Spirit of Prophecy Day / Heritage Sabbath

Suggested Program

October 9, 2010 (North America, October 16, 2010)

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1. Opening Hymn: "Joyful, Joyful, We Adore Thee" (SDAH 12)
1a. Alternative Opening Hymn: "The Lord in Zioneth Reineth" (SDAH 7, CH 7)
2. Scripture Reading: Colossians 2:8-10
3. Children's Story: "The Books That Changed Hearts"
4. Sermon: "Complete in Christ," by Philip Samaan
5. Closing Hymn: "O Let Me Walk With Thee" (SDAH 554, CH 395)

Opening Hymn: "Joyful, Joyful, We Adore Thee" (SDAH 12)

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            Henry van Dyke (1852-1933), the author of the words to this hymn, was a clergyman and one of the most distinguished literary men of his generation.  Besides his pastoral work and his gaining a reputation as a powerful preacher, he taught English literature at Princeton University, where he met many well-known authors from both sides of the Atlantic.  He became moderator of the Presbyterian Church in 1902.  He also became a close personal friend of American President Woodrow Wilson, who appointed him minister to the Netherlands and Luxembourg in 1913.  In 1907, however, he was on a preaching mission to Williams College in Massachusetts, staying in the home of its president, Mr. Garfield.  At breakfast one morning, van Dyke placed a manuscript on the table and said to his host, "Here is a hymn for you.  Your mountains were my inspiration.  It must be sung to the music of Beethoven's 'Hymn to Joy.'"  He had been moved by the power and beauty revealed in God's "second book," nature, and he wanted others to capture a portion of his spiritual experience in these things.

            As noted, the music for this hymn comes from Ludwig von Beethoven (1770-1827).  It is the theme from the final movement of his Ninth Symphony, written in 1824, and adapted by Edward Hodges in 1846.  At the time Beethoven wrote it, as with many other of his greatest compositions, he was totally deaf.  When he conducted its premier performance, at the close one of the soloists had to turn him around so that he could see the wild applause and hat-waving of the enthusiastic audience.  Though Beethoven did not write the music as a hymn, it has served that purpose well in giving glory to God.

Alternative Opening Hymn: "The Lord in Zioneth Reineth" (SDAH 7, CH 7)

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            Most of the hymns of the blind poet Frances ("Fannie") Jane Crosby (1820-1915) are simple and earnest, many being subjective, and most would be considered as gospel songs.  The strong words of this hymn are a notable exception.  They make for an inspiring congregational hymn of praise.  The stirring, challenging music for it was written by Hart Pease Danks (1834-1903), a carpenter who was an accomplished musician and composer.
The first appearance of this hymn was in the Seventh-day Adventist hymnal Hymns and Tunes (1886), where it bore the notice "Copyrighted 1886 by The J. E. White Pub. Co."  J. E. White was James Edson White, the third son of James and Ellen G. White.  We do not know how Edson White obtained this song, for most of Fannie Crosby's prolific output was controlled by the publisher Bigelow and Main in Chicago.  This hymn has been published in only two non-Adventist hymnals, each more than 100 years ago.  So for the most part this hymn, which some feel is one of Crosby's best, has been an almost exclusive possession of Seventh-day Adventists.  It has appeared in seven of the church's hymnbooks.

Children's Story: "The Books That Changed Hearts"

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Adapted from Angel Over Her Tent, by D. A. Delafield and Gerald Wheeler
(Southern Publishing Association, 1969), pp. 107-109,
and Manuscript Releases, vol. 1, pp. 146-150.


When Ellen White lived in Australia, a family lived nearby who owned a large fruit farm. She had a great interest in the family. The father raised excellent oranges and lemons, as well as other fruit. He liked to read, and by doing so he had learned much about Adventist doctrines and accepted them as true. Yet he had not committed himself to follow them and live for God. Although he knew better, he clung to many of his old habits. Mrs. White was disappointed that the farmer and his family did not join the church.

On one of her visits with the family, Mrs. White turned the conversation to spiritual things. Speaking to the father as she would to a Seventh-day Adventist church member, she said, "You have great responsibilities. Here are your neighbors all around you." She motioned to the distant farms with her hand. "You are accountable for every one of them because you have Bible knowledge they don't have.  If you love what you know and follow it, you will help convert many to Christ."

He looked at her strangely. The expression on his face seemed to be trying to tell her that he had long ago given up those points of Adventist belief that he had once accepted. But Mrs. White knew it already. Ignoring his expression, she continued to talk to him as if he were an Adventist. "We are going to help you to begin to convert your neighbors." She asked him if he had some of the books that she had written.  The farmer politely replied, "No, but we have a local library from which to get them," trying to think of a way to change the subject.

