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About The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984 | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1937)
Thursday, July 22, 1937 THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL S UNDAY CHOOL I U esson B y R E V H A R O L D L . L U N D Q U IS T . D e a n o f th e M o o d y B ib le I n s titu te o f C h ic a g o . © W e s te r n N e w s p a p e r U n ion . Lesson for July 25 — L E S S O N T E X T — E x o d u s 12:21-28. G O L D E N T E X T — T h e L o r d th y G od h a th c h o s e n t h e e to b e a s p e c ia l p e o p le u n to h im s e lf .— D e u t e r o n o m y 7:6. P R I M A R Y T O P IC — R e a d y fo r th e J o u r n ey. J U N I O R T O P IC — R e a d y to S ta r t H o m e . I N T E R M E D I A T E A N D S E N IO R T O P IC — H o w G od P r e p a r e s a P e o p le . Y O U N G P E O P L E A N D A D U L T T O P IC — E q u ip p e d f o r a N e w E r a . “ Let m y people go” —such was the word of the Lord to P haraoh through Moses and Aaron. “ Who is the Lord, th a t I should obey his voice to let Israel go? I know not th e Lord, neither will I let Israel go” — thus hardened P haraoh his heart. The issue was so draw n for one of the g re a t struggles of history. On one side was a bold and mighty m onarch with all the resources of the em pire of Egypt, and on the other an unorganized m ultitude of slaves. No, wait, on the other side w as Almighty God! The outcome w as never in doubt and through the unspeakable horror of the plagues we come to consider the last of the ten, the death of the first-born, with which is joined the establishm ent of the Passover. The P assover is of sufficient im portance to justify careful study sim ply as the perpetual feast of Jew s, but to the C hristian it is also a m ost blessed and instructive type of Christ who is, according to Paul, “ our passover” (I Cor. 5:7). Let no one who studies or teaches this les son fail to point to “ the Lam b of God which taketh aw ay the sin of the world” (John 1:29). I. A Lam b Slain (v. 21). The sacrifice appears, a gentle, subm issive lam b, a m ale without blem ish, which is separated for the giving of its life th a t‘the first-born in Israel m ight be saved. N o t i c e th a t God’s instructions w ere explicit, and w ere to be obeyed if there w as to be redem ption. T here a re those in our day who would substitute any and every other m eth od of salvation for God’s revealed plan.’ They talk about c h aracter de velopm ent, the redem ption of t h e social order, peace and politics, and forget the Lam b of God. II. A Blood Salvation (vv. 22, 23). The a c t of faith in m arking the lintel and the doorposts with the blood, brought salvation to the fam ilies of Israel. Had they w aited until they could reason out the philosophy of their prom ised redem ption, or had they shrunk from the blood as th eir covering, their first-born would have been slain. It w as when the destroying angel saw the blood th at he passed over them . Many there are in our tim e who speak disparagingly of the blood of Jesu s Christ, but it is still the only way of redem ption. “ Without shed ding of blood there is no rem ission.” It ill befits an age th at is so blase and sophisticated as ours to attem pt to cover its dislike for God’s way of redem ption by suddenly becom ing too cultured and sensitive to h ear of the blood of the Lam b of God shed on C alvary’s tree for our cleansing from sin. III. A P erpetual M emorial (vv. 24-28). God w ants his people to rem em ber. We, like Israel, are to rem em ber the bondage from which we w ere delivered. Down through the ages the Jew s have kept the Pass- over. Our H ebrew neighbors do it today. Let us honor them for their obedience to God’s com m and and at the sam e tim e seek to point them to the One who is the tru e Pass- over, Jesu s Christ. IV. Christ Our P assover (I Cor. 5:7). Let us add to the assigned lesson text this New T estam ent passage which speaks of our Lord Jesu s Christ as “ our passover . . . sacri ficed for u s.” The bondage in Egypt was te r rible in its afflictions and sorrows, but fa r m ore serious is the bondage in which m en find them selves under sin and the rule of Satan. Surely there is need of divine redem ption, and there is none to bring it to us but the Lam b of God. He was the One who without spot or blemish (I Pet. 1:19) was able to offer him self in our behalf th at in him we m ight find “ redem ption through his blood’’ (Eph. 1:7, Col. 1:14). “ Is the blood upon the house of my life? Is the blood upon the door post of my dwelling place? Have I put up against the divine judgm ent some hand of self-protection? Ver ily, it will be swallowed up in the g reat visitation. In th at tim e noth ing will stand but the blood which God him self has chosen as a token and a m em orial. ‘The blood of Jesus Christ, his Son, cleanseth us from all sin’ ” (Joseph P a rk e r). L abor and P atience T ruth is to be costly to you—of labor and patience; and you are never to sell it, but to guard and to give.—Ruskin. Judging A nother's Sorrow One can never be the judge of another’s grief. T hat which is a sor row to one, to another is joy. -**J !c"* ‘ ' r '*• Follow Our Convictions Never sw erve in your conduct from your honest convictions.— H orace Bushnell. Cook (to assistant on entering gal ley and seeing stew had boiled over) —I told you to notice when the stew boiled over. A ssistant— 1 did. air It boiled over a t exactly 10:31.-U . S. N. A Log W»lN4 M itriu u . tin «AiftEP BŸ MM- eyenivauy maxes hears «»5. w n r n WNFS NIKOTIINI 5IH» MtlSBAMO HEAR, tW n i l HER noth SMOUi 1*6, ANO Mt» eoNvtRsrtiON f t . she wsK he » can W lttc f M e OY«* ATM!» OVT» »6»». 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