ADULT Bible Class June, July, August 2015 SUMMER QUARTER Vol. CI No. 3 Adult Bible Class SUMMER QUARTER June, July, August 2015 Editorial................................................................................................................. 2 God Demands Justice UNIT I: Indictments Against Injustice June 7—Judgment on Israel and Judah—Amos 2:4-8.................................................... 4 June 14—God Is Not Fooled—Amos 5:14-15, 18-27 ......................................................... 9 June 21—Rebuked for Selfishness—Amos 6:4-8, 11-14................................................... 14 June 28—God Will Not Delay Justice—Amos 8:1-6, 9-10 ................................................. 19 UNIT II: Appeals to the Unjust for Justice July 5—No Rest for the Wicked—Mic. 2:4-11................................................................. July 12—Condemnation of Corruption—Mic. 3:5-12 ....................................................... July 19—Justice, Love, and Humility—Mic. 6:3-8 ............................................................ July 26—God Shows Mercy—Mic. 7:14-20 ....................................................................... 24 29 34 39 UNIT III: Advocates of Justice for All Aug. 2—Our Redeemer Comes—Isa. 59:15-21 ............................................................... Aug. 9—Mend Your Ways!—Jer. 7:1-15 ............................................................................ Aug. 16—A Call for Repentance—Ezek. 18:1-13, 31-32 ................................................... Aug. 23—God Demands Justice—Zech. 7:8-14 ................................................................ Aug. 30—Return to a Just God—Mal. 3:1-10..................................................................... Paragraphs on Places and People ..................................................................... Daily Bible Readings............................................................................................ Editor in Chief: Grace M. Todd 43 47 51 55 59 63 64 Edited and published quarterly by THE INCORPORATED TRUSTEES OF THE GOSPEL WORKER SOCIETY UNION GOSPEL PRESS DIVISION Rev. W. B. Musselman, Founder Price: $2.45 per quarter* $9.60 per year* *shipping and handling extra ISBN 978-1-59843-343-2 Lessons based on International Sunday School Lessons; the International Bible Lessons for Christian Teaching, copyright © 2011 by the Committee on the Uniform Series and used with permission. Edited and published quarterly by The Incorporated Trustees of the Gospel Worker Society, Union Gospel Press Division, 2000 Brookpark Road, Cleveland, Ohio 44109-5812. Mailing address: P.O. Box 6059, Cleveland, Ohio 44101-1059. www.union gospelpress.com EDITORIAL Genuine Justice J.A. LITTLER It is entirely natural for people to demand justice. When some evil is committed against us, we usually experience an emotional response, feeling sad or angry that we were violated in some way. Whether it is as simple as being cut off in traffic or as horrific as being the victim of a serious crime, experiencing sin causes us to demand justice for ourselves or the person who was hurt. Believers can respond to injustice in a number of ways. Perhaps the first step prescribed by Scripture is that we should know with confidence that our God is a just God. He demands that sin be punished, and He commands His people to exercise a sense of fairness and equality. This quarter of study will help us develop a holistic understanding of how the Bible addresses the concept of justice and in what ways God demands justice. The first unit, titled “Indictments Against Injustice,” takes us to the book of Amos. Speaking to the kingdom of Judah in lesson 1 (2:4-8), the Lord’s prophet warned the people that the Lord was sorely displeased with the rank injustice He saw among His people. In lesson 2 (Amos 5:14-15, 18-27), the prophet teaches us that God is not fooled by false worship. His people were living lives contrary to the lives God had called them to, even to the point of trying to worship both the Lord and pagan gods at the same time. Instead of worship that was void of genuine praise, God ordered His people to 2 offer up to Him worship characterized by obedience to His commands. Lesson 3 (Amos 6:4-8, 11-14) expresses how much the Lord abhorred Israel and Judah’s gross lack of justice. Amos continued his proclamation of God’s message by comparing the people’s attempts to please God and be successful through unrighteousness to a horse trying to climb a mountain and a farmer attempting to plow a field of rocks. Lesson 4 (Amos 8:1-6, 9-10) features Amos’s vision of a basket of ripe, fresh fruit. Just as the fruit was ripe, so too it was time for God’s people to be judged for their disastrous lack of genuine justice among themselves. The songs of false praise that the people presented to God would eventually be drowned out by the cries of people mourning the death and destruction brought on by a powerful pagan empire. The second unit begins a series of lessons specifically focused on God’s appeals to the unjust of the land as communicated through His prophet Micah. The fifth lesson (Mic. 2:4-11) sees Micah warning the people not to silence the Lord’s prophets. Sadly, many in Judah were so consumed by life’s pleasures that they gave audience exclusively to false prophets, who spoke only of pleasant things to come. Micah reminded them that the Lord was indeed watching and that He was calling them to repentance. In lesson 6 (Mic. 3:5-12), we will delve into Micah’s plea for God’s peo- ple to evaluate false prophets according to God’s will and His definition of obedience. A day would come when the false prophets and those who paid them to preach only messages of prosperity would come to the sober realization that God was utterly displeased with them. Lesson 7 (Mic. 6:3-8) demonstrates the Lord’s great mercy offered to His people through