TEN HOME
STUDY LESSONS
1. There IS a God!
2. God Revealed in Animal Life
3. God Revealed in Man
4. The Creator’s Wisdom
5. God’s Eternal Justice
6. The Creator’s Love
7. Our All-Seeing God
8. God Hears and Cares
9. The Almighty God
10. The Glory of God
THE CREATOR
SERIES
Lesson I There IS a God!
MANY great
scientists of modern times have openly stated their belief in the existence of
a supreme, intelligent Creator, among them, Dr. Albert Einstein. A.
Cressey
Morrison, former President of the New York Academy of Sciences, said, "By
unwavering mathematical law we can prove that our universe was designed and
executed by a great engineering Intelligence." (From the book, "Man
Does Not Stand Alone") We cannot establish the existence of God through
the medium of our five senses.
We can neither
see, feel, smell, taste, nor touch him. While God is invisible to our natural
eyes, we can, nevertheless, discern him in the visible things he has created.
(Ro 1:20) This is accomplished by means of our reasoning faculties. The more we
ponder over the significance of the marvelous things of the material world with
which we are surrounded, the more unwise it seems to deny the existence of a
supreme, intelligent Creator. (Psalm 53:1) We sometimes speak of what a person
has made as being a "creation." Actually, however, man’s ability to
"create" is limited to the use of materials already in existence.
Strictly speaking, man does not create a house; rather, he builds a house,
using materials which have already been created.
But, even the building of a house calls for
plans, specifications, measurements, and the use of proper materials. A
foundation has to be laid and firmly secured. The superstructure must be
properly built upon the foundation. The house needs a roof, and the various
rooms must be built according to a plan and specifications. A house does not
just happen to come into existence. Every house, or any other building,
evidences the work of an intelligent designer and builder. So the earth itself,
the home, or "house" provided for man, also reveals the existence of
a Designer and Builder. (Job 38:4-8) And what great wisdom is displayed in the
Creation of the earth! Think of the ingenious circulatory system by which the
land surfaces of the earth are watered to make possible the growth of
vegetation and food! (Job 38:25-28) What an endless variety there is of trees,
of fruit, of flowers, and all so intricately designed and exquisitely
beautiful!
Man can make an
artificial flower, but he cannot give it life. We can admire the blade of grass
and the mighty trees of the forest, but we cannot create them, nor do we
understand what makes them live. We may plant an acorn in the ground and
discern that later it has grown into a sturdy oak. We can marvel about this,
but cannot explain how it happened. Some may say it is simply nature, but the
wise will say it is an evidence of the existence of nature’s God. (Psalm
107:43) The human mind seems still more hopelessly inadequate when it peers
into the heavens and there, too, sees displayed the mighty works of an
Intelligent Creator. (Psalm 19:1,2) The
astronomer’s telescope reveals the tremendous reaches of the universe and its
countless millions of stars and planets. We know that all these are governed by
fixed laws, and reason tells us that these laws could have been established
only by divine intelligence. If our reason leads us to such a conclusion, then
we will reverence our great Creator and will want to learn all we can about
him, so that we can know him intimately, do his bidding, and copy his ways. (Pr
1:7, Joh 17:3)
STUDENTS’
HELPS for Lesson I
QUESTIONS The following questions are answered in
the preceding short article.
Can you answer
them?
1. What is the thinking of many of our modern scientists
concerning the existence of a supreme, intelligent Creator?
2. Can we establish the existence of God by means of any of
our five senses?
What does the
Bible say?
3. Do humans have the ability to create?
4. How does the need for planning in the building of a
house prove the existence of the Creator?
5. Do any of us know the secret of life?
6. What does reason tell us concerning the laws which
govern the universe?
REFERENCE
MATERIAL "The Divine
Plan of the Ages," Chapter 2 "The New Creation," pages 20-22
SUMMARY OF
IMPORTANT THOUGHTS · We
perceive God through the visible things of his Creation.
· The earth, man’s "house", or
home, was designed by God, the Creator.
· All the
inflexible laws which govern the universe reveal the existence of a Lawgiver.
THE CREATOR
SERIES Lesson II
God Revealed
in Animal Life
THERE is a poem
which states that "only God can make a tree," ("Trees," by
Joyce Kilmer) and this thought is even more conclusive when we think of the
almost countless varieties of trees which God has made. This same
faith-strengthening reasoning can be carried over into the animal kingdom. Only
a supreme, intelligent Creator could produce the myriad varieties of animals,
birds, and fish, and provide the appropriate food and surroundings enabling
them to continue their existence.
The peacock is
noted for its gorgeous plumage, while the ostrich is rather plain in
appearance, although its feathers are much in demand. By comparison with the ostrich,
the peacock moves about quite slowly, but the ostrich is able to run at great
speed. What determines these differences? Reason tells us that here is
displayed the planning and work of an intelligent Creator.
