Lesson 7.Foundations of Prophecy | 7.7 Questions | ALLUSIONS, IMAGES, SYMBOLS | LIVING FAITH

đ Lesson 7: Foundations of Prophecy
7.6 Questions
When Heaven Touches EarthâGodâs Voice in Prophecy
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đŠ Introduction
There are moments in life when all masks fall awayâwhen you can no longer hide from yourself, from others, or from God. The Bible describes exactly such a moment: the Judgment. Yet instead of fear, God invites us through the Gospel to face that moment with confidenceânot because of our own righteousness, but because of His grace in Christ.
At the same time, in the end times God calls peopleâas He once called John the Baptistâto be light in the darkness. The church becomes a prophetic people, shining like a burning lamp in the night and calling out, âPrepare the way of the Lord!â Amid a global battle between light and darkness, Godâs love is revealed most clearly at the cross.
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đ Bible Study
1. The Abyss of PrideâLuciferâs Rebellion
Isaiah 14 and Ezekiel 28 show how Lucifer, once a protective cherub, fell from heaven. His fall began with the thought âI willâŠââI will ascend, I will rule, I will be like God. In that self-exaltation the first evil took rootâa rebellion against the very nature of God: love, humility, self-sacrifice.
God allowed evil to bear its fruitânot because He desired its existence, but because love cannot compel loyalty. The cosmic conflict became public, and the cross became the center of revelation: there Jesus triumphedânot by force but by sacrifice.
2. Righteousness in JudgmentâRomans 3:22
Paul declares:
âThis righteousness from God comes through faith in Jesus Christ to all who believeâ (Rom 3:22).
At the Judgment we stand exposedâevery thought, every motive, every action laid bare. What remains? No self-righteousness. Only the Gospel. Christâs righteousness covers us like a mantle of light. Without it we are lost; with it we will endure.
3. Godâs People as Prophetic LightâJohn 5:35 & Revelation 14:6
Jesus said of John the Baptist:
âHe was a burning and shining lampâ (John 5:35).
John was more than a preacherâhe was a forerunner, a voice in the wilderness pointing to the nearness of Godâs kingdom. In the end times the church has a similar role: Revelation 14:6 speaks of an eternal gospel proclaimed to every nation, tribe, language, and people. We are not spectators; we are messengers.
Questions with Answers
Question 1:
Imagine standing before God with every flaw, every character defect, every wrong deed, every wrong thought, every impure motive fully exposed. What would you rightfully deserve? What is your only hope? Why must we have âthe righteousness of God⊠through faith in Jesus Christ to all who believeâ (Rom 3:22) both now and at the Judgmentâwhen we most need it? In short: Why do we need the Gospel?
Answer:
If we are honestâtruly honestâwe know: no one can stand before the all-knowing, holy God. If our hearts, our intentions, our hidden thoughts, and our inner lives were laid bare, we would be utterly exposed and burdened with guilt. Not only our obvious sins count, but also what we failed to do, what we thought but never spoke, hypocrisy, pride, envy, indifference to the weak, and silent neglect of truth.
According to Scripture, what we âdeserveâ is clear:
âFor the wages of sin is deathâ (Rom 6:23)ânot just physical death, but eternal separation from God, the Source of life.
And our only hope begins hereânot in ourselves but in Jesus Christ. Romans 3:22 tells us there is a righteousness outside of usâGodâs righteousness, given by faith in Jesus Christ.
This righteousness is no pious abstraction:
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It is perfect.
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It is tested, proven, and sealed by suffering.
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It is freeâbut costly, purchased by Jesusâ blood.
At the Judgment, when books are opened and every person stands before the throne (Rev 20:12), the question will not be, âWere you good enough?â but, âAre you secure in Christ?â
Thus the Gospel is not an addition to pietyâit is life itself. It is Godâs answer to Luciferâs accusation, the guarantee that grace overcomes sin, and the reason heaven will one day sing,
âBehold the Lamb of God, whose blood redeems!â (VSS 615)
We need the Gospel because:
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We are sinners.
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We need a righteousness we cannot produce.
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God loves us and desires our restoration, not our condemnation.
Question 2:
John the Baptist served as a âburning and shining lamp.â In what way does Godâs end-time people have a similar prophetic role?
Answer:
John the Baptist was unique in salvation history; Jesus Himself said no greater prophet was born (Matt 11:11). He was a voice in the wilderness, calling,
âPrepare the way of the Lord, make His paths straightâ (Luke 3:4).
He was like a seraph on earthâburning, shining, willing to consume himself to bring light, and he proclaimed Christâs first coming with clarity and humility:
âHe must increase; I must decreaseâ (John 3:30).
In the end times, Godâs people fulfill a similar roleâbut announcing Christâs second coming. We live in an age where truth is desperately sought yet elusive. Spiritual relativism, distraction, and fear cry out for a prophetic witness.
Revelation 14:6â12 describes a people proclaiming the eternal gospel to every nation. Like John, we call people to fear God, honor Him, and recognize that the hour of His judgment has come.