Soon after this Mrs. White had a vision one night in which an angel stood by her bed and directed her to visit the fruit grower again and to take him copies of her books. The angel said that the books would help convert him. Obeying the instruction, she collected a few of her larger books, put them on the buggy seat beside her, and drove over to the fruit farm. Although the man was working out in the orchards, he came up to the house when he learned that she had stopped by. "I have brought some books for you and your children to read," she said.  Again he replied that he could get such books at the library.  She looked around the room. "I don't see any library books here. Perhaps you feel reluctant to take out books from the public library." By ignoring his protests, she overcame them, and he finally accepted the books.

Before she left, Mrs. White knelt and prayed with him.  When they stood again, tears rolled down his leathery cheeks. "I'm glad you came to see me. I thank you for the books," he repeated over and over.

The next time she visited the fruit farm, the man told her that he had read part of Patriarchs and Prophets. "There is not one syllable I could change," he commented. "Every paragraph speaks right to the soul."

"Which book do you consider the most important?" she asked.

"I lend them all to my neighbors, and the hotelkeeper thinks The Great Controversy is the best." Suddenly his lips began to quiver. "But I think Patriarchs and Prophets is the best. It is the one that has pulled me out of the mud."

Mrs. White understood human nature. She knew that a person becomes most interested in those things he is actively involved in. Getting the farmer to work for his neighbors by lending them books made him interested in the Adventist message again. Reading Mrs. White's books also touched his heart and changed it. He and his family joined the church, and together they helped bring in several neighboring families. Mrs. White's influence on one man had far-reaching results.

Those books still change hearts and draw people to Jesus.  We can read them ourselves and gain a blessing, and like Mrs. White, we can encourage others to read them, too, and experience God's blessing for themselves.

Sermon: "Complete in Christ," by Philip Samaan

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"To the praise of the glory of His grace, by which He has made us accepted in the Beloved" (Eph. 1:6).

"And suddenly a voice came from heaven, saying, 'This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased" (Matt. 3:17).

Introduction

The Bible tells us to expect the gift of prophecy in the last days (see Joel 2:28-31).  It says that God's people at the end of time will "keep the commandments of God" and will "have the testimony of Jesus Christ" (Revelation 12:17).  It defines "the testimony of Jesus" as "the spirit of prophecy" (Revelation 19:10).  The Spirit of prophecy is the Holy Spirit in His work of bringing the prophetic gift to God's people, just as He is called "the Spirit of truth" when He acts to "guide you into all truth" (John 16:13).  The messages that God's prophets give are a result of the working of the Spirit of prophecy, as He brings Christ's message, or testimony, to God's people.

Is this an addition to the Bible, or perhaps even a replacement for it?  No.  Though God has promised to send prophets in the last days, the Bible is already complete.  It gives God's essential message to all of mankind.  But in His mercy God is able to give prophetic messages to His people at the end of time to help them understand and apply His Word to the situations they face.  Ellen G. White put it this way:  "I recommend to you, dear reader, the Word of God as the rule of your faith and practice. By that Word we are to be judged. God has, in that Word, promised to give visions in the 'last days'; not for a new rule of faith, but for the comfort of His people, and to correct those who err from Bible truth" (Early Writings, p. 78).

Today we will explore one topic as an illustration of this function of the prophetic writings.  It is an area where God's conscientious people sometimes need comfort, and where they may be in danger of erring from Bible truth.  It has to do with how we may be right with God, and how we may know whether we are right with God.  We are imperfect human beings.  Does God accept us?  What is His attitude toward us?  How may we walk with Him?  The Bible gives us answers to these questions, but sometimes we miss them or don't understand them.  The writings of God's servant Ellen G. White help us to see more clearly the Bible's teaching on this matter.  They bring us much-needed comfort on this challenging point.  So today I invite you to go on a journey with me in Scripture and in the writings of Ellen G. White, to see how we sinful human beings may be "Complete in Christ."  We begin by noting our predicament:

