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Sunday: We Are Part of God’s Family — 16 Comments

  1. “How can we learn to relate better to all human beings as our brothers and sisters?”

    My immediate family is the “sandbox” in which God’s love can be practiced, and from experience, the place where it can be hardest to practice well. It is so easy to expect that those closest to me will bend to my will and accommodate me. But that is not the way of Jesus (see Philippians 2).

    True godly love considers the will of others and accommodates those with whom I am closest in the context of my relationship with God. This is a matter of consideration of family members above my convenience and opinions that I might “strengthen the hands that are weak and the knees that are feeble” and make a way for healing. (Hebrews 12:12-13.) A functional family is one in which no one gets everything they want, but in which everyone gives everything they can for the good of all. It is the sandbox in which Christ works to perfect my faith, just as the Father perfected his faith as my Elder Brother. (Hebrews 12:1-17.)

    It is as I master these lessons in humility that God can use me in my church, my community and my work, to his honour and glory. It is a matter of putting my trust in the faithfulness of my Brother, Jesus, who will write his law of love in my heart and mind.

    (36)
    • How True! Recently I heard a talk on Ted Talks that impressed me on how to live in our families. James says, "Be quick to listen and slow to speak" These Ted Talk ideas reminded me of this counsel. "Be curious not critical", "Don't assume, ask", "Be careful not crushing." "Connect before correct." Thanks for your thoughts.

      (37)
  2. The Ellen White quote in today's lesson states "...Jesus became a member of the earthly family so that we could become members of the heavenly family...." It is interesting to note that elsewhere, Ellen White also highlights that we need a wider view of what it means to be part of God's family. Specifically, it is not just the 'saints' who God considers His family, but every human whether they be sinner or saint. This is not to say that every human will automatically be saved even if they reject the offer of salvation, but it does speak to God's attitude towards 'sinners' in so far that He doesn't 'write (any of) them off' - and therefore that as part of God's family, neither do we.

    "...He (Christ) identifies Himself with every child of humanity. That we might become members of the heavenly family, He became a member of the earthly family. He is the Son of man, and thus a brother to every son and daughter of Adam. His followers are not to feel themselves detached from the perishing world around them. They are a part of the great web of humanity; and Heaven looks upon them as brothers to sinners as well as to saints. The fallen, the erring, and the sinful, Christ's love embraces; and every deed of kindness done to uplift a fallen soul, every act of mercy, is accepted as done to Him. Desire of Ages 638.4

    How might keeping this awareness in mind influence your attitude and perhaps behaviour towards every other person you come into contact with - be they 'saint' or 'sinner'?

    (30)
  3. We are a part of God's family. We have a very wealthy family! Eph. 3:8 says we have the "unsearchable riches of Christ bestowed upon us". Exploring Ephesians, we read more about our wealthy Father and what these riches are.

    (1) Eph. 1:7: We have redemption through Jesus's blood. We have deep ease of heart and mind from contentment because we have no guilty conscience. A guilty spirit seems to be angry and defensive all the time, even before anything has happened. If you tip over a glass of water what comes out? Water. Just so, if someone tips us over they're not responsible for what comes out. Whatever comes out reveals our state of conscience. But we know we're clean because the blood of Christ cleans us.

    Our God also gives us common graces so that even those with no or little faith may act kindly in the face of adversity…but sometimes these graces are taken away so that we can realize we're running on empty and can't climb up this hill with an empty tank.

    (2) Eph. 2:14 Christ is our peace. We don't have to constantly be improving ourselves to gain self-worth. We don't have sin constantly stirring up our anxiety. Our welfare does not depend upon us. In John 13:36-38, Jesus told Peter that he would deny his Lord. But He added, "don't let your heart be troubled" Jn. 14:1.

    "Peter, I have a whole different infrastructure provided for you. I'm giving you a relationship with the Father so that your heart does not need to be troubled. I'm going to be troubled in your place for all the times you'll deny me (Jn. 12:27). In the presence of your own failure, remember this moment when your Savior is saying, 'I'm coming back to get you'. You'll stop being my disciple when you refuse to take up your cross and follow me, but I'll rescue you from isolation and keep you in the family. I'll seek you out as soon as I'm resurrected (Mark 16:7). You'll continue to be emptied of evil and made pure so you can always be in My presence.

    You are to be rooted and grounded in MY love (Eph. 3:17). It's Ok to be empty. The fullness is God's, not yours (Eph. 3:19). You don't need to have the resources for anything. You have nothing inside yourself to be faithful with. Everything comes to you from the Father through the Spirit. Pray "to be strengthened" (Eph. 3:16). All the time, just keep bowing to the Father (Eph. 3:14), keep turning away from your barren self and submit to being filled up with Me. By filling up with the Father's riches, your growing faith will become a rock that will strengthen your brothers and sisters (Luke 22:31-32). By waiting upon Me, as my contented child who honors and trusts Me to be your Everlasting Nurturing Parent (Ps. 131:2), you will renew your strength more than any athlete hitting the gym : you will run and not be weary, you will walk and not faint (Is. 40:31)"

    What riches we are enjoying! Happy New Year everyone!

