Our Prayer

Our Prayer

Heavenly Father, I know that I have sinned against You and that my sins separate me from You. I am truly sorry. I now want to turn away from my sinful past and turn to You for forgiveness. Please forgive me, and help me avoid sinning again. I believe that Your Son, Jesus Christ, died for my sins, that He was raised from the dead, is alive, and hears my prayer. I invite Jesus to become my Savior and the Lord of my life, to rule and reign in my heart from this day forward. Please send Your Holy Spirit to help me obey You and to convict me when I sin. I pledge to grow in grace and knowledge of You. My greatest purpose in life is to follow Your example and do Your will for the rest of my life. In Jesus' name I pray, Amen.

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Class Lesson March 1, 2020




HOLY VOCABULARY: 
UNPACKING THE LANGUAGE OF FAITH

Our words have a way of changing over time.

“At first, I thought he was awful, but he turned out to be a nice guy.”

Think you know what that statement means?

Consider the original meaning of these words:

  • Awful. Something full of awe and inspiring reverential wonder.
  • Nice. The word originally referred to something silly or foolish, ignorant or senseless.
  • Guy. This word used to refer to someone frightening or grotesque. Guy Fawkes was part of an attempt to blow up the British Parliament in 1605. Afterwards, the people would burn in effigy – a “Guy Fawkes” or a “Guy”.

Although English vocabulary continues to grow and many words slowly change in meaning, our understanding of some words should never change. Unfortunately, however, it does. When our culture changes the connotations of some words, it can seriously impact our understanding of truth.

In this study, we’re going to recapture the meaning of six key words and phrases in the Bible.

Holy / Lost / Salvation / Faith / Sanctified / Eternal Life


Click Here to Watch Series Promo


It doesn’t matter how our culture uses these words; what matters is how God intended for us to understand them. Their meaning makes all the difference in the world.






THE POINT: God is distinct from and above absolutely everything else.

THE BIBLE MEETS LIFE

“You are one of a kind!”

Depending on who says it, that statement can be a compliment or an insult. When my nanna said it to me, it was always a good thing. She would say, “You’re not like your brother or your mother. Boy, you are unique!” And I always believed her.

It applies to you too. No one is exactly like you. When you put all the pieces together—your physical makeup, your personality, your temperament, your interests—you are truly unique. And God is big enough to put a different print on the fingers of each individual in all of human history!

But you are also somewhat interchangeable. You can donate blood and even certain organs that keep another person alive. Knee and hip replacements are proof that our parts can be replaced. And because of broken bones, many people have metal screws and plates. Many parts of our bodies are interchangeable and replaceable.

Only One is unique and completely unlike any other being in all of creation—the One who created all things. God is truly distinct.















WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?

Isaiah 40:25-26
25 “To whom will you compare me, or who is my equal?” asks the Holy One. 26 Look up and see! Who created these? He brings out the stars by number; he calls all of them by name. Because of his great power and strength, not one of them is missing.

When my kids were young, they loved playing with Play-Doh®. Molding and shaping that squishy stuff, they would form it into the weirdest of shapes and come up with the most extravagant names for their creations. What I thought was just a blue stick or a yellow ball would end up as a main character in their make-believe story; each one had a name, a job, and a role to play in their narrative. And then they would ask me to play. “Daddy, make something with us.” The only thing my finite brain could come up with was a ball and bat.

I could never come up with things as imaginative as they could. My creative juices flowed more like clumpy old motor oil. But my kids always came up with wildly original things. On an infinitely larger scale, the things we “create” are nothing compared with what God creates. Our God is so creative and unique that He is totally unlike and far above anything we could ever think to make. Through the prophet Isaiah, God asked two foundational questions: (1) Who is like me? and (2) Who is equal to me? If we attempt to answer those rhetorical questions with anything but the obvious answer “no one,” then we have not set apart God as holy. We have erroneously set as equals two distinctly differing beings.

Question 2: 
In what settings do you find yourself in awe of God?





Consider who is asking these questions: “the Holy One.” The word holy describes someone or something that is devoted or set apart. For example, at the end of creation, God declared the seventh day holy, meaning it was set apart and different from the other six days (Gen. 2:2-3). “Holy” certainly applies to God, because He is totally separate and unique from anyone and anything else.

Our God is so holy and set apart that Jewish people will not pronounce the covenantal name God told Moses: Yahweh (Ex. 3:13-14), which essentially means I AM. Instead, they will substitute Adonai, which means Lord. Even in most English translations, “Yahweh” is replaced with the word Lord in caps (or lower caps). (See Isa. 40:27.)

If anyone wants to know what makes Him unique, the Holy One says: look and see for yourself. No one but God can bring out the stars, number them, and call them all by name. No other being could have named and known each star. And certainly no one could have made a single star, yet God made each one! God stands alone in this, highlighting just how holy He is. His holiness cannot be undone by anyone or anything.

God’s declaration really puts our own fallible and finite nature into perspective. Our own attempts to be creative look like preschool Play-Doh games alongside God’s creative power. In fact, God created the very elements in the Play-Doh we used to make our childish creations!

He is the Creator. We are the created. If we can keep that in perspective, then we set Him apart in our hearts as holy and acknowledge Him as Master and Creator.

Isaiah 40:27-28
27 Jacob, why do you say, and, Israel, why do you assert: “My way is hidden from the Lord, and my claim is ignored by my God”? 28 Do you not know? Have you not heard? The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of the whole earth. He never becomes faint or weary; there is no limit to his understanding.

God used Isaiah to speak these words of comfort to the Jews. The cause of their murmurings may have been when the Assyrian army was at the door threatening to attack. They didn’t know what to do.

We also know times when we don’t know what to do. It is easy for us to complain when we’re scared or don’t know what the future holds. We grumble in our uncertainty and search for answers—but we do so with no clear direction of where to look for the right answer. Too often we have more than enough voices offering us an answer, but we lack the wisdom to hear the correct response above all their noise.

We have only one voice worth listening to: God. God is set apart from all other voices because He is the only One who knows all things and has wisdom about the right course of action. He is holy in His wisdom. His knowledge is unmatched in all the world.

If God has the wisdom to create the whole earth, the wisdom to create an ecosystem that keeps nature in balance, and the wisdom to create the human body with all its intricacies, He certainly can handle all of our questions and concerns. We need to be more like toddlers, asking questions freely and constantly. Instead, we’re too often like teenagers, no longer asking anything because they think they know it all.

How can God know all that is going on in my life and the direction my life is heading? When such questions arise in our minds, we’re doing what the Jews did when they wondered if God had forgotten about them or had no direction for them. Even when we are experiencing those “dry seasons” when we wonder if God has forgotten about us or has any direction for us, God is present, He knows us, and He knows what we need. That is why He is God and we are not. We cannot even begin to fathom His understanding. He never tires or grows weary of our question and needs. God is without equal in His knowledge, and His infinite wisdom points to His holiness.

Question 3: 
When have you felt that God was unaware or uninvolved in your circumstances?






Isaiah 40:29-31
29 He gives strength to the faint and strengthens the powerless. 30 Youths may become faint and weary, and young men stumble and fall, 31 but those who trust in the Lord will renew their strength; they will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not become weary, they will walk and not faint.

Facing our weaknesses is not just about physical limitations. We can struggle spiritually. We can feel weak when it comes to maintaining good relationships, struggling with temptation, or enduring difficulties at home or work. We may want to do the right thing, but we can’t stand on our own. Thankfully, God can sustain us. In fact, God is the only One who can sustain us. To sustain means to strengthen or support mentally or physically. And we all need to be strengthened and supported, even when we are young. No one can sustain himself nonstop; we all have limits.

But we don’t have to remain held down by our limitations. We can renew our strength when we confidently look to God and His Word to fill us. We can rest in the truth that God is all we need. “He gives strength to the faint and strengthens the powerless” (v. 29).

Verse 31 gives the meat to the promise of God’s sustaining power: “Those who trust in the Lord will renew their strength.” The Hebrew word qavah, translated “trust,” is a rich word. It captures the idea of a sure confidence that what God says will happen. Trust is a confident and eager expectation that God will come through. Trust is fully leaning on His Word.

So when we trust God to sustain us, we not only renew our strength, but we rise to new heights! We “will soar on wings like eagles.” We don’t just survive in this life; we thrive. All this happens because of the God we serve. God is holy in that He is the only One who can sustain us and provide what we need at just the right time and in just the right measure. He truly is without equal, and we can stand when we rest in His holiness.

Question 4: 
When have you felt especially sustained or supported by God?



Question 5: 
How can God use our group to help us soar, run, and walk in our
spiritual journey?




Engage

HOLY, HOLY, HOLY
In the space below, draw a picture that captures what you see when you think of God’s holiness. Then write a prayer of praise to the One who alone is holy.















LIVE IT OUT

In light of the holiness of God, how will you live this week?

Choose one of the following applications:

  • Thank Him. Thank God for His uniqueness and holiness. Thank Him for His incredible power, infinite wisdom, and gracious sustaining work in your life.                                                          
  • Trust Him. Only God has the power and wisdom to save you, help you, and sustain you. Consider any areas of life where you might have questioned Him or relied more on yourself. Commit to trusting Him with all your life.                                                                                                           
  • Be holy. God is holy, and He calls us to follow Him and be holy as well. Commit to living a life set apart for Him. Memorize 1 Peter 1:15-16: “But as the one who called you is holy, you also are to be holy in all your conduct; for it is written, Be holy, because I am holy.”


We all have things about us that make us unique, but God is in a league all of His own. Understanding that truth will help us live well knowing He is God and we are not!






Hope to see everyone this Sunday as we start this new series!

In His Love,

David & Susan

Teacher Notes:



Words change all the time and over time. Often origins are forgotten. So, what are some words from long ago that carry a very different meaning today?








  1. Hook up.  “Hook up” used to mean getting some kind of device or service or appliance up and running, i.e. “hook up cable television.” Today, it also means “hooking up” with someone to have sex or just “hooking up” with someone as in meeting up.
  2. Bad. “Bad” used to describe someone who’d done something wrong or something that was poor in quality. Today, it also means “good” or “great” when used as slang. (And “breaking bad” means to challenge conventions and defy authority.)
  3. Gay. “Gay” used to mean merry or happy, i.e. “don we now our gay apparel.” Today, it is usually associated with being homosexual as in “gay marriage.”
  4. Sick... now is a good thing. “Sick” used to mean ill. Today, it also means something is really amazing.
  5. Backlog meant the biggest log in the fire during colonial times. Today, it means a reserve or a pile of work you still need to plow through.
  6. Message me! wouldn’t have made sense a few years ago... like ‘Letter me’?”
  7. Cell used to mean jail! Or a tiny part of your body. Today, of course, it’s also what you call your phone.
  8. Web use to mean a network of fine threads constructed by a spider from fluid secreted by its spinnerets, used to catch its prey. Now it refers to the internet.


In this study, we’re going to recapture the meaning of six key words and phrases in the Bible.
Holy / Lost / Salvation / Faith / Sanctified / Eternal Life

It doesn’t matter how our culture uses these words; what matters is how God intended for us to understand them. Their meaning makes all the difference in the world.


Our series opens this morning with a word that describes something about someone that is unique and completely unlike any other in all of creation—the word is HOLY.


What does the word HOLY mean to you?
  • Different, set apart, sacred, referenced, hallowed, sanctified, consecrated


How have we watered down the word HOLY?
  • Not as reverenced as it once was – God’s name, Bible, worship, prayer, Sunday.
  • Do we honor and keep the Sabbath as we should?


Why would our lesson say that the holiness of God is the most difficult of all God’s attributes to explain?
  • Partly because it is one of His essential attributes that is not shared, inherently, by man. We are created in God’s image, and we can share many of His attributes, to a much lesser extent, of course—love, mercy, faithfulness, etc. But some of God’s attributes, such as omnipresence, omniscience, and omnipotence, will never be shared by created beings. Similarly, holiness is not something that we will possess as an inherent part of our nature; we only become holy in relationship to Christ. It is an imputed holiness. Only in Christ do we “become the righteousness of God” (2 Corinthians 5:21). God’s holiness is what separates Him from all other beings, what makes Him separate and distinct from everything else. God’s holiness is more than just His perfection or sinless purity; it is the essence of His “other-ness,” His transcendence. God’s holiness embodies the mystery of His awesomeness and causes us to gaze in wonder at Him as we begin to comprehend just a little of His majesty.
  • In the vision Isaiah saw of God’s throne room, he heard the angel cry, “Holy, holy, holy” (Isaiah 6:3). God, he proclaimed, is holy. “Different, different, different.” Totally different. That’s what the angels, then and now, want the universe to know. God is not the same as His creation. Though He made us like Him in some respects (Gen. 1:26), and though He calls us to rise to His level (1 Pet. 1:16) still, there will always be a gulf between who God is and who we are (Isaiah 55:8-11). God is unique. There is no other like Him.



