Archive

You are currently browsing the archives for the Richland Campus category.

Nov

6

“Are You Freed? (Four Freedoms)” Romans 8:1-8 by Dave Bechtel

By kellitempleton

This week we start the “Are You?” sermon series based on Romans 8. This series gives us an opportunity to invite friends and family to services as a natural application of the Lost and Found series. Romans 8 addresses who we are in Christ and all we can be when we walk in the Spirit. The six sermons are:

  1. Are you freed? (v.1-8) 2. Are you filled? (v. 9-13) 3. Are you adopted? (v. 14-17) 4. Are you included? (v. 18-27) 5. Are you called? (v. 28-30) 6. Are you loved? (v. 31-39)

For some in our congregation, these will be new concepts. For some, these are known truths we need to keep internalizing. Magnets will be provided each week to remind us of these truths during service.

Here are the sermon questions for your small group discussion time:

1.Think about the movie clip from “Princess Bride.” Share a word that you, your spouse or your children have used incorrectly and humorously. We try each week to add an element of fun to the questions. Hopefully this provides some fun. Dave spends some time talking about the context of a word to figure out its meaning. We had a child that would ask for “M & M’s” vs. nummy nums for food.

2. Read Romans 8:1-8 and answer the following:

a. What idea from the passage stands out to you? answers will vary but this allows some time for people to read the passage again.

b. What roles do the Father, Jesus, and Holy Spirit play in setting us free? The Father provides Jesus to free us. Jesus dies for us as our sin offering to give us freedom from the penalty of sin. The Holy Spirit allows us to walks in freedom.

3. The “Four Freedoms” from the sermon are: 1. Free from the just penalty of sin. 2. Legally free from sin as our master. 3. Free to live through the power of the Holy Spirit. 4. Free to live according to the Word of God.

  1. Which freedoms are given to us when we trust in Jesus? This is tricky because all the freedoms are given to us. The first two are legally given and true without any action accept trust from us.
  2. Which freedoms require our continual choice to experience? Again, a tricky question. The face-value is that the last two require a continually choice by us to walk in the Spirit and to abide in the Word; however, we often need to choose to remember we are forgiven and we are free from sin as a master although we may not experience it.
  3. What are some inward and outward signs that we’re not living in these freedoms? inwardly we could be living in shame, hopelessness, despair, striving, earning, working; outwardly we could be living in the flesh doing things contrary to the Lord. We may be neglecting meeting with other believers, reading the Word, etc.
  4. Brainstorm ways to regularly experience each of these freedoms. We need to remind ourselves of our legal position with God through songs, prayers, being with others; we can choose to confess, repent and walk with the Spirit; we can regularly immerse ourselves in the Word.

Break into gender groups for the following:

4. As a Christian:

  • What chains immediately fell off when you first trusted Jesus? answers will vary but might be a lack of desire to party, modesty, entertainment preferences, freedom from addictions, etc.
  • How has being in the Word helped you overcome other chains? answers will vary but might address how we speak differently, who we hang out with, etc.
  • How have other believers helped you? answers will vary but hopefully we care for one another, confront, speak truth, forgive, etc.
5. What chains continue to hinder you? How could your group help you? we are hoping the group will help through at least prayer if not accountability throughout the next few weeks.

Follow-up Assignment: Read Romans 8 three times this week. Be prepared to share next week how the Lord is using this passage in your life. We will be doing this each week with the prayer that Romans 8 will sanctify us each as needed. Some people are even memorizing portions of the passage or the whole passage.

 

Oct

30

“Inventory” (1 John 2:12-14) by Dave Bechtel (Richland Campus 11/1/15)

By kellitempleton

We will be doing an actual all church “inventory” during the Sunday services this week (11/1/15). We use this information to get a “snapshot” of who we are and where we are in our discipleship. We did somethin similar a few years ago, so the comparison will be helpful as well.

We also have the opportunity to do a GROW Assessment. Please do encourage your group members to complete the assessment before your small group meeting. Also, there is a GROW chart provided with your results. The GROW chart provides crawl, walk, and run ideas for us to start in areas we would like to partner with Jesus for growth. Some of the specific ideas directly link to books, tools, etc.