    (15)
    • Esther,

      Thanks for New Year encouragement. It is not all on us—God knows our every weakness and that our “promises" to be "good" are nothing but “ropes of sand.” In fact, if we act to "help out" God in regard to our salvation and sanctification, our efforts at "sinlessness" will be outside of his provision made through the faithfulness of his son, Jesus. This is sin. (Romans 14:23.)

      God is the one who writes his law of love in our hearts. It is not our work—it is his. Our work is to accept his gift of life and to follow his son where he leads, remembering that he is with us always, even to the end of age. (Matthew 28:20.)

      Richard

      (4)
  4. Well, it's 2023. Another revolution around the sun. And in a week's time about 2% of 2023 will have passed into history. We need to make it count!

    A few years ago while we were studying this same lesson theme, I met someone for whom these lessons, stressing the family of God, were a complete anathema. He had come from a dysfunctional family with an abusive father, and where sibling rivalry reigned, Talking of God as a loving father was nonsense to him. Family ties were something that was restrictive and distasteful.

    It made me realise just how much our pictures of God depend on our experiences here. I learned two important lessons from this person.

    1. We need to be sensitive to the backgrounds of other people. What works for you may not work for them. God describes himself in a number of ways using metaphors that we can relate to. If we are sensitive to the experiences of others we can choose more meaningful metaphors/

    2. Part of our responsibility as a church is to be a family, particularly for those whose only family experience has been hurtful. The church is more than a forum to thrash out doctrinal purity. It is, or should be, a supportive and caring community, that fills the family role for those who are disenfranchised from their families. It is by caring for one another that we paint our picture of God for others.

    (57)
  5. The metaphor of the family that the Bible presents has been a powerful one for me, growing up in the church. Believing that I could go to any corner of the world and, as long as I found an Adventist church I would be at home, was a great comfort to me. It wasn’t so much that I believed all people in the church were good and welcoming; it was belief in my birth right, and in the claims I have as a member of the family of God.

    The metaphor that the Bible presents of the family may not be a happy one for people that come from a dysfunctional family, but it is the one God has chosen. It is a metaphor that is not simply descriptive of what the people of God are, it is aspirational of what we should be. The Bible is full of dysfunctional families; the first family had the first example of fratricide. The father of the faithful was a polygamist and the offspring from his wife and concubine continue to have contentions to this day. One of King David’s son raped his sister, and another one of his sons tried to kill him. One of Jesus’ ancestors was the result of sex between a man and his daughter-in-law when he believed she was a prostitute. Need I go on? Dysfunction exists, not only in our biological families, but even in our church family.

    And yet God calls us to view him as our Father. He calls us to treat all who have accepted Christ as their Saviour as our brothers and sisters. He invites us to see those who are not part of this family as neighbours. When we see what this means in light of how God defines these relationships, it is revolutionary! It is more significant than the warm feelings that some of us get with childhood memories of family. It is a call to war against our own selfish propensity. It is a beacon of hope for all, but especially for those who have been hurt by the worst that sinful relationships have to offer.

    I'm so glad I'm a part
    Of the family of God
    I've been washed in the fountain
    Cleansed by His blood
    Joint heirs with Jesus
    As we travel this sod
    For I'm part of the family
    The family of God

    (28)
    • I am thankful that even if the family I came from is dysfunctional, I through the power and presence of God’s Spirit in my life do not have to continue that “tradition.” The promise of the Father and his Son are in the Lord’s prayer to “deliver us from evil” and to forgive as we have been forgiven.

      (9)
  6. The value of a soul.

    We are often amazed at the thought that even if we were the only person needing salvation, Christ would have died for us.
    Do we turn that around and as we look at someone who doesn't look all that lovable, and think, even if that one person were the only one needing salvation, Christ would have died for them.

    It's easy to accept as "family" a friendly, positive person, it's the ones who are rather dysfunctional and abrasive in their social skills that are harder to treat as beloved family members.

    (6)
  7. In this very group here I can say that there are some family ties. It's even also probable that most don't take their time to express their ideas in writing, but they may participate by reading the lines. I hope we can all help each other, somehow, to get to the best family gathering, at Christ's return.

    (13)
  8. Happy new year to my brothers and sisters in Christ. I enjoy reading the comments. They are very uplifting and encouraging.

    (3)
  9. Happy New Year all. I too am happy to be a part of the family of God; I've been washed in the fountain and cleansed by His blood. Joint heirs with Jesus, as I manage for Him. I'm a part of the family, the family of God.

    Amen!

    (4)

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