Tuesday, August 11, 2009

August 8th/9th – Say What? – Bread of Life

What was Jesus talking about when He called Himself the bread of life? This lesson helps students understand one of Jesus’ most famous claims. The main point of this lesson: Am I going to settle for white, whole wheat, or Jesus? In other words, why settle for the “bread” the world says we need when we can have Christ instead. Sort of dorky, but our students got a chuckle out of it.

SAY WHAT?

Bible Saying You’ve Heard, But May Not Understand!

Bread of Life

Give us free bread every day, like our fathers had while they journeyed through the wilderness! As the Scriptures say, “Moses gave them bread from heaven” (John 6:31).

BREAD:

NOURISHES ME

SATISFIES ME

SUSTAINS ME

Jesus replied, “I am the Bread of Life. No one who comes to me will ever be hungry again” (John 6:35 NLT).

JESUS:

NOURISHES ME

SATISFIES ME

SUSTAINS ME

Thought for the week:

Am I going to settle for WHOLE WHEAT, WHITE, or JESUS?

Sunday, May 17, 2009

May 16th & 17th

Subject: Generosity: Generosity is giving no matter what you’re getting

Core Scriptures: Genesis 40:1 – 41:46
Memory Verse: 2 Corinthians 9:7 (NIV) “Each man should give what he has decided in his heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.”
Discussion Questions:

• Did Joseph ask for anything in return for what he gave? Why or why not? Did Joseph ultimately get anything in return for what he gave? If so, what?

• What are some specific ways that we can show generosity in our lives? What is at least one way you can be generous in the next 24 hours?

• How do our heart motives affect whether we are generous or not?

• How does our motivation affect our generosity? When should we ask for something in return for what we give? When should we not ask for something in return?

• How does it make you feel when someone gives to you with “strings attached”? Do you ever find yourself doing that to others? How do you think it makes them feel?

Bottom Line:

• If generosity means giving no matter what you’re getting, then a person with the successory of generosity should be quick to fill a need when he or she sees it.
• We have opportunities to give around us everywhere. Generosity isn’t a successory we add to our lives later – it’s something that we can add to our lives right now. Generosity is giving no matter what you’re getting. When we give help in whatever form, we join God in remaking and redeeming the world. This is the kind of world we dream about living in.

Monday, May 11, 2009

May 9th & 10th

Subject: Integrity: Integrity is doing what is right even if what happens next is wrong

Core Scriptures: Genesis 39: 1-23
Memory Verse: Proverbs 11:3 (NASB) “The integrity of the upright will guide them, but the crookedness of the treacherous will destroy them.”
Discussion Questions:

• What situation was Joseph in? What are some of the ways he chose integrity? What did the choice for integrity cause Joseph to do? What did the choice for integrity cause Joseph not to do?

• What is YOUR definition of integrity? How do you feel about people who have integrity? What about people who don’t?

• What are some of the things integrity leads us not to do? What are some of the things integrity leads us to do?

• Have you ever been in a situation where you had to make a decision based on your integrity, a time when no one else would have known the difference? What choice did you make? How did you feel about it afterwards?

Bottom Line:

• Joseph decided that his commitment to God and his master meant far more than a sexual affair or a comfortable life. His story shows us that integrity is doing what is right even if what happens next is wrong.

• Integrity is doing what is right even if what happens next is wrong. If we try to skirt the rules and get away with as much as we can, we cheat God and ourselves. But we can be like Joseph and choose to live with the successory of integrity.

• We need to weed out unwise decisions and replace them with the successory of integrity so that we can begin laying a foundation of Wise Choices in our lives. We will always face the choice between integrity and the easy way out. But imagine how much different your life would be if everyone lived this way. This is truly a better kind of life.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

May 2nd & 3rd

Subject: Humility: Arrogance is the Pits
Core Scriptures: Genesis 7: 6-35
Memory Verse: Proverbs 16:18 (AMP) “Pride goes before destruction and a haughty spirit before a fall.”

Discussion Questions:

• How was Joseph arrogant? What were some of the factors that led him to be arrogant? What was the result of Joseph’s arrogance? How did this contribute to his trip to the pits?

