

âȘ Lesson 12: Precursors
đ 12.7 Questions
…………………………………………………………………
đŠ Introduction – When Faith Goes Through the Fire
The final events of earthâs history are drawing near. For some, it sparks curiosity; for others, fear. What will happen? Will it affect us personally? Will we be ready?
In 2 Timothy 1:7, Paul writes to his young disciple something that holds more relevance today than ever:
âFor God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.â
These words are like a shield for anyone who looks to the future with anxiety. God does not call us into dark prophecy, but into living hope. The worldâs storyârevealed in Daniel and Revelationâis not a reason to panic, but a call to prepare.
………………………………………………………………….
đ Answers to the Questions
đ Question 1: How can we overcome the spirit of fearâespecially regarding prophetic persecution?
Prophecy speaks openly about difficult times: persecution, deception, the mark of the beast. Anyone honest feels at least a sense of concernâperhaps even fear. Yet Paul calls us to live by a different spirit.
-
The âspirit of powerâ reminds us that Godâs strength surpasses all worldly forces.
-
The âspirit of loveâ reassures us that Christ walks with us through every trial.
-
âSound mindâ helps us avoid being driven by panic or fanaticism.
đ Biblical example:
The three men in the fiery furnace (Daniel 3) had no Plan B. They said, âOur God can save usâbut even if He doesnât, we will not bow.â
They had no guaranteeâjust trust. And that was enough.
đĄ Spiritual truth:
Itâs not information that saves usâbut trust. Fear paralyzes, but faith acts.
Prophecy doesn’t only reveal dangerâit reveals hope:
God is with usâin fire, in prison, even in death.
đ Question 2: Why should we base our faith not on events, but on Godâs Word?
The world changes overnight. Who couldâve imagined, just a few years ago, that global pandemics, wars, and political chaos would reshape our lives so drastically? The Sabbath may not seem to be at the center of global controversy yetâbut how quickly could that change?
Those who base their faith on current events will be tossed like a ship in a storm.
But those who anchor their faith in Godâs revealed Word will stand like a rock.
đ Biblical example:
In Matthew 7:24â27, Jesus compares faith to a house.
Whoever hears His words and does them builds on rock.
The storms comeâand the house stands firm.
đĄ Spiritual truth:
Prophecy is not a breaking news tickerâitâs a divine navigation system.
It guides us through the dark, even when the map ahead seems blank.
đ Question 3: Which kingdom is still to comeâand how can we be sure it will?
Daniel 2 outlines four world empires: Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, Romeâand then divided nations. All of that happened exactly as foretold. But the image doesnât end with Europeâit ends with a stone.
This stone, not cut by human hands, strikes the image and becomes a mountain that fills the earth: Godâs eternal kingdom.
đ Daniel 2:44:
âThe God of heaven will set up a kingdom that shall never be destroyedâŠâ
đ Why are we certain it will come?
-
Because earlier prophecies were fulfilled with precision.
-
Because Jesus Himself spoke of His return (Matthew 24).
-
Because the longing for justice, peace, and truth is written in every human heart.
đĄ Spiritual truth:
We are living in the feet of iron and clay.
The stone is on its way.
Christ will returnânot as a baby in Bethlehem, but as King in the clouds.
………………………………………………………………….
âš Spiritual Principles
-
Godâs Word is reliableâfaith should not be based on headlines, but on promises.
-
Fear is not a godly advisorâfaith walks by promises, not by sight.
-
Faithfulness in small things prepares us for bigger tests.
-
God writes historyâwe are not victims of chaos, but participants in His eternal plan.
………………………………………………………………….
đ§© Application for Daily Life
-
Read prophecy dailyânot to create fear, but to build trust.
-
Practice faithfulness todayâin the small decisions of everyday life.
-
Walk in loveâeven under pressure. The fruit of the Spirit shines brightest in storms.
-
Speak openly about your hopeâthe world desperately needs clarity.
………………………………………………………………….
â Conclusion
Lesson 12 has led us through prophetic milestones:
From Babylon to the furnace. From the statue to the mark. From persecution to the return.
What remains is not fearâbut a call to choose:
Will you be a spectatorâor a part of Godâs story?
Donât trust what you see today.
Trust the One who sees it all.
………………………………………………………………….
đ Thought of the Day
âIf you want to stand firm against the winds of the world, plant your roots deep in Godâs Word.
Only those who are faithful in the small things today will stand in the great tests tomorrow.â
………………………………………………………………….
âïž Illustration â âThe Empty Conference Roomâ
It was Monday, 8:00 a.m. The lights in the conference room at AegisTech Europe were bright. Clara, 32, a compliance manager, was the first to arrive. Outside, the world spun onâwar, inflation, climate panic. But today wasnât about politics. It was about principles.
On Friday, she had been handed a new workplace directive.
All employees were now required to participate in flexible âcrisis readiness shiftsâ on Saturdaysâofficially for emergencies, of course. But Clara knew better. She had seen too many quiet compromises before.
Today she would respond.
The room filled. The managerâprofessional, politeâspoke of team spirit, of adaptability. Then he turned to Clara.
âClara? Your shift this coming Saturday is critical. Weâre counting on you.â
Silence.
Clara stood. Her voice was calm.
âI respect the company. But I cannot agree. I keep the Sabbathânot out of tradition, but out of loyalty to my God.â
Some looked confused. Others amused.
âClara⊠Itâs the 21st century.â
âI know,â she said quietly. âThatâs why my decision matters more than ever.â
She left the room. She lost her job.
But not her peace.
Three months laterâshe had a new job. A smaller company. Less pay.
But Sabbath-free.
And more than that: her story became a testimony. Colleagues began to ask. One conversation led to another.
Godâs kingdom didnât come with trumpets.
But with a quiet âNo. I will not bow.â
