Lesson 2.The Genesis Foundation | 2.7 Questions | ALLUSIONS, IMAGES, SYMBOLS | LIVING FAITH

š Lesson 2 ā Foundation Genesis
2.7 Questions
Firmly Rooted, Open to Light
š¦ Introduction ā Old Light, New Light
Truth is not rigid, but it is also not arbitrary. In a time when new ideas spread virally and everything old seems suspicious, many believers wrestle with this question: How can we remain open to new insights without losing the truths weāve already been given? How do we discern what is genuine? And what gives life meaning if, in the end, death erases it all?
This lesson invites us to dig deeperāin the Word, in our hearts, and in the hope of what endures.
š Bible Study ā Questions and Answers in the Light of Scripture
1. Scripture continues to provide new insight and understanding. How can we reconcile the desire to learn something new with the importance of staying anchored in the truths already given?
True understanding is like a tree: the deeper the roots, the higher the crown can grow. The Bible teaches that new light is not a replacement for existing truth, but rather an expansion and deepening of what God has already revealed.
Proverbs 4:18 says, āThe path of the righteous is like the morning light, shining ever brighter till the full light of day.ā This means God grants growth in understandingānot through upheaval, but through confirmation.
The desire to learn is from God. But He invites us to test everything by His Word. 2 Timothy 3:14ā17 reminds us, āContinue in what you have learned and have become convinced ofā¦ā
So: We learn to believe more deeplyānot to replace. New light never contradicts what God has already said in His Word. It brings clarity, not contradiction. The danger lies not in searchingābut in searching without an anchor.
2. How should the Church respond to new interpretations of prophecy? While we know thereās always more to learn, how do we discern whether new light is meaningful or merely a trendāor even error?
The church is not a fortress that shuts itself offābut neither is it a marketplace for every new idea. Paul urges in 1 Thessalonians 5:21: āTest everything; hold on to the good.ā This means openness with responsibility.
New prophetic interpretations must be tested in the light of the entire Scriptures:
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Do they reflect the character of Jesus?
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Do they align with existing truthāor do they undermine it?
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Do they promote love, humility, and holinessāor bring division, pride, and sensationalism?
The church must not reject everything new, nor accept everything exciting. The Reformation was once ānew lightāābut deeply rooted in Scripture. The same is true today: only what has been tested by the Word holds weight.
3. During World War II, a dying sailor in the Pacific cried out to a medic, āIām an orphan. If I die, who will remember me?ā The medic replied, āIāll remember you.ā Though well-intentioned, even the medic would one day dieātaking the memory with him. How does this story reveal the futility of life if death has the final word?
The scene is deeply moving. A young man, slipping away from life, asks a haunting question: āWho will remember me?ā And though the medic shows compassion, his answer holds a quiet tragedy: āIāll rememberāābut he too will die.
If there is no God, no Judge, no eternal memoryāthen remembrance is only a brief flicker in the dark. Psalm 103:15ā16 describes it: āMan is like grass⦠the wind blows over it, and it is gone.ā
Without the resurrection, our lives echo in emptiness. Paul puts it plainly: āIf Christ has not been raised⦠our faith is futile⦠we are of all people most to be pitiedā (1 Corinthians 15:17ā19).
The sailorās story reminds us: only in Christ are our lives eternally remembered. He forgets no one. He has engraved us on His hands. He has the final wordāand that word is not death, but life.
⨠Spiritual Principles ā Light in the Tension
New light requires old trust. Growth means deepening, not replacing.
The standard for prophetic interpretation is always: Christ, the cross, and the written Word.
Only the resurrection gives lasting meaning to life. Without it, every promise is hollow.
Truth is not a feelingāit is revealed reality in Godās Word, anchored in Christ.
š§ Everyday Application ā Living Rooted in the Midst of Change
š Be curiousābut also discerning. Not every ānew interpretationā is light. Some are just distraction.
š Read the Bible not selectively, but in context. What God said in Genesis never contradicts what He reveals in Revelation.
š In every truth, seek the heart of Godānot just information, but transformation.
š Speak lovingly with those who bring ānewā ideasābut remain grounded in the foundation Christ Himself laid.
š Live so your life doesnāt just leave memoriesābut a testimony that echoes into eternity.
ā Conclusion ā Rooted in Christ, Tested by the Word, Guided by the Spirit
The Church is called to growānot to wither. In times of change, Christ remains the same.
He is the measure against which every new light must be tested.
Our lives have meaning because Jesus lives. Our hope endures because He is coming again. And our faith grows because His Word stands forever.
š¬ Thought of the Day
Those who have Christ do not only live todayāthey are remembered forever in the heart of God.
āļø Illustration ā A Memory That Endures
Pacific Ocean, 1944.
A young sailor lies bleeding on the edge of a bombed deck. The sky burns. His words are faint, almost wind:
āIām an orphan. If I die⦠who will remember me?ā
The medic kneels beside him.
āI will. Iāll remember.ā
A promise. Genuine. Heartfelt. And yet⦠temporary.
Years later.
Berlin, 2024.
The medicās granddaughter, Hannah, discovers an old letter in a suitcase. The sailor had survivedāand written.
āI know you remembered me. But now I know: God never forgot me. I found Him. Or maybe⦠He found me.ā
Hannah folds the letter. She walks to the living room, opens the Bibleāand reads:
āI am the First and the Last and the Living One. I was dead, and behold, I am alive forevermore, and I hold the keys of death and Hades.ā (Revelation 1:18)
She whispers:
āI wonāt forget you either. Because HE doesnāt.ā
And so, the promise made in the Pacificābecame a promise from Heaven.