• What are some of the ways we display arrogance? What reasons do we use as excuses for our arrogance?

• What problems can result from our arrogance? How can this lead us into the pits? How has this happened in your life? Are there any specific relationships in your life that have been damaged by arrogance?

• What will it look like for us to live with humility? What is humility? How can we develop humility in our lives? What Wise Choices must we make to grow in humility?

• In what specific situations do you need to show humility right now? How can you do this? What practical steps do you need to take?

Bottom Line:

• Jacob’s favoritism and Joseph’s arrogance had created a recipe for jealousy, and this soon took a disastrous form as Joseph’s life took a dark turn. Joseph found out the hard way that arrogance is the pits.
• Humility does not mean we will become doormats. It didn’t for Joseph; he actually ended up as a ruler. But no matter where he was, he had a realistic view of who he was. He knew that God was in control, not him.
• Let us move away from arrogance and instead make the Wise Choice to humbly follow God in our lives, trusting him to lift us out of the pits and into the good He is up to in our world.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Leaving Lust Vegas...April 25-26

Tips on Staying Free of Pornography

  1. Avoid stores that sell porn, especially those that display it behind the cash register so you can see it as you check out
  2. Don't surf the internet alone
  3. Avoid sexually explicit movies (usually R rated and some PG rated)
  4. Avoid looking at people in a sexual manner. If you can't look at a person without having sexual thoughts, then don't look at all!
  5. If married, avoid being separated from your spouse, especially in the evening
  6. Avoid being alone
  7. Pre-plan alternate, non-pornographic activities you will do when you feel the urge to view porn. Examples:

· Ask God for help in prayer

· Pray for others struggling with porn addiction

· Call a friend

· Exercise

· Recite Bible verses audibly

· Sing praise songs to God

  1. Install internet filters on your computer and give a friend the password; use a text only browser (like Lynx) if search engine pictures are tempting you
  2. When tempted, remind yourself the truth about the lies behind the temptations
  3. Take actions to clean out your home from any physical or spiritual stumbling blocks related to porn
  4. Take action to build your spiritual walls of resistance through our online courses
  5. www.xxxchurch.com

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Purity Week #2
April 18 & 19, 2009

Big Idea: “Just This Once”

Core Scripture: Judges 13-16 (Samson and his choices)

Memory Verse: Matthew 5:27-28 (MSG) "You know the next commandment pretty
well, too: 'Don't go to bed with another's spouse.' But don't think
you've preserved your virtue simply by staying out of bed. Your
heart can be corrupted by lust even quicker than your body. Those
leering looks you think nobody notices—they also corrupt.

They led this muscular guy out into the courtyard, his eyes had been gouged out and people were making fun of him and his God. Thousands of people were crowded into this facility and suddenly, without warning, this man turned his face toward heaven and said these words “God, remember me, just this one time”. That phrase is just a snapshot of the life of Samson… Samson, as you look at him, is a tragedy of what might have been. He was a man who was literally leveled by lust.

Let’s look at how he started, let’s look in Judges 13:24
Here’s the situation, Samson was from the tribe of Dan and they had just moved into the Promised Land and they hadn’t actually settled it yet.

Every time you think about temptation, you have to think about your purpose – because the devil uses temptation to throw you off of your purpose. Samson’s purpose was to lead Israel, to be a judge of Israel. The enemy used lust to get Samson off of his purpose. The enemy used temptation to get Jesus off of His purpose (it didn’t work – but he used temptation). He wanted Jesus to not live a sinless life – he wanted to get Jesus off track. What things in your life have tried to get you off purpose or off track?

Judges 14: “Now Samson went down to Timnah” (a Philistine city) The Israelites were SPECIFICALLY told not to associate with, talk to, or marry the Philistines. Well, Samson had a problem with lust.

What is lust? Lust is when a God-given desire (our sex and/or sexuality) goes haywire. Or when an attraction, segues into an illicit action that is physical, emotional, or mental.

Samson went DOWN to Timnah… geographically and spiritually. Lust is always going to take you down – it’s looking for leverage to take you down.

