Death and Resurrection

THERE WAS no Stoic resignation, no Socratic dignity, nothing to make it easy or natural: Jesus looked at his coming death and saw it as monstrous and dreadful. What compelled the imagination of the early believers was precisely this—that he was obedient in spite of all, that he endured the nightmare for the sake of God’s mercy. (Rowan Williams, Open to Judgement)

THE GOSPEL ACCOUNTS were all written “on this side of Easter.” That is to say, early followers of Jesus, including the authors of the Gospels, had the benefit of looking back on an event and seeing in it the working of God. In addition to the cross being an act of human treachery and brutality, they were able to see the crucifixion of Jesus as also God’s act. The crucifixion was viewed not only as an act of hostility on the part of human beings toward God’s messenger, but also an act of immeasurable love on the part of the one who had sent that messenger. (Thomas R. Yoder Neufeld, Recovering Jesus)

CHRIST’S DEATH doesn’t replace our death. It enacts it, [the apostle Paul] suggested. That’s what theologians call inclusive substitution. Because one has died, all have died. As a substitute, he is not a third party. His death is inclusive of all. … What happened to him happened to us. When he was condemned, we were condemned. When he died, we died. We were included in his death. Miroslav Volf, Free of Charge

GOD’S VERDICT reversed the world’s judgment. He exalted his humbled servant, Jesus, and gave to him a name above every other name, in heaven or on earth. … By accepting this position of greatest humiliation, Jesus had taken the road to highest exaltation. … The least of all and the servant of all had become in fact the greatest of all and the Savior of all. Paul S. Minear, The Kingdom and the Power

IT IS IN THE LIGHT of Calvary that we can see what it means for us to confess our poverty and our helplessness and to renounce the attempt to overcome them on our own. It is there that we accept our suffering and turn it into a compassion with all the pains that men bear, bundled together as they are in the suffering of Christ. (Simon Tugwell, The Beatitudes)

FOR THE NEW TESTAMENT the resurrection is an ultimate, eschatological event of overwhelming joy for which God is responsible. It is therefore an event than which none better or greater could be conceived. … God acts; Jesus appears; the disciples are transformed. (David Ford, Self and Salvation)

GRANT, O LORD, that in your wounds I may find my safety, in your stripes my cure, in your pain my peace, in your cross my victory, in your resurrection my triumph, and a crown of righteousness in the glories of your eternal kingdom. (Jeremy Taylor, in, The Westminster Collection of Christian Prayers)

Compiled by Richard A. Kauffman/CT

ETB Leader Guide – 327

ETB Commentary – 327

Leaderextras_adults_2016_spr_session04

Leader Tips Video

Prayer & Power

Prayer acknowledges our total dependence on the living Lord.

Oh! yes, (the prayer meeting) is the place to meet with the Holy Ghost, and this is the way to get His mighty power. If we would have Him, we must meet in greater numbers; we must pray with greater fervency, we must watch with greater earnestness, and believe with firmer steadfastness. The prayer meeting…is the appointed place for the reception of power. ~ Charles H. Spurgeon

There has never been a spiritual awakening in any country or locality that did not begin in united prayer. ~ A.T. Pierson

Gentlemen, I have lived a long time and am convinced that God governs in the affairs of men. If a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without His aid? I move that prayer imploring the assistance of Heaven be held every morning before we proceed to business. ~ Benjamin Franklin

ETB – Teaching Plan 320

ETB – Commentary 320

leaderextras_adults_2016_spr_session03

Acts – Lesson Overview

Your Life

When your earthly life is celebrated at your memorial service, few memories will surpass those of the people who remember you as “teacher.”

Someday, folks will gather to remember your life. There are not many better things people could say about you on that day other than about your calling to teach the Bible. “She taught kids in Sunday School as long as she had strength.” “He taught middle school boys the Bible for 50 years.” “She was the best bible teacher i ever had.” “He was a teacher who was always learning.”

Thank you for answering the call to teach.

May your ministry be marked by an unquenchable devotion to the Word. And an insatiable desire to create environments and experiences that help boys and girls and men and women engage and embrace the Word.

It is told of a young boy’s testimony: “First, i fell in love with my teacher. Then I fell in love with my teacher’s Bible. Then i fell in love with my teacher’s Lord”.