In most cases
the birds and lower animals instinctively exercise great care over their young.
The birds sit on the eggs from which their offspring are hatched. But with the
ostrich it is different. The mother ostrich simply buries her eggs in the sand and then leaves them, evincing no
interest in what might happen thereafter.
The warmth they
need for incubation is in the sunbaked sand. But the eggs are hidden from most
danger, and, unlike most other birds, the mother ostrich is not on hand to
afford protection for her young. (Job 39:13-18) Did this maternal indifference
of the ostrich just happen to be? Oh, that is just a matter of instinct, some
may answer. But why should there be such a variety of instincts in the animal
creation? Besides, what is instinct? The dictionary says that instinct is
"the hereditary factor in behavior." But whence came this hereditary
factor that enables fowl, animal, and fish, to survive?
Reason tells us
that instinct is a creation of God. This is particularly apparent when we
consider the widely variant instincts with which the animal creations have been
endowed. What causes young salmon, after spending four years in the ocean, to
seek and travel up the identical river where they were born, there to spawn and
die? And whence came the instinct which causes some birds to migrate from north
to south, and from south to north, with the changing seasons? How do they know
that it will be warm in the south, and that they would freeze or starve to
death in the north?
Innumerable
pages would be required to call attention to all the fascinating varieties of
instincts displayed throughout the animate creative works of God. To say that
such variety came about by mere chance is to stifle reason and to distort the
good judgment with which we have been endowed by the Creator.
And herein is
another proof of the existence and work of the Creator. The lower animal
creations do not understand why they act as they do; but man has been given the
ability to understand, if he will, and choose his ways. He may go south or
remain north in the winter as he reasons and decides which move to make. Thus
man is set apart from the other animate creations, and this also we see as an
evidence of the existence of a wise and loving Creator. (Job 32:8; also
"The New Creation," pages 55-58)
STUDENTS
HELPS for Lesson II
QUESTIONS The following questions are answered in
the preceding short article.
What do these
answers mean to you?
1. How does the endless variety of life in the animal
kingdom prove the existence of a supreme, intelligent Creator?
2. What determined the great differences of appearance and
abilities between the peacock and the ostrich?
3. What is indicated by the mother ostrich’s lack of
interest in her young, in contrast with the maternal instincts of other birds?
4. What is instinct, and why do the lower animals possess
it?
5. What is the true explanation as to why man is able to
reason rather than to be guided by instinct?
SUMMARY OF
IMPORTANT POINTS ·
Reason tells us
that the great varieties of species found in the animal kingdom, and all fixed,
did not develop by chance but through the guidance of a supreme, intelligent
Creator.
· The instincts of the lower animals are
endowments of a Creator, not the haphazard process of nature.
· One of
the great distinctions between man and the lower animals is seen in the
differences between instinct and reason, both being endowments by the Creator.
THE CREATOR
SERIES Lesson III
God Revealed
in Man
ALL animate and
inanimate things of which man has knowledge proclaim to reason that there is a
God. The intricacies of the life principle are quite beyond the ability of the
human mind fully to understand. This is true in the earthly realm from the
lowest form of shellfish right on up to man, the highest order of animate life.
This is particularly true of man, whose body, animated by the breath of life,
is one of the marvels of the universe. (Psalm 139:14,15) And one of the amazing
things about humans is their ability to reason upon available facts and to
reach logical conclusions. We are living in the day of electronic computers.
Data is fed into these computers for the purpose of obtaining certain
information, and in a relatively short space of time they produce the answers sought. It is claimed by authorities
that an electronic computer capable of reaching all the conclusions potentially
possible to the human brain, would need to be as large as the Empire State
building in New York City. And this electronic marvel can process data only in
response to facts fed into it by an intelligent human being.
And yet, how
small is the human brain! Besides, even though a computer can be constructed by
human wisdom to do the mechanical reckoning heretofore done by the brain, it
lacks feelings of any kind. If a computer informs its owner that he has
prospered in business, it registers no joy; if he is bankrupt, it displays no
sorrow.
But in man’s
little brain there is the potential mathematical ability of the most
complicated electronic computer ever built, and a thousand times over, plus a
sympathetic understanding of the implications in the conclusions at which it is
capable of arriving. Could such a capability just happen to function? (Job
38:36) The obvious answer is no, that here is irrefutable proof of the
existence of a supreme, intelligent Creator.
Besides, by
noting the reasoning characteristics of man, as translated into human behavior,
we learn something about the Creator, for the Bible tells us that man was
created in the image of God. (Ge 1:27,28; also "The New Creation,"
page 39) All Creation reveals the intelligence of the Creator and his ability
to reason. (Isa 1:18) Man’s
puny mind, while not able to understand a great deal about God’s Creation is,
nevertheless, able to reason upon the basis of his limited knowledge and to
reach the conclusion that there is a God.
