronger and learning more.”
“That wasting away we’re talking about is called entropy. Do you think God created entropy?”
“I don’t think so. It’s just there.”
“You know what I think?”
“Nope.”
“I think God can turn entropy or decay into life and growth and that when we go to heaven we’ll see lots of evidence of His power to resurrect and revive and change us into beings who won’t get tired, won’t get sick and will be around animals and plants that have the same abilities.”
“And the Second Law of Thermodynamics will be repealed.”
“We’ll see, won’t we?”
1. Key thought. Does God have power over the Second Law of Thermodynamics? Are the results of decay and deterioration always harmful? What about the vultures that clear dead meat from the roads? Is that a good service? Do you think there will be vultures gobbling up the carcasses of animals and birds in the New Earth? If not, what will happen to them? What about our sinful hearts? Does spiritual entropy ever rule in our hearts? In our churches? In our relationship with Christ? How can that happen? Do you think there’s a cure for spiritual deterioration?
2. Christ as clothing. At the end of this thirteen-week study of the imagery of clothing in the Bible, do you have trouble-or is it a blessing-to think of Jesus as clothing that we put on? How many times in your life have you clothed yourself in Christ’s righteousness? Or does the clothing come directly from the presence of God to your spiritual being? What is the result of being clothed in Christ’s righteousness? Are you perfect then? Does sin seem abhorrent? Can you fall from grace while you’re wearing the garment of righteousness? Since Jesus has promised to forgive us, does it matter how often we sin or how far we stray? Can we put on that special robe any time we need to? Why or why not?
3. Clothing that works. Have you ever worn a brace or had a body part wrapped in cloth tape? Was it uncomfortable? Why did you keep wearing it? Or did you? How does the robe of righteousness straighten our spiritual snarls? Is it ever possible to be wrapped in God’s spirit of righteousness and not know it? Once you have the Sabbath and the other key doctrines of the church incorporated into your life, do you still need to rely on the clothing of Christianity to make the transition from world to Christ complete? Why? Is a sin-free life a requirement for salvation? Why or why not?
4. Regeneration. Does the seemingly inevitable presence of entropy conflict with the eternal presence of a Creative God? If so, does that conflict bother you? Or are you comforted by the ability of God to bypass the Second Law of Thermodynamics in your spiritual life? Do you remember your baptism? Did you feel something in your heart? If you were very young, were you convinced that God had made you new? Or did you even have a sense of your sinfulness? What about now? How are your human behaviors related to being a Christian?
5. The image of God. Does it thrill you to think of sinful, filthy human beings standing before their Creator changed into clean, happy, and holy Christians? Do you want to be like Jesus? Or is that a useless prayer, considering how far you’ll always be from His ultimate holiness? Or is a standard that is worth striving for? The lesson states that we’ll be physically changed at the resurrection. Do you look forward to that? Do you know a person with limited abilities and long for the day that person will be equipped with abundance strength and capabilities? How do you think Jesus feels about that day?
6. A dwelling. Can you think of the shoes and socks and other clothes you wear as a “house” you live in? As long as it’s yours, do you prefer your clothing to any alternative? What about your physical body? Are you a person who feels pain every day? Do you long for the absence of all pain and discomfort? Would you gladly trade your body in for a newly created one? How often do we think about death and dying? What are some more optimistic themes to bring to mind while enduring the troubling aspects of life? Do you think anyone is going to complain in the New Earth about the way they look or the clothing they have to wear? What should our thinking be now while we’re waiting for that day?
7. No more sin. Do you ever get sick through and through of sin? Whether it’s a huge financial scandal, a series of gruesome murders, or a case of horrific child abuse, does your heart cringe? What do you think when sin is glorified? How do you respond to smart remarks about how much fun sin is? Does your heart long for that day when there will be no more sin? None. Nobody will hurt anybody. When we’ll be wearing holy garments that won’t be destroyed? Do we have to wait until the resurrection to enjoy the pleasures of living without sin? Or can we learn to hate all aspects of sin in our hearts before then? How?