I.  None Is Righteous

No one, no matter how righteous he may become, can be righteous enough to be saved into God's kingdom.  The Bible says about human beings, "There is none righteous, no, not one" (Romans 3:10).  Even the spiritual giants of the Bible, such as Moses, Daniel, Paul, or John, could never be saved based on their abundant righteousness.  They could not then—and we cannot now—be righteous enough to be saved.  Only Christ is righteous enough; and we are righteous only in His righteousness.  This is what I confidently describe as a theology of hope; any other type of theology must always lead to despair.  Perfect righteousness is required, and total perfection is needed.  The best we can offer in this regard, even with God's help, is not good enough.  Therefore our great hope is in His righteousness as we submit ourselves to Christ and walk with Him:  The Bible tells us clearly that God "made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him" (2 Corinthians 5:21).  God's goodness leads us to repentance (Romans 2:4), and in mercy He grants us repentance (Acts 5:31, 11:18).  He assures us that "If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness" (1 John 1:9).  We can say with confidence then that we are righteous in His righteousness, worthy in His worthiness, and perfect in His perfection.  But this brings us to the next part of our study:  can God ever really be pleased with us?

II.  He Is Well Pleased

Ellen G. White was balanced and seasoned in this crucial area of righteousness and perfection.  She certainly taught a theology of hope.  This is evident in her tremendously encouraging comments about the Father's being well pleased with His Son at His baptism, and how this relates to each one of us.  Matthew 3:17 says that when Jesus was baptized, "Suddenly a voice came from heaven, saying, 'This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.'"  In the past, whenever I read these reassuring words, I felt somewhat excluded.  After all, this wonderful declaration was addressed to the perfect Jesus, not to the poor imperfect me—or was it?  Oh, how much I wanted to please My heavenly Father!  But it seemed that the harder I tried to please Him, the harder it was for me to make such an experience real in my life.  I wondered, what would it take to hear His reassuring words said about me?  Dare I even imagine such a glorious prospect?  Who am I even to think that God would ever be pleased with me as He is well pleased with Jesus?

Then I found this reassuring statement from the book The Desire of Ages, p. 113, which clearly tells me that my ardent desire for divine affirmation can become a reality.  Notice how it applies Scripture to our specific situation.  Here is the statement reflecting Ellen White's theology of hope:

"And the word that was spoken to Jesus at the Jordan, 'This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased,' embraces humanity.  God spoke to Jesus as our representative.  With all our sins and weaknesses, we are not cast aside as worthless.  'He hath made us accepted in the Beloved.' Ephesians 1:6.  The glory that rested upon Christ is a pledge of the love of God for us. . . . By sin, earth was cut off from heaven, and alienated from its communion; but Jesus has connected it again with the sphere of glory. His love has encircled man, and reached the highest heaven. The light which fell from the open portals upon the head of our Saviour will fall upon us as we pray for help to resist temptation. The voice which spoke to Jesus says to every believing soul, This is My beloved child, in whom I am well pleased."

So we have seen, first, that none of us is righteous enough to be saved, but that Jesus has provided the righteousness we need, and second, that in Christ God can say of us as He said of Jesus, "This is my beloved child, in whom I am well pleased."  This brings us to the third part of our study, the struggle we have in receiving, believing, and experiencing this relationship with God.  Fundamentally, it is a—

III.  Struggle Over Trust and Submission

This wonderful promise of hearing God express His delighted approval of us is real, yet—like all of God's promises—it is conditional.  To please the Father as His children, we must trust Jesus, submit ourselves to Him, and walk with Him daily.  And the challenge is to persist in this vital relationship.  Satan is constantly working to undermine this trust relationship between our heavenly Father and us as His beloved children.  That is what he tried to do with Jesus in the wilderness after His baptism.  Notice that at the end of the story of Jesus' baptism in Luke 3, Jesus heard His Father's voice reaffirming His trust relationship with Him, but then as chapter 4 begins, He heard Satan's voice, casting doubt on this Father-Son relationship.  "If you are the Son of God, . . ." (v. 3).  Satan applies the same strategy to us.  The arch-deceiver well knows that if he succeeds in shaking our confidence and assurance in this trust relationship, he will have won.  And he tries again and again, waiting for just the opportune time.

Satan is so deceptively subtle that even while we are in our heavenly Father's loving embrace, he comes knocking at the door of our heart, insinuating doubt and planting discouragement and distrust.  He wages this war over our hearts and minds, because for "thousands of years Satan has been experimenting upon the properties of the human mind, and he has learned to know it well" (Selected Messages, book 2, p. 352, 353).  He plays subtle psychological games with our minds, especially now that he knows his time is short.  His weapons of choice are worry, anxiety, regret, and discouragement—all to dislodge us from Christ.  Ellen White cautions us that "when brought into trial, we are not to fret and worry.  We should not rebel, or worry ourselves out of the hand of Christ" (Signs of the Times, Feb. 5, 1902).  It is so amazing but so true in real life that we may move out of the arms of Christ into the waiting arms of Satan, simply by fretting and worrying.