Here are the sermon questions for your small group discussion:

Homework: Before attending small group take the GROW Assessment at GROW Assessement Big Picture - Bethel’s purpose is to “make disciples” and we have defined a disciple using the acronym GROW after reviewing over 800 definitions of a disciple from the New Testament. G is God Lover, R is Relationship Builder (within the church), O is Obedient Follower, and W is World Influencer (outside the church).

  1. Share one thing you have done intentionally to GROW spiritually. Answers will vary but our sermon question team answered in the following ways: memorizing Scripture, being in accountable relationships, removing distractions/temptations, attending seminary, etc.
  2. Read 1 John 2:12-14 and discuss the following:
    1. What are the 3 stages of spiritual development? child, father, young adult
    2. What helps you know this is spiritual development and not physical? Besides Dave telling us, the passage provides spiritual instructions for each stage. Furthermore, the passage is written in poetry form which often means it is not literal but figurative like poetry.
    3. Why do you think John wrote nearly the same things twice? The second “stanza” provides the foundational focus for each spiritual stage whereas the first “stanza” describes the stage.
  3. Describe the spiritual characteristics for each stage:
    1. Child literally means “born ones”- their sins are forgiven; childish (Matt 18:1-4); ignorant, instable, vulnerable (Eph. 4:11-15); immature in thinking (1 Cor. 14:20); false expectations, self-focused (Matt 11:16-17): undependable (Gal 4:1); unable to feed themselves, can’t discern the difference between right and wrong (Heb. 5:11-14); consumers (2 Cor. 12:14-15); they need to get to know their Father
    2. Father (parent) walk with and walk like Jesus (1 Jn 2:1-6) - they walk closely with Jesus, they know Him (Phil 3:10); they serve, love, live, think like Jesus and it is an on-going process that will not reach full maturity this side of heaven.
    3. Young adult have overcome the evil one (tempatation); they are developing in self-discipline, self-sacrifice, dependable, stable, informed, mature in thinking, protectors….”baby sitters” or “warriors” as Dave B puts it; they need to get strong, let the Word abide in them, and overcome the enemy
  4. As a group assign a spiritual stage to each of the following statements: These are difficult to answer because any stage, not walking by the Holy Spirit, could make these statements.
    1. “Is there anything I can do to help around here?” young adult or parent
    2. “I got in late last night so now I’m too tired to do what I said I’d do.” child or young adult
    3. “I don’t get anything out of Bible if I try to read it.” child
    4. “I go to church when I can.” child
    5. Brainstorm a statement for each stage. answers will vary
  5. Since God delights in every stage of spiritual development, why does He want us to GROW? (Ephesians 3:17-19, 4:11-16) One aim for this question is for people to not become discouraged if they are in the beginning stages. They are right where they need to be. Another aim for this question is that we are to GROW. God wants it and commands it. It is for our best to delight in the Father, to walk with Him. It is also for other’s benefit - believers and unbelievers. Our new heart and the Spirit within us want to GROW and help us. By His grace, we can know Him and GROW in Him.

Break into gender groups and discuss the following:

  1. What spiritual stage mostly describes you? answers will vary. A good follow-up question might be “Would those closest to you agree with your answer?” wink, wink
  2. Based on your GROW Assessment results discuss the following:
    1. Identify an area in which you want to GROW. Why? An answer like becoming a God-Lover is a start but push them to something specific - like “I would like to get baptized” or “I would like to sincerely praise God at services and not be distracted or critical”
    2. Select one or two steps to take from the options provided. There is a GROW chart with crawl, walk, run suggestions for G, R, O, and W. People may also have other ideas for growth.
    3. How will the Bible (Word) play a part in your GROWth? Ideas include regular Bible reading, Bible study, memorization, application, meditation…..listening to sermons, listening to music, etc.
    4. Who could you team with to help you GROW? God provides Himself, His Word, and His people. We need others to GROW. Hopefully, people will actually use a name or ask someone in the group to help them.

