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Exodus 20:14 Study Guide: Do Not Commit Adultery
Marriage has become less and less favorable in our culture. Fewer people are getting married, people who do get married are getting married later in life. There are many reason for this including poor examples of marriage in one’s personal life, a cultural vision prioritizing independence and economic achievement, and hyper sexualized content all around us…, just to name a few. Should marriage just be thrown out as an archaic thing of the past? Throughout our study on the Ten Commandments we have learned that God forbids what he hates so that we would pursue what he loves. In the seventh commandment God commanded “do not commit adultery” because he loves marriage.
Exodus 20:13 Study Guide: Do Not Murder
The Sixth Commandment: “do not murder” prohibits the taking of another life and points to God’s love of life and desire to protect it. Out of all the commandments, this one comes with the most number of complicated ethical situations attached to it. Does this apply to wartime scenarios, how about medical procedures that may terminate life and what about Jesus’s interpretation of the command to include prohibitions on anger and hatred? When we step back and look at our world and our culture in general, we see that our culture does not value life the same way God does. To not murder is not enough, followers of Jesus also need to actively pursue and protect life.
Exodus 20:12 Study Guide: Honor Your Mother and Father
This may be the most difficult command in scripture to wrap our minds and hearts around. In some sense it is straight forward, a godly relationship to one’s parents consists in honoring them. This commandment also points to how God loves family and created the family as a place where his ways are taught and where love, respect and support flourish. Yet, for many of us our deepest wounds have come from family, even our parents. Many of us reading this have come from broken homes, experienced abuse, or even lost our parents at an early age. What does honoring your parents mean in the ideal situation and what does it look like when there’s been a lot of difficulty?
Psalm 2:1-12 Study Guide: God's Good and Gracious King
Most images of kings and rulers in our culture and media are negative. Usually the focus is on the unjust rule or abuse of authority. Think King George in Hamilton, Emperor Palpatine in Star Wars and of course the classic Lord Farquaad from Shrek. More often than not, we’re conditioned to think that kings are bad and in many cases they are. But, what if you’d be better off living under a king? The answer to that question would depend on who the king is, right? The story of scripture tells us there is a perfectly just, holy and loving king. The bible begins and ends with a picture of God’s loving rule and as followers of Jesus, we do not just follow a loving savior, we follow a good and gracious king. This Sunday is Palm Sunday and a time when the church pauses to reflect on the kingship of Jesus before we look to Good Friday and Easter. We’re going to turn to Psalm 2 and learn about the good and gracious rule of Jesus as our king.
Exodus 20:8-11 Study Guide: Keeping the Sabbath Holy
God commands his people to rest. The fourth command was the longest, and likely, the most refreshing word from God the Israelites could have received. The word sabbath meant to cease, and specifically they were to cease from work! God established a pattern of 6 days of work and a single day at the end of each week for rest and worship. For many of us the idea of taking a sabbath can be complicated. Some of us have images of extra rules and burdens associated with what it means to rest on the sabbath. Others struggle with the idea of losing productivity or getting behind. Most of our jobs provide two days off, but many of us struggle with being able to fully disengage from work as we check emails and sneak a little extra productivity in on the weekend to make next week “easier.”
Exodus 20:7 Study Guide: Do Not Take God's Name in Vain
The first four of the ten commandments relate to how we love God with our heart, soul, mind and strength. Love for God includes undivided allegiance, whole hearted worship, reverence for who he is and an active trust that he will provide as seen in the Sabbath command. From a genuine love for God flows a love of our neighbors which is the focus of the next six commandments. How do we love God in such a way that we revere and represent him well? That is the focus on the third commandment and what it means to “ not take the Lord’s name in vain?”
Exodus 20:4-6 Study Guide: The Second Commandment Jealous God
Does God hate art? The second command prohibits the creation of “any image or likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth or in the water under the earth.” Do you have a picture in your living room of a nature scene? Throw it out. How about a decorative statute, maybe even a nativity set? Crush it! Do you have a picture of your dog on a mug…? Sinner! Kidding aside, the church has had a fraught relationship with art throughout history. Early Christian art gives us an idea of what church life and worship looked like, but over time art was embraced as a means of worship in some circles and hard reactions to those situations has led to art being vilified as a false practice.
John 4:1-45 Study Guide: Grace in Unexpected Places
In this passage we see the heart of Christ to seek and to save the lost and how he extended the offer of everlasting life to her before addressing her specific sin issues and life hardship. This offer of living water changed the trajectory of her life and led to many in her town to put their faith in Jesus as the Christ. This text also challenges our often hidden assumptions about who is most likely to respond to the offer of forgiveness and reconciliation in Christ.
Exodus 20:1-3 Study Guide - The First Commandment: Devoted Worship
Whether you follow Jesus or not, you are a worshipper. This seems counter how our culture emphasizes atheism, self discovery and being a free person. Yet, the Bible puts all people into one of two categories, we either worship God or we worship a created thing. Paul said it this way in Romans 1:21–23, “For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their foolish hearts were darkened.