🧭 Overview
This week’s SDA Sabbath School lesson focuses on Achan’s sin in Joshua 7, where Israel’s defeat at Ai was linked to disobedience within their own ranks. The lesson frames the story around the danger of sin in the covenant community, asserting that Israel’s collective failure flowed from one man’s greed. It emphasizes obedience to the covenant as the condition of divine victory and portrays Achan’s downfall as an example of how God’s people must maintain purity within the camp to keep God’s presence and blessing.
The lesson consistently draws moral parallels between ancient Israel and the modern Seventh-day Adventist Church, warning that God’s blessing and “heavenly inheritance” can only be secured through the community’s faithful adherence to the covenant.
📖 FAP Response
While the story of Achan indeed teaches us about the seriousness of sin and God’s holiness, the SDA interpretation once again filters everything through an Old Covenant framework, applying Israel’s national-covenantal dynamics directly to the New Covenant Church.
This is a hermeneutical misstep. The covenant under Joshua was conditional and corporate, tied to land, law, and lineage. The New Covenant, however, is personal, spiritual, and fulfilled in Christ (Heb. 8:6–13). The “enemy within” today is not a covenant-breaker who endangers our corporate salvation, but the indwelling sin of the flesh that Christ alone can conquer through His Spirit (Rom. 7:23–25).
The SDA lesson subtly reinforces legalistic theology, suggesting that “victory” depends on obedience to “the stipulations of the covenant.” But the gospel teaches the opposite order: Victory is the gift of grace through faith (1 Cor. 15:57), and obedience flows from that victory (Rom. 6:14–18). The Israelites fought to earn victory under the old system; the Christian fights from a position of victory already secured by Christ.
The repeated allusions to “faithfulness” as the means to “secure” divine favor reveal the ongoing tension in Adventist theology between grace and performance. It’s not that the lesson denies grace; it’s that grace is still framed as empowerment to keep the law rather than the unmerited favor that saves and transforms.
Even worse, the lesson uses corporate guilt theology to imply that one believer’s hidden sin could cause communal defeat, mirroring Adventism’s long-standing obsession with “purity” and “investigative judgment.” This mindset often breeds spiritual paranoia instead of gospel assurance.
🕊️ FAP Theological Conclusion
The true “enemy within” is not merely personal failure or moral compromise, but the human heart apart from the gospel (Jer. 17:9). The law exposes the problem, but only the cross cures it. Unlike Joshua, who uncovered sin by tribal lot, Christ bore our sin by divine grace. In the New Covenant, God no longer relates to His people through collective punishment but through individual justification in Christ (Rom. 8:1).
Adventism’s covenant framework collapses the Old and New into one continuous legal system, turning the church into “spiritual Israel” still under conditional terms of blessing. But the New Covenant declares:
“Their sins and lawless deeds I will remember no more.” (Heb. 10:17)
That’s not the language of probation, it’s the promise of finished redemption.
The real takeaway from Achan’s story is not “keep the covenant or you’ll lose the battle,” but “trust the God who provided the true Joshua (Jesus) who wins every battle on our behalf.”
💬 Reflection for Former Adventists
If you’ve left Adventism, this lesson may feel like déjà vu, a subtle guilt trip wrapped in moral language. It reminds you of that old feeling: “If I fail, the whole community suffers.” But Christ already carried that communal guilt on His shoulders.
The gospel frees you to face the “enemy within” not with fear of exclusion, but with faith in redemption. The Holy Spirit convicts not to condemn but to conform you to Christ. Unlike the old Joshua who judged Achan, our greater Joshua took Achan’s place.
So, when the SDA quarterly warns, “Be faithful or you’ll lose the inheritance,” remember what Peter actually says:
“An inheritance incorruptible, undefiled, and that does not fade away, kept in heaven for you… guarded by God’s power through faith.” (1 Pet. 1:4–5)
You’re not maintaining your salvation by obedience; you’re walking in obedience because salvation is already secured.
Former Adventists Philippines
“Freed by the Gospel. Firm in the Word.”
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