Oct

11

“Beyond Help” (Luke 7:36-50) by Dave Dawson (Richland Campus 10/11/15)

By kellitempleton

  1. Share about a spiritual conversation you had this past week with an unbeliever.

Read Luke 7:36-50 and review the sermon outline.

2. Contrast the ways Simon and the woman treated Jesus. Jesus says to the woman “Your sins are forgiven.” Why doesn’t he say that to Simon?
Simon controlled everything: his home, his guests, his menu, his servants. Simon was trying to impress Jesus and his guests. The focus was on Simon (the heart of entertaining). He did not show Jesus proper hospitality. The woman was completely humble and all about Jesus: she is close to Jesus, she washes Jesus feet with her tears, wipes Jesus feet with her hair, kisses Jesus feet and then puts valuable perfume on Jesus’ feet. She lavishes hospitality and love on Jesus. She worships Jesus.
Jesus does not state forgiveness for Simon’s sin because Simon has not seen his sin. He believes Jesus is not the Messiah because he would not allow this woman to do this given her reputation. In fact, Simon does not see a need for a Savior. He believes he is righteous.
3. If someone said “God could never forgive the things I’ve done,” what would you say? (Ps 103:11-12, Rom 5:8, 8:1, Eph 1:7-8)
We can show them this very story - Simon, who seemed to be all cleaned up was not forgiven but the woman was forgiven for her many sins, most likely the sin of prostitution. The verses listed also show the power of forgiveness is in God’s control, His power NOT the magnitude of our sin. We could also affirm the fact that they see their sin, unlike Simon did.
4. Eph 2:8-9 says we’re saved by grace. What do you think that means? How should the grace you receive motivate you to care about others?
From the ESV Study Bible: “By grace refers to God’s favor upon those who have transgressed his law and sinned against him. But grace may also be understood as a “power” in theses verses. God’s grace not only offers salvation but also secures it. Saved refers to deliverance from God’s wrath at the final judgement. Salvation is a gift of God and not something that we can accomplish ourselves. We are dead in our sins, unable to do anything. God alone is the one who saves us by his grace.
This amazing grace helps us lavish grace on others - forgive quicker, bear with easier, delight in others, be more patient, etc. We stop addressing immoral behavior in our unbelieving friends and family and start lavishing God’s grace on them. We care about the lost and seek to join God in finding them.
5. How did Jesus see the woman differently than Simon saw her? What do you think Jesus would say to you about the way you “see” people? Who is Jesus asking you to “see?” (Use the “Relational Circles” tool.)
Jesus saw the woman as someone who expressed her love from a heart that was grateful for having her debts cancelled. Her deep emotion was from a heart of gratitude. Jesus saw a person who needed a Savior, wanted a Savior, worshipped Him. Simon did not see a person but a nuisance, an interruption, something that defiled his party and guests. He saw a sinner who he was better than.
We all need to see the unbelievers in our midst more clearly and lavish grace on them. Use the relational circles tool to identify the unbelievers in your relational circles. Use this tool to pray for those unbelievers. Ask each other weekly if you have had a casual conversation with one of these people. Has the conversation gone from casual to significant to spiritual?
6. The more attractive Jesus is to you, the more you will want to share Him with others. What about Jesus in this passage was particularly attractive to you?
We will use this question each of the 6 weeks of the series. Answers will vary. Here are my answers as an example: Jesus’ wisdom and storytelling was attractive to me. His tenderness with the woman was attractive. His patience and pursuit of Simon is attractive.
7. Hospitality is a potential tool for engaging the lost and encouraging the found. What’s the difference between biblical hospitality and entertaining? Who could you show biblical hospitality to this week? See answers to question #2 to describe the difference between entertaining and hospitality. Is there anyone from the relational circles tool that we could invite over for dinner? a football game? dessert?
8. This sermon series is all about “Lost and Found.” What does God want you to do because someone you “see” is “Lost” and needs to be “Found?”
personal answers will vary but could be pray, engage them in conversation, invite them over, etc.