Monday, November 14, 2016

Lesson 6: 10 Commandments



Scripture
Exodus: 20:1-17

Quick Summary
Moses went up Mt. Sinai and brought down 10 rules written on stone by the finger of God. Here are God’s rules for the Hebrews/Israelites to live by:
  1. God is 1st
  2. No idols
  3. Honor God’s Name
  4. Remember to Rest (Sabbath)
  5. Honor Mom and Dad
  6. No Murdering
  7. No cheating on people (Adultery)
  8. No Stealing
  9. No Lying (False Testimony against neighbor)
  10. No being jealous of others’ stuff (coveting)

The Point
God’s gives us rules to live by.

Questions for Family Time
1.     Have your kid show you the 10 commandment motions.
2.     Which is the easiest Commandment to follow? Which is the hardest?

Deeper
            It started with just 10 commandments in the desert. Few enough for God to put everything on stone tablets that could easily be carried around. But as the Hebrews became the Israelite and settled in the Promised Land, the rules expanded. Then those rules expanded. By the time the Old Testament was done being written there were 613 rules to live by. By the time Jesus came along, the religious leaders had added to the written laws an entire verbal tradition known as the Tradition of the Elders.
            When I was growing up, we had cattle, and around their pasture was an electric fence. That fence was not to hurt them, but to protect them from the dangers that lay beyond the fence. It protected them from the busy roads and kept them from getting lost. That fence was a boundary for their own good. Much like that, God’s 10 commandments acted as a fence to protect his people from getting lost without God, and from endangering themselves and others. Out of respect for God’s laws, the religious leaders added more laws to make sure they didn’t break God’s laws. It was like adding a second fence to keep people from touching the first. However, many of these laws missed the whole point of God’s original commandments, which was to love God and love others. That is why so often in the New Testament we find Jesus breaking the Tradition of the Elders. Jesus saw how unrealistic these rules were for the average Jew to follow perfectly and that some missed the point completely.
            Maybe you have noticed some modern day churches that have fallen in the same trap. Rules that aren’t realistic or in the Bible for that matter become mandatory for those who want to be part of the community. It’s often because of these rules that Christians are labeled as judgmental. That description usually isn’t placed on us because we believe murder is a bad idea. If that has been your experience with church, I hope this helps explain how we get into that trap, and I ask that you would have grace with us as well. I also want to let you know, that at LUMC we do our best to follow the two rules that Jesus summed all the other rules up with: Love God and Love others. Those two are enough work for us to focus on, and we can’t be judgmental and do them well. So I encourage you to put those two rules as the ones you give priority to over all others.
           
Personal Reflection
1.     What are the traditional rules that you follow that keep you from Loving God and Loving others?

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Lesson 5: Water and Manna



Scripture
Exodus 15:22-16:18

Quick Summary
            The Hebrews are free from Pharaoh’s rule but are now stuck in the desert without food or water. They complain because they have nothing to drink, and God gives them water. They complain because they have no food and God give them meat for supper and bread for breakfast. The bread which falls from heaven as dew in the morning is called Manna.

The Point
God will provide.

Questions for Family Time
1.     What did God provide for the Israelites/Hebrews in the desert?
a.      Water, quail (meat), manna (frosted flakes, bread)
2.     What has God provided for you?

Our Song for today:
I hunger and thirst for you, I hunger and thirst for you.
In the desert of my need, you’re the fountain that I seek.
You’re the living water I keep running to.
I hunger and thirst for you, I hunger and thirst for you.

I hunