Thursday, March 12, 2026

INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM Q&A: Response to the SDA Argument on Law, Grace, and the Sabbath



PRELIMINARY OBSERVATION

The argument presented commits a fundamental dialectical error at the outset: it opens with a sweeping accusation that our definitions of 'Law' and 'Grace' are unbiblical and agenda-driven while itself presenting redefined terms without exegetical support. This is the classic Begging the Question (petitio principii) fallacy: asserting that one's own definitions are biblical without demonstrating it from the text. We welcome rigorous hermeneutical engagement. But rhetoric is not exegesis. Let us proceed, argument by argument, with historico-grammatical discipline, sound Hebrew and Greek analysis, and the full canonical context.


ARGUMENT #1 REFUTED: The Decalogue, John 14:15, and the Nature of 'Commandments'

The SDA Claim

John 14:15 refers exclusively to the Decalogue. The Sabbath is the moral reflection of God's character. Removing the Sabbath destroys the authority of all ten commandments.


Q: What Does the Text Actually Say?

In John 14:15, Jesus says: "If you love Me, keep My commandments" (ἐντολάς mou the Greek is entolas mou). The critical question is: whose commandments? In the immediate context, Jesus is speaking his own commands, not citing Exodus 20. The genitive pronoun mou ("My") tethers these entolai to Christ himself, not to Sinai.

"A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another, even as I have loved you, that you also love one another." (John 13:34 Grk. didomi entolen kainēn)

Note the word: kainēn = new, fresh, unprecedented in kind (καινήν), not merely neos (new in time). If the entolai of John 14:15 were simply a cross-reference to the Decalogue, why would Jesus use kainēn in John 13:34 just one chapter earlier? The SDA argument conflates "commandments" in John 14:15 with "the Decalogue" without a single word of Greek exegesis.


The Reductio ad Absurdum

The SDA argues that removing the Sabbath from our moral framework destroys the other nine commandments. Let us test this logic:

If the moral authority of the nine depends on the Sabbath being perpetually binding in its Mosaic form, then we have a problem. Exodus 20:8-11 commands Saturday rest, prohibiting all work under penalty of death (Numbers 15:32-36). Does the SDA consistently enforce capital punishment for Sabbath-breakers? No. Do SDAs refrain from all cooking, travel beyond a Sabbath day's journey, and fire-lighting? Inconsistently at best.

If removing one commandment collapses the nine, then modifying that same commandment's penalty and application should collapse them equally. The SDA cannot apply this logic selectively. You cannot claim the Sabbath's form is immutable while quietly modernizing its penalties and mechanics.


The Hermeneutical Issue: Creation Ordinance vs. Mosaic Codification

The SDA correctly notes Genesis 2:1-3 as the seventh-day pattern for Israel's Sabbath origin, but confuses the act of God's resting with a universal command. The Hebrew שָׁבַת (shavat) in Genesis 2 is descriptive: God rested. There is no imperative verb, no command to Adam and Eve, no institution of a weekly observance in the pre-Fall narrative. The command form of the Sabbath enters the biblical canon at Exodus 16 (manna collection) and is codified at Sinai in Exodus 20 addressed explicitly to Israel, tied to the Exodus event (Deuteronomy 5:15), not merely to creation.

"You shall remember that you were a slave in Egypt, and the LORD your God brought you out of there by a mighty hand... therefore the LORD your God commanded you to keep the Sabbath day." (Deuteronomy 5:15)

The grounding in Deuteronomy 5 is redemptive-historical, not creational-universal. Moses himself provides two different rationales in Exodus 20 (creation rest) and Deuteronomy 5 (Exodus redemption). This dual rationale is typical of covenant sign-acts they are given specific theological meaning within a covenant context.


CROSS-EXAMINE Q1

If the moral authority of the nine commandments depends entirely on the perpetual binding of the Sabbath in its Mosaic form Saturday observance, death penalty for violators, no travel, no fire, no cooking then why does Adventism systematically modify every one of those Mosaic Sabbath stipulations while claiming the command itself is eternally unchanged? Is not the SDA position itself the very inconsistency it accuses us of?

