Sabbath School Lesson 5 SUMMARY - (Jul 26-Aug 1)
Richard M. | Creator | Sabbath School SUMMARY đș
đ Sabbath Afternoon, July 26 â Passover
đ Memory Text: ââAnd it shall be, when your children say to you, âWhat do you mean by this service?â that you shall say, âIt is the Passover sacrifice of the Lord, who passed over the houses of the children of Israel in Egypt when He struck the Egyptians and delivered our households.â (Exodus 12:26â27, NKJV)
Overview
As Egypt faces the final plagueâthe death of the firstbornâGod instructs Israel to observe the first Passover (Exodus 11â12). This moment marks both judgment on Egypt and protection for God's obedient people.
Practical Lessons
1. Our choices affect more than just us
Pharaohâs refusal to submit to God led to national tragedy (Exod. 11:1â10).
Adamâs choice still affects us today. Even now, the decisions of global leaders fuel wars and unrest, while choices within families are causing tragedy and pain.
đ What decisions are you making today? Rememberâthey impact more than just you.
2. Pharaoh suffered from âmoral inertiaâ
Moral inertia is knowing the right thing but staying stuck in inaction.
Pharaoh didnât lack knowledgeâhe lacked the courage to act.
Many modern Christians suffer the same: information-rich, obedience-poor.
We know the sermons, we memorize the hymns, we predict the message from the memory text⊠yet we still donât âdo.â
Philosophers call this akrasiaâknowing what is right but deliberately not doing it.
Itâs intellectualism without action.
đ May God deliver us from knowing but not doing.
đ Sunday, July 27 â One More Plague
Overview
Before the final plague, God gives Pharaoh one last clear warning (Exod. 11:1â10). Though Egypt had witnessed divine power repeatedly, Pharaoh's heart remained hard. Moses leaves in angerâknowing that innocent lives will suffer because of one manâs pride.
Practical Lessons
1. God warns before He judgesâgrace always comes first
âThe Lord God does nothing without revealing His secret to His servants the prophetsâ (Amos 3:7).
Even before judgment, God gave Pharaoh time to reflect (Exod. 10:22â23).
đ Today, God is still warning us. Donât wait for your âfinal plagueâ to changeâit may be too late.
2. Real love balances justice with mercy
âWhat does the Lord require⊠but to do justly, love mercy, and walk humbly?â (Mic. 6:8). God hates oppression and pride (Ps. 33:5; Jer. 9:24), yet He also offers mercy.
We must avoid both extremes:
Donât excuse evil under the name of âlove.â
Donât use âjusticeâ as an excuse to be cold, cruel, or vengeful.
True justice confronts evil, not the person, while revenge seeks to hurt the person.
đ When in doubt, err on the side of compassionâjust like God does.
đ Monday, July 28 â Healing the Body
Overview
Before organizing Israelâs escape, God instructs them to worshipâthrough the Passover meal (Exod. 12:1â20). The blood of the lamb was their covering, and the meal a spiritual reset. This wasnât just ritualâit was remembered faith in action.
Practical Lessons
1. Worship is not optionalâitâs the starting point of deliverance
âThis month shall be your beginningâŠâ (Exod. 12:2).
âNow this day shall be a memorialâŠâ (Exod. 12:14).
đ Before solving your problemsâreturn to worship. God must be central, even before the breakthrough comes.
2. Godâs deliverance is personalâand shared
âEach man shall take a lamb⊠according to the number in the householdâ (Exod. 12:3â4).
Salvation begins with you, but it should impact others around you.
đ True faith isnât privateâit spreads through community, worship, and shared obedience.
đ Tuesday, July 29 â Pesach
Overview
The blood of the spotless lamb was placed on the doorposts as a visible sign of faith (Exod. 12:17â23). This act pointed forward to Christ, the Lamb of God (John 1:29), whose sacrifice covers and protects all who believe.
Practical Lessons
1. Faith must be expressedânot just believed
âWhen I see the blood, I will pass over youâ (Exod. 12:13).
The Israelites werenât saved just by believing Mosesâbut by applying the blood.
đ Faith is not passive. It's not enough to believeâyou must respond personally.
But be careful: this was not salvation by works.
The blood saved themânot the act.
Without Godâs instruction, applying blood wouldâve meant nothing.
đ It was God's graceâand their faithâthat saved them.
2. Sin is seriousâit cost the blood of God Himself
âChrist, our Passover, was sacrificed for usâ (1 Cor. 5:7).
The spotless lamb symbolized a sinless Savior.
đ Forgiveness is freeâbut it is never cheap. The cross shows the true cost of sin.
đ Wednesday, July 30 â Passing the Torch
Overview
Before they even left Egypt, God told the Israelites to teach future generations about their deliverance (Exod. 12:24â28). They werenât to remember the Exodus as historyâbut as personal experience to be passed on.
Practical Lessons
1. Faith must be passed on intentionally
âWhen your children ask⊠you shall sayâŠâ (Exod. 12:26â27).
đ Today, many young people have replaced faith with entertainmentâand weâre watching the effects.
In many churches in the West, the younger generation is missing.
Our pioneers passed the faith to us. Who will we pass it to?
2. Teach your children or risk spiritual amnesia
If we donât teach them what God has done, theyâll think Heâs done nothing.
Let them see God at work in your lifeâin your daily bread, in answered prayers.
đ Donât just teach Bible storiesâshare your own testimony.
đ Thursday, July 31 â The Divine Judgment
Overview
At midnight, God struck the firstborn of Egypt (Exod. 12:29â30). This was divine judgmentânot just on Pharaoh, but on the gods of Egypt who were powerless to protect. Egypt reaped what it had sown (Exod. 1:22 vs. 12:29).
Practical Lessons
1. Judgment may be delayedâbut never denied
âFor years Egypt oppressed Israel, but Godâs justice arrived on timeâ (Heb. 11:28).
đ Just because God is silent doesnât mean Heâs absent.
Todayâs injustices will be answered in Godâs time. Donât mistake His patience for passivity.
2. Sin always impacts others
âThere was not a house without someone deadâ (Exod. 12:30).
Pharaohâs pride brought death to his nation.
đ Sin may feel private, but its pain often goes public. Lives are lost when leaders and loved ones reject God.
đ Friday, August 1 â Further Thoughts
This section is left open for group discussion or reflection. What did you learn this week? What stood out to you most? How does this apply to your family or community?
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