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Lesson 9february 24

This document provides the weekly lesson for a Sabbath school on offerings of gratitude. It discusses how God is a giving God, as seen in His sacrifice of Jesus, and how we should reflect His giving character through our offerings. The lesson examines principles of storing up treasure in heaven rather than on earth, being stewards of God's grace, giving our best offerings out of gratitude for what God has given us, and ensuring the proper motives of love are behind our giving. It encourages generous giving from our means, time and talents to live our faith and reveal God's character.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views8 pages

Lesson 9february 24

This document provides the weekly lesson for a Sabbath school on offerings of gratitude. It discusses how God is a giving God, as seen in His sacrifice of Jesus, and how we should reflect His giving character through our offerings. The lesson examines principles of storing up treasure in heaven rather than on earth, being stewards of God's grace, giving our best offerings out of gratitude for what God has given us, and ensuring the proper motives of love are behind our giving. It encourages generous giving from our means, time and talents to live our faith and reveal God's character.

Uploaded by

Andersson Avila
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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LESSON 9February 24-March 2

Offerings of Gratitud

SABBATH AFTERNOON

Read for This Week’s Study: Matt. 6:19-21; Eph. 2:8; 1 Pet. 4:10; Luke 7:37-47; 2 Cor. 8:8-
15; 2 Cor. 9:6, 7.

Memory Text: “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever
believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life” (John 3:16, NKJV).

Our God is a giving God; this great truth is seen most powerfully in the sacrifice of Jesus. “For
God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should
not perish but have everlasting life” (John 3:16, NKJV). Or in this verse: “If you then, being evil,
know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your heavenly Father give the
Holy Spirit to those who ask Him!” (Luke 11:13, NKJV).

God gives and gives; it’s His character. Thus, we who seek to reflect that character need to give
as well. It’s hard to imagine more of a contradiction in terms than that of “a selfish Christian.”

One way to give back what we have been given is through offerings. Our offerings present an
opportunity to express gratitude and love. On the day that Jesus welcomes the redeemed into
heaven we will see those who accepted His grace, and realize that those acceptances were made
possible by our sacrificial offerings.

This week we will look at important aspects of offerings. Giving generously, whether from means,
time, or talent, is a powerful means of living our faith and revealing the character of the God
whom we serve.

Study this week’s lesson to prepare for Sabbath, March 3.

SUNDAYFebruary 25
“Where Your Treasure Is”

Read Matthew 6:19-21. Though we are so familiar with these texts, how can we nevertheless
be free from the powerful hold earthly treasures can have on us? See Col. 3:1, 2.

“‘For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also” (Matt. 6:21, NKJV) is an appeal from
Jesus. The full magnitude of this statement can be seen from the preceding two verses, which
contrast storing our treasures on earth with storing them in heaven. Three words describe earth:
moths, rust, and thieves (see Matt. 6:19), all of which imply just how temporal and transient our
earthly treasure is. Who hasn’t learned just how quickly earthly things can vanish? “On earth
everything is unstable, uncertain, and insecure; it is subject to decay, destruction, stealing, and
loss. Heaven is the opposite: everything is eternal, durable, secure, and imperishable. In heaven
there is no loss.” - C. Adelina Alexe, “Where Your Heart Belongs”, in Beyond Blessings, edited by
Nikolaus Satelmajer, (Nampa, Idaho: Pacific Press Publishing Association, 2013), p. 22.

Look at your possessions. Even if you have only a very few, sooner or later most of them will be
thrown away. The exception might be an heirloom. But a wise steward should be concerned with
putting treasures in heaven for safekeeping. There, unlike here, you don’t have to worry about
recessions, thieves, or even plunderers.

Matthew 6:19-21 contains one of the most important concepts on stewardship. Your treasure
pulls, tugs, coerces, draws, demands, allures, and desires to control your heart. In the material
world your heart follows your treasure, so where your treasure is remains vitally important. The
more we focus on earthly needs and gains, the harder it is to think on heavenly matters.