 

ARGUMENT 2 REFUTED: 'Antinomianism,' Cheap Grace, and the Straw Man

The SDA Claim

Our position is antinomian 'Cheap Grace,' permitting disobedience under grace. True grace empowers obedience.


The Straw Man Fallacy: Named and Exposed

This argument does not engage our actual position. It constructs a caricature "okay lang sumuway dahil under grace tayo" and then defeats the caricature. This is the classic Straw Man fallacy (ignoratio elenchi). No responsible New Covenant theologian, Reformed Arminian, or mainstream evangelical has ever argued that grace is permission to sin. To accuse us of teaching this is either a deliberate misrepresentation or a failure to read our actual literature.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the theologian who coined the term "cheap grace" in The Cost of Discipleship, was himself arguing against dead religiosity within German Lutheranism not against the New Covenant framework. The SDA has appropriated Bonhoeffer's critique and weaponized it against a position Bonhoeffer never criticized.

"What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin so that grace may increase? May it never be! How shall we who died to sin still live in it?" (Romans 6:1-2)

This is precisely our position. Paul is the most "antinomian" writer in the New Testament by Adventist standards he wrote Galatians 3, Colossians 2, Romans 6-8 and yet Paul himself thunders against license. The question is not whether grace produces obedience (it does all sides affirm this). The question is: obedience to which law, under which covenant administration?


The Obedience Question: Romans 8 vs. Galatians 3

Our position is that under the New Covenant, the law of God is written on the heart (Jeremiah 31:31-34; Hebrews 8:10), not on tablets of stone. The locus of moral obligation shifts not to lawlessness, but to the indwelling Spirit who produces the fruit of righteousness (Galatians 5:22-23; Romans 8:4). The "righteous requirement of the law" is fulfilled in those who walk by the Spirit. This is not antinomianism. This is pneumatology.

"For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has set you free from the law of sin and of death." (Romans 8:2)

If the SDA equates any departure from Decalogue-as-legal-code with antinomianism, then Paul himself is antinomian for he writes in Romans 7:6, "we have been released from the Law" (κατηργήθημεν ἀπὸ τοῦ νόμου katērgēthēmen apo tou nomou we were put to death to, made inoperative toward, the Law). The Greek katargeō is decisive. It is the same word Paul uses for the veil being abolished in 2 Corinthians 3:13-14.


The Real Talk Response: Turned Around

The SDA accuses us of creating doctrine "para maging komportable." We ask: is it not far more comfortable to reduce the entire Christian life to a Saturday observance as the litmus test of faithfulness, rather than carrying the full weight of dying daily to self (Luke 9:23), loving enemies (Matthew 5:44), and pursuing costly holiness in every arena of life seven days a week?

 

CROSS-EXAMINE Q2

You accuse us of teaching 'Cheap Grace' but you have not quoted a single line from our writings making that claim. Can you name one New Covenant theologian, one Reformed Arminian scholar, or one recognized exegete who has taught that grace is permission to disobey God? And if you cannot, are you not bearing false witness a violation of the very Decalogue you are defending?

 

ARGUMENT 3 REFUTED: The Sabbath as 'Creation Ordinance for All Humanity'

The SDA Claim

The Sabbath was instituted in Genesis 2:1-3, before the Jews existed, therefore it is a universal creation ordinance binding on all humanity.


The Exegetical Problem: Missing Imperative

This argument rests entirely on what the text does not say. Genesis 2:1-3 records three things:

(1) God finished His work,
(2) God rested (shavat) on the seventh day,
(3) God blessed and sanctified the seventh day. 

Not one of these clauses contains a second-person imperative directed at humanity. The text says God rested. It does not say Adam must rest every seventh day.

Compare this to actual creation ordinances that are explicitly given as human commands: 

a) The dominion mandate (Genesis 1:28 "Be fruitful and multiply, fill the earth and subdue it") contains direct imperatives in the second person plural (pĕrû ûrebû "be fruitful, multiply"). 

b) The marriage ordinance (Genesis 2:24 "a man shall leave his father and mother") uses 'azav a third-person jussive indicating normative human behavior. 

c) Genesis 2:1-3 has no equivalent imperatival structure directed at humans.

"Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy." (Exodus 20:8 Zākor 'et-yôm haShabbat leqaddesho)

The first command to humans to observe the Sabbath comes at Sinai. If it were a universal creation ordinance, we would expect pre-Sinai observance in the patriarchal narratives. Yet from Adam to Moses spanning thousands of years of biblical narrative not one patriarchal figure (Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph) is ever recorded observing, teaching, or referencing a weekly Sabbath rest. The silence of Genesis through Exodus 15 is exegetically deafening.


Exodus 16: The First Mention of Human Sabbath Observance

The first explicit human observation of the Sabbath in Scripture occurs at Exodus 16:23-30, in the context of the manna collection. Significantly, God presents this in language suggesting it is new information to Israel: "Tomorrow is a sabbath observance, a holy sabbath to the LORD" (v.23). If the Sabbath were a universal creation ordinance observed since Eden, why does Israel need to be told what it is?

"See, the LORD has given you the Sabbath; therefore He gives you bread for two days on the sixth day." (Exodus 16:29)

The word "given" (natan) here marks the Sabbath as a gift being bestowed, not a universal practice being reinvoked. This is inauguratory language, not restorative language.


The Analogy That Exposes the Argument

The SDA logic runs: "God rested on Day 7, therefore all humans must rest on Day 7." But using the same hermeneutical logic: God created in six days, therefore all humans must work exactly six days and no more. God ceased from all creative work at the end of Day 6, therefore humans must never create anything new after completing their life's work. Do we apply 'God did X, therefore humans must do X' as a universal hermeneutical principle? Of course not. The SDA applies this rule selectively only when it supports their Sabbatarian obsession.

 

CROSS-EXAMINE Q3

If the Sabbath is a universal creation ordinance binding on all humanity from Genesis 2, can you show us, exegetically from the text of Genesis through Exodus 15, a single human being observing, teaching, or being commanded to observe a weekly Saturday Sabbath? And if that record is entirely absent if not one patriarch in over 2,000 years of biblical narrative touches it does that not falsify the claim that it was universally instituted and universally known?

 

ARGUMENT 4 REFUTED: 'It Is Finished' and the Continuity of Obedience

The SDA Claim

'It is finished' (John 19:30) means only that atonement is complete, not that the Law is fulfilled or done away. Obedience continues as the work of sanctification.


Agreement With a Critical Distinction

We agree entirely that sanctification requires obedience, that grace is not license, and that Christians are called to holy living. The SDA has set up a false dichotomy: either you keep the Decalogue as codified at Sinai, or you are living in lawless antinomianism. This is not a biblical either/or.


The Greek of Tetelestai

John 19:30 records tetelestai (τετέλεσται) a perfect passive indicative from teleō. The perfect tense in Greek signifies a completed past action with ongoing present consequences. Tetelestai was a commercial term: "paid in full." It appears on ancient receipts in the papyri (discovered in Egypt) written over invoices as proof of final payment.

But what is "finished"? The Gospel of John has been building toward this cry since 1:29 ("the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world"). The fulfillment (plēroō) of the law is part of what is finished. Matthew 5:17 "I did not come to abolish (kataluō) but to fulfill (plēroō)" does not mean "maintain the law in its present form indefinitely." Plēroō means to bring to completion, to fill up, to bring to its intended telos. When a prophecy is plēroō'd, it is not perpetuated; it is consummated.

"For Christ is the end (telos) of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes." (Romans 10:4)

The Greek telos means end, goal, culmination. Christ is the terminus ad quem of the Mosaic Law. The law was given as a paidagōgos (Galatians 3:24 a guardian/tutor) until Christ came. Now that faith has come, we are no longer under the paidagōgos. This is not Paul's marginal opinion; it is the central argument of Galatians, Romans, and Hebrews.


Hebrews and the 'Better Covenant' Argument

The author of Hebrews makes the most sustained canonical argument that the Old Covenant of which the Decalogue was the covenant document (1 Kings 8:9, "in the ark there was nothing except the two tablets" the very constitution of the Mosaic Covenant) has been made obsolete:

"When He said, 'A new covenant,' He has made the first obsolete; but whatever is becoming obsolete and growing old is ready to disappear." (Hebrews 8:13)

The Greek here is pepalaioōken (has made old/obsolete) and eggus aphanismou (near to vanishing). This is not incidental language. The Old Covenant as an administrative structure including the Decalogue as its core document has been superseded by a better covenant with better promises (Hebrews 8:6).