Turn with me to Isaiah:

Isaiah 40:25-26
25 “To whom will you compare me, or who is my equal?” asks the Holy One. 26 Look up and see! Who created these? He brings out the stars by number; he calls all of them by name. Because of his great power and strength, not one of them is missing.

In what ways is God beyond any kind of comparison?

1.     God is without equal as our Creator.
  • God is without equal in ability, strength, and power; hence, the Holy One.
  • If God knows the stars by name, He surely knows us who are made in His image.



Isaiah 40:27-28
27 Jacob, why do you say, and, Israel, why do you assert: “My way is hidden from the Lord, and my claim is ignored by my God”? 28 Do you not know? Have you not heard? The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of the whole earth. He never becomes faint or weary; there is no limit to his understanding.

God used Isaiah to speak these words of comfort to the Jews. They felt like God was unaware or uninvolved in their circumstance. It may have been when the Assyrian army was at the door threatening to attack. They didn’t know what to do.


When have you felt that God was unaware or uninvolved in your circumstances?

Have you had moments that you felt God was unaware or uninvolved in your circumstances? Ever felt like God is nowhere to be found?

2.     God is without equal in His understanding.
  • In moments of despair, disappointment, or distress, we may wonder if God has forgotten us; He has not.
  • God is always just and acts in our best interests, even when He disciplines us.
  • What we have experienced and learned about God in the past can encourage us in the present and be counted on in the future.


We all have times when we don’t know what to do. We’re scared and don’t know what the future may hold. We search for answers—but we do so with no clear direction of where to look for the right answer. Too often we have more than enough voices offering us an answer, but we lack the wisdom to hear the correct response above all their noise.

How many times do we listen to the voice of reason instead of God’s voice of promise?

Promise + Faith = Blessing


When did Abraham see the ram?
  • When he looked up – many times we can’t see how God has provided for us because we keep looking at our problem instead of looking up.


We have only one voice worth listening to: God. God is set apart from all other voices because He is the only One who knows all things and has wisdom about the right course of action. He is holy in His wisdom. His understanding is unmatched in all the world.

How can God know all that is going on in my life and the direction my life is heading?
When such questions arise in our minds, we’re doing what the Jews did when they wondered if God had forgotten about them or had no direction for them. Even when we are experiencing those “dry seasons” when we wonder if God has forgotten about us or has any direction for us, God is present, He knows us, and He knows what we need. That is why He is God and we are not. We cannot even begin to fathom His understanding. He never tires or grows weary of our question and needs. God is without equal in His understanding.


Someone read:

Isaiah 40:29-31
29 He gives strength to the faint and strengthens the powerless. 30 Youths may become faint and weary, and young men stumble and fall, 31 but those who trust in the Lord will renew their strength; they will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not become weary, they will walk and not faint.

How would you explain the idea that God gives strength to the faint and strengthens the powerless?

3.     God is without equal as our Sustainer.
  • God gives power to the weak and weary.
  • Hoping in the Lord is the key to receiving God’s strength and power.
  • God strengthens us to soar to the heights of victory, but also to walk the steady gait of daily living.

To sustain means to strengthen or support mentally or physically. And we all need to be strengthened and supported, even when we are young. No one can sustain himself nonstop; we all have limits.

But we don’t have to remain held down by our limitations. We can renew our strength when we confidently look to God and His Word to fill us. We can rest in the truth that God is all we need. “He gives strength to the faint and strengthens the powerless” (v. 29).

Verse 31 gives the meat to the promise of God’s sustaining power: “Those who trust in the Lord will renew their strength.” The Hebrew word qavah, translated “trust,” is a rich word. It captures the idea of a sure confidence that what God says will happen. Trust is a confident and eager expectation that God will come through. Trust is fully leaning on His Word.