Professing belief in God but keeping our treasure here on earth is hypocritical. Our actions must
agree with our words. In other words, we see our treasures on earth by sight, but we must see our
offerings as treasures in heaven by faith (2 Cor. 5:7). Though we, of course, need to be practical
and provide for our needs (even retirement), it’s crucial to always keep the big picture, eternity,
in mind.

Read Hebrews 10:34. What important point is Paul making here about the contrast between
treasure on earth and treasure in heaven?

MONDAYFebruary 26
Stewards of the Grace of God

What , according to Ephesians 2:8, is something else we have been given by God?

Grace is “undeserved favor.” It is a gift you do not deserve. God has poured out His grace on this
planet and, if we would simply not reject it, His grace will reach down and transform our lives,
now and for eternity. All the wealth and power of heaven is embodied in the gift of grace (2 Cor.
8:9). Even angels are amazed at this ultimate gift (1 Pet. 1:12).

No question: of all that God gives us, the grace given us in Jesus Christ is the most precious gift of
all. Without grace, we would be without hope. Sin’s doleful impact on humanity is too great for
humans ever to free themselves from it. Even obedience to God’s law couldn’t bring to us life. “Is
the law then against the promises of God? God forbid: for if there had been a law given which
could have given life, verily righteousness should have been by the law” (Gal. 3:21). After all, if
any law could save us, it would be God’s law. But Paul says that even that can’t do it. If we are to
be saved, it would have to be by grace.

Read 1 Peter 4:10. How is stewardship related to grace? Explain how giving to God and to
others displays His grace.
Peter said that as we have received the gift of God’s grace, we are to be “stewards of the
manifold grace of God” (1 Pet. 4:10) in return. That is, God has given us gifts; therefore, we need
to give back from what we have been given. What we have received, by grace, is not just for
pleasing and benefitting ourselves, but for the furtherance of the gospel. Freely we have been
given (which is what grace is all about); freely, then, we need to give every way we can.

Think about all that you have been given by God. In what ways can you, then, be a steward of
the grace you have been so freely given?

TUESDAYFebruary 27
Our Best Offering

Read Luke 7:37-47. What does this story teach us about the proper motivation for offerings
to God?

Mary entered the room and saw Jesus reclining at the table. She broke the alabaster box of
expensive nard and poured it on Him. Some thought her act was improper, considering that the life
she lived was illicit.

But Mary had been set free from demon possession (Luke 8:2). Then, after witnessing the
resurrection of Lazarus, she became overwhelmed with gratitude. Her perfume was the most
valuable possession she owned, and it was her way of showing thankfulness to Jesus.

This story captures what should truly be our motivation in the giving of our offerings: gratitude.
After all, what other response should we have to the priceless gift of the grace of God? His
generosity also prompts us to give, and when coupled with our gratitude, both make up the
ingredients of meaningful offerings, including our time, talents, treasures, and bodies.

Read Exodus 34:26, Leviticus 22:19-24, and Numbers 18:29. While the context is completely
different from today, what principle can we take from these texts in regard to our offerings?

Our best offerings may seem insufficient in our eyes, but they are significant in God’s. Giving God
the best shows that we put Him first in our lives. We don’t give offerings in order to receive favors;
instead, we give what we have out of gratitude for what we have been given in Christ Jesus.

“Entire devotion and benevolence, prompted by grateful love, will impart to the smallest
offering, the willing sacrifice, a divine fragrance, making the gift of priceless value. But, after
willingly yielding to our Redeemer all that we can bestow, be it ever so valuable to us, if we view
our debt of gratitude to God as it really is, all that we may have offered will seem to us very
insufficient and meager. But angels take these offerings, which to us seem poor, and present them
as a fragrant offering before the throne, and they are accepted.” - Ellen G. White, Testimonies for
the Church, vol. 3, p. 397.