The Sanctification Argument Turned Back

We affirm with full conviction: sanctification requires obedience. But the question is what law governs our sanctification under the New Covenant. The New Testament consistently grounds New Covenant ethics in the law of Christ (Galatians 6:2 νόμον τοῦ Χριστοῦ), the law of the Spirit (Romans 8:2), and the love commandment as the fulfillment of all law (Romans 13:8-10; Matthew 22:37-40). The nine moral principles of the Decalogue that are universally applicable are re-stated and grounded in the New Covenant not by carrying the stone tablet, but because they are inscribed on renewed hearts (Hebrews 10:16). The Sabbath alone is the one commandment from the Decalogue never once reiterated as binding on New Covenant believers in the entire New Testament epistolary literature.


CLOSING VERDICT: The Logic of the Whole SDA Argument

The four arguments presented share a common structural flaw: they all assume what they are trying to prove. The argument assumes that the Decalogue is the normative law for New Covenant believers and then criticizes any departure from that assumption as error, antinomianism, or comfort-seeking. This is circular reasoning (circulus in probando). The conclusion is smuggled into every premise.

Let us name the additional logical fallacies embedded in the "Real Talk" conclusion:

Ad Hominem / Motive Attack:

"Ang turo ninyo ay man-centered para maging komportable kayo." This attacks the motive of the teacher rather than engaging the argument. Imputing comfort-seeking as the reason for New Covenant Theology is a personal attack, not a theological refutation. The proper response to an exegetical position is exegesis not psychoanalysis.

 

Appeal to Emotion / Guilt Trip:

"Huwag ninyong gamitin ang pangalan ni Kristo para bigyang-katwiran ang inyong pagsuway." This is an appeal to shame and emotional pressure rather than rational argumentation. Calling our position "pagsuway" (disobedience) without establishing exegetically that the Sabbath is binding on New Covenant believers is the very question at issue it cannot be used as if it were already established.

 

False Dichotomy:

The entire argument presents only two options: keep the Sabbath as SDA teaches, or you are living in Cheap Grace rebellion. This ignores the massive theological middle ground of New Covenant obedience that is both rigorously holy and Sabbath-free as a Mosaic obligation.

 

SDA CLAIM

EXEGETICAL VERDICT

John 14:15 = Decalogue observance

Eisegesis. Entolai mou = Christ's own commands (John 13:34). No textual basis for Sinai equation.

Sabbath = moral reflection of God's character

Category error. The Sabbath is a sign-act (Exodus 31:13), not an eternal moral absolute. God's eternal character is holy love, not Saturday rest.

Sabbath pre-dates Judaism = universal ordinance

Non sequitur. Absence of human command in Genesis 2; no patriarchal observance; Exodus 16 presents Sabbath as new institution.

'It is finished' ≠ end of law-keeping

Tetelestai = paid in full. Romans 10:4: Christ is the telos of the law. Hebrews 8:13: Old Covenant made obsolete.

Rejecting Sabbath = antinomianism

Straw man. New Covenant obedience is to the law of Christ (Galatians 6:2), law of the Spirit (Romans 8:2), and love (Romans 13:8-10).

 

THE GOSPEL POSITION

Former Adventists Philippines do not reject the Law we proclaim its fulfillment in Christ. We do not reduce obedience we ground it in the better covenant. We do not cheapen grace we declare it as the most costly thing in the universe: the blood of the Son of God. The Sabbath pointed to the rest found in Christ (Matthew 11:28-30; Hebrews 4:1-11). We have entered that rest. Every day is holy to the Lord. Every moment belongs to Christ. That is not Cheap Grace. That is the Gospel.

 

Sola Scriptura. Sola Gratia. Sola Fide. Solus Christus. Soli Deo Gloria.

Investigating Adventism Philippines | Ronald V. Obidos 

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

FAP SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2026: "The Good Samaritan:Who Is My Neighbor? Luke 10:25–37




FORMER ADVENTISTS SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON

SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2026

Lesson: "The Good Samaritan:Who Is My Neighbor? 
Kingdom Love That Crosses Every Boundary

Scripture: Luke 10:25–37

Memory Verse: 
Luke 10:37b "You go, and do likewise."


