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You are here: Home / Archives for Adventist Sermons & Video Clips

God First: Your Daily Prayer Meeting #1032

June 22, 2025 By admin



"If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer" (Matthew 21:22, NIV). 
Tag someone in need of prayer, and kindly share your prayer requests here:
https://wkf.ms/3DBuapQ Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hk3WhRMQ2Gw

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13: Images of the End — Singing with Inspiration

June 22, 2025 By admin

To learn of the “Allusions, Images and Symbols” in Bible Prophecy, we are really in great need of saying to God
Give Me The Bible – Hymn 272 so we are able to learn with His abundant help. This will be our theme for this, the second quarter of Bible Study, 2025.
 

“This time we will look at the mission of Jonah to Nineveh, the fall of Babylon, and the rise of Cyrus, the Persian King wholiberated God’s people and enabled them to return to the Promised Land

”

 which is where we find our first hymn for this Sabbath: 
Hymn 620 – On Jordan’s Stormy Banks, just as did the Children of Israel. This hymn comes along a few times this week.

Our Creator is spoken of frequently in our studies this week, giving us another hymn:
Hymn 320 – Lord Of Creation to enjoy.
 

It is wonderful to read that all over the world many people will heed the call of God and come to repentance (Monday). All will 
Stand Up, Stand Up for Jesus – Hymn 618, and will 
Stand Like The Brave – Hymn 610 as well as be found 
Standing On The Promises – Hymn 578.

Jesus warned His disciples (Tuesday) “Watch, therefore” just as 
Hymn 598 – Watch Ye Saints does.

We learn on Thursday that Cyrus came forward and liberated God’s people, which is “a type of Christ’s Second Coming”: 
Hymn 213 – Jesus Is Coming Again.

As this second quarter of 2025 closes, are we found 
Standing On The Promises – Hymn 518? Please let us all say 
O Brother, Be Faithful – Hymn 602 because 
Jesus Is Coming Again – Hymn 213.
 

Please continue to search the scriptures this week to be blessed, and to bless others.

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/Search 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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Source: https://ssnet.org/blog/13-images-of-the-end-singing-with-inspiration/

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13: Images of the End — Teaching Plan

June 22, 2025 By admin

Key Thought: Three accounts that help us understand the last day events are the mission of Jonah, the fall of Babylon, and the rise of Cyrus, the Persian king.
June 28, 2025

1. Have a volunteer read Matthew 12:38-42

  1. Ask class members to share a short thought on what the most important point is in this passage.
  2. What parts of Jonah’s story does Jesus refer to? What lessons about judgment are found in His statement
  3. Personal Application: How much of Jonah do you find in yourself? How can we move beyond the wrong attitude? Share your thoughts.
  4. Case Study: One of your relatives states, “Why would God hold people who know the truth and fell away more responsible than those who never accepted it? Does that make sense?” How would you respond to your relative? .

2. Have a volunteer read Jonah 3:5-10.

  1. Ask class members to share a thought on what the most important point in this text is.
  2. Why was this prophecy not fulfilled?
  3. Personal Application: What choices are you making now that will help determine what choices you will make when the final issue breaks upon the world? Share your thoughts.
  4. Case Study: One of your friends states, “Was Jonah prejudiced against the people of Ninevah because they were considered so evil or because they weren’t Jews? How does this warn us about religious or cultural bias?” How would you respond to your friend?

3. Have a volunteer read Daniel 5:1-31.

  1. Ask class members to share a short thought on what the most important point in this text is.
  2. What important spiritual messages can we take from this account?
  3. Personal Application: Are there ways that we could be flaunting God or misusing or abusing the sanctuary or the leadership of God’s church? Share your thoughts.
  4. Case Study: One of your neighbors states, “What caused Belshazzar to be found wanting and destroyed? Was it his attitude? His misuse of the objects of the sanctuary? His debauchery and drunkenness?” How would you respond to your neighbor?

4. Have a volunteer read 2 Chronicles 36:22,23.

  1. Ask class members to share a thought on what the most important point in this text is.
  2. In what ways are Cyrus’ story and Nebuchadnezzar’s story similar and different?
  3. Personal Application: How is everyone in the world going to be warned in the last days? Is God going to take the work in His own hands, or are other people going to be lost because of neglect on our part? Share your thoughts.
  4. Case Study: Think of one person who needs to hear a message from this week’s lesson. Tell the class what you plan to do this week to share with them.

(Truth that is not lived, that is not imparted, loses its life-giving power, its healing virtue. Its blessings can be retained only as it is shared. ”Ministry of Healing, p. 148).