WEDNESDAYFebruary 28
The Motives of the Heart

In an earlier lesson we noted the story of the widow’s generous offering. Though minuscule in
comparison to other offerings, it was generous because it showed the true nature of her character
and heart, prompting Jesus to say, “This poor widow has put in more than all” (Luke 21:3, NKJV).

God alone (James 4:12) knows our true motives (Prov. 16:2; see also 1 Cor. 4:5). It is possible to
have the right actions with the wrong motives. To give out of abundance does not require much
faith, but to give sacrificially for the good of others can indeed say something very powerful about
our hearts.

Read 2 Corinthians 8:8-15. What is Paul talking about here in regard to giving and the
motives for giving? What principles can we take from these texts regarding stewardship?

Whatever your motive for giving may be, it is on a continuum that ranges from ego to altruism.
The fight on this continuum between selfishness and giving is fought more frequently than any
other spiritual fight. Selfishness will chill a heart that was once on fire for God. The problem comes
when we let selfishness into our Christian experience. That is, we find ways to justify our
selfishness and do it in the name of Christ.

The bottom line comes down to one word: love. And love cannot be manifested without self-
denial, a willingness to give of oneself, even sacrificially, for the good of others.

Unless God’s love is reflected in our lives, our giving will not reflect God’s love. A selfish heart
tends to love only itself. We must ask the Lord to “circumcise the foreskin of [our] heart” (Deut.
10:16, NKJV) so that we can learn to love as we have been loved.

Love, the basis of all true beneficence, captures the sum of all Christian benevolence. God’s love
directed toward us inspires us to love in return, and it is truly the supreme motive for giving.

What’s wrong, if anything, with a freewill offering given more out of a sense of obligation than
a sense of love?

THURSDAYMarch 1
The Experience of Giving

If Christ came to reveal to us the character of God, one thing should be clear by now: God loves
us, and He wants only the best for us. He asks us to do only what would be for our own benefit,
never to our detriment. This would include, too, His call for us to be generous and cheerful givers
of what we have been given. The freewill and generous offerings we give are as much a benefit to
ourselves, the giver, as they can be to those who receive them. Only those who give this way can
know for themselves just how much more blessed it is to give than to receive.

Read 2 Corinthians 9:6, 7. How does this text so encapsulate what giving should be about?

Giving a generous offering can and should be a very personal, spiritual act. It is a work of faith,
an expression of gratitude for what we have been given in Christ.

And, as with any act of faith, giving only increases faith, for “faith without works is dead” (James
2:20). And there is no better way to increase faith than to live out our faith, which means doing
things that grow out of our faith, that spring from it. As we give, freely and generously, we are in
our own way reflecting the character of Christ. We are learning more about what God is like by
experiencing Him in our own acts. Thus, giving like this only builds trust in God and the opportunity
to “taste and see that the LORD is good; blessed is the man who trusts in Him!” (Ps. 34:8, NKJV).

“It will be seen that the glory shining in the face of Jesus is the glory of self-sacrificing love. In
the light from Calvary it will be seen that the law of self-renouncing love is the law of life for earth
and heaven; that the love which ‘seeketh not her own’ has its source in the heart of God; and that
in the meek and lowly One is manifested the character of Him who dwelleth in the light which no
man can approach unto.” - Ellen G. White, The Desire of Ages, p. 20.

In what ways have you experienced the reality of how faith grows through giving freely and
generously out of what you have been given?

FRIDAYMarch 2

Further Thought: “The spirit of liberality is the spirit of Heaven. The spirit of selfishness is the
spirit of Satan. Christ's self-sacrificing love is revealed upon the cross. He gave all that he had, and
then gave himself, that man might be saved. The cross of Christ appeals to the benevolence of
every follower of the blessed Saviour. The principle illustrated there is to give, give. This carried
out in actual benevolence and good works is the true fruit of the Christian life. The principle of
worldlings is to get, get, and thus they expect to secure happiness; but carried out in all its
bearings, the fruit is misery and death.” - Ellen G. White, in Advent Review and Sabbath Herald,
Oct. 17, 1882.