Opening Prayer

Lord, soften our hearts today not only to be comforted, but to be challenged. Disrupt what we think we already know about love. Expand our vision of who our neighbor is, and give us the courage to cross the boundaries we have quietly drawn. May Your Spirit do in us what we cannot do on our own. In Jesus Name! Amen.


OPENING HOOK:

A lawyer came to Jesus and asked a question to TEST Him. By the time Jesus was done answering, the question had flipped around and it was testing US. Today's parable is not an answer. It is a mirror.


INTRODUCTION: The Most Dangerous Question 

Setting the Scene: Luke 10:25

An expert in the Law (a Torah scholar, a man of religious achievement) stands up. He already knows the rules. He asks: "Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?" Pay close attention to the framing. He thinks in terms of DOING to EARN. He believes eternal life is a prize that belongs to the performance-minded.

"And behold, a lawyer stood up to put him to the test, saying, 'Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?' He said to him, 'What is written in the Law? How do you read it?'" Luke 10:25–26, ESV


Cultural Bridge: SDA Background

Many of us came from a tradition that specialized in doing: keep the right day, eat the right food, follow the right prophet, read the right commentary. The good news is: that training taught us discipline and love for Scripture. The danger is: it can subtly replace trust with performance, and reduce love to a checklist.

Today's parable is not gentle. It does not congratulate the rule-keepers. It elevates the outsider. It disrupts performance religion at its very root.


Cultural Bridge: Filipino Regionalism

Before we read the parable, consider this: the Philippines has its own invisible boundaries. Tagalog vs. Bisaya. Manila vs. probinsya. Wealthy barangay vs. poor barangay. The educated vs. the uneducated. We know who "our people" are and quietly, we know who falls outside that circle.

Ask yourself as we read: Who is your Samaritan?


KEY THESIS:

True Kingdom love is costly, indiscriminate, and initiative-taking not rule-following in disguise. The question is not 'Who qualifies as my neighbor?' The question is: 'What kind of person am I becoming?'


Four Responses to a Man in Need

"A man was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and he fell among robbers, who stripped him and beat him and departed, leaving him half dead. Now by chance a priest was going down that road, and when he saw him he passed by on the other side. So likewise a Levite, when he came to the place and saw him, passed by on the other side. But a Samaritan, as he journeyed, came to where he was, and when he saw him, he had compassion..." Luke 10:30–37, ESV


CHARACTER 1:The Robbers | v. 30

The Robbers v. 30

They saw a person and asked: "What can we GET from him?" They exploited the man's vulnerability. They took everything his clothing, his dignity, his safety and left him for dead. This is self-interest at its most naked.

Application: The Commodification of People:

• We live in a world that measures human beings by their usefulness. Employees are resources. Migrants are labor. The poor are problems.

• Even in churches, people can become projects targets for conversion, sources of tithe, audience for our ministries.

• The robbers' question haunts every economy, every organization, and sometimes every heart: What can I get from this person?


REFLECTION QUESTION:

Have you ever treated someone as a means to your end a transaction rather than a person? This is the robber's spirit, even in respectable clothes.


CHARACTER 2: The Priest & Levite | vv. 31–32

The Priest v. 31

He saw the man. He was on the same road. He deliberately crossed to the other side. This is not ignorance it is calculated avoidance.

The Levite v. 32

Same road. Same sight. Same response. Two men from Israel's religious elite the most trained, most devoted, most doctrinally sophisticated people alive and both walked past.

Why Did They Pass By? (Exploring Possible Rationales):

RITUAL PURITY: Contact with a dying or dead man made a priest ceremonially unclean (Lev. 21:1-3). To serve in the Temple, he needed to remain clean. His religious system gave him an excuse.

FEAR: The Jericho road was notorious for bandits. The man's condition might be a trap. Better safe than holy.

INCONVENIENCE: He had places to be, appointments to keep, sermons to preach, meetings to attend.

COMPARTMENTALIZATION: "This is not my department. Social services handle this. Let someone else."


