This week’s lesson brings us back to the foundation: what the Bible is and what place it should occupy in the life of the believer. This is not an abstract theological question—it is practical guidance for the real world, where countless competing voices exist, and each claims authority.
The Bible is the living Word, not an archive
“For the word of God is living and active, and sharper than any two-edged sword.” Heb. 4:12
The author of Hebrews emphasizes that God’s Word is not a dead record of the past. It is living and active —here and now, in the heart of the one who opens it. The same Spirit who inspired the authors of Scripture opens its meaning to readers in every generation.
The role of the Bible: four functions according to Paul
“All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness.” 2 Tim. 3:16
- Teaching —reveals God’s character and His purpose for humanity.
- Reproof —honestly shows where we have strayed from His path.
- Correction —points the way back.
- Instruction —forms a character that lives in a godly way, not only in words.
How to make the lesson come alive
- Read every day throughout the week—do not try to cover everything on Sabbath.
- Ask not “what does this say,” but “what is God saying to me through this text today?”
- Bring your question to Sabbath School class—not only a ready-made answer.
This week’s topic is not about the Bible as a subject of study. It is about God, who speaks through it. And an open heart matters more than the right answer on a test.