This weekly feature is dedicated to Adventists who are looking for biblical insights into the topics discussed in the Sabbath School lesson quarterly. We post articles which address each lesson as presented in the Sabbath School Bible Study Guide, including biblical commentary on them. We hope you find this material helpful and that you will come to know Jesus and His revelation of Himself in His word in profound biblical ways.
Lesson 10: “Remember, Do Not Forget”
COLLEEN TINKER
Problems with this lesson:
- The emphasis on “Remember” is really about the Sabbath.
- The Sabbath application is not made in the lesson but in the Teachers Comments.
- The use of EGWs recommendation that a daily hour of thinking of Jesus’ life will make people be “more deeply imbued with His spirit.”
This week’s lesson is an example of Adventism’s disingenuousness. The entire lesson focusses on Deuteronomy’s various commands for Israel to remember how God had delivered them from Egypt, how they had wandered in the wilderness as a result of their unbelief, and how they were to remember how God had provided for them. The biblical focus of these commands to “remember” are clear in context: God is SOVEREIGN, and Israel’s needs, future, and very existence were evidences of God’s sovereign will which had nothing to do with Israel’s decisions. They were God’s people because God formed and chose them, rescued them, provided for them, disciplined them, and promised them ultimate redemption and restoration.
Yet this lesson does what Adventism does: it uses these commands to the nation to “remember” God’s sovereign power and care and subtly introduces an entirely different idea via the Teachers Comments where the teachers are directed how to steer the class conversation to the Sabbath.
Adventism has devised a powerfully confusing argument for the eternality of the Fourth Commandment: they grab the first words, “Remember the Sabbath Day to keep it holy,” and they say that the word “remember” in this commandments means that the Sabbath had always been kept prior to the giving of the law. The word remember, they argue, means that Israel was supposed to NOT FORGET what had always been known, that God gave the seventh-day Sabbath as a perpetual command for all people, and He reminded Israel of this fact in the fourth commandment. Thus they piggy-back on the use of “Remember” throughout Deuteronomy, where God reminded Israel of HIM, and they apply these historic meanings to a command that occurred for the first time in Exodus 16.
This is a false use of definitions and grammar. In fact, the reality that the Sabbath application is nowhere printed in the members’ daily lessons but is made only in the Teachers’ Comments just confirms the sneaky way they switch the definition of “remember” and apply it to the Sabbath in a way the fourth commandment itself does not apply the word.
Definitions matter
A quick look at Merriam-Webster’s online dictionary definitions for the word “remember” demonstrates that there are several different definitions for this verb. Adventism insists that in both the fourth commandment as well as throughout the book of Deuteronomy, the meanings are the same: do not forget this “thing” which has existed from the past.
Let’s look, though, at the definitions listed online (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/remember):
Definition of remember
1: to bring to mind or think of again
remembers the old days
2. archaic
a: BETHINK sense 1b
b: REMIND
3a: to keep in mind for attention or consideration
remembers friends at Christmas
b: REWARD
was remembered in the will
4: to retain in the memory
remember the facts until the test is over
5: to convey greetings from
remember me to her
6: RECORD, COMMEMORATEz
intransitive verb
1: to exercise or have the power of memory
2: to have a recollection or remembrance
We see in the definitions above that God’s commands that Israel remember how He led them out of Egypt, how He created the world, and how He provided for them fits the first definition: “to bring to mind or think of again”.
The fourth commandment, however, asks Israel to “remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy”. This form of “remember” is not an act of recalling the past. Instead, it reflects definition #3 best: “to keep in mind for attention or consideration”.
The word “remember” simply does not always mean recalling the past. It is often a command that a person keep something in mind in order to take care of a need. For example, if I ask Richard to please “Remember to pick up some eggs when you go to town,” I am not asking him to recall a repeating event. I am not even asking him to recall something that has happened in the past. I am asking him to keep in mind the need to pick up eggs—a current, maybe even a one-time event.
When Israel was asked to “remember” the Sabbath, God was not telling them to recall an eternal commandment. He was asking them to keep in mind something new He gave them: the Sabbath day which was the sign of His Mosaic covenant with them (Ex 31:17).
Adventism’s “remember” argument is particularly egregious because it clearly misuses the definition of the word and the clear meaning of the passages of Scripture where the word is used. Moreover, this lesson demonstrates the deceptiveness of Adventism’s particular form of brainwashing: they don’t even put this argument clearly on the pages of the lesson but hide it in the Teachers’ Comments so that the idea can be introduced during a moderated discussion rather than publicly in a printed venue which the reader can study for himself, seeing how the word is used and checking the arguments for himself in a setting where he has the time to look up the references in Scripture.
