Seventh-day Adventist leaders launched the OneVoice27: Mission for All initiative to the Annual Council 2025 delegates on October 11, 2025, before the delegates voted to accept the strategy during business meetings on October 12. The presenters… Source: https://adventist.news/news/onevoice27-unveiled-at-annual-council-as-churchwide-digital-evangelism-emphasis-for-2027
The Truth Receives Wings to Fly
In places like Peru where many people listen to the radio, Marlene’s story stands out. Nuevo Tiempo Radio brought her the hope she needed. Learn more about radio evangelism at https://awr.org. Watch Marlene’s full story here: https://youtube.com/watch?v=E9wQwYAs1Ro #AWR360 #BroadcastToBaptism Source: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/-k3k1Fd0Bqg
Matteo 23:8 - Apri la porta del tuo cuore
“Ma voi non vi fate chiamare ‘Rabbì’; perché uno solo è il vostro Maestro e voi siete tutti fratelli”. 📖 Matteo 23:8
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💌 Apri la porta del tuo cuore
🗣 Speaker: Alessia Zagara Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RIDFhDlo37c
Journal to Remember!
“We have nothing to fear for the future, except as we shall forget the way the Lord has led us, and His teaching in our past history.”—Ellen G. White, Life Sketches, p. 196.
Long before Sabbath School Net, my blogsite, and Facebook, I loved to write. When I was a teenager, Earl Hamner inspired me to write and keep a journal. You may or may not know that Earl Hamner created the 1970s TV series The Waltons, based loosely on his own family’s experiences growing up during the Great Depression and World War II. In the TV series, John Boy, the character is based on Earl Hamner, who kept a journal. This inspired me to keep a journal, hoping to write some exciting stories to share later in life. While I did not write anything noteworthy enough to create my own TV series, I did write what has become a gold mine for my own reflection and self-discovery.
Photo by Jan Kahánek on Unsplash
For instance, when I was 15, I had a crush on a girl who didn’t return my feelings, so I wrote in my journal that I had called her a snob to her face. A couple of weeks later, I recorded in my journal that I preached my first sermon, but also noted the girl I had a crush on did not come to hear me preach, and I wondered why. Reading my journal years later, it was blatantly obvious why. Just a few days earlier, I called her a snob. Who wants to hear someone preach who just called you a snob? I didn’t see the obvious at the time, but years later, reading my journal, I could connect the dots I couldn’t then. Around the same age, I wrote in my journal how I hoped to become a pastor someday. It is rewarding to go back to my journal and read about dreams that were fulfilled years later. Except now I don’t call people I want to share the Gospel with “snobs.”
Sadly, after a couple of years of journaling, I stopped because I didn’t feel that what I wrote was exciting enough to record. Was I ever wrong! As I said earlier, I look back and see it as a gold mine of self-reflection and self-discovery, as well as a way to document events and dates to refer back to whenever I need a timeline. By reading my old journals, I can now see what I needed to grow and how I have grown.
Around 2005, Someone gave me a journal as a birthday gift, and I started journaling again, though I do not write in it nearly as often as I did as a teen. Of course, I now write on my blog and Facebook, so I can still share stories of my life. As we study this week’s Sabbath School Lesson, “Memorials of Grace,” I am reminded how journaling can be a memorial of grace. In recent years, I have journaled about how God closed the door on my Bible Worker ministry only to open an even bigger door for ministry. I have journaled about how God got me out of debt after I lost my job, which is a really unique route out of debt. I have journaled about how God revealed His presence to me when my mother passed away. These past miracles are recorded in my journal to remind me that I never have to fear bad news.
They do not fear bad news; they confidently trust the Lord to care for them. Psalm 112:7 NLT
So today, I thank God for the gift of writing, whether it is in my personal journal or blogging on Sabbath School Net or social media. I hope you also take advantage of the wonderful gift of writing and record your own tragedies and triumphs, so you can look back and read and re-read the wonderful things the Lord has brought you through and done for you. I feel that, like me, you will also learn some things about yourself as you read your old stories.
