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Monday, July 13, 2020

LUKE 19:10

LUKE 19:10




By modeling for them what it meant to see
each individual from a new perspective, Jesus taught His disciples how
to see people through heaven’s eyes. His view of people was radical. He
saw them, not as they were but as they might become. In all of His
interactions with people, He treated them with dignity and respect.


woman at the well
Image © Pacific Press at Goodsalt.com
Often He surprised His disciples by the way He treated people. This
is especially true in His interaction with the Samaritan woman.


The Archaeological Study Bible makes this interesting
observation about the relationship between the Jews and the Samaritans:
“The rift between the Samaritans and the Judeans dates from an early
period. According to 2 Kings chapter 17 the Samaritans were descendants
of Mesopotamian peoples who were forcibly settled in the lands of
northern Israel by the king of Assyria in the wake of the exile of 722
B.C. They combined the worship of Yahweh with idolatrous practices”. —
The Archaeological Study Bible (Zondervan Publishing, 2005), p. 1727. In
addition to these idolatrous practices, they established a rival
priesthood and a rival temple on Mount Gerizim. Considering such
theological differences with the Samaritans, the disciples must have
been perplexed when Jesus chose the Samaritan route to Galilee. They
were surprised that Jesus did not allow Himself to be drawn in a
religious debate. He appealed directly to the Samaritan woman’s longing
for acceptance, love, and forgiveness.


Read John 4:3-34.
How did Jesus approach the Samaritan woman? What was the woman’s
response to Christ’s conversation with her? What was the disciples’
response to this experience, and how did Jesus broaden their vision?
The eternal lesson that Jesus longed to teach His disciples and each
one of us is simply this: “Those who have the Spirit of Christ will see
all men through the eyes of divine compassion”. — Ellen G. White, The Signs of the Times, June 20, 1892.


Who are people whom, due to the
influence of your own culture and society, you tend to view disdainfully
or with lack of respect? Why must you change your attitude, and how can that change come?
<–Sunday Tuesday–>

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