Micah’s prophetic ministry. After reminding Judah of how He had saved them and provided for them throughout their history, the Lord responded to the people’s hypothetical suggestions for sacrifices that would appease Him. In the end, God laid out His requirements—namely, to simply believe His promises and naturally respond with justice, mercy, and humility. The eighth lesson of study (Mic. 7:14-20) features the conclusion to the book of Micah. In this last section of Micah’s prophecy, the prophet extolled the Lord for the forgiveness and mercy Adult Bible Class He freely offers His people, as well as for the hope of future restoration promised to Israel. Modern believers will be encouraged and edified as they ponder this promise of forgiveness, as fully accomplished through Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross, as well as Israel’s restoration and the fulfillment of the Abrahamic covenant, which is yet to take place. The name of our third unit of study is “Advocates of Justice for All.” We will examine five other prophets who, like Amos and Micah, urged their listeners to repent of the injustices they were committing and live out their identity as people of God. Lesson 9 (Isa. 59:15-21) sees Isaiah speak of future events while admonishing his audience to immediately reform their present attitudes and actions. In particular, the people were commanded to repent of injustice so that they might meet their coming Lord as Redeemer rather than as Judge. The tenth lesson (Jer. 7:1-15) describes the Lord’s message through Jeremiah regarding the people’s hypocrisy. The Lord warned them to stop thinking that simply having God’s temple in their midst would save them from destruction. Lesson 11 (Ezek. 18:1-13, 31-32) concentrates on a portion of Ezekiel’s prophecy, specifically, the need for God’s people to punish only those who have committed sins, not the innocent. Our twelfth lesson (Zech. 7:8-14) features the Prophet Zechariah confronting those among God’s people who were abusive and took advantage of others. Our thirteenth and final lesson (Mal. 3:1-10) comes from the last book of the Old Testament. Here we see Malachi announcing the Lord’s invitation for His people to return to Him. Like the Israelites, we have an invitation to reflect God’s justice in our lives and live out our identity as people of God. 3 LESSON 1 JUNE 7, 2015 Scripture Lesson Text AMOS 2:4 Thus saith the LORD; For three transgressions of Ju⬘dah, and for four, I will not turn away the punishment thereof; because they have despised the law of the LORD, and have not kept his commandments, and their lies caused them to err, after the which their fathers have walked: 5 But I will send a fire upon Ju⬘dah, and it shall devour the palaces of Je-ru⬘sa-lem. 6 Thus saith the LORD; For three transgressions of Is⬘ra-el, and for four, I will not turn away the punish- ment thereof; because they sold the righteous for silver, and the poor for a pair of shoes; 7 That pant after the dust of the earth on the head of the poor, and turn aside the way of the meek: and a man and his father will go in unto the same maid, to profane my holy name: 8 And they lay themselves down upon clothes laid to pledge by every altar, and they drink the wine of the condemned in the house of their god. NOTES 4 Judgment on Israel and Judah Lesson: Amos 2:4-8 Read: Amos 2:4-16 TIME: about 762 B.C. PLACE: Beth-el GOLDEN TEXT—“Thus saith the Lord; For three transgressions of Judah, and for four, I will not turn away the punishment thereof; because they have despised the law of the Lord, and have not kept his commandments” (Amos 2:4). Lesson Exposition We know very little about the man Amos, a farmer who became a prophet at God’s command. He was a sheepherder—perhaps more than a shepherd—possibly a breeder of several flocks of sheep and goats. He lived near the town of Tekoa, which was located about five miles southeast of Bethlehem. He also described himself as one who tended sycamore trees. JUDGMENT COMING UPON JUDAH—Amos 2:4-5 An indictment against Judah (Amos 2:4). A glance at chapter 1 and the beginning of chapter 2 shows a series of judgments pronounced against several cities and nations: Damascus and all Syria (1:3-5); Gaza, Ashdod, Ekron, and all Philistia (vss. 6-8); Tyre and all Phoenicia (vss. 9-10); Teman and Bozrah and all Edom (vss. 11-12); Rabbah and all Ammon (vss. 13-15); and Kerioth and all Moab (2:1-3). Now Amos turned his attention to the two nations of Israelites, beginning with Judah and followed by Israel, where God had sent him. Amos’s announcements of judgment had circled Israel, but when he got to Judah, he was zeroing in on the kingdom just south of where God had Adult Bible Class sent him. In each declaration, Amos used the God-given formula “For three transgressions of . . . and for four, I will not turn away the punishment thereof.” The use of two numbers in such a formula is common in Scripture and was used for emphasis. Here it indicated that God’s patience had come to an end, and He was going to act. Judah’s iniquity had reached its completion, and God could no longer ignore it. Charles Feinberg pointed out that “the nations are punished for sins against the laws of nature, conscience, and natural feeling; Judah and Israel are visited because they sinned against the revealed will of God” (The Minor Prophets, Moody). The first part of God’s indictment against Judah says that very thing: “they have despised the law of the Lord, and have not kept his commandments” (Amos 2:4). God had a unique relationship with His chosen people, and this relationship included multiple instructions on how they were to live. The covenant relationship between God and His people meant there were higher expectations of them than of other nations. But Judah had come to the point of ignoring these expectations. They lived according to whatev5
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