The Pageland journal. [volume] (Pageland, S.C.) 1911-1978, October 11, 1922, Image 7
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|? Serge, and Broadclotl
?; 5&A $9.95, $13.1
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In Tricotine and Poir
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P I;|1 *8-50' $9%
Long and short coat
JjJI with tassels, fur colli
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a. Prices
?5, $15.50, $19.50, and $25.00
ft S pB
Dresses
et Twill, Embroidered, Beaded ai
95, $12.50, $14.95, $19.50 upl
s in all shades, elaborately d(
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ae and see them. Prices for Lad
$9.95, $12.50, up to !
so coats for ctiildrc
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^ftsSON FOR OCTOBER 22
[ Hr JESU8 TEMPTED
[v JwPON TEXT?Luke 4:1-11.
bWJ^WEN TEXT?For In that He HlmoufTentl
being tempted. He M
8RHb succor them that are tempted.
d[^MjbRENCE MATERIAL?Phil. 2:6-11;
_^BplARY TOPIC?Jesus Overcomes
TOPIC?Jesus Tempted to Do
' fl^fcRMEDLATE AND SENIOR TOPIC
Temptation.
PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC
<^hrlst'* Victory Means to Us.
^^^mhe Place of (v. 1.).
wilderness of Judea. The first
'.jWMkdain, was tempted in a garden
most pleasant surroundings.
JwBlecond man, Jesus Christ, was
c^Ked in a barren wilderness surby
wild lieusts fMurk 1:13).
Tffifoh* Purpose of (v. 1). He was
a wilderness by the Spirit,
temptation was Messianic.
39^nh He was "tempted In all points
we are," we are not tempted
was In this Instance, but the
g^^KjJaetbods are employed on us.
fi^Hgft-the eighteen years of retlre:^4npstan
surely tempted Christ as
ttflBnpts us. Satan, no doubt, would
B^MpjUdly escaped this hour, but the
t^pfm&d come for the Redeemer to
mBWEnoon His mediatorial work;
feBMAtr* He went from the place of
*s^Bpi| and heavenly recognition as
thtflfeu of God to meet and despoil
enemy (Heb. 2:4).
was not a preparation for His
JP^flput rather Its first conflict. In
MnHa'we have the symbolic act of
. P^wfction of himself to the work of
rotmptlon through the cross?the
full a righteousness. " In the
tesaj^atlon, the strong man is spoil
was not to see If Ohrlat would 1
Wt- fast?would fall under the most
cwsil test. Christ could not fall.
postulate would make God'a
achats of redemption to have been
una^fUed until after this temptation. ,
:99j?*$fculd have made God guilty of
forth a scheme of redemption
o4-Be^baals of a possibly overthrow. '
* . Ws to show Christ aa an ob3effi|gop
^Wb^-h we may rest our faith
TjW^^ahaken confidence. He came I
Man' thC heSd ?f a DeW
Il^eMB^ihe divine'and human natures
(TV. 2-1Z).
C^yatae the world's Redeemer
Ru^Sned a threefold relation?Son of
" Son of God; and Messiah, therefore^pstan
made each one a ground of
attach*
1. 'As Son of Man (tt. 2-4). Satan
made, his first assault upon Him as
a roavi by appealing to the Instinct of
hunger. Satan urged Him to use His
divine power and convert a stone Into
btfsd. Hunger Is natural and sinless.
<, The temptation was in satisfying
a right hunger in a wrong way.
To hhve yielded in this case would
have been to renounce the human limitations
which He had taken for our
salt en To use divine power to satisfy
hum#) needs would have been to fall
as Savour and Redeemer.
2. As Messiah (vv. 5-8). Here the
temptation was to grasp His rlghtftal
dominion by false means. The
devil ; offered to surrender unto Him
the vrorld if He should worship him.
The force of this temptation was in
the fact that the kingdoms of the
worldl are Christ's by God's covenant
with .Him. God's method by which
Jesu^^as to possess the world was
th? cross. The temptation Satan is
pressing uppn the church today is to
get ppss ession of the world by other I
means than the cross.
3. AS Son of God (vv. 9-12). Here .
Satan tries to Induce Christ to presumes
upon Qod's care. He quotes a
Mesavnic Psalm to Induce Him to so
act. TTo do the spectacular thing in
order-to get notice is to fall into Sa-.
tan's temptation. For Jesus to have
placed himself in danger in order to
get God's special help in delivering
Him fvould have been to sin. To put
one's iself In moral and spiritual peril
in or far to test God's faithfulness is
to aid- Satan is never quite so danI
kMAita tirtlAn ha n 11 At ao CaelntnaA
UI UU4 . ?" ?* ?*v?i MV V|UVlUO
IV. Christ'# D?fen#e (rv. 4. 8, 12).
It 4raa the Word of God. He met
and repulsed the enemy with "It is
wrlttefu." Our defense la God's Word.
May every Sunday school teacher
know bow to use ltl
V. "he laau# (v. 13).
Satfn la vanquished. If we will but
trust God and use His Woru we too
Can cvercome.
Superior and Inferior.
Ten may fail to shine In the oDlnlon
of both In your conversation
nod actions, from being superior, as
well as Inferior to them.?OrevlUe.
- / Faith.
Nov faith is the substance of things
to be toped for, the evldenc^of things
that Appear not.?Hebrew* 2:1.
I 1 The Lord's Day.
Ye 0hall keep my Sabbathj and reverence
my sanctuary; I am the Lord.-*
Levin, us 19:30. j
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\ :'K
DO YOU
ruRNi;
HI
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We have a new
grade Room Su
Parlor Suits, M
Dining Room Si
we have extra el
%
We are lookii
Pafldand Hardw
' j L.r;J. WAT
I
$1.:
For Two
EHherOne
Pageland Jou
Progressive F
BOTH ONE YEA
$1.35 '
Smith-Ba
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Dry Goods,
Shoes
?A N
Heavy and Fai
PvfnoB anil Anall
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Highest Market 1
Chickens
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?For?
FRESH
MEATS
?And?
BEST OFtFISt
Headquai
FANCY AND HEA
SHOES AND
1
NEED
rURE?
stoekof high
its, Iron Beds,
tattresses and
tits on which
leap prices.
ng tor yon.
are Company,
FORD
? Papers
Worth It
rnal
'armer
ft FOR ONLY
Cannot
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Notions I
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Price Paid For
and Eggs
hardson.
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