Man is fallen
and imperfect. (Psalm 51:5) Many humans are even degraded and debauched.
However, there are many noble specimens of humanity all around us, and in these
we see the qualities of sympathy, justice, and love. Since man was created in
the image of God, we therefore conclude that the Creator is sympathetic, just,
and loving.
Man has also
been endowed with the ability to conceive the idea of a great God and Creator
over all. This not only sets man apart from all the lower forms of animal life,
but is an additional proof that he is a created being, and not an accident of
an unguided evolutionary process. From the dawn of Biblical history man has
been a worshipping creature, (Ge 4:3-5) and among the truly wise of the human
race, is no less so today. Prof. Pasteur, the noted bacteriologist, testified
that he prayed while he worked. ("The New Creation," page 44,
paragraphs 1 and 2)
STUDENTS’
HELPS for Lesson III
QUESTIONS These questions are based on the foregoing brief discussion of the
manner in which man, as a created being, is himself one of the proofs of the
existence of the Creator. Can you answer them?
1. What is implied by the fact that the intricacies of life
are quite beyond the ability of human wisdom to understand?
2. How does the human brain compare in ability with modern
electronic computers? Give an example.
3. What characteristic of the human brain is totally absent
in the mechanism of an electronic computer?
4. What can we learn about God by noting the reasoning and
behavior of the noble-minded among the human race?
5. What is indicated by man’s inherent desire to worship a
higher power than himself?
SUMMARY OF
IMPORTANT THOUGHTS
While man’s
ability to reason and make decisions is in itself an evidence that he is the
handiwork of a divine Creator, even more so is his ability to react emotionally
to his reasoning and to the circumstances with which he is surrounded.
· Since,
as the Bible declares, man was created in the image of God, all the kindly qualities
of the noble-minded reflect, in more or less degree, the goodness and love our
Creator.
THE CREATOR
SERIES Lesson IV
The
Creator’s Wisdom
IN MYRIAD ways
God’s wisdom is displayed in his creative works. One of these is the occasional
exception to the laws by which all inanimate things of creation are governed.
For example, the general law is that substances expand with heat and contract
with cold. An exception to this is in the freezing of water. If water
contracted as it froze, ice would then be heavier than water, and the end of
winter throughout half of the earth would find the rivers and lakes solid cakes
of ice. But God’s exception to this law of nature averts such a catastrophe.
Wisdom beyond
our comprehension is displayed in all created things. We are particularly
interested in divine wisdom as we see it in operation in connection with his
provisions for man, whom he created in his image and to be king of earth.
("The New Creation," page 39)
One evidence of
this is in the relationship of parents to children. God endowed the lower
animals with certain instincts which
cause them to make essential preparation for their young and to care for
them for a short time after they are born; but this instinct is devoid of
lasting interest in, and love for, the offspring.
How different
in the case of humans! A human child is helpless when it is born. It needs the
loving and tender care of its mother and generally gets it. The love of both
parents for their child generally increases, and the child learns to appreciate
and love its parents. God’s wisdom designed it so, and it is related to the
fact that we are created in the image of God. The Creator loves his children
and is pleased when they realize their dependence on him, and out of this there
grows love and loyalty. (Isa 49:15; Psalm 103:13) God’s wisdom is displayed by permitting man to be
subjected to temptation, as he was in the Garden of Eden. The universe is
filled by created things compelled to obey the Creator’s law. The stars are
given no choice as to the orbit in which they will travel or how fast they will
revolve in that orbit. But the Creator was not limited to exacting this sort of
obedience. He created man in his own image and gave him a choice between
obedience and disobedience. (Ge 2:16,17; Jos 24:15) God’s wisdom enabled him to
know in advance that, through lack of experience, man would choose the course
of disobedience and thus incur the penalty of death, as had been stipulated.
God’s wisdom decreed that all of Adam’s children would share in this death
condemnation. By this wise arrangement, it was possible for one man—even Jesus
Christ, who was made flesh for this purpose—to redeem from death Adam and his
entire progeny who lost life through and in him. (Ac 15:18; Ro 5:12; I Corinthians
15:21,22) By this wise arrangement, each generation of Adam’s children has had
an opportunity to experience the disastrous results of disobedience to divine
law. Thus far few have known the true significance of their plight, but the
Creator’s wisdom has arranged their awakening from the sleep of death at a time
when the educational program of Christ’s kingdom will be in operation, and then
they will learn. Thus they will, by experience, have learned both good and
evil, and will be in a position to make an intelligent choice between the two.
