Giobbe 42:2 – Io riconosco che tu puoi tutto e che nulla può impedirti di eseguire un tuo disegno. Meditazione giornaliera Apri la porta del tuo cuore, di autori vari, con Cesare Zausa Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_dxtpRPMct4
How Do We Know Our Way To Salvation? Jill Morikone | Global Campmeeting
We are all Saved By Grace of God. Our salvation is not in our might but through God's grace. When man transgressed the law, we lost eternal life. But the Heavenly Father sacrificed Jesus to give us the gift of salvation. We have to be grateful every day to God for His redeeming love. But as our faith grows, we have to be watchful of being legalistic. Sometimes, walking in obedience to God makes us see ourselves on top of others, leading us to wear a mask of righteousness that deceives others. As Christians, our image as Christ's reflection plays an essential role in the Seventh-day Adventist faith. Let us guard ourselves. Watch the Virtual Camp Meeting with Jill Morikone, 3ABN Vice President, as she talks about "Grace versus Legalism." Learn the seven Dangers Of Legalism and how to counterbalance it by the seven Developments Of Grace. Share your life-changing experience through God's grace and say, "IWillGo for Jesus!" To follow our official social media accounts, just follow the links below:
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Site: https://www.adventist.org #IWillGo
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#Campmeeting Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=okQScCqQMdc
5: Come to Me … – Singing with Inspiration
Rest. The word used most frequently in our Sabbath School Lesson pamphlet this quarter. “Thou shalt rest, Thou shalt rest!” These are words repeated each verse of
Hymn 387 – Come, O Sabbath Day, our theme hymn for this quarter.
Jesus calls to us
Come, Ye Sinners – Hymn 280 and we wish to reply
Jesus, I Come – Hymn 292.
The heavy laden are given rest in
Hymn 255 – I Cannot Tell Why (verse 2),
Hymn 368 – Watchman, Blow the Gospel Trumpet (verse 4) and the answer is in
Hymn 499 – What a Friend We Have in Jesus (verse 3) and
Hymn 476 – Burdens Are Lifted at Calvary.
The best teacher to have is Jesus who instructed us to “Take my yoke upon you”, and we may learn from Him all our lives:
Hymn 193 – Savior, Teach Me, verse 4 of
Hymn 297 – God Be Merciful to Me and
Hymn 524 – ‘Tis So Sweet to Trust in Jesus (verse 4).
Gentleness is found in verse 4 of
Hymn 231 – Bless Be the King,
Hymn 540 – Gentle Jesus Meek and Mild,
Hymn 542 – Jesus Friend So Kind and we ask
Pass Me Not, O Gentle Savior – Hymn 596.
To learn unknown hymns, you will find the accompaniment music for each one at: https://sdahymnals.com/Hymnal/
Another great resource is for when there is a hymn you wish to sing, but can’t find it in your hymnal. Go to https://www.sdahymnal.org and in the search bar type a special word in that is in the hymn. I am sure you will be amazed at the help you will be given.
2 Timothy 2:15 KJV – “Study to shew thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.”
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Monday: “Take My Yoke Upon You”
Read Matthew 11.29-30. Why does Jesus command us to take His yoke right after He has invited us to give Him our burdens and find true rest?
After the first imperative “come” in Matthew 11.28-29.
“Take” and “learn” focus the attention of the audience (and the reader) on Jesus. We are to take His yoke and learn from Him.
The intimate relationship in the Godhead between the Father and the Son (already intimated in Matthew 11:25-27) offers a powerful illustration that may explain the yoke metaphor in these verses. Both the Father and the Son are working unitedly to save humanity. While the yoke is a symbol of submission (see Jeremiah 27), it is also a metaphor illustrating united purpose. We submit to His yoke and accept the task He gives us to bless those around us. We are not carrying His yoke; we are just yoked to Him because His yoke “is easy” and His burden “is light” (Matthew 11:30).
The second imperative “learn from Me” reiterates this concept. In Greek the verb “learn” is connected to the term “disciple.” When we learn from Jesus, we are truly His disciples. Obedience and commitment are characteristics of discipleship.
What is the difference between being “heavy laden” ( Matthew 11.28-29)?
