From:
Date: October 5, 2019
Subject: It's October 5; Good Morning Union, Special Sabbath Edition



Happy 94th birthday to my mom!!

If you are so inclined maybe you could take the time this afternoon to fill out the REVEAL survey you received in the mail last week. Thanks for helping us understand the spiritual climate of our school so we can help build it and grow it more effectively for everyone. Thanks.

The Well- 10:30am, Youth Adult Room in the Church for a time of food, fellowship and feasting on God’s Word. Join us each Sabbath morning.

“The Lesson” is another Sabbath School experience that meets at 10:45am in the Ortner Lobby. Join faculty, staff, and students as we come together to study the Sabbath School lesson and its real-world application. We're excited to share time in fellowship, discussion and biweekly bagels.

IRR SS”- Another option for your Sabbath School experience. It meets each week in the IRR Gear room and everyone is welcome (IRR major or not!) It starts at 10:40.

CVC- 9:15am and Noon- Our lead pastor Harold Alomia will be continuing his series on David. Don’t miss it!!

V2- 7:00pm, is back in Rees Hall Chapel- This is our “close the Sabbath” time when we come together for 30 minutes of singing and one of your peers sharing their current journey with Jesus. It’s a great way to end the Sabbath and all are welcome. This week will be hosted by Amber Fellers and her Human Development peeps.

 

Quote for the day:      "Others."         William Booth, Founder of the Salvation Army

 

And now my favorite blog of the week:

No one gets through life without scars

Our scars tell our stories. They are the mile markers of our existence, reminding us where we have been. Like chapter titles, they announce what has been written onto the pages of our lives. Even as they cover and hide our wounds, they reveal to all that we have suffered.

As with a block of marble, what has been taken from us has created the contours of our being. How we have handled the pain of being human in the past has determined who we are in the present. What we do with our suffering today will form who we are tomorrow.

People get hurt in the world we live in. At times, we suffer because of the cruelty of our enemies. On other occasions, we are betrayed by a loved one or forgotten by a friend. And sometimes we bring it upon ourselves by our poor choices. But however it comes, we all end up wounded.

No one gets through this life without scars.

If you want to live well in a world where people are hurt and mistreated, suffer deeply and unfairly, wounded not just in their bodies but also in their souls, it is important to hold on to God’s promise:

My grace is sufficient for you. — 2 Corinthians 12:9


Whatever you face — temptations, trials, opposition — God will give you His grace, and His grace will be sufficient for you to overcome.

Looking back on our scars, there are times we can laugh about them. We may even brag about them, shaking them off, “It was nothing, really.” We might even take a strange pride in having been hurt more severely or wounded more deeply than others. But in the moment, whether the wound is physical, emotional, or spiritual, when we are broken and bleeding, there is no laughter or pride. We wonder, How deep will the wound go? How long will I have to endure such pain? How broken will I become? How scarred will I remain when this is over?

God has a promise for us when our way is dark and the suffering is great. When we do not understand what is happening to us and our lives are in chaos, the unfailing promise of a faithful God is this: “Whatever you face and however you suffer, you can hold on because My grace will be sufficient for you.”

These are the words that God spoke to Paul when he pleaded for God to take away his thorn in the flesh.

My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect in weakness. — 2 Corinthians 12:9


It is a promise that Paul wrote on God’s behalf to all of us.

No temptation has overtaken you except what is common to mankind. And God is faithful; He will not let you be tempted beyond what you can bear. But when you are tempted, He will also provide a way out so that you can endure it. — 1 Corinthians 10:13


The Greek word (peirasmós) translated as “temptation” in 2 Corinthians 12 can also be translated as “testing.” It is often associated with physical suffering or spiritual attack. The promise God gives us is that when we suffer to the point that our faith is tested and we are tempted to be unfaithful, He will give us the grace we need to endure the pain and remain true.

He Will Give You the Strength You Need to Overcome

Paul wrote to the church in Corinth that throughout his ministry he suffered from what he referred to as “a thorn in the flesh.” Paul did not describe for the Corinthians what the thorn was. Very possibly they were familiar with his condition and understood his reference perfectly. But two thousand years later we are a bit in the dark. Some scholars have thought Paul was referring to the constant opposition and persecution he suffered. Others believe it was bouts of malarial fever. Some have suggested that Paul suffered from epilepsy. We know from his letter to the Galatians that he had an eye condition that caused him suffering and embarrassment, and some have argued that was Paul’s thorn.

The literal meaning of the Greek word for “thorn” (skolops) in 2 Corinthians 12:7 means “something pointed.” It is sometimes translated as “stake” and refers to a sharpened piece of wood that was employed as an instrument of torture or execution. Whether Paul was referring to his affliction as a “thorn” or as a “stake” is unclear. But what is certain is that it was painful enough that Paul referred to it as “a messenger from Satan” and it caused him such torment that he pleaded not once, but three times, that God would remove it from him.

Here’s how he described his condition in his second letter to the Corinthians:

I was given a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me. Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. But He said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me. That is why, for Christ’s sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong. — 2 Corinthians 12:7-10


Maybe you have been there or maybe you are there now — that place where it feels as if there is a thorn in your flesh. A stake has been driven through your heart. Satan is attacking you. You are so tormented in body and spirit that you do not know if you can bear any more. God’s promise to you is this: “My grace is sufficient for you, for My power will be made perfect in your weakness.”

God’s grace will be enough for you. Not merely enough for you to endure. But enough for you to overcome. Enough to go through times of suffering, hardships, and even persecution and come out stronger in faith, closer to God, and powerful in your witness for Christ.