KEY INSIGHT: New Covenant Theology Application:

The ceremonial purity system is fulfilled in Christ (Heb. 10:1-14). We are no longer governed by codes that allow us to justify bypassing a suffering person. Under the New Covenant, there is NO religious system that gives you a pass on human need. If your theology is making you less compassionate not more something is wrong.

SDA-Specific Application:

Many of us were trained in elaborate doctrinal systems 28 Fundamental Beliefs, the investigative judgment, health reform, prophetic timelines. We learned to argue. We learned to research. Did we also learn to see?

It is possible to know the exact prophetic fulfillment of Daniel 8:14 and still cross to the other side of the road when someone is bleeding. Religious sophistication and human compassion are not automatically the same thing.


APPLICATION:

The Kingdom of God advances as the Church becomes present to suffering, not absent from it. Every time a Christian crosses to the other side past the homeless person, past the marginalized colleague, past the broken family member they slow the advance of the Kingdom. Presence is a Kingdom act.


CHARACTER 3: The Good Samaritan | vv. 33–35

The Samaritan vv. 33–35

He had every cultural, ethnic, and religious reason NOT to help. Jews despised Samaritans as half-breed heretics with wrong worship and wrong theology. And yet he stopped. He acted. He gave everything.

Who Were the Samaritans?

• Samaritans were descendants of Israelites who intermarried with Assyrian settlers after the exile (2 Kings 17:24-33).

• They worshipped God on Mount Gerizim instead of Jerusalem (John 4:20). Jews called this false worship.

• Strict Jews avoided all contact with Samaritans. Some spat on the ground when passing a Samaritan village.

• In this culture, for a Samaritan to be the HERO of a story told by a Jewish rabbi was deeply, deliberately shocking.


Anatomy of Samaritan Love: Every Detail is Sacrificial


HIS ACTION: WHAT IT COST HIM
  • He saw him (v. 33): He did not look away. Seeing is itself an act of love.
  • He had compassion (v. 33): Splanchnizomai - gut-level, visceral mercy. He felt the man's pain in his own body.

  • He went to him (v. 34):  He crossed social, ethnic, and religious lines without hesitation.
  • He bound his wounds (v. 34):  Physical service. Hands in blood. Undignified, intimate, necessary.

  • He poured oil and wine (v. 34) His own supplies not a hospital's, not the government's. His personal resources.

  • He put him on his own animal (v. 34) He walked. The wounded man rode. Status reversed by love.

  • He brought him to an inn (v. 34) He took him somewhere safe not his own home, but he secured shelter.

  • He paid for his care (v. 35) Two denarii roughly two days' wages. Out of his own pocket, no reimbursement expected.

  • He promised to return (v. 35) He committed to ongoing relationship, not a one-time transaction.

Greek Word Study: Splanchnizomai

The word translated "had compassion" in verse 33 is splanchnizomai (σπλαγχνίζομαι). It derives from splanchna the bowels, the inward parts. In Hebrew thought, the gut was the seat of deep emotion. This word describes an involuntary, physical response to another person's suffering. It is not a feeling you decide to have. It is a feeling that overtakes you.

This same word is used for Jesus in Matthew 9:36 when He saw the crowds. It describes the Father in the Parable of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15:20). The Samaritan felt what Jesus feels. His compassion was not policy it was person-to-person encounter.


FILIPINO CULTURAL ILLUSTRATION: Malasakit:

Filipino culture has a word for this: malasakit. Genuine concern and care for another person not out of duty, not for reward, but because their pain becomes your pain. The Samaritan embodies Kingdom malasakit elevated to its highest form. This is not foreign to Filipino instinct. Jesus is calling you to live what your culture already recognizes as beautiful.


The Samaritan as Type of Christ

It is not an accident that Jesus who was himself despised and rejected by the religious establishment (Isaiah 53:3; John 8:48, where Jews called Him a Samaritan as an insult!) chose a Samaritan as His hero. There is a deep, deliberate theology here:

• Jesus came from outside the religious elite to rescue those the elite had abandoned.

• He crossed every boundary divine to human, holy to broken in the Incarnation.

• He poured out His own life as a resource for our healing (Isaiah 53:5).

• He placed us on His own life and bore us to safety.