Note: The story and questions were prepared to help teachers leading class discussion of the Seventh-day Adventist Sabbath lesson study guides. This one was presented to SSNET by Joyce Griffith for the 12th Sabbath of the three-month quarter ending June 25. Go to SSNET for more.
The heavenly loom
March 30, 2011
“Mama! A loom! Auntie Cherri gave me a loom. I’m going to make a scarf with it! She showed me how.”
The loom Penny held in her hand was a piece of smooth wood carved in a flat loop about eight inches long and half an inch thick. On one side were carved small wooden pegs, about twenty on each side. “This is my loom,” she said. “And this is my yarn for the scarf.”
Penny carefully tied a knot of yarn around a peg on one end of the loom and pulled it tight. Then she looped the yarn around the first peg, crossed over the loom diagonally and looped it round a peg on the other side. She skipped a peg and repeated the process, making sure each loop was pulled firm and tight. It looked like a pattern of Vs. Then she went back and looped pegs again, skipping a different peg this time. After she had three loops firmly on each peg, she used a metal pick to pull the bottom loop to cover the loops, Following a pattern of going across the loom and skipping pegs, she kept going until the loom was filled with yarn in the chosen pattern.
All the while she was doing this, her mother watched in amazement.
The finished piece of work would hardly qualify as a blanket or scarf, but the yarn held together as Penny lifted it from the loom.
“It’s beautiful,” Mom said. “Do you think that is something like the way God weaves our hearts for Him?”
“Well, He uses different colors and types of yarn. And He weaves them together so they make a finished piece.”
“And the loom? What does the loom do?”
“The loom keeps the yarn together. Makes it a whole piece even though it’s made of many strands of yarn.”
“Just like God! God holds us together and makes us in the pattern He has for us. If we let Him. God is like a heavenly loom!”
Lessons from articles of clothing. From April through June of this year we’re going to draw spiritual lessons from the imagery of the Bible related to clothing. How do you feel about clothing as a lesson topic? Think about the clothing you’re wearing as you read this. Can the belt you are wearing remind you of something that God does for you? What about the shoes on your feet? Does a winter coat remind you of God’s warm love for you? In the summer can a hat or scarf protect you from the hot sun something like the way God wants to keep you from harm? Does a pile of torn and dirty clothing remind you of your sinful state? What article of clothing did God choose to represent the most glorious gift of all that He offers freely to us?
- Woven on the loom of heaven. Remember the multi-colored coat Joseph’s father gave him? In what ways is the coat that Jesus offers us superior to Joseph’s beautiful coat? Have you ever owned a white dress, trousers, or other article of white clothing and watched with dismay as it became faded and discolored—or was splashed with blood and dirt? Do we need to wait for heaven before we can wear the spotless, glowing robe of righteousness? Is this lovely white robe a reward for living a sinless life? Or can sinners also be clothed in this amazing garment? How? Or why not?
- Filthy rags. Why does God allow church members, including leaders, to serve as role models even though their lives are spotted with sin? Do you like the image that stares at you from the mirror? Do you ever feel like saying to God, “You are so fortunate to have me in Your family”? Have you ever known someone who seemed to have the belief that he or she was a blessing to all? How does God see us as we take pleasure in ourselves? Modern methods neatly conceal the stains of menstruation, but in Bible times, what did women—and society—think of these monthly flows of blood? Why did God choose the rags that soaked up this blood as an example of our sinfulness? Is it right to be repulsed by sin?
- Imputed, disputed. Why are the two words, imputed and imparted, so hard for us to understand and apply to the gospel story? When God sees our rotten lives and hears us cry for forgiveness, what does He do? Does anyone deserve the royal treatment God gives us when we cry out to be rescued from sin? When God offers us His righteousness and we accept, are we then perfect beings free from sin? If so, how long does that state continue? Does the robe of righteousness keep working for us even when we sin? Explain. Is imputed righteousness from God Himself? How can God cover our messy, sin-dominated lives with His holy righteousness and treat us as if we have never sinned? How should you and I feel about being offered the gift of pure righteousness?