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Source: https://ssnet.org/blog/13-images-of-the-end-teaching-plan/

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1 Marco 1:17 – Apri la porta del tuo cuore

June 21, 2025 By admin



“Seguitemi, e io vi farò diventare pescatori di uomini”.
📖 1 Marco 1:17 —
💌 Apri la porta del tuo cuore
🗣 Speaker: Andres Hidalgo Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQDr4R5ZFPU

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Lesson 13.Images of the End | 13.1 The Reluctant Prophet | ALLUSIONS, IMAGES, SYMBOLS | LIVING FAITH

June 21, 2025 By admin

🟦 Introduction

The Bible is far more than a collection of ancient stories—it is a living testimony of divine guidance throughout the centuries. Lesson 13 invites us to look beyond the historical accounts and discover their deeper, prophetic significance. Whether it’s Jonah in the belly of the fish, Belshazzar’s fateful night, or the drying up of the Euphrates—each of these events contains clues about major happenings still ahead of us in the end times. These images serve as signposts on the spiritual map of the last days: they reveal God’s seriousness in judgment, but also His patience, grace, and faithfulness in salvation. Those who watch with an alert heart will see that God still speaks today through what happened yesterday. And He calls us to recognize the signs of the times and make a clear decision for Him—while grace still calls.

⛪ Lesson 13: IMAGES OF THE END

📘 13.1 The Reluctant Prophet
✨ Jonah – A Reflection of God’s End-Time Messengers

………………………………………………………………….

🟦 Introduction

There are stories in the Bible so human, so profound, and at the same time so prophetic that they endure through generations. The story of Jonah is one of them. A man of God who flees from his calling. A prophet who knows the voice of God—yet runs in the opposite direction. How is that possible? And how often do we see ourselves in that mirror?

Jonah is not just an Old Testament prophet. His story is a parable of our calling, our struggles—and God’s immense patience. In this lesson, we not only dive into the Old Testament account, but we examine it through the lens of the New Testament and end-time prophecy. What does Jesus say about Jonah? And what does it mean for us today—in the 21st century, in the midst of spiritual Babylon?

………………………………………………………………….

📖 Bible Study

Matthew 12:38–42 – Jonah as a Sign

“For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.” (Matt. 12:40)

Answer:
Jesus deliberately refers to Jonah—not because of his flight, but because of his time inside the fish. The fish becomes a symbol of the grave. Jonah seemingly returns from death to preach God’s word. Jesus, however, truly dies and conquers death forever. Just as Jonah preached repentance to the Assyrians, so Jesus proclaims the gospel to the world through His resurrection. Yet Jesus is “greater than Jonah”—He is the perfect sign of grace and judgment.

Jesus also reveals something about judgment: the people of Nineveh will testify against this generation because they repented. A serious warning: those who know the light and still do not turn back will be held accountable.

………………………………………………………………….

📖 Answers to the Questions

📌 Question 1: Read Matthew 12:38–42. Which parts of Jonah’s story does Jesus refer to when speaking to the scribes and Pharisees? What lessons about judgment can be found in His statement?

In Matthew 12:38–42, Jesus directly references the sign of the prophet Jonah to reveal a deeper spiritual truth. When the Pharisees demand a sign to prove His divine authority, Jesus does not perform another miracle. Instead, He points forward to what is yet to come—His crucifixion, death, and resurrection. These three days “in the heart of the earth” correspond to Jonah’s experience in the belly of the fish (cf. Jonah 1:17). This is not a superficial comparison: Jonah was seemingly dead and miraculously returned to deliver God’s message. Jesus truly died, conquered death, and brought eternal hope.

Jesus also addresses judgment: the people of Nineveh repented at Jonah’s preaching—with no signs or wonders, just God’s word. Now, someone greater than Jonah stands before Israel’s religious leaders—yet they remain unmoved. The judgment, therefore, will be even stricter for those who received greater light but chose to reject it.

This statement is both a solemn warning and an appeal: God gives signs, but the greatest sign is Jesus’ resurrection. Whoever recognizes this sign will understand that judgment is real—but so is salvation. Jesus’ words are prophetic, just, and full of grace.

📌 Question 2: How much of Jonah do you see in yourself? How can you overcome this wrong attitude?

Many Christians see themselves in Jonah—especially when they honestly examine their inner responses to God’s call. Jonah was not a skeptic—he was a prophet. He knew God’s voice, His holiness, and His grace. And that was the issue: Jonah knew that God forgives when people repent (cf. Jonah 4:2). But his national loyalty, fears, and perhaps pride got in the way. He didn’t want to be the vessel of grace to Nineveh—he believed they didn’t deserve it. That attitude is uncomfortably human.