Then what is the solution to this problem?  Citing Hebrews 12:2, Ellen White wrote: "Look unto Jesus, who is the Author and Finisher of your faith.  Turn your attention from subjects which make you gloomy and sad, for you become an agent in the hands of the enemy to multiply gloom and darkness. . . .  Although severe afflictions may come upon you, it is your business to look up, and to see light in Jesus" (This Day With God, p. 233).  Beyond that, remember that Satan plays the role of the arch-accuser or prosecutor in the court of the great controversy.  But the Bible tells us that "if anyone sins, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous" (1 John 2:1).  Christ is our able Advocate and skilled Defense, and He never loses a case if we continue to cling to Him and rely totally on Him.  And the price for our defense has already been paid—His precious blood shed on Calvary (see verse 2)!  We play the role of defendants in this court of destiny.  And just as in an earthly court defendants do not listen or talk to their prosecutors, so we must not listen or talk to Satan our prosecutor, except to say, "Satan, talk to my Lawyer!  Christ's precious blood is the price of my defense."

When we look to Jesus in this way, trusting Him, submitting to Him, walking with Him, we will find to our joy that—

IV.  Satan Trembles and Flees

Even when we feel that we are weak, if we rely on Christ and remain submitted to Him, our weakness becomes strength in His strength.  John wrote about our family relationship with our heavenly Father and its impact on our victory over Satan.  "You are of God, little children, and have overcome them, because He who is in you is greater than he who is in the world" (1 John 4:4).  We are certainly no match for Satan, and if we try to resist him by ourselves, he will always defeat us.  But in this spiritual warfare we are not to resist him by ourselves, but with Christ.  The apostle James gives us three progressive stages in gaining victory over Satan.  Two of these involve things we are called upon to do:  "Therefore submit to God.  Resist the devil and he will flee from you" (James 4:7).  Following this counsel assures us of defeating Satan.

First, we submit ourselves to God, and He will cover us with His righteousness and shield us in His armor.  United with Him, we present a formidable front.  Isaiah 59:19 says, "When the enemy comes in like a flood, the Spirit of the Lord will lift up a standard against him."  It is a mighty standard, a powerful banner, that He raises in our behalf against the enemy.  It represents His might, not ours.

Second, together with Christ (never alone), we resist Satan.  He calls on us like He called on King Jehoshaphat:  "Do not be afraid nor dismayed because of this great multitude, for the battle is not yours, but God's. . . . Position yourselves, stand still and see the salvation of the Lord, who is with you" (2 Chronicles 20:15, 17).  And because Christ is far more able than we are, we can be confident of victory.  All He wants is our availability to His ability.  Ellen White wrote: "He who is imbued with the Spirit of Christ abides in Christ. The blow that is aimed at him falls upon the Saviour, who surrounds him with His presence" (Thoughts From the Mount of Blessing, p. 71). 

Third, the result is that Satan will flee from us.  It is often the case that God's people flee before Satan; therefore it is about time that he starts fleeing, for a change.  For when he sees Jesus in us and all around us, he resigns himself to the fact that in fighting us he has to fight Jesus.

Contemplate these encouraging words from The Desire of Ages, p. 131:  "We cannot save ourselves from the tempter's power; . . . and when we try to stand in our own strength, we shall become a prey to his devices; but 'the name of the Lord is a strong tower: the righteous runneth into it, and is safe.' Proverbs 18:10. Satan trembles and flees before the weakest soul who finds refuge in that mighty name."

Do you sense that you are spiritually weak, that you are even "the weakest soul"?  Then place your trust in the formidable name of Jesus.  Let Him enfold you now like an impenetrable shield, and let Him protect you like a strong tower.  So we come to the last part of this process—

V.  Doing Our Best

Christ does His utmost to make us complete in Him; but what is our part in this process?  Our part is to cooperate with Him, making ourselves totally available to Him.  The important role that we play, by His grace and in His strength, is to do our part, what we can—to do our best.  This is not a matter of "supplemental righteousness," in which we provide some righteousness and God adds what we lack.  No, it is Jesus' righteousness from start to finish.  "Without Me," He says, "you can do nothing" (John 15:5).  The Bible says, "Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God who works in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure" (Philippians 2:12, 13).  We can only work out what He works in, whether in willing or doing.  He is at work in us to produce any good that we do, and it is His righteousness that makes up for our lack when we fall short.  In His mercy and grace He reaches us where we are, changing our lives for the better and compensating for our shortcomings.

