0% found this document useful (0 votes)
27 views1 page

Embracing Meekness in Humanity

This document provides a lesson on meekness for elementary, intermediate, and advanced levels. For elementary students, it defines meekness as not arguing or fighting back when pushed or called names. Intermediate students are taught that meekness means not resisting how others treat us, even if wrong, and accepting situations without resentment. For advanced students, meekness involves having a loving heart such that one does not need to fight for themselves. Jesus is given as the ultimate example of meekness in willingly dying for sinners without resistance. A story is also provided of a 19th century missionary, Mr. Hunter Corbett, who endured children mocking him by throwing dirt but continued preaching with

Uploaded by

richgetahun2
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
27 views1 page

Embracing Meekness in Humanity

This document provides a lesson on meekness for elementary, intermediate, and advanced levels. For elementary students, it defines meekness as not arguing or fighting back when pushed or called names. Intermediate students are taught that meekness means not resisting how others treat us, even if wrong, and accepting situations without resentment. For advanced students, meekness involves having a loving heart such that one does not need to fight for themselves. Jesus is given as the ultimate example of meekness in willingly dying for sinners without resistance. A story is also provided of a 19th century missionary, Mr. Hunter Corbett, who endured children mocking him by throwing dirt but continued preaching with

Uploaded by

richgetahun2
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Topic: Proper Humanity – Meekness

Note: The practical applications provided in the lesson are offered as suggestions to help the saints in their
preparation. They are not meant to direct or limit the ways in which the focus of the lesson can be applied.
The saints are encouraged to pray and contact the Lord to receive His burden and guidance in teaching and
applying the lesson. Fellowship with other saints, and inquiring of the children themselves, may also bring
out many helpful applications.

Elementary:

Verse: “Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth” (Matthew 5:5).

Focus: We need to be meek toward others. To be meek is not to argue or fight back.

Practical Application: When someone pushes you or calls you names, you should not push or fight back.
Instead, you should tell someone in charge about it.

Intermediate:

Verse: “To slander no one, to be uncontentious, gentle, showing all meekness toward all men” (Titus 3:2).

Focus: We need to be meek toward others. We should not resist how others treat us, even if they are
wrong. We need to endure and accept our situation without resentment. We should not insist on
our own ways, ideas, or wishes.

Practical Application: Your friend talks to you during class. Your teacher says you are being disruptive and
decides to bench you during recess. Do you accept your teacher’s decision? Or do you go to your teacher and
argue that your friend was the one who started talking and that you should not be benched?

Advanced:

Verse: “With all lowliness and meekness, with long-suffering, bearing one another in love,” (Ephesians
4:2).

Focus: Meekness involves our heart. We need to love others. Because we love and care for others, we can
be meek before them and not fight for ourselves. Not fighting for ourselves or fighting back means
that inwardly we can accept our situation.

Practical Application: Jesus was the meekest person. He was even willing to die for sinners without
resistance. The Lord’s dying on the cross is an example of meekness. When He was on the cross others
mocked Him and said that if He was the Son of God, He should save Himself and come down from the cross.
The Lord is the Son of God and He could have done it, but He chose not to. He did not fight back and justify
Himself. Instead, He suffered on our behalf because He loved us. When others criticize, mock, or are mean to
you, what is your attitude? Do you accept the situation or do you fight back? You can also tell the story of Mr.
Hunter Corbett.

Story: In 1863, there was a preacher named Hunter Corbett who came to northern China from America to
preach the gospel. He was thick-skinned and not self-conscious. When he passed through the villages, crowds
of children would follow him, throwing dirt at him and mocking him. But he was conscious of nothing and
kept walking. After a while, he would turn around and say with a smile, “Enough, enough.” By being oblivious
of his self, the gospel was eventually preached. The ancient and great country of China was extremely
conservative at that time. The Boxer Movement of 1900 intended to kill the Westerners in China and all the
Chinese Christians who followed the “Western religion.” However, the people respected the older
Presbyterian missionary named Mr. Corbett. Mr. Corbett could not speak eloquently, but he had a heart to
love the people. He loved everyone, and he gave whatever he had to them. Eventually, everyone came to know
that this was an American who was for everyone but himself. Therefore, the Boxers even had a slogan: “Kill all
the Westerners and their followers, except Mr. Corbett.”

You might also like