- A lawful believer. What do we mean by belief in the perpetuity of the law? What law? Is the robe of righteousness reserved for those who keep the law without sin? How many people since Adam and Eve qualify for such a standing before God? Does a command-keeping Christian’s belief in the law give him or her special standing in the courts of heaven? Why do some Christians have a reputation as legalists? What is harmful about such a reputation? Do you have any suggestions for changing this perspective by others of our attitude towards the law? Or should we welcome the attribution of “law-abiding?” Do you love the law? David got himself into more trouble than you and I ever thought of, but he says over and over that he loves the law. How can we love a law that condemns us?
- The robe that works. The drunkard writhes on the concrete walkway in his own spit and vomit, but somehow in his drunken state he senses the call of Jesus to salvation, and he accepts. Is he a Christian at that point? If so, is he clothed in Christ’s robe of righteousness? How does God see that wretched human being lying in the gutter with the broken glass and garbage of a forlorn neighborhood? How do you and I see that same person? The robe is a symbol of something else. What? How does the act of wearing Christ’s free robe of righteousness change the person from within? Is the change sudden? Comprehensive? What about people who look like us but belong to other religious persuasions? Are they wearing the robe of righteousness? If so, how should we treat them? How does God regard them?
- Cheap grace. Chances are you have never been accused of believing in cheap grace. Why not? Why is cheap grace almost never something that people blame us Adventists for having? What is it about the term “cheap grace” that offends us so much? If “cheap” grace is bad, what does “good” grace cost? If grace is free, why isn’t it also cheap? Have you ever heard a person bemoan the fact that he or she isn’t good enough for heaven? Or that he or she has a past that makes it impossible to fit in the church? Have you ever heard a Christian seriously doubt if he or she has done “enough” to be worthy of salvation? Does the thought ever occur to you that you need to get busy and get ready or you will come short in the good deeds department at the Second Coming? What does it take to accept God’s grace as God offers it to us?
- The Holy Spirit. How does the Holy Spirit help us struggling Christians make our way through life? What does the Holy Spirit possess that He can share with us to help us discern God’s will for us? Is the Holy Spirit our Friend? Or our Judge? Is it proper to pray to the Holy Spirit? What role does the Holy Spirit play in making the robe of righteousness our most important possession? Do you really believe it is possible for you to become more like God? How much more? What does it take to start on that pathway?
How God’s children deal with guilt and shame
January 29, 2011
“I feel so guilty,” Marie told her friend Jeannie when she saw her at church. “Here you’ve been sick in bed for three weeks, and I didn’t even call to see how you were doing.”
Stress: Counsel from Scripture
January 17, 2011
Rizpah, a diamond in the Old Testament
November 24, 2010
Read it, study it, live by it
September 15, 2010
Yes, the law can bring freedom
August 28, 2010
S T O R Y
All rights reserved
Who is the man? Romans 7
August 17, 2010
Dialog: Romans 7
August 17, 2010
James looks for a new life
August 12, 2010
James was looking for work. The boss at the first company offered a very high salary but made it clear that the rules in the employee handbook and the job description had to be followed. “One mistake, and you’re fired,” he was told.
At the second company the salary was good, but the boss told James that his attitude was the most important factor in keeping the job and that one outburst or other indication of a negative attitude would send him on his way.
The third company was a whole new situation. There was no salary at all, just the promise of food and water and a simple house to live in until retirement, when James would receive a big, fully furnished house and all the things he and his family desired. What the boss said next shocked James. “In order to keep this job,” he said, “You must trust me, love me, and obey me. If you don’t,” the boss continued, “you won’t want to work here any more, and it will be your decision to leave, but leave you will.”
“I’ve never heard of such requirements to keep a job,” James said.
“Of course you haven’t,” the boss said. “I’ve wanted to be your friend, but you’ve never wanted to get acquainted with me. So you don’t know who I am.”
“Who are you?”
“I am God.”
Copyright © 2010 by Joyce Griffith. All rights reserved.
