Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Make-up: January 15, 2012

The Wilderness Temptations

On January 15th, we studied the wilderness temptations. We ask you to take a look at the lesson, read the scriptures and watch the video clip and then comment. You may comment as anonymous and then just put your first name or initials in the box. In the comment section, give a few sentences on the lesson.

Bible Text: 
Luke 4:1–15; Matthew 4:1–11; Mark 1:12–13

Lesson Focus: 
Jesus used scripture to resist the devil's temptations.

Big Question: 
How can I resist temptations if I can't quote scripture?

Key Words: 
TEMPTATION, SCRIPTURE, HOLY SPIRIT, SATAN

Definition of Key Words

TEMPTATION: anything that controls us and leads us away from God or threatens our relationship with God.

SCRIPTURE: God's word in the Bible and the words that Jesus used against Satan.

The HOLY SPIRIT: the third person of the Trinity (with God and Jesus) and the one who guides us in our decision-making.

SATAN: the one who tempts us in order to draw us away from God. Satan is also known as the "accuser."


Quick Overview

Jesus was tempted—really tempted—but did not succumb to using his God-given powers for any cheap thrills, fantastic duels with Satan, or evil misuse.

In all three gospels, the temptation scene comes toward the beginning of Jesus' story and—in some fashion—inaugurates his ministry.

Some have suggested that the point of the mysterious temptation scene is that Jesus was fully human and was fully tempted. Others say that we are to glean, as any first century Jew would, that Jesus was a model Jew. Still others maintain that this scene shows up-front the conflict between God's reign and the reign of Satan, setting up the thematic undercurrent that all of Jesus' ministry is an attack on Satan's work.

Jesus stymies the devil finally because he knows whose he is—He is God's Son.

Movie Connection: 3:10 to Yuma

Main Idea: A Person Of Integrity Does The Right Thing Even When No One Is Watching

Scene Set Up: Dan Evans has made it all the way to the small town of Contention where he is being paid $200 to deliver outlaw Ben Wade to the 3:10 train. Wade’s outlaw gang has been trailing them and Dan’s son William has snuck along and is now caught up in the deadly adventure. Dan desperately needs the $200 to save his ranch, and he wants the respect of his son who thinks he is a weak, boring, religious nobody. As they wait for the local sheriff and his deputies to show up Ben takes another opportunity to try to tempt Dan into letting him go.




Application: 

Your character reveals itself when you face a moral issue and nobody is around to catch you. Daniel is facing an integrity issue. Ben Wade knows Dan is a strong Christian, but his experience is that everybody has a price, and most people of faith live differently from the foundational teachings of the bible in their private lives. So Ben expects Dan to be like the other Christians he has met…saying one thing and doing whatever it takes to get ahead.

Dan has become a man of integrity. A man of integrity is a man who keeps his word. A person of integrity is a person who does what he says even when temptation hits. A person of integrity is the same person in every part of his life. When the chips are down you can count on a person of integrity to be sturdy and solid, like an oak of righteousness.

We begin the journey of integrity when we live in the presence of one who truly sees us as we are, and longs for us not to be impressive, not to be inconsistent, but to be people who live whole and complete lives. We live as people of integrity when we have a solid center. This center comes from knowing we were bought with a price and are now the ones who represent Jesus. It is Him who lives at our core, and that center will ground you to make choices that line up with the Word which will set you free. When you are the same in private as you are in public that is a good start. When you are pursuing righteousness regardless of who is watching that is an even better measure of your integrity



Make Up: January 8, 2012


The Magi

For your make up, we simply ask you to read through the lesson out line and then in the comment section (choose anonymous), write a sentence or two regarding the lesson or scripture and answer the big question.

Bible Text:

Lesson Focus:
Jesus is revealed as king of all—whether the people recognize him or not.

Big Question:
Jesus was a poor baby. Why am I supposed to worship him like a king?

Key Words:
EPIPHANY, GENTILES, HEROD THE GREAT, MAGI, HOMAGE

Definition of Key Words

EPIPHANY: the church's celebration on January 6 of the visit of the magi to the infant Jesus. Epiphany means "revelation" and recognizes that Jesus is "revealed" as king for all people by this visit of the magi.

GENTILES: people who weren't Jewish.

HEROD THE GREAT: a corrupt Jewish king who served as governor of Galilee and was backed by Roman power. Threatened by the birth of Jesus, the true king, he sent the magi to Bethlehem to find Jesus so that he could have the child killed.

MAGI: stargazers or astrologers from Persia. They recognized Jesus as a great king, chosen by God, even though they were Gentiles.

HOMAGE: a ceremony by which people acknowledge themselves as servants of a master or lord

Quick Overview

The Christmas story in Matthew bears no resemblance to the one in Luke.

Matthew 1 shows that Jesus is the fulfillment of promises made to Israel. Matthew 2 introduces the idea that Jesus fulfills Gentile hopes for salvation as well.

The primary message of Matthew's Christmas story is that Jesus is revealed by God as Lord and king for the entire world.

The magi were probably astrologers or magicians of a priestly clan of Persians. They were exotic pagans—Gentiles in the extreme.

It was a widely held belief that a new star rose in the sky at the birth of a great leader.

The story of the magi shows us that Jesus is God's gift to the entire world.

Baptismal Connection

In the Rite of Affirmation of Baptism, a five-part question addresses each confirmand's intent to continue in the covenant God made with them in Holy Baptism. Here We Stand resources help students—with support from parents, leaders, and the entire congregation—prepare to answer this question as they continue in their lifelong faith journey.

Today's lesson focused on the clause "to proclaim the good news of God in Christ through word and deed."

The visit of the magi revealed to all the world that Jesus is God's chosen king—the Messiah. The magi offered physical gifts and also offered themselves as they worshiped him. Likewise, our words and deeds reveal who Jesus is in our lives. The magi put forth a great deal of effort to pay homage to the new king. Do we show the same determination to honor Jesus as our king? Help the youth use this lesson to grow in their understanding of how their words and deeds reveal what they think and feel about Jesus. Herod was afraid that he would lose his position as king of the Jews. The magi were determined to honor Jesus, regardless of the cost to themselves. Do our words and deeds show that we want to preserve our own status in our community? Or do they show that Jesus is our king and that we are willing to pay homage to our king regardless of the cost?