Todayâs prophetic role of the church involves three key activities:
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Preparation: Calling to repentance and renewal, not by force but by love.
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Proclamation: Taking the Gospel to every cornerâevery voice matters.
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Resistance to evil: In a world bowing to the beast (Rev 13), Godâs people stand with the Lambâfaithful, steadfast, even unto hardship.
We are not just followers; we are path-makers for His return, lights in the night, flames of hope, heralds of heaven. And, like John, we must say,
âI am not the light, but I am sent to bear witness to the light.â
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âš Spiritual Principles
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Without the Gospel, no one is righteous; in Christ, all who believe are saved.
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Godâs love shines most deeply in the face of evilâon the cross.
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God uses ordinary people for prophetic purposes.
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The church is not a building but a movementâa living lamp.
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đ§© Application for Daily Life
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Examine your heart: Do you rely on your own righteousness or on Christâs?
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Stand daily under the crossâyour refuge at the Judgment.
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Be a lightâthrough conversations, deeds, and thoughts. You are Godâs messenger.
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Learn to speak upâthe world needs the Gospel, and you are Godâs voice in your sphere of influence.
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â Conclusion
Luciferâs fall began with pride; humanityâs redemption began with humilityâin a manger, on a cross, and in an empty tomb. At the center of Godâs plan stands the cross, where love triumphed over sin. And in that divine plan stand you and Iâredeemed, called, and sent.
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đ Thought of the Day
At the Judgment, those who endure will not be the flawless, but those who stand beneath the cross.
đš Illustration â âThe Final Voiceâ: A Story of Judgment, Grace, and the Call to Shine
It was just before midnight when David sat alone in his tiny study. His laptop screen flickered; outside, rain hammered the window. The city below was frantic, loud, indifferentâhis heart was just as restless.
He had just finished watching a courtroom drama. The judge coldly sentenced the defendantâno mercy, no excuses. For some reason, the film didnât leave him. It wasnât the movie itself but the question burning in him:
âWhat if I had to stand before Godâright now, tonight?â
He closed his eyes. And saw.
Not in a dream, but as an inner visionâa sudden, quiet crack in the wall between this world and eternity.
He stood in a vast hall of light. Not a wooden courtroom but radiant brilliance. No human judge, but a throneâdazzling, majestic, awesomely beautiful. Around it: beings with eyes like fire, faces like lion, eagle, ox, and man. Before the throne lay a book, openâhis life story.
David could not flee. The throne was not outside him; it was inside him. And the book was his soul. Page by page, memories surfaced: pride, lies, ignored cries for help, superficiality, self-righteousness, hurtful words, judging glances, hidden thoughtsâknown only to Him on the throne.
An angel stepped forwardâradiant, pureâand calmly asked,
âWhat do you bring the King, son of man?â
David tried to answer: âI wasnât so bad⊠I never stole⊠I did goodâŠâ But his voice failed. Even his good was tainted by pride in that light.
He sank to his knees and whispered,
âI have nothing to offerâonly guilt.â
Then another figure appearedâa man with nail-pierced hands, a face full of love. He looked at Davidânot accusingly but deeplyâand said,
âFor him, I suffered. For him, I died. That he might be with Me forever.â
David hardly dared believe it. The bookâs pages began to change; the writing erased itself. In their place appeared words like:
âForgiveness.â
âMy Blood.â
âRighteousness by Faith.â
And a voice from the throne declared,
âRighteousânot by your own works, but by the Lamb.â
Then the vision vanished.
David gasped and found himself back in his studyâbut he was never the same. He knew that when he stands before God, it will not be his record that saves him, but the Gospelâgrace, the cross.
Two weeks later, David sat in a small Bible study and for the first time spoke aloud about his visionâquietly, humbly. Everyone listened.
âI realized,â he said, âthat Iâm not only saved, Iâm also calledâlike John the Baptistâto share this light.â
Afterward, a young woman named Elisaâ23, an artist, lost, curiousâapproached him.
âDo you really think God can use someone like me? I have so many questions and so much darkness inside.â
David smiled and replied,
âGod doesnât need perfect people. He needs genuine, honest, courageous hearts. If He could use John, eating locusts in the wilderness, He can use youâand me.â
Elisa began to read the Bibleâfirst hesitantly, then passionately. One evening by a small lakeside she whispered what she had long feared to hope:
âI want to be like a burning lampâeven if I only light the way for one person.â
A year later, David and Elisa traveled through Europeânot on big stages or TV, but in small groups, cafĂ©s, university talks. They shared stories of grace, judgment, the Lamb, and the light that came when they lost themselves. They met skeptics, seekers, dissentersâand saw quiet embers ignite in hearts.
One day they stood before an old prison turned museum. David whispered,
âImagineâweâre all born behind bars of guilt, fear, pride. Then Christ comes, opens the door, and says: âGo forth. Be free. Shine for others.ââ