Bible Study Guides – “A Table in the Wilderness”

November 12-18, 2000

MEMORY VERSE: “Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies: Thou anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over.” Psalm 23:5.

STUDY HELP: Early Writings, 56–58.

INTRODUCTION: “The Lord will help all who take hold with good courage, and humbly do His work with honesty and fidelity and earnest zeal. The end is near, and I would say to those I love in every place, Be of good courage in the Lord. Ministers and people, the Lord is our Rock. We may be secure. The Lord will not leave His people to the will of the enemy. He will carry us through all the strait places. He can spread a table for us in the wilderness.” Review and Herald, February 12, 1901.

“The Bread of God is He Which Cometh Down from Heaven”

1 What piece of tabernacle furniture was placed on the north side of the Holy Place? Exodus 26:35; Exodus 40:22.

NOTE: “The table of showbread stood on the north. With its ornamental crown, it was overlaid with pure gold. On this table the priests were each Sabbath to place twelve cakes, arranged in two piles, and sprinkled with frankincense. The loaves that were removed, being accounted holy, were to be eaten by the priests.” Patriarchs and Prophets, 348.

2 What was placed upon this table? What other items were needed in the use of this table? Exodus 25:29; Exodus 37:16.

NOTE: See Patriarchs and Prophets, 354.

“A drink offering accompanied the morning and evening sacrifice (Exodus 29:40; Numbers 15:5). For this reason the shewbread table contained dishes, spoons, covers, and bowls, or as other versions render it, dishes, spoons and ‘cups with which they pour out’ (Exodus 25:29, Young’s translation). This drink offering was poured out in the holy place ‘unto the Lord.’ It is not a long step from the table of shewbread mentioned in the Old Testament to the table of the Lord in the New Testament.…” The Seventh-day Adventist Bible Commentary, vol. 1, 719, 720.

“I Am the Bread Which Came Down from Heaven”

3 How did Jesus explain the spiritual significance of bread? John 6:30–35.

NOTE: See The Desire of Ages, 386.

4 In what special sense is Jesus the Bread of life? John 6:51–57.

NOTE: See The Desire of Ages, 389.

“Every Sabbath He Shall Set it in Order”

5 When was the bread to be renewed on the table? Leviticus 24:5–8.

NOTE: “When the bread was removed every Sabbath, to be replaced by fresh loaves, the frankincense was burned upon the altar as a memorial before God.” Patriarchs and Prophets, 354.

“The Sabbath hours are sacred, when hungry worshippers enter the courts of God. Common fare can never satisfy. So the preacher must study diligently during the week to gather grains of truth in the fields of scripture. Upon his knees he must labor to grind and sift the flour, while within his heart the fire burns. He must watch to exclude the leaven of self, and include the flavor of heaven’s salt. And he must pray, Sweet Spirit, flow into the dough and anoint it with a cross of oil. And through this toil, the substance of his Sabbath ‘loaf’ will be the Lord Jesus. Then in God’s house, and on God’s day, His pulpit will become a banquet table spread with heaven’s shewbread, ready to satisfy His people’s hunger.” Hardinge, With Jesus in His Sanctuary, 167.

6 What was done with the shewbread removed from the table? Leviticus 24:9.

“They Did Eat and Were All Filled”

7 What mighty miracles did Christ work to demonstrate His power to supply man’s need? Matthew 14:14–20. (Compare Matthew 15:32–37; Mark 6:35–44; Mark 8:1–9; Luke 9:12–17; John 6:5–14.)

NOTE: This is the only miracle recorded by all four Gospel writers. See The Desire of Ages, 365, 366.

8 How had Christ worked similar miracles for His people before? 1 Corinthians 10:1–4. (Compare 1 Kings 17:2–6, 14–16; 1 Kings 19:5–8.)

NOTE: “…there is no place for anxious care. Diligence, fidelity, caretaking, thrift, and discretion are called for. Every faculty is to be exercised to its highest capacity. But the dependence will be, not on the successful outcome of our efforts, but on the promise of God. The word that fed Israel in the desert, and sustained Elijah through the time of famine, has the same power today. ‘Be not therefore anxious (R.V.), saying, What shall we eat? or, What shall we drink?…Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and His righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.’ Matthew 6:31–33.” Education, 138.

“Thou Preparest a Table Before Me”

9 What regular reminder did Jesus give us of His continuing ability to satisfy the needs of His people? 1 Corinthians 11:23-26.

NOTE: See The Desire of Ages, 660.

10 How are we assured that Christ will minister also to the soul’s hunger? Matthew 5:6; Psalm 36:7–9.

NOTE: See The Desire of Ages, 660.

“O Taste and See that the Lord is Good”

11 In what precious promises may God’s people put their trust? Psalm 34:8–10.

NOTE: “How shall we know for ourselves God’s goodness and His love? The psalmist tells us—not, hear and know, read and know, or believe and know; but—‘Taste and see that the Lord is good’ (Psalm 34:8). Instead of relying upon the word of another, taste for yourself. Experience is knowledge derived from experiment. Experimental religion is what is needed now. ‘Taste and see that the Lord is good.’” God’s Amazing Grace, 252.

12 What gracious promise does Jesus make? Matthew 21:22.

NOTE: See Steps to Christ, 111, 112.