• He paid the full price of our redemption and promised to return (John 14:3).

The Cross is the ultimate Good Samaritan act. Jesus is not just telling a story about how to be a good person. He is revealing who He is and what love, rooted in Him, looks like in daily life.


CHARACTER 4: Jesus' Redirected Question | vv. 36–37

"Which of these three, do you think, proved to be a neighbor to the man who fell into the robbers' hands?" He said, "The one who showed him mercy." And Jesus said to him, "You go, and do likewise." Luke 10:36–37, ESV


The Question That Changed the Question:

The lawyer asked: "Who is my neighbor?" He was looking for the boundary of his obligation. If Jesus defines neighbor narrowly, the lawyer is off the hook for most people.

Jesus refuses to answer that question. He reframes the entire inquiry. He asks instead: Which of these three PROVED TO BE a neighbor? The shift is profound:

FROM: "Who qualifies for my love?" a sorting question

TO: "Am I becoming the kind of person who loves?" a character question

FROM: Looking for the limit of the law

TO: Living from the depths of the Spirit


THE POINT:

Stop defining the boundary of your love. Start BEING a neighbor. Love is not a boundary question it is a character question. The Kingdom does not ask 'How little love can I give and still qualify?' It asks 'How much love can I give, shaped by the One who gave everything?'


The Lawyer's Answer (v. 37a):

Notice: the lawyer cannot even bring himself to say "the Samaritan." He says only "the one who showed him mercy." The prejudice runs so deep he avoids the name. But he got the answer right. And Jesus does not shame him. Jesus simply says: "You go, and do likewise."

This is grace and demand in one sentence. This is the voice of the New Covenant: not 'Do more to earn' but 'Go and embody what you have seen.'


IV. APPLICATION FOR DAILY LIVING 

Personal Application

• Who is the person on the side of the road in your life THIS WEEK?

• A struggling co-worker you have been carefully not seeing?

• A family member you have crossed to the other side to avoid?

• A former church member from your SDA days who you left behind without closure?

• An elderly neighbor whose name you do not know?


Community Application: For Former SDAs Specifically

Many of us in this congregation know what it is to be the wounded man on the road. We left a community, or were pushed out of one. We know the experience of religious people passing by of leaders prioritizing institutional reputation over our pain.

Let that experience be a teacher, not a poison. Use the memory of being wounded to cultivate compassion, not bitterness. The best former-SDA witness is not an argument. It is a life of radical, boundary-crossing love that proves the Gospel is alive.

Social & Structural Application

Note that the Samaritan addressed both immediate physical need AND long-term systemic provision (the inn, the promised return). Kingdom love does not choose between charity and justice it pursues both:

Immediate: Feed the hungry, visit the sick, shelter the vulnerable.

Long-term: Advocate for structures that reduce the number of people being beaten and left on roads.

Both hands of the Kingdom: immediate mercy and long-term flourishing are in this story.


Cross-Cultural Application

Every culture has its Samaritan, the group deemed theologically suspect, ethnically inferior, or socially unworthy. In the Philippines, consider:

Indigenous peoples (IPs): marginalized by both government and mainstream church culture

Muslims in Mindanao: do we see them as neighbors or threats?

LGBTQ+ individuals: can we embody compassion before we debate theology?

The extremely poor in informal settler areas: does our church have a theology of the squatter?

Kingdom love crosses these lines. Not because it ignores conviction, but because it refuses to use conviction as a reason to avoid presence.


CHALLENGE FOR YOUTH:

True strength is using your resources time, money, social capital, skills for others. This week: identify ONE person in your world who is on the side of the road. Do ONE concrete act of costly kindness. Do not post it. Do not announce it. Just do it. And report back next week on how it felt.


The Spirit and Compassion

The Spirit does not only convict us of sin. He empowers us for acts of mercy. The Greek word parakletos (Comforter/Helper) describes someone who comes alongside the suffering. The Spirit is Himself the ultimate Good Samaritan in our inner lives and He calls us to be that presence for others.

Invitation: Share a story with the congregation a time when you felt the Spirit prompt you toward an act of compassion you would not naturally have chosen. This is the Spirit's kingdom work in real time.