The yoke was a common metaphor in Judaism for the law. Acts 15:10 uses it in reference to the law of circumcision. Galatians 5:1 contrasts the liberty Jesus offers with the yoke of bondage, which is a reference to the law as a means of salvation. Being yoked to Jesus emphasizes obedience and commitment to follow in His footsteps and to participate in His mission. While we cannot hope to add anything to the salvation that Jesus won for us on the cross, we can become His ambassadors and share the good news with those around us. Jesus’ interpretation of the law, as demonstrated in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7) is even more radical than the Pharisees’ take on it. It requires heart surgery and transforms our motives — and, His yoke is easy and His burden is light (Matthew 11:30).
| What a wonderful promise! Rest for your souls. How have you experienced that rest? What is it like? By focusing on Jesus and on what He offers us, how can we begin to know that rest? |
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5.2 “Take My Yoke Upon You” – “COME TO ME…” | Pastor Kurt Piesslinger, M.A.
Series REST IN CHRIST with Pastor Kurt Piesslinger, M.A. |
5.”COME TO ME…” |
Jesus invites you to rest with him
Memory Text:
Matthew 11:28 – Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
5.2 “Take My Yoke Upon You”
Everything depends on your confidence to your creator.
My God bless you today and always.
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Source: https://fulfilleddesire.net/5-2-take-my-yoke-upon-you-come-to-me-pastor-kurt-piesslinger-m-a/
Proverbs 22:6
Start children off on the way they should go, and even when they are old they will not turn from it.
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Domenica 25 luglio 2021
Filemone 1:4,5 – Io ringrazio continuamente il mio Dio, ricordandomi di te nelle mie preghiere, perché sento parlare dell’amore e della fede che hai verso il Signore Gesù e verso tutti i santi Meditazione giornaliera Apri la porta del tuo cuore, di autori vari, con Simona Esposito. Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EB7T_bei3vk
Who Needs Spiritual Gifts?
[vimeo 578952026 w=640 h=360]
God gives each person a set of talents and spiritual gifts. This week Bill will be speaking on why it is important to cultivate, nurture, and share these talents…Source: https://vimeo.com/578952026
Church At Worship | July 24, 2021
Worship: "The Boldness of a Canaanite Women" – Ernest Hernandez THANK YOU for your continued support. The Media Ministry needs your financial support. Please donate by clicking the link below and select the “Media Ministries” box when giving. https://adventistgiving.org/#/org/ANB4RC/envelope/start Connect With Us:
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to Remnant Seventh-day Adventist Church on YouTube. Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2s_63eIS4ac
Sunday: “I Will Give You Rest”
Read Matthew 11:20-28, when Jesus says: “Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest” (NKJV). What is the context of this statement? How does Jesus give us this rest?
Like all of us, Jesus never spoke without a context. In order to understand Him, we need to grasp the specific context surrounding a particular statement, especially if we want to avoid misunderstanding Jesus.
Matthew 11 marks a turning point in Matthew’s Gospel. The statements denouncing important Galilean cities are the harshest heard so far in the Gospel. Jesus does not curry favors; He puts the finger where it hurts; He associates with the “wrong” people (Matthew 9:9-13); His claim to be able to forgive sins is scandalous in the eyes of the religious leaders (Matthew 9:1-8).
Indeed, Jesus speaks some powerfully condemning words to the people, even comparing them, unfavorably, to Sodom, viewed then (as today) as a place of implacable wickedness. “But I say to you that it shall be more tolerable for the land of Sodom in the day of judgment than for you” (Matthew 11:24).
Tensions are rising — and yet, in the midst of all of this, Jesus changes gear and offers true rest. He can do so because “all things have been delivered to Me by My Father, and no one knows the Son except the Father” (Matthew 11:27). Jesus’ ability to give rest is based on His divinity and His oneness with the Father.
Before we can come to unload our burdens, we need to understand that we cannot carry them alone. In fact, most of us will not come unless we have recognized our true condition. Jesus’ invitation is need-based.
His statement in Matthew 11:28 begins with an imperative in the Greek original. “Come” is not optional; “come” represents the precondition of finding rest. “Come” means that we need to surrender control. In a time when we can conveniently control many things in our lives via our smartphones, coming to Jesus is not the natural direction. In fact, for most people, surrender is the toughest part of the Christian life.
We love to talk, and rightly so, about all that God does for us in Christ and how we cannot save ourselves and the like. All that is true. But in the end, we still have to make the conscious choice to “come” to Jesus, which means surrender to Him. Here is where the reality of free will becomes front and center in the Christian life.
| What burdens are you carrying? How can you learn to give them to Jesus and experience the rest He offers, and at so great a cost to Himself? |
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