(Isa 26:9; Isaiah 29:24; also "The Divine Plan
of the Ages," chapter 7)
STUDENTS’
HELPS for Lesson IV
QUESTIONS Here are a few questions based on the
preceding short article pertaining to divine wisdom. How many of them can you
answer?
1. What is one of the exceptions to the laws of nature
which reveals the wisdom of the Creator?
2. How is the wisdom of God displayed in the parental
relationship of humans to their children?
3. Was it wise for God to permit our first parents to be
tempted?
4. If so, can you explain why?
5. When will the human race as a hole have an opportunity
to benefit from the Creator’s wise permission of evil?
SUMMARY OF
IMPORTANT POINTS
The occasional
exception to be noted in nature’s laws is one of the proofs that these laws
were framed by a supreme Lawgiver.
· Parental love for children demonstrates
that man was created in the image of God.
· God’s
wisdom is displayed in permitting man to choose obedience or disobedience, for
it is through the permission of evil that true, free-will obedience to the
Creator is demonstrated and attained.
THE CREATOR
SERIES Lesson V
God’s
Eternal Justice
THROUGHOUT all
the ages of human experience, innocent men, women, and children have suffered.
Is it just for God to permit an innocent infant to be afflicted with a painful
disease and ultimately to die? There are thousands of situations in which the
question of God’s justice is raised. Assuming that God is all-powerful and
therefore able to control human experience, why does he permit the innocent to
suffer? In the absence of a satisfactory answer to this question, some might
well question the existence of God.
The operation
of God’s justice in his dealings with his human creatures can be understood
only in the light of his plan as a whole. One would properly question the
motives of a surgeon who cuts into a human body to remove a malignant growth,
or a diseased organ, were it not known that the objective sought is the
person’s health and well-being. The healthy unaffected organs of the body
might well suffer as the malignancy is
being removed, but those involved understand the reason and are quite willing
to have it so.
The principle
of justice is well illustrated by the balanced apothecary’s scale. With the
scale, the illustration is in equality of weight. In God’s relationship to man,
it is in equality of dealings. The Creator is the source of life and its
blessings, so he has the right to decide the terms upon which these blessings
may be obtained and maintained. (Ac 17:24-28; Job 12:10) Adam was God’s
creation. He owed his life to his Creator.
Adam also owed
obedience to his Creator; and the Creator, in his wisdom, exacted the death
penalty for disobedience, not because he was vindictive, but because it would
result in the greatest good to Adam and to his progeny. (Ge 3:17-19) Think of the havoc that would be wrought if the earth
were to disobey the laws of gravitation by which it is kept in its proper
orbit! So, if man were permitted to live in disobedience to divine law, there
would be no end to the chaos and suffering that would result.
Man was justly
condemned to death. The penalty was death, so if man was to be rescued from
death the demands of divine justice against him must be satisfied.
The Creator’s
wisdom provided the way, which was through Christ, the Redeemer.
Jesus became a
substitute in death for Adam and for the unborn race in his loins when he
sinned. The Bible refers to this as a ransom, or corresponding price. (I
Timothy 2:3-6) While God’s love is involved in this plan, it is his justice
that opens the way for man’s release from sin and death. Meanwhile, the human
race has continued to suffer, the innocent with the guilty. The Just
compensation for this will be in the blessed experiences of the enhanced joy
which will be made available to all as they are restored to life. Then, as they
look back upon the experiences through which they passed during the reign of
sin and death, they will thank God for them; for thereby they will be led to a
more profound appreciation of their loving Creator, whom they will have the
opportunity of obeying and serving forever. (Isa 35:10; Isa 29:24; Re
21:4)
STUDENTS’
HELPS for Lesson V
QUESTIONS Here are some of the questions answered
in the foregoing short article on the topic, "God’s Eternal Justice."
Do you know the plan of God well enough to answer these questions?
1. Why has the suffering of the innocent caused some to
question the existence of God?
2. How only can we understand the operation of God’s
justice in his dealings with the human race?
3. Explain the principle of justice. How is it illustrated
by the apothecary’s scale?
4. Explain the wisdom of the just penalty of death which
resulted from Adam’s disobedience.
5. Explain how justice operates to provide the release of
the human race from death.
6. What compensation will there be for the sufferings of
the human race during the reign of sin and death?
REFERENCE
MATERIAL "The Divine Plan of the Ages,"
pages 149 to 159
SUMMARY OF
IMPORTANT THOUGHTS A proper
understanding of the operation of God’s justice is possible only in the light
of the divine plan of redemption from death.
All life is
dependent upon God, who justly demands the obedience of his intelligent
creatures.
What now
appears unjust in human experiences will be understood and appreciated in the
age of restoration from death.