So when we trust God to sustain us, we not only renew our strength, but we rise to new heights! We “will soar on wings like eagles.” We don’t just survive in this life; we thrive. All this happens because of the God we serve. God is holy in that He is the only One who can sustain us and provide what we need at just the right time and in just the right measure. He truly is without equal, and we can stand when we rest in His holiness.

We all have things about us that make us unique, but God is in a league all of His own. Understanding that truth will help us live well knowing He is God and we are not!

THE POINT: God is distinct from and above absolutely everything else.




Question: What does it mean that God is holy, holy, holy?

The phrase “holy, holy, holy” appears twice in the Bible, once in the Old Testament (Isaiah 6:3) and once in the New (Revelation 4:8). Both times, the phrase is spoken or sung by heavenly creatures, and both times it occurs in the vision of a man who was transported to the throne of God: first by the prophet Isaiah and then by the apostle John. Before addressing the three-fold repetition of God’s holiness, it’s important to understand what exactly is meant by God’s holiness.

Isaiah was a firsthand witness of God’s holiness in his vision described in Isaiah 6. Even though Isaiah was a prophet of God and a righteous man, his reaction to the vision of God’s holiness was to be aware of his own sinfulness and to despair for his life (Isaiah 6:5). Even the angels in God’s presence, those who were crying, “Holy, holy, holy is the LORD Almighty,” covered their faces and feet with four of their six wings. Covering the face and feet no doubt denotes the reverence and awe inspired by the immediate presence of God (Exodus 3:4–5). The seraphim stood covered, as if concealing themselves as much as possible, in recognition of their unworthiness in the presence of the Holy One. And if the pure and holy seraphim exhibit such reverence in the presence of the Lord, with what profound awe should we, polluted and sinful creatures, presume to draw near to Him! The reverence shown to God by the angels should remind us of our own presumption when we rush thoughtlessly and irreverently into His presence, as we often do because we do not understand His holiness.

John’s vision of the throne of God in Revelation 4 was similar to that of Isaiah. Again, there were living creatures around the throne crying, “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty” (Revelation 4:8) in reverence and awe of the Holy One. John goes on to describe these creatures giving glory and honor and reverence to God continually around His throne. Interestingly, John’s reaction to the vision of God in His throne is different from Isaiah’s. There is no record of John falling down in terror and awareness of his own sinful state, perhaps because John had already encountered the risen Christ at the beginning of his vision (Revelation 1:17). Christ had placed His hand upon John and told him not to be afraid. In the same way, we can approach the throne of grace if we have the hand of Christ upon us in the form of His righteousness, exchanged for our sin at the cross (2 Corinthians 5:21).

But why the three-fold repetition “holy, holy, holy” (called the trihagion)? The repetition of a name or an expression three times was quite common among the Jews. In Jeremiah 7:4, the Jews are represented by the prophet as saying, “The temple of the Lord” three times, expressing their intense confidence in their own worship, even though it was hypocritical and corrupt. Jeremiah 22:29, Ezekiel 21:27, and 2 Samuel 18:33 contain similar three-fold expressions of intensity. Therefore, when the angels around the throne call or cry to one another, “Holy, holy, holy,” they are expressing with force and passion the truth of the supreme holiness of God, that essential characteristic which expresses His awesome and majestic nature.

In addition, the trihagion expresses the triune nature of God, the three Persons of the Godhead, each equal in holiness and majesty. Jesus Christ is the Holy One who would not “see decay” in the grave, but would be resurrected to be exalted at the right hand of God (Acts 2:26; 13:33-35). Jesus is the “Holy and Righteous One” (Acts 3:14) whose death on the cross allows us to stand before the throne of our holy God unashamed. The third Person of the trinity—the Holy Spirit—by His very name denotes the importance of holiness in the essence of the Godhead.

Finally, the two visions of the angels around the throne crying, “Holy, holy, holy,” clearly indicates that God is the same in both testaments. Often, we think of the God of the Old Testament as a God of wrath and the God of the New Testament as a God of love. But Isaiah and John present a unified picture of our holy, majestic, awesome God who does not change (Malachi 3:6), who is the same yesterday, today and forever (Hebrews 13:8), and “with whom is no variableness nor shadow of turning” (James 1:17). God’s holiness is eternal, just as He is eternal.














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