By the way, at camp meetings and while traveling, I will meet people who tell me they have been following my blog for a long time. Some of them have never commented, so I had no idea they were even following me. So, whether you have commented or not, I want to thank you for reading my blogs. Thank you for being someone with whom I can share my stories. By sharing my stories with you, I have been able to share my life with you. That makes you very special to me. Thank you.
(0)Pressure Builds on New Southern Asian Division Leadership

by Loren Seibold | 14 October 2025 | For as long as I’ve been involved in reporting and writing about the Seventh-day Adventist Church, one of the things that has troubled me the most has been the constant drumbeat of accusations of corruption in the church in the developing world. No church entity anywhere is […] Source: https://atoday.org/pressure-builds-against-new-southern-asian-division-leadership/
Wednesday: Forgetfulness
Daily Lesson for Wednesday 15th of October 2025
Read Joshua 4:20-24 in the light of the following verses: Judges 3:7; Judges 8:34; Psalms 78:11; Deuteronomy 8:2,18; Psalms 45:17. Why was it so important to remember the mighty deeds of the Lord?
Notice the change in person in Joshua 4:23. The waters of the Jordan are referred to as having been dried up before “you,” that is, before all the Israelites who have just crossed the Jordan. In contrast, the Red Sea is said to had been dried up before “us,” those who were still present from the first generation and who experienced the Exodus.
The two events experienced by two different generations were similar in significance, which enabled the second generation, through the testimony of their parents, to rediscover the same meaning of the Jordan crossing for themselves.
Generally, we perceive forgetfulness as a normal trait of all human beings. However, forgetfulness in the spiritual sense can lead to serious consequences.
Even today, if we want to maintain our identity as a people with a peculiar calling and mission, we will have to create occasions for refreshing both our individual and corporate spiritual memory in order to keep in focus where we are coming from, who we are, and what we are here for.
Read 1 Corinthians 11:24-25 and John 14:26. Why must we always remember what Christ did for us? What else really matters without it?
Ellen G. White clearly understood that without constantly guiding ourselves in the light of God’s past acts and revelation, we will surely lose the motivation to carry out our mission in the future: “We have nothing to fear for the future, except as we shall forget the way the Lord has led us, and His teaching in our past history.”—Ellen G. White, Life Sketches, p. 196.
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Though it is important to remember the past and how the Lord has worked in your life, why must you day by day have an experience with Him and the reality of His love and presence now? |
(0)3: Memorials of Grace — Hope Sabbath School Video Discussion
View an in-depth discussion of Memorials of Grace in the Hope Sabbath School class led by Pastor Derek Morris.
Click on the image below to view the video:
With thanks to Hope Channel – Television that will change your life.
(0)Zephaniah 3:17 (NIV)
God doesn’t just save you. He sings over you with joy. Source: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/VuAsnrBVTIg
Saved From the Coming Storm | Doug Batchelor (Amazing Facts)
The apostle Paul warned, “In the last days perilous times will come” (2 Timothy 3:1). Donate: https://www.amazingfacts.org/donation/donate-online/?utm_source=SM2510MA Are you prepared “to give a defense to everyone who asks you a reason for the hope that is in you” (1 Peter 3:15)? When you partner with the worldwide evangelistic outreach of Amazing Facts, you help people trapped in sin find their way to eternity. Your gifts awaken hearts so people can be prepared for Jesus’ soon return. Will you provide answers that give hope? Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8MAZS4dAKm4
Fulton Adventist University College Transitions to University Status
Fulton Adventist University College has received provisional approval to operate as Fulton Adventist University, marking a new chapter in the institution’s 120-year history. The approval, granted by the Higher Education Commission Fiji (HEC) on O… Source: https://adventist.news/news/fulton-adventist-university-college-transitions-to-university-status
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