THE CREATOR
SERIES Lesson VI
The
Creator’s Love
THE great
Creator of the universe dispenses blessings to his earthly creatures with a
lavish hand. His love has made provision for the lower creatures as well as for
man. He takes delight in exercising his loving-kindness throughout the earth,
causing the sun to shine and the rain to fall upon all. These blessings are
available even for those of his human creation who, in their folly, disbelieve
in his existence, and ofttimes blaspheme him. (Mt 5:43-45; Jer 9:23,24) Because
man is sinful and fallen, and because the command to subdue the earth has not
yet been carried out, there are times when human suffering and apparent
unbalances in the material world seem to belie God’s loving interest in his
earthly creatures. It is in such circumstances that we need to understand the
divine plan for the ultimate elimination of all evil in order to see through
the dark circumstances of life.
Man sinned and
brought upon himself the penalty for sin, which is death. God’s love provided
redemption from death through our Lord Jesus Christ. (Ro 6:23; Joh 3:16,17; Ro
5:8; I Joh 4:9-12) God’s gift of his Son to suffer and die for the sin-cursed
and dying race is a most outstanding evidence of his love. No gift has ever
been so great, or so costly to the giver.
While the
Scriptures declare that it was God’s love for the world that caused him to send
his Son to earth to be the Redeemer and Savior of mankind, our appreciation of
that love is enhanced by the assurance given us in the Bible that a full and
complete opportunity is to be given to all mankind to benefit from God’s gift.
Only those who believe will receive everlasting life through Christ, but the
opportunity to believe is not limited to this present short span of imperfect
life. (I Timothy 2:3- 6; also "The Divine Plan of the Ages," pages
104-107) While God’s love is abundantly manifested by the gift of his dear Son,
we see a further evidence of his love in his invitation to believers of the
present age to suffer and die with Jesus that they might live and reign with
him. Through the Holy Spirit these are made sons of God on the divine plane.
(II Peter 1:4; also "The Divine Plan of the Ages," pages 277-282)
This is truly a marvelous manifestation of God’s love. (I Joh 3:1-3) It is beyond the ability of our finite minds
fully to understand the length and breadth and height and depth of God’s love
which provided that some few of the fallen, imperfect members of the human race
should not only be redeemed from death through Jesus but should be called to
joint-heirship in his kingdom; and yet the Scriptures reveal that this is the
divine plan for a "little flock" selected from the world upon the
basis of their faith and obedience. (Eph 2:1-7; Lu 12:32) Such love should call forth a hearty response
of love and devotion on the part of all whose hearts are opened to receive it.
STUDENTS’
HELPS for Lesson VI
QUESTIONS
These questions
on the love of God are answered in the preceding article. Can you answer them,
and document your answer with a text of Scripture?
1. Does God ever bestow his blessings upon the unrighteous?
2. What knowledge do we need to have, to be assured that
God does love his human creatures despite the suffering that is in the world?
3. Name the outstanding act of the Creator which proves his
love for the sinful race of mankind.
4. Is the opportunity to accept Jesus Christ as Redeemer
limited to the present short span of life?
5. Explain the manner in which God’s love is especially
manifested toward the footstep followers of Jesus.
SUMMARY OF
IMPORTANT THOUGHTS
To know the
love of God truly, it is essential to have a knowledge of the divine plan of
the ages.
· The
greatest manifestation of God’s love is in the gift of his Son to be man’s
Redeemer from sin and death.
THE CREATOR
SERIES Lesson VII
Our
All-Seeing God
NO ONE has seen
God at any time. (Joh 1:18) Indeed, no one can see him and live. (Ex 33:20) But while we do not know his appearance,
his character is revealed to us through his beloved Son, Christ Jesus. (Joh
14:9) We note the sympathy and love of Jesus, and we know that these same
qualities are possessed by our loving Creator.
In addition to
this, the Bible helps us to grasp more fully the idea of our Heavenly Father’s
love for his people by symbolic references to his "eyes," his
"ears," and his "arms." This does not mean that God
possesses eyes and ears and arms like ours, but by the use of these as symbols
we are given a clearer concept of our Heavenly Father’s powers and of his
intimate love for us.
Just as we see
with our eyes and are aware of what is transpiring within the range of our
sight, so the Creator knows what is happening to his people, for they are
always within range of his "vision." He is never weary, never faint,
and is always ready and willing to give strength to his people in their every
time of need. (I Peter 3:12; Isa
40:28-31) Our Heavenly Father
said of his ancient people Israel, who typified spiritual Israel of the Gospel
Age, that those who touched them to do them injury, touched the apple of his
eye. (De 32:10; Psalm 17:8; Zec 2:8) What an endearing symbol this is of how
precious to him our Father considers his children to be!