Discussion Questions:

1. What is it about selfishness that makes it so contrary to the spirit of Christ? What are
conscious things that we can do to help protect ourselves from what is such a natural
attitude for a fallen human being?
2. “So let each one give as he purposes in his heart, not grudgingly or of necessity; for God
loves a cheerful giver” (2 Cor. 9:7, NKJV). The Greek word translated as “cheerful”
appears only once in the New Testament and is the word from which we get the English
“hilarious”. What should that tell us about our attitude in giving?
3. Make a list of all that you have been given in Christ. Pray about what you write down.
What should this list teach us about why we should give in response to what we have
been given? At the same time, what does your list teach you about how even our best
gifts, given for the best motives, can seem so paltry in the face of what we have
received?
4. Why is selfishness a guaranteed way to make yourself miserable?
5. Think about someone in your own church family right now who is in some kind of need.
What could you do, even right now, that could reach out and help minister to this person
or persons? What can you do, even if it takes a painful sacrifice on your part?

INSIDE STORY~

Tragedy, Cocaine, and Jesus

By Andrew McChesney, Adventist Mission

Mervan Jaikaran, a machinery operator at a wood factory on the Caribbean nation of Trinidad and
Tobago, was unconscious for four days and hospitalized for three months after a devastating car
accident at the age of 7.

Jaikaran had been walking along the side of the road when the car struck him and dragged him
for 50 yards (45 meters), ripping off the side of his face and inflicting deep back injuries.

“Mommy says I was dead and brought back to life”, said Jaikaran, now 52, whose left side of the
face is badly scarred. “I say, ‘Mommy, I was dead in sin, but Jesus brought me back to life.”

Jaikaran, one of nine siblings, was raised by a single Seventh-day Adventist mother after his
father deserted the family. At the age of 11, he quit school, unable to study because of brain
damage sustained in the accident. He started smoking and drinking at 14, and eventually expanded
to marijuana and cocaine. He married at 28 and became the father of four.

But Jaikaran kept using drugs, and his wife finally left with the children.

Jaikaran said he desperately wanted to change. One day, he cried out: “Jesus, I want to change.
But I don’t want my wife’s help. I don’t want my Mommy’s help. I want Your help.”

Hours later, he received a call from the director of an Adventist-operated drug rehabilitation
center called Love Until Ready Center. He subsequently learned that his sister had contacted an
Adventist pastor for help, and the pastor had called the rehab center.

Jaikaran eagerly checked himself in for treatment. He was 46.

Progress was slow, but he claimed biblical promises daily. His three favorites were: “You will
keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on You, because he trusts in You” (Isaiah 26:3); “I
will not leave you are forsake you” (Joshua 1:5); and “But seek first the kingdom of God and all His
righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you” (Matthew 6:33).

He also prayed for the Lord to bind together his family and bind the family closer to the
Lord.
At the end of the rehab program, Jaikaran’s estranged wife came to pick him up and drive him to
his mother’s house. But when his wife saw he was a new man, she unexpectedly took him home.
Both ended up getting baptized.

These days Jaikaran tells everyone he meets about his love for Jesus. He prays daily, “Lord, give
me some more so I can talk about you.”

“I believe that the Lord brought me into this world so I can be a witness for Him”, he said.
“Nothing is about me. It is all about Him.”

Produced by the General Conference Office of Adventist Mission.


email: info@adventistmission.org website: www.adventistmission.org

All Rights Reserved. No part of the Adult Sabbath School Bible Study Guide may be edited,
altered, modified, adapted, translated, reproduced, or published by any person or entity without
prior written authorization from the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists.

Sabbath School Lesson Ends

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