The Authority of the Word of God Anchor command. “Prove yourselves doers of the word, and not merely hearers who delude themselves.” James 1:22 Anchor promise: “Everyone who
hears these words of Mine and acts on them, may be compared to a wise
man. Anchor story. King Josiah’s obedience to God’s Word, 2 Chronicles 34 Anchor verse. “Josiah … made all who were present in Israel serve the LORD their God. All his days they did not turn away from following the LORD.”2 Chronicles 34:33 Learning goals. Respect, honour and obey God’s holy Word. Growth goals. Read and
meditate on God’s word daily, including with one’s family. Skill goal. Become able to teach and apply God’s word skilfully. Outcome goal. All believers in one’s church come to love and obey God’s word. Basic Study 1. Learn from Josiah how to respond to God’s Word. 2. Prayer: “Holy Spirit, illuminate our minds to learn and obey your Word with all our hearts. Help us make it clear to others, so they can share in our joy.” 3. Read 2 Chronicles 34 and find in it: ·
How Josiah
broke with some human religious traditions, in order to obey God. ·
Find how hard
Josiah’s people worked to find the Word of God. ·
Find the
authority that God’s Word had for Josiah, and what Josiah did. ·
Find how
Josiah sought God’s help as he studied the Scriptures. 4. Plan with coworkers activities to do during the week. · With your co-workers, help families to study the Word of God carefully during the week. · Find how you can support translation and literacy in your area. ·
Announce to
the believers what you and they will be doing during the week.
5. Plan with coworkers the upcoming worship time. · Praise God for the truth revealed in His Word. · Ask for testimonies and reports of how the Holy Spirit used the Bible last week to help people find joy and holiness. · Prepare helpers to tell or act out the story of King Josiah in 2 Chronicles chapter 34. · Ask all to listen to find how the God’s Word changed the lives of the Israelites. · After relating the story, ask the believers what they discovered. · Have the children also present the story of King Josiah, from children’s study #25. · To add some exciting drama, do the brief skit under #3, in the Advanced Study, below. ·
To introduce
the Lord supper, read 2 Chronicles
30, verses 5-6 and 25-27. · Gather in groups of two or three. To pray, confirm plans, and encourage one another. Advanced Study 1. Main instruction Find in Matthew 4:1-11 how Jesus resisted Satan. · In what three ways did Satan tempt Jesus? · What did Jesus quote, to answer Satan after each temptation? · Who came to care for Jesus after His temptation? · You might want the group to memorize 2. Background · The Holy Spirit inspired devout men to write God’s Word (2 Timothy 3:16-17). They wrote the Old Testament in Hebrew and the New Testament in Greek: · Hebrew is read from right to left: · Greek is read left to right. · You will understand a Bible passage better if you know: Who wrote it, to whom and
why. You will also understand some parts of the Bible better, if you know the customs, history and geography of ancient Israel. Learn these in other Paul-Timothy shepherds and supplementary studies (see the P-T User Menu). 3. Dramatize how the Holy
Spirit uses God’s Word to illuminate our minds. Learner: Light a candle on a table, then look the other way. Deceiver:
Sneak up to the candle, blow it out, and lasts evenly. You fools obey my Enemy! I will stop your bold sedition! I will turn you from His Word, you will see, by teaching man’s tradition! You mortals dare with Him to sup, whose cup delivers from hell’s fire? I warn you, stop opposing or you’ll feel the sting of hell’s hot ire!” Learner: Light the candle again and hold it over the Bible in front of Deceiver. Deceiver: take that horrible light away! I cannot bear it! Learner: Jesus said, “I am the Light of the world; he who follows me will not walk in the darkness, but will have the Light of life.” John 8:12 God’s Word is hidden from many people today, wherever no one has yet translated it correctly into their language. Many translators work hard to provide accurate translations.
In Old Testament times, Jews wrote their Scriptures by hand on scrolls that rolled up. In New Testament times, Christians started making books that they copied by hand, thousands of times. |