The Bible tells
us that the eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the earth. (II
Chronicles 16:9) This, also, is pictorial language, but how vividly it brings
before us the idea of the Creator’s ability to know what is happening
everywhere. In this instance the assurance is given that the Lord’s interest is
to note the faithfulness of his own people and to give them the necessary
protection from their enemies and the needed strength to serve him.
We are informed
by the Scriptures that "the eyes of the Lord are in every place, beholding
the evil and the good." (Pr 15:3) How vividly this language conveys the
idea of God’s ability to "see," or to know, what is taking place everywhere, that nothing can be hid from his
sight. Conscious of this discerning ability of his God, David prayed that his
words and thoughts, even the very thoughts of his heart, might be acceptable in
his sight. (Psalm 19:14) The human eye is limited in its vision. We can see
only those things which are physical, or material. But God’s "eyes"
are not thus limited, for he can search our minds and discern the thoughts and
intents of our hearts. (Heb 4:13) How careful we should be to keep our thoughts
and motives pure!
Jesus will be
the great Judge of the people during the world’s coming judgment day, and we
are told that he will not judge after "the sight of his eyes." (Isa 11:1-5) Thus we are reminded of the limitation of human eyesight
and that Jesus, who is now "the express image" of his Heavenly
Father, will have the ability to see into the minds of the people and will
therefore know how to judge them correctly.
(Heb 1:3) How
wonderful are our Heavenly Father and his beloved Son!
STUDENTS’
HELPS for Lesson VII
QUESTIONS The answer to these questions should help
us understand our loving Creator somewhat more intimately. Do you know these
answers?
1. What is the outstanding attribute of God’s character?
2. Since no human can literally see God, what is one of the
ways in which his character is revealed to us?
3. How are the capabilities of God revealed to us through
symbolic language?
4. What does the Bible mean in its references to the
"eyes" of the Lord?
5. How do the "eyes" of the Lord run to and fro
throughout the earth, and for what purpose?
6. Are God’s "eyes" limited in their vision as
ours are?
7. Will Jesus, as the future Judge of the world, be limited
to what human eyes might be able to discern concerning those who are being
judged?
REFERENCE
MATERIAL "Hymns of
Dawn," No. 293
SUMMARY OF
IMPORTANT POINTS
God’s
attribute of love is specially manifested by his solicitude for his faithful
people here on earth, as revealed by the symbolic references to his
"eyes," "ears," and "arms."
THE CREATOR
SERIES Lesson VIII
God Hears
and Cares
GOD’S loving
interest in his people and his care for them are brought feelingly to our
attention by the Bible’s many references to his ability to "hear"
when we cry to him for help, and that he bears us up in his everlasting
"arms." (Psalm 34:15-19; 20:6; De 33:27) To make his love more
understandable and more intimate, the Scriptures represent God as inclining his
ear toward his people to make sure that he hears their prayers. (Psalm 116:1,2;
40:1) The Lord has not promised to hear favorably the prayers of his people if
their requests are not in harmony with his will. (I Joh 5:14,15; also "The
New Creation," page 679 to and including paragraph 1, page 680) God is
abundantly able to grant us all the blessings for which we pray and will do so
if our requests are in keeping with the principles of his plan and laws. The
Scriptures tell us that God has a "mighty arm," and a "strong
hand," and that these will be used in keeping with justice, mercy, and
truth. (Psalm 89:13,14) During the present Gospel Age the Lord is dealing only
with those whom he is preparing to live and reign with Christ in his
thousand-year kingdom. When that kingdom is fully established, and the
knowledge of the Lord is filling the earth, "all flesh" will be
lifting up their hearts in prayer to God, and he will "hear." (Psalm
65:2; Isa 65:24) How the
people will then rejoice that they have learned to know, to love, and to serve
the true and living God, the loving Creator of the universe! (Isa 25:9) Meanwhile, the Lord has not been indifferent to the
sufferings of fallen mankind.
The Scriptures
represent him as looking down from heaven and seeing conditions on the earth,
and hearing the groanings of the people, who are as prisoners of death. It is
indicated that the Lord has pity for these prisoners and will release them.
(Psalm 102:19,20) The releasing of the prisoners of death is the great work of
Christ during the thousand years of his kingdom. It is a work that was planned
by God’s wisdom, having been motivated by his love.
This loving
future work of God, through Christ, is spoken of in the Scriptures as the
opening of his hand to satisfy the desires of "every living thing."
When, in the kingdom of Christ, this promise is being fulfilled, the people
will find that the Lord is very near to
them. Those who truly fear or reverence him will be saved, or rescued
completely, from death, and will live forever. (Psalm 145:16-19) This blessed
kingdom work of the future is prophesied as being accomplished by the
"arm" of the Lord, Jesus. (Isa 52:10; Psalm
98:1) This arm, the prophecy states, is to be "made bare," so that
all can see it. No longer will the people wonder about God’s love, for it will
be revealed to them that the blessings of that day are the result of the gift
of his own dear Son to be their Redeemer and Savior.