(David Francis, Ken Braddy, Micheal Kelley)

Acts – Lesson Overview

ETB – Teaching Plan 313

ETB – Commentary 313

ETB – Leader extras 313

Training Video – Acts 2

 

Teaching from the Overflow

(Mike Livingstone has authored this article & Teaching helps for the week are attached below)

Effective Bible teaching is artesian in nature. The word artesian describes a well through which water rises naturally to the surface as a result of internal pressure. Charles Spurgeon used this metaphor with reference to preaching: “True preaching is artesian; it wells up from the great depths of the soul. If Christ has not made a well within us, there will be no outflow from us.” What is true for preachers is true also for small group Bible study leaders—God’s Word is most effectively communicated from the overflow of what God is doing in our lives.

This being true, the key to transformational Bible teaching begins with recognizing the difference between preparing a lesson and preparing the leader of the lesson. Make no mistake; I’m a strong proponent of lesson preparation. Artesian teaching doesn’t negate the need for personal study, though a prepared heart is more critical. If we have only prepared a lesson but have not spiritually prepared ourselves, we are unprepared to teach the Bible.

How, then, can we prepare ourselves to teach from the overflow? Rather than offering a step-by-step process of preparation, let’s consider three general principles of spiritual preparation:

1. Prepare on your knees.

It’s not the physical posture of kneeling that matters, but the posture of the heart—dependency on and submission to God. “A prayerless ministry cannot know God’s truth and, not knowing it, cannot teach it,” said E. M. Bounds.

The apostles gave priority to two things in ministry, according to Acts 6:4: prayer and teaching the word. Certainly this means they considered their responsibility to pray to be no less important than their responsibility to communicate the word to others and knew the two priorities could not be separated.

2. Pursue God.

It’s one thing to go to the Bible in search of lesson material. It’s another thing altogether to go to te Scripture in pursuit of the Person of God. How important it is not to allow the former to take precedence over the latter!

Leonard Ravenhill said: “A man may study because his brain is hungry for knowledge, even Bible knowledge. But he prays because his soul is hungry for God.” The effective Bible teacher prays not just that God will give him something to say; he prays because he desires God.

In the days of the prophet Jeremiah, the Lord condemned the priests because of a grave sin: “The priests quit asking, ‘Where is the Lord?’ The experts in the law no longer knew Me” (Jer. 2:8, HCSB). Those who dealt with the law of God did not seek God and thus had no first-hand knowledge of what they taught. The Bible is God’s personal Word to the leader before it is lesson material for the next meeting.

3. Practice what you teach.

“Never traffic in unpracticed truth,” Dr. Howard Hendricks used to say. Ezra, the Old Testament priest, scribe, and teacher of God’s law, provides a model. Ezra 7:10 says he “determined in his heart to study the law of the Lord, obey it, and teach its statutes and ordinances in Israel.” The order is significant: study, obey, and teach. If we haven’t studied the Word, we are not ready to teach it. If we’re not obeying it, we are not qualified to teach, for we can’t understand the truth of the Word if we are not practicing it.

Let’s not emphasize lesson preparation to the point that we lose sight of the more important thing—heart preparation. Prepared hearts make prepared lessons. May Christ make a well in the depths our hearts out of which flows the truth of God’s Word in sincerity and power.

Mike Livingstone

Teaching Helps (1/17/2016)

ETB Lesson Plan – 01172016

ETB Commentary – 01172016

leaderextras – 01172016

Training Video

Bible Reading Plans for 2016

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!

Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path. (Psalm 119:105)

Here are a list of a few Bible reading plans for your reading convenience in 2016.

52 Week Bible Reading Plan

Read through the Bible in a year, with each day of the week dedicated to a different genre: Epistles, The Law, History, Psalms, Poetry, Prophecy, and Gospels.

52 Week Plan

Chronological Bible Reading Plan

Read through the Bible in the order the events occurred chronologically.

Chronological Plan

The Discipleship Journal Bible Reading Plan

Four daily readings beginning in Genesis, Psalms, Matthew and Acts.

Discipleship-Journal-Bible-Reading-Plan

Historical Bible Reading Plan

The Old Testament readings are similar to Israel’s Hebrew Bible, and the New Testament readings are an attempt to follow the order in which the books were authored.

Historical Plan