Back to Judges 14 – talking about Delilah. Those Philistines dressed MUCH more provocatively than the Israelites. You go to the wrong places, you’re going to meet the wrong people and miss the purpose of God for your life!

Judges 14:2 – He saw a woman in Timnah… he wanted that woman! His mom and dad knew not to do it, but they did, they went and got this forbidden woman for their son.

Let me tell you something about Samson – Samson was a man who was devoted to God. He took something called a Nazarite vow. The Nazarite vow was a outward symbolic thing of an inward commitment. Here’s what a Nazarite vow entailed – Samson could not touch anything that was dead, he could not partake of any grape products (wine, juice, jelly), also Samson could not have a razor near his head (no haircuts). Those were outward symbols of an inward commitment.

Then going through verses 5-9 – him touching the dead lion and eating the honey. He probably said to himself “just this once”. He even took some back to his parents… (and didn’t tell them where he got it from)
1. Lust always looks for leverage. Eph 4:27 “Don’t give Satan a toe hole.”
2. Lust always lies to us.

“Just this once”… (touch the dead, lust after the women, have some wine) always turns into one more, one more and one more. Lust is that powerful – it can rule us, dominate us and take us down a path that we don’t want to go.

Look at all the awful things that Samson did after that point – the foxes, killing men,

Judges 16:1 – He saw a prostitute, then in verse 4 he runs into Delilah (there’s a “lie” in there). Women have a power, don’t they guys? Vs 6 – her strategy… she “nagged” him to death! He told her all that was in his heart – that’s what the Nazarite vow was all about, his heart.

Look at how sad it really was, in verse 20 it says “and he didn’t even know that the Lord had left him”.

3. Lust always leads to destruction

Look at verse 21 – they gouged out his eyes, bound him, he became a grinder in prision. Lust blinds, it binds and it grinds. Samson’s problem was with his eyes! Lust is all about the eyes! It’s not about the look – its about the linger. He couldn’t control his lust for women. Now he was doing the work of a woman – grinding grain at the mill.

Then he began to cry out to God – what else was he going to do?

His heart began to grow for God again. Then vs. 29 & 30 – “God, remember me again just this once.”

Monday, April 13, 2009

09 Easter: The Story of God

1) Lesson One: Remember
Bottom Line: Our history shapes who we are today
Central Text: Exodus 12:14-17, 26-28 Story of Passover and why we remember vs26
Today is an event in history and we need to remember that!

3 Days Later video:


2) Lesson Two: Receive
Bottom Line: Receiving communion is valuing Christ and unifying us as believers
Central Text: Mark 14:12-26; I Corinthians 11:23-26, 28; I Corinthians 10:16-17
I Corinthians 11:23-26, 28; 23-that the Lord Jesus on the night when He was treacherously delivered up and while His betrayal was in progress took bread, 24 And when He had given thanks, He broke [it] and said, Take, eat. This is My body, which is broken for you. Do this to call Me [affectionately] to remembrance. 25 Similarly when supper was ended, He took the cup also, saying, This cup is the new covenant [ratified and established] in My blood. Do this, as often as you drink [it], to call Me [affectionately] to remembrance. 26 For every time you eat this bread and drink this cup, you are representing and signifying and proclaiming the fact of the Lord's death until He comes [again]. 27 So then whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in a way that is unworthy [of Him] will be guilty of [profaning and sinning against] the body and blood of the Lord. 28 Let a man [thoroughly] examine himself, and [only when he has done] so should he eat of the bread and drink of the cup.

3) Lesson Three: Respond
Bottom Line: The resurrection of Christ 2,000 years ago empowers us to respond in the bigger story of God today.
Central Text:
Matthew 28:16-20
Colossians 1:15-20
Col 1:20 And God purposed that through (by the service, the intervention of) Him [the Son] all things should be completely reconciled back to Himself, whether on earth or in heaven, as through Him, [the Father] made peace by means of the blood of His cross.

All that God wants from you is consent to be loved by Him, consent to be saved…he died and had a choice and now he extends that choice to you!