Up to now this
"Arm" of the Lord has been revealed only to a few, comparatively
speaking. He was despised and rejected of men. Few indeed at Jesus’ first advent
recognized that he had come as the gift of God’s love to save the people from
their sin; so they persecuted him, and put him to death. (Isa 53:1-5) But we can rejoice that during Christ’s second visit to
earth the situation will be vastly different. Then the people from all the ends
of the earth will recognize him, and will rejoice in the salvation which he has
provided for them.
STUDENTS’
HELPS for Lesson VIII
QUESTIONS These questions are answered in this
short article, "God Hears and Cares." Do you know the answers to
them?
1. What lessons do we derive from the Bible’s references to
God’s "ears" and "arms"?
2. Upon what condition does God answer the prayers of his People?
3. When will the people of all the world—"all
flesh"—have their prayers answered?
4. Does the seeming long delay in the fulfillment of God’s
promises to bless all the families of the earth imply that he has been
indifferent to human needs?
When will God
satisfy the desire of "every living thing"?
5. Who is the "Arm" of the Lord that will, in
God’s due time, be made "bare" for all the world to see?
SUMMARY OF
IMPORTANT THOUGHTS
God assures his
people of his loving watchfulness over their interests and of his ability to
care for them.
In the
present Gospel Age God is caring specially only for those whom he has called to
joint-heirship in Christ’s kingdom. In the kingdom age his care will be
manifested toward all the willing and obedient of mankind.
THE CREATOR
SERIES Lesson IX
The Almighty
God
IT IS a
self-evident truth that the great Creator of the universe is of necessity
all-powerful.
Job expressed
this fact beautifully when he said to God, "I know that thou canst do
every thing." (Job 42:2) The almighty power of God is manifested in all
his creative works. Life itself is a mighty force beyond the ability of the
human mind to conceive.
In this lesson
we are particularly interested in the power of God as it relates to the
outworking of his plan for the redemption and recovery of the human race from
sin and death. This plan is motivated by divine love. It is based on the
justice of God and was conceived by the Creator’s wisdom. But the plan itself
would have no validity if its Author lacked the ability to carry it out.
However, we are assured that God is abundantly able to accomplish every detail
of his plan. (Isa 55:10,11)
The miracle-working power of God is required for the accomplishment of
essentially every detail of his plan of salvation. It was God’s love that
prompted him to give his Son to be man’s Redeemer, but the presentation of this
gift called for the exercise of mighty power. It was necessary that Jesus be
made flesh by the transfer of his life to the womb of Mary to be born a human.
(Joh 1:14,15) The Holy Spirit, or power of God sustained Jesus throughout the
trying years of his earthly ministry. Finally, when Jesus had given his
humanity in death, dying on the cross, the power of his Heavenly Father raised
him from the dead and exalted him to his own right hand in divine glory. (Eph 1:17-23) Throughout the Gospel Age the Holy Spirit, or power of
God, has been working in the hearts and lives of Jesus’ true followers. They
have been made spiritually strong in the power of his might. (Eph 6:10) The truly faithful have
experienced the same almighty power sustaining them as that which gave Jesus
the strength to suffer and to die. (II Timothy 1:7; Php 3:10, 11) And then, at
the end of the age, these, like Jesus, are raised from the dead to live and
reign with him for a thousand years, to restore mankind in general to life on
the earth. (Re 20:6; I Corinthians 6:14) Christ and his followers will be the
invisible rulers in that kingdom and will be represented on earth by those
ancient servants of God from Abel to John the
Baptist. The Bible says that these will be made "princes in all the
earth." (Psalm 45:16) And divine power will raise these from the dead as
perfect humans. (Heb 11:35,39,40; 12:23) But this is not all, for there will
follow the awakening from the sleep of death of all the billions of the human
race who were condemned to death in Adam and redeemed by the precious blood of
Christ. (I Corinthians 15:21,22) To believe this should not place a strain on
our faith, for the One who has planned and promised it is the great God of the
universe who created life in the first place. Surely this almighty God is
abundantly able to restore life.
And it will not
be merely an awakening from death, but all the willing and obedient of the
kingdom age will be restored to human perfection just as Adam possessed it
before he sinned. This will also call for the exercise of divine power.
This will be
the "restitution" of all things. (Ac 3:20,21)
STUDENTS’
HELPS for Lesson IX
QUESTIONS
There is
nothing more important than to learn all we can about our loving Creator. How
many of these questions can you answer?