Don't we want to do our best for such a gracious Lord?  Isn't that the heart's response to grace?  Jesus knows those desires of our hearts.  How grateful we ought to be that the Lord looks at the heart and fully understands our deepest motives!  Other people may misunderstand us and impugn our motives, but we can rest assured that our all-loving and all-knowing God understands us completely.  And He reaches us in mercy to cover us with His Son's righteousness, accepting us as complete in His Beloved.  "When it is in the heart to obey God, when efforts are put forth to this end, Jesus accepts this disposition and effort as man's best service, and He makes up for the deficiency with His own divine merit" (Selected Messages, book 1, p. 382).

So, what does it mean to be clothed with Christ's robe of righteousness?  Ellen White gives us a very clear answer in this regard.  "Christ looks at the spirit, and when He sees us carrying our burden with faith, His perfect holiness atones for our shortcomings. When we do our best, He becomes our righteousness" (Ibid., p. 368, emphasis added).  Christ has done His best, His utmost, for us.  Why not do our best for Him?

The apostle Paul assured the Colossians about such glorious completeness in Christ:  "For in Him dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily; and you are complete in Him, who is the head of all principality and power" (Colossians 2:9, 10).  This assurance applies to us today when we submit our lives wholeheartedly to Him and walk with Him as Enoch walked with Him.  This is the only way we will walk with Him in heaven—by walking with Him in this world, so that when He comes again we may continue this walk in glory.  But throughout our earthly walk, if we are walking with our Savior, we will never feel self-sufficient or that we have reached our goal.  We will always sense our incompleteness and our desperate need for His completeness.  Sanctification is not a goal as such, but it is a way of life.  Now listen attentively, for "a voice speaks to him from the oracles of God's Word. In amazement he hears the message, 'Ye are complete in him' (Colossians 2:10). Now all is at rest in his soul. No longer must he strive to find some worthiness in himself, some meritorious deed by which to gain the favor of God" (Reflecting Christ, p. 76).

Therefore, our worthiness is only His worthiness, our righteousness is only His righteousness.  This is not hard work; rather, it is heart work.  It is not overwork; rather, it is the overflowing of God's redeeming love and empowering righteousness that propel us to go forward and upward with Jesus.  What do we think of when we hear about the need to be clothed with the robe of Christ's righteousness?  How does this experience work in real life?  This is it in a nutshell, according to Ellen White.  Notice how balanced this succinct statement is, and notice the cooperative effort of the human with the divine.  It is the submission of our heart, our will, our mind, our thoughts, and our whole life.  "When we submit ourselves to Christ, the heart is united with His heart, the will is merged in His will, the mind becomes one with His mind, the thoughts are brought into captivity to Him; we live His life. This is what it means to be clothed with the garment of His righteousness" (Christ's Object Lessons, p. 312, emphasis added).

Will you submit yourself to Christ, your will to His will, uniting your mind with His?  You will be "accepted in the Beloved," God will look upon you as His beloved child, in whom He is well pleased, your life will be transformed, and through His grace and power, you will be complete in Christ!  Will you say Yes to Him today, and each day, so that this wonderful experience of walking with Jesus may be yours?

Closing Hymn: "O Let Me Walk With Thee" (SDAH 554, CH 395)

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            Both the author and composer of this hymn were Seventh-day Adventists.  The words come from Lillian Dale Avery-Stuttle (1855-1933), who was a student at Battle Creek College in the late 1870s and became an editorial worker.  A woman of deep devotion, faith, and courage, she wrote many beautiful poems and several books.  One of her poems appeared on the cover of the Review and Herald March 16, 1933, one day before her death.  She expected to be one of the glorious company who would be alive and faithful at the second coming of Jesus, and who, like Enoch, would be "translated so that he did not see death" (Hebrews 11:5).  Our hymn today, based on Genesis 5:24, "And Enoch walked with God," was her own favorite.

            The tune for this hymn was composed by Edwin Barnes (1864-1930) and copyrighted by the J. E. White Publishing Company for inclusion in Hymns and Tunes, 1886.  It was named "Morton" to commemorate Eliza H. Morton, a teacher at Battle Creek College, where Barnes attended in 1881.  He was also a teacher of music there.

                        Adapted from Wayne Hooper and Edward E. White, Companion to the Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal (Hagerstown, Md.: Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1988).

SDAH = Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal
CH = Church Hymnal