Finally, Thursday’s lesson ends with an appeal to the reader to remember what God has done for them. The author seals the command with a quote from EGW:
“It would be well for us to spend a thoughtful hour each day in contemplation of the life of Christ. We should take it point by point, and let the imagination grasp each scene, especially the closing ones. As we thus dwell upon His great sacrifice for us, our confidence in Him will be more constant, our love will be quickened, and we shall be more deeply imbued with His spirit” (Ellen G. White, The Desire of Ages, p. 83).
This quote is intended to convict the reader to a form of self-directed meditation urged on by the false prophet, suggesting that one’s own imagination should contemplate the final hours of Christ’s life. It doesn’t command that person read Scripture for an hour a day but that one is to contemplate, to imagine, to fill in the blanks with one’s own imagined responses—and in so doing, one’s love should become greater and one will get more and more of Jesus’ spirit.
Notice that the word “spirit” is not capitalized, as it would be if Ellen meant the Holy Spirit. No, she is saying one will somehow become internally more like Jesus in his or her own “spirit”, or attitude. This quote is one of those subtle but profoundly revealing quotes of hers: a casual reader would think she meant the “Holy Spirit”, but when one looks at her punctuation, it’s clear she means something more like Jesus’ power, or attitude.
We do not get more of the Holy Spirit by contemplating Jesus life, and we do not get more of His power or attitude this way, either. Furthermore, contemplating Jesus’ life is never a command of Scripture. We are never commanded to use our imaginations to think about what Jesus felt or thought or experienced. We are to read Scripture and to submit to it. This quote from Ellen, however, asks the reader to put himself on an equal playing field with Scripture. The reader himself is instructed to imagine what Christ endured.
Our own imaginations will NEVER yield the truth, and they will never bring about an increase in our access to Jesus’ spirit or the Holy Spirit!
This EGW quote is actually a directive to practice a form of eastern mysticism, or contemplation. Truth is never in our own heads; our imaginations will never yield reality.
Only in submitting to Scripture, to the normal meanings of the words using normal rules of grammar and vocabulary, will we know what it means. Even more, without recognizing our own need of a Savior and trusting Jesus’ finished work of atonement and the end of the curse of death accomplished at His resurrection, even reading Scripture will not reveal truth.
Only when we submit our minds to God’s own self-revelation, when we submit to His revelation that we are hopelessly sinful, and when we trust His finished work will we be literally made spiritually alive and transferred out of the domain of darkness into the kingdom of the Beloved Son (Col 1:13). Only when we are spiritually alive will God’s word begin to make sense to us, and only then will we discover the truth and reality that are found in Christ alone.
This lesson is a pious deception. The word “remember” is not a one-size-fits-all-uses word, and the fourth commandment is not asking anyone to remember and eternal day. Furthermore, the false prophet of Adventism has misused Scripture to the point that her most spiritual-sounding advice is heretical.
Leave Ellen White and ask the Lord to reveal truth and reality to you. Ask Him to show you your need and to lead you to repentance, and ask Him to give you faith to believe Jesus’ finished work. Ask Him to protect you from deception and to give you eternal life now!
Our eternal, omnipotent, omnipresent Savior will never trick us! †
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In addition, Israel was commanded to keep the Sabbath, observe the Sabbath, and to hallow and sanctify the Sabbath. Along with remembering the Sabbath, this collection of verbs conveys the sense that the Sabbath should be observed as commanded, just like any other ritual command. “Every commandment which I command you today, you must be careful to observe” (Deut 8:1). “Remember and do all the commandments” (Num 15:39-40). And there is more to the Sabbath than simply resting from labor for 24 hours. Regardless, there is no compelling reason to imagine that the Sabbath or any other ceremonial law existed before its first mention in the Bible simply because the Jew was asked to remember it.
Hi Colleen
Your review of Lesson 9 was outstanding .
I have been of the opinion that SDA theology is one of the most subtle , sophisticated and pervasive attacks against the kingdom of God [the way God does things] that the Devil has mounted .
But after reading your review :
… Lesson utterly misses the fact …
… God’s people , are people of faith – not those who continue to try to define their righteousness by the law
.. . Here the lesson reveals the foundation that renders all its arguments false . First , there is no great controversy . The Adventist paradigm of Christ and Satan engaged in an ongoing battle for souls which if Christ wins with the help of believers , will vindicate God’s character and the validity of the Ten Commandments , is heresy .
… Humanity is not born with sovereign free will …
… repentance is not a choice , nor a free will decision …
… Adventism does not teach the finished work of Jesus …
… Adventism puts people in bondage to the law …
… living clean and obedient lives V trusting and believing the gospel …
I now believe that SDA theology is blatant , in your face satanic doctrine . This theology did not come down from Heaven , it came up from Hell . The issues are not subtle . There is a great divide between Bible truth and Adventist truth . The divide , like the Grand Canyon , is obvious . There is no reason to wake up in Hell , the ultimate destination of heresy .