1. How did Job describe God’s almighty power?
2. By what means is the wise, just, and loving plan of God
accomplished?
3. What is one way in which the power of God was exercised
in the giving of his Son to be man’s Redeemer?
4. By what means was Jesus sustained in his trials, and
raised from the dead?
5. How has the work of God in the earth during the Gospel
Age been accomplished?
6. Who will be the visible representatives of Christ during
his reign on earth, and how does divine power make this possible?
7. By what means will the promises of God to restore all
the dead to life be accomplished? Will this be merely an awakening from the
sleep of death?
REFERENCE
MATERIAL
"The
Atonement Between God and Man," pages 417, par. 2, to 420, and 346, par. 5
SUMMARY OF
IMPORTANT THOUGHTS
The
attribute of power, combined with divine wisdom, justice, and love, assure us
of the glorious success of the Creator’s plan to bless all mankind with joy and
life.
THE CREATOR
SERIES Lesson X
The Glory of
God
THE personal
glory of the Creator is quite beyond our comprehension, but we can understand
to some extent the glorious virtues of his character. We might say that God’s
infinite wisdom, his unyielding justice, his boundless love, and his almighty
power, in perfect balance as they are, together reveal his glory.
We can
"see" God’s glory through an understanding of his plan for the
redemption and recovery of the human race from death. But the world in general
does not possess this knowledge, and therefore does not now "see" the
glory of God. But with the full establishment of the kingdom of Christ this
situation will change.
Then the
knowledge of the Lord will fill the earth, and all shall know and serve him.
(Isa 11:9; Zep 3:9) Then all
flesh will "see," or discern, the glory of God. (Isa 40:5) The whole world will then know of God’s justice as
represented in the divine penalty for sin. They will know how divine wisdom
found the way whereby God could be just, yet release the condemned world from
death. (Ro 3:26) They will know that it was divine love that provided the
Redeemer, who himself lovingly died for their sins. (Joh 3:16; Ro 5:8; I Joh
2:2) The world will also then discern, even better than we are able to
comprehend at the present time, the miracle-working power of God; for they will
see it demonstrated in the resurrection of the dead. Since all the dead from
every part of the earth eventually are to be awakened from death, the glory of
God will indeed fill the earth. (Ac 24:15) The glory of God was reflected to a limited degree in our first
parents, whom he created in his image and crowned with glory and honor. (Ge
1:27; Psalm 8:4, 5) As a result of the reign of sin and death, man has lost
much of his original perfection, although there are degrees of the divine
qualities of justice, sympathy, and love to be found in many persons even now.
During the
Gospel Age God has been inviting a company of people to come out from the
world, offering them the privilege of striving, through the exercise of faith,
for a change of nature, from the human to the divine. (II Peter 1:4) Those who
reach this high position in the resurrection will attain also unto the divine
glory. (I Corinthians 15:47-49) All who
do not attain to spiritual glory in the resurrection will be restored to human
perfection during the thousand years of Christ’s kingdom. And think what a
change that will be! ("The Divine Plan of the Ages," pages 191-193)
It will be a progressive return to holiness, or perfection, which the Bible
likens to traveling over a "highway." (Isa 35:8) This "highway" is in reality
the return road, not only to life, but to the image and glory of God. All have
been ransomed by Jesus and will return from the sleep of death. If they then
accept the provisions of divine love through Christ and obey the laws of his
kingdom, they will obtain eternal joy and gladness; and sorrow, sickness, and
death will he no more. (Isa
35:10; Re 21:1-5) The Bible
assures us that all will then acclaim the glory of God, and the glory of his
beloved Son, Christ Jesus, the "Lamb" that was slain to take away the
sin of the world. (Re 5:13; Joh 1:29) They will then sing that inspiring song
recorded in Revelation 15:3,4, Revised Version
STUDENTS’
HELPS for Lesson X
QUESTIONS Test your knowledge! To know the correct
answers to these questions is important to all who would be pleasing to the
Lord.
1. Explain one manner in which the glory of God’s character
is revealed.
2. Can the unbelieving world "see" God’s glory?
When will the knowledge of God’s glory fill the earth?
3. In what manner will the world of mankind, during the
kingdom age, see the glory of God manifested, even more clearly than we do now?
4. What Scripture text affirms that our first parents were
endowed with a measure of God’s glory?
5. Will any members of the human race ever attain to a
measure of God’s glory?
6. Will man’s restoration to perfection be instantaneous?
7. What is the "highway" of Isa 35:8?
8. How do we know that the whole world ultimately will
ascribe glory to the Creator, and to his Son, Christ Jesus?
SUMMARY OF
IMPORTANT POINTS
The glory
of God’s character is reflected by his wisdom, justice, love, and power. This
glory eventually will be recognized by all mankind.