CONCLUSION

Summary of the Journey

The Robbers

What can I GET from you? (Exploitation)


The Priest

I cannot help without losing something (Religious self-protection)


The Levite

This is not my responsibility (Systemic avoidance)


The Samaritan

What do you NEED from me? (Costly, indiscriminate love)


Jesus

He IS the Good Samaritan  (The Cross is the act)


The Gospel and Ethics Are Inseparable

We do not love our neighbors in order to earn God's favor. We love our neighbors because we have already received God's favor lavishly, at infinite cost, through the One who crossed every boundary to reach us.

"We love because he first loved us." 1 John 4:19


Invitation to Surrender Your Boundaries
  • Today's invitation is not a call to try harder. It is an invitation to be honest about the invisible lines you have drawn. Where have you been the Priest? The Levite? Whose face have you avoided?
  • Come and surrender those invisible lines to God. Ask the Spirit to give you splanchnizomai gut-level compassion for the specific person He is bringing to your mind right now.

  • Pray: "Lord, show me who is on the side of my road. Make me the neighbor they need. Give me the courage and resources to cross to them. Not to earn but because You crossed to me."

SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL

Additional Biblical Parallels 'Who Is My Neighbor?' Across Scripture

Leviticus 19:18 "Love your neighbor as yourself" the original commandment. But note: in context it was addressed to fellow Israelites.

• Leviticus 19:34 "Love the stranger as yourself, for you were strangers in Egypt." The boundary was already expanding before Jesus!

Ruth 2 A Moabite (another despised outsider) embodies covenant faithfulness for Naomi. Boaz is a type of the Good Samaritan (and Christ) extending kinsman-redeemer love.

2 Kings 17:24-33 The historical background of the Samaritan people helps the audience understand the depth of the cultural barrier.

John 4:1-42 Jesus crosses the Jewish-Samaritan boundary again, this time with the woman at the well. "Jews have no dealings with Samaritans" (v. 9). Jesus ignores this boundary entirely.

Matthew 25:31-46 "Whatever you did for the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me." The King identifies with the suffering neighbor. This is not works-salvation it is the fruit of Kingdom citizenship made visible.

James 2:14-17 "If a brother or sister is poorly clothed and lacking in daily food, and one of you says to them, 'Go in peace, be warmed and filled,' without giving them the things needed for the body, what good is that?" Faith without works is dead.


Five Questions for Small Group Discussion

• 1. Who is the "Samaritan" in your cultural context the person your community has taught you to distrust or dismiss? What would it look like to receive help from that person?

• 2. The Priest and Levite had a religious reason to walk past. What religious or doctrinal reasons have you used (consciously or unconsciously) to avoid a person in need?

• 3. Jesus says "You go, and do likewise" not "You feel, and do likewise." Why does Kingdom love require action before feeling? Have you ever acted in love and felt it afterward?

• 4. The Samaritan gave two denarii and promised to return. How does sustained, long-term involvement in others' lives differ from one-time charity? What does that look like practically?

• 5. How has your journey out of Adventism shaped your capacity for compassion or your barriers to it? What wounds do you carry that God might want to redeem into a ministry of presence?

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Tuesday, March 10, 2026

"The Adventist Exit Arc: When Loyalty Becomes a Cage!"


This meme captures a genuine journey many ex-Adventists walk through, and it deserves honest pastoral engagement. 

The final panel is the wisest one, and here's why:

Seventh-day Adventism isn't merely a collection of doctrines you can swap out. Its core identity is structurally bound to the prophetic authority of Ellen G. White, Saturday Sabbatarianism as a salvation issue, Investigative Judgment theology, and a self-understanding as the one true remnant church. These aren't peripheral; they're the skeleton.

You cannot remove them and still have Adventism. You just have something else. And that's okay. That something else might actually be closer to the gospel.

The pastoral word here is this:

Loyalty to a system is not the same as loyalty to Christ. When the system requires you to defend what the Bible doesn't teach or suppress what it clearly does, that's not faithfulness; that's captivity.

Leaving isn't betrayal. Sometimes it's obedience.

The Reformers didn't stay in Rome trying to fix it from within forever. There comes a moment of honest reckoning.

If you're on that journey, the exit door isn't defeat. It might be your Damascus Road.

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