15 September 2021 | Read this poem, and the following essay, in preparation for our class. Are We and Our Grandchildren Damned? A Biblical Basis for Setting Our Hearts at Rest Just a year or two into my first ministerial assignment, I conducted a funeral service for the eighteen-year-old son of one of my new […] Source: https://atoday.org/are-our-grandchildren-damned/
Avondale Homecoming: The origin story
It’s hard to believe that only 40 years ago Avondale celebrated its first Homecoming and honoured Ruby Ferris from the Class of 1921, someone who would have been familiar with Avondale’s pioneering days. How did it all start and what meaning does it have now? Source: https://wp.avondale.edu.au/news/2021/09/24/avondale-homecoming-the-origin-story/
Inside Story: Tough First Day at School
Tough First Day of School
By Andrew McChesney
The first day of school was hard for Niang Muang. Really, really hard.
The 9-year-old girl had arrived in the United States only a month earlier from Myanmar. Her parents were refugees. She didn’t know English, and she didn’t have any friends.
“Hello, what’s your name?” a girl asked her.
Niang shook her head.
“No,” she said.
“Oh,” said the girl, confused. “Where are you from?”
Niang shook her head again.
“No,” she said.
Niang was not trying to be rude. She just didn’t understand.
Because she didn’t know English, she sat quietly all morning in class. At lunchtime, she followed the other children to the cafeteria and looked at the food being served. Nacho cheese and shredded beef. Mini-pizzas. Chicken nuggets. The food was very strange to her. She was used to eating mustard leaves, potatoes leaves, watercress, brown beans, and red lentils.
After tasting the food, she returned to the classroom and sat quietly until school ended for the day. At home, she prayed for help. “Dear God, please help me survive another day of school,” she said.
Fourth grade was tough, but fifth grade was better. She began to speak English and to make friends.
“What’s your name?” a girl asked.
“My name is Niang,” she replied with a shy smile.
“Oh, where are you from?” the girl said.
“I am from Burma, which is also called Myanmar,” Niang said.
The girl nodded her head. She had heard of the country. Several other refugee children from Myanmar also studied at their school.
“Oh OK,” she said. “Do you want to play?”
Niang felt happy. She was beginning to fit in. She felt even happier in seventh grade. She was able to transfer from the public school to a Seventh-day Adventist school thanks to money from a 2011 Thirteenth Sabbath Offering to help refugees in the North American Division.
She thanked God in her daily prayers. “Dear God, thank You so much for helping me learn this new language and for taking care of me,” she prayed.
Part of this quarter’s Thirteenth Sabbath Offering will help more children refugees like Niang study at Adventist schools. Niang is now 21 and studying to become a mission doctor.
Produced by the General Conference Office of Adventist Mission. Find more mission stories at adventistmission[dot]org
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Friday: Further Thought ~ The Ultimate Rest
Further Thought:
“We all desire immediate and direct answers to our prayers, and are tempted to become discouraged when the answer is delayed or comes in an unlooked-for form. But God is too wise and good to answer our prayers always at just the time and in just the manner we desire.
He will do more and better for us than to accomplish all our wishes. And because we can trust His wisdom and love, we should not ask Him to concede to our will, but should seek to enter into and accomplish His purpose. Our desires and interests should be lost in His will.” — Ellen G. White, Gospel Workers, p. 219.
“It will only be a little while before Jesus will come to save His children and to give them the finishing touch of immortality … The graves will be opened, and the dead will come forth victorious, crying, ‘O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?’ Our loved ones who sleep in Jesus will come forth clothed with immortality.” — Ellen G. White, Counsels on Stewardship, p. 350.
Discussion Questions:
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Mission Spotlight for September 25
Support for the mission activities of the Seventh-day Adventist church has always been part of the Sabbath School program. This video is Mission Spotlight for this week.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eZgqTYglytE]
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