We often face assignments that challenge us: loving a difficult person, standing for Jesus in a hostile environment, witnessing to an unconverted family. And sometimes we react like Jonah: fleeing, delaying, making excuses. But God’s patience doesn’t end with our resistance. He continues to call—and often uses the storms in our lives to bring us back on track.

Overcoming this attitude starts with humility. When I realize I am saved by grace alone, I will wish that same grace for others. Then I stop trying to control the outcome and focus on obedience. It’s God’s job to change hearts—not mine. My job is to go, preach, and love—even when it’s difficult.

Regular prayer, recognizing my own need, and trusting God’s strength help me say, like Jonah ultimately did, “Here I am, send me”—even when my heart still hesitates.

………………………………………………………………….

✨ Spiritual Principles

  • God doesn’t just call—He pursues.

  • The mission is more important than our comfort.

  • The message may be unpopular—but it is necessary.

  • God uses our weakness to show His strength.

  • Worship is inseparable from obedience.

Like Jonah, we are sent into a world that has forgotten God. The end-time message is not just an invitation to religion—it is a call to repentance. Revelation 14:7 calls us to worship the Creator—which is exactly what Jonah affirms before the sailors (Jonah 1:9).

………………………………………………………………….

🧩 Application for Daily Life

Jonah lived in a real world of political tensions, fear, and personal pride—just like we do today. Our “Nineveh” may look different—it might be a conversation with a neighbor, an invitation to a coworker, a testimony to strangers. But the calling remains. So does the fear. What’s different? We already have the sign: Jesus lives. The tomb is empty. What’s still holding us back?

Imagine if every believer lived today as though the salvation of hundreds depended on their faithfulness. Would that change your willingness?

………………………………………………………………….

✅ Conclusion

The story of Jonah is not a children’s tale. It’s an end-time story. A story of flight and return, judgment and grace. It’s a mirror for all who claim to be God’s people—especially in a time when Babylon is erecting its final walls. But God doesn’t call perfect people. He calls the willing. And He walks with them through the storm—until they reach the place He wants them to be: as messengers of His love, even in the capital of darkness.

………………………………………………………………….

💭 Thought of the Day

“God’s call may take you out of your comfort zone—but He will never leave you without His presence.”

………………………………………………………………….

✍ Illustration – “Called but Fleeing”

David Krüger was 35, a theologian, influencer, and a man of principle. People loved his clear sermons, his calm voice, and his well-structured podcasts about the Bible and society. On social media, he was known as “the understanding reformer.” But few knew how often David wrestled with God in private.

One morning—just an ordinary Thursday—David sat with his coffee in his home office in Leipzig when he sensed a clear prompting in prayer: “Go to Riyadh. Proclaim My message.”

He froze. Riyadh? Saudi Arabia? A place where Christians are persecuted, where one can be imprisoned for speaking publicly about Christ?

David laughed nervously. Surely not from God. Maybe it was just the strong coffee.

But the message wouldn’t leave him. In the following days, he spoke with God—or rather, he argued. “Lord, You know what happens there. I’m not a missionary. I’m a theologian, a writer, a father! I can’t just go to Riyadh and tell them to repent!”

Instead of booking a ticket, David fled—not literally, but digitally. He declined a Middle East mission invitation and volunteered for a humanitarian project in Stockholm. It sounded like ministry. It felt “Christian.” But deep down, he knew: I’m going to Tarshish.

While he sat in air-conditioned rooms in Stockholm discussing peace, justice, and religious tolerance, a storm raged in his soul. At night, he couldn’t sleep. Over and over, he dreamed of a sun-drenched city, of people praying—earnestly, sincerely—and of a voice crying: “Yet forty days…”

One night he fell weeping from his bed. In that moment, he realized: I’m running. Not from a place. From God.

David returned home. Three weeks later, he was on a flight to Amman, Jordan. From there, he continued with a Christian aid organization to Riyadh. But instead of preaching in large gatherings, he spoke with people in cafés, discussed with liberal students in back rooms, answered questions about hope, forgiveness, eternity.

He didn’t speak loudly. But his words carried weight.

One evening, after a discussion group, a young man asked him,
“Why are you risking this, Mr. Krüger?”
David answered softly:
“Because God doesn’t want you to die—but to live.”

Source: https://fulfilleddesire.net/lesson-13-images-of-the-end-13-1-the-reluctant-prophet-allusions-images-symbols-living-faith/

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