Skip to main content
Home
MALINA (Malgaches adventistes de Lyon intéressés par l'avenir)

[EN] Navigation principale

  • Sabbath School Day
  • Sabbath School Week
  • Sabbath School Last Week
  • Sabbath School Next Week
  • Radio AWR

Breadcrumb

  1. Home

Further Thought

Date
Friday 18 July 2025

Read Ellen G. White, “The Plagues of Egypt,” pp. 257–265, in Patriarchs and Prophets.

Look at how badly things started off for Moses and his people after Moses first approached Pharaoh.

“The king, thoroughly roused, suspected the Israelites of a design to revolt from his service. Disaffection was the result of idleness; he would see that no time was left them for dangerous scheming. And he at once adopted measures to tighten their bonds and crush out their independent spirit. The same day orders were issued that rendered their labor still more cruel and oppressive. The most common building material of that country was sun-dried brick; the walls of the finest edifices were made of this, and then faced with stone; and the manufacture of brick employed great numbers of the bondmen. Cut straw being intermixed with the clay, to hold it together, large quantities of straw were required for the work; the king now directed that no more straw be furnished; the laborers must find it for themselves, while the same amount of brick should be exacted.

“This order produced great distress among the Israelites throughout the land. The Egyptian taskmasters had appointed Hebrew officers to oversee the work of the people, and these officers were responsible for the labor performed by those under their charge. When the requirement of the king was put in force, the people scattered themselves throughout the land, to gather stubble instead of straw; but they found it impossible to accomplish the usual amount of labor. For this failure the Hebrew officers were cruelly beaten.”—Ellen G. White, Patriarchs and Prophets, p. 258.

Discussion Questions:

Think of a time that, as you heeded God’s call in your life, things did not go well, or certainly did not start off well. What lessons have you learned over time from that experience?

Tell others how God intervened in your life when you prayed for His help or when you did not expect it. How can we believe in God’s goodness when bad things happen, even to those who trust the Lord?

What would you say to someone who declares, “I do not know the Lord”? However, suppose the person said it, not in a way of defiance, but as a simple fact about his or her life? What could you do to help him or her know the Lord and explain to the person why it’s important that he or she do so?

Supplemental EGW Notes

Testimonies for the Church, vol. 3, pp. 293–303.
The Ministry of Healing, pp. 474–478.\

The above quotations are taken from Ellen G. White Notes for the Sabbath School Lessons, published by Pacific Press Publishing Association. Used by permission.

Sabbath School Week

Sat 30 Aug 2025
The Covenant and the Blueprint
Sun 31 Aug 2025
The Book and the Blood
Mon 01 Sep 2025
Seeing God
Tue 02 Sep 2025
Power to Obey
Wed 03 Sep 2025
In the Midst of His People
Thu 04 Sep 2025
Filled With the Spirit of God

Sabbath School Last Week

Sat 23 Aug 2025
Living the Law
Sun 24 Aug 2025
The Code of the Covenant
Mon 25 Aug 2025
More Laws
Tue 26 Aug 2025
God’s Original Plan
Wed 27 Aug 2025
An Eye for an Eye
Thu 28 Aug 2025
Vengeance
Fri 29 Aug 2025
Further Thought
Sat 30 Aug 2025
The Covenant and the Blueprint

Sabbath School Next Week

Monthly archive

  • July 2024 (33)
  • August 2024 (31)
  • September 2024 (27)
  • October 2024 (32)
  • November 2024 (30)
  • December 2024 (27)
  • January 2025 (31)
  • February 2025 (28)
  • March 2025 (28)
  • April 2025 (30)

Pagination

  • 1
  • Next page
Powered by Drupal