We are saddened to learn of the death of Pastor Roy Burgess, who passed away on 12 November 2023 following a long battle with a neurological condition. Pastor Burgess was born in Watford on 14 June 1926, and he spent his early years at Parkgate, Callowland, the Stanborough Schools, and Leggatts Ways Senior Boys’ School.
He entered denominational employment on 30 September 1942, serving as a general hand at Granose Foods Ltd and then as a baker until April 1948. He decided to study for the…Source: https://adventist.uk/news/article/go/2023-11-23/1768/
Why would Jesus become a human in the first place? #Short
We believe Jesus is fully God and fully human after He came to Earth as a baby to become our Savior. If you’ve never considered what it means for the God of the universe to make it so He can relate to us intimately–as humans–we want to talk about it. Leave us a comment. #Shorts #YouTubeShorts To watch the full video, paste this link into your browser: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ytZ4XOR4E0&list=PL-k2Gb-DBYo-DoiuxUHibFDmt1K00XeI2&index=5 Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YjBfBeiRu38
En memoria de Kit Watts
Kit Watts, una figura pionera en la Iglesia Adventista del Séptimo Día e incansable defensora para la igualdad de género en el ministerio, falleció el 15 de noviembre de 2023 en Walla Walla, Washington. Watts deja tras de sí un legado de importantes logros y decidida dedicación a su causa. Nacida el 5 de diciembre […] Source: https://atoday.org/en-memoria-de-kit-watts/
Inside Story: Mission Path to Spain ~ Part 2
Inside Story for Friday 24th of November 2023
By Andrew McChesney
Only five families were at home when gunmen descended on a cluster of nine houses occupied by Seventh-day Adventist pastoral families in Venezuela. Waving weapons, the attackers forced the families into a single house where they separated the men, women, and children. Police arrived and surrounded the house, leading to a standoff that ended peacefully ten hours later when, at 3:00 a.m., the gunmen fled into a forest behind the house.
The wives and children of the nine pastoral families were relocated after the 2016 attack. The pastors worked alone for several months as they waited for new placements. Several moved to other countries to serve as pastors.
Luis Paiva, who had served as a pastor for about decade, wasn’t sure what to do. Life had been difficult in economically volatile Venezuela before the attack. Money was tight, and food was scarce. For three years, he had been struggling to pay off a loan. But he couldn’t even keep up with interest payments, and the debt had swelled to US$1,000.
The hostage-taking was the breaking point for Luis’s wife. The family of five had not been at home at the time of the attack. But his wife was left traumatized, and she didn’t want to live in Venezuela anymore. Luis agreed that the country wasn’t safe, but he didn’t feel right about leaving an unpaid debt.
Luis prayed for a sign. He didn’t usually ask for signs because he believed that God could lead without them. But he didn’t know what else to do.
“Lord, if You work a miracle and help me pay this debt, that will be the sign for me to leave Venezuela,” he prayed.
The gunmen had stolen things from all nine houses, including Luis’s. Being robbed was not unusual. Luis’s home had been broken into many times over the past year, but he had not filed any insurance claims. Usually the thefts were too small to make them worth pursuing a claim. But after the last theft, church leaders offered compensation for everything stolen over the past year if Luis obtained a stamped police report confirming the latest theft.
None of the other pastors were able to get the police report. But Luis happened to have friends in the police force, and he secured the document.
Two months later, the insurance company deposited $1,000 into his bank account. It was the exact amount needed to pay the debt.
“I didn’t benefit from that money,” said Luis, who is a missionary in Spain today. “But I understood that God sent the money so I could pay off the debt. I knew that God also would bless the plan to leave the country.”
Thank you for your Sabbath School mission offering that helps support missionaries around the world. Read next week about how Luis flew from Mexico to Spain.
The post Inside Story: Mission Path to Spain ~ Part 2 appeared first on Sabbath School Net.
Source: https://ssnet.org/blog/23d-08-inside-story-mission-path-to-spain-part-2/
Friday: Further Thought – Mission to the Needy
Daily Lesson for Friday 24th of November 2023
Read Arthur White, “A Few Days at Long Point,” Ellen G. White: The Australian Years: 1891–1900, vol. 4, pp. 100–104.
The Gospel writers recorded examples of Jesus’ practice of building bridges with people from other cultures in order to save them (Matthew 8:28-34, Mark 5:1-20). Likewise, we also are called to make friends and minister to people from other cultures, as well. Christ’s death was for everyone, regardless of race, nationality, wealth, or background. This is a point we must never forget. “And He Himself is the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only but also for the whole world” (1 John 2:2, NKJV).
“Men and women are not fulfilling the design of God, when they simply express affection for their own family circle, . . . while they exclude those from their love whom they could comfort and bless by relieving their necessities. . . .
“When the Lord bids us do good for others outside our home, He does not mean that our affection for home shall become diminished, and that we shall love our kindred or our country less because He desires us to extend our sympathies. But we are not to confine our affection and sympathy within four walls, and enclose the blessing that God has given us so that others will not be benefited with us in its enjoyment.”—Ellen G. White, Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, October 15, 1895.
The responsibility given to us to be a blessing to those outside our comfort zone, whether they are from another culture or just a helpless person, is a nonnegotiable mandate from Jesus Christ Himself (Acts 1:8, Mark 11:17).
Discussion Questions
- What is your own comfort zone, and why must you be willing to step outside of it when necessary?
- What are the implications of the incident when Jesus was called “ ‘a glutton and a drunkard, a friend of tax collectors and sinners’ ” (Matthew 11:19, NIV)? What was Jesus doing that would have brought that accusation, and what does it teach us about mission?
- To what extent should a Christian engage in the celebrations of nonbelievers? How might Christians do that without compromising biblical principles?
The post Friday: Further Thought – Mission to the Needy appeared first on Sabbath School Net.
Source: https://ssnet.org/blog/23d-08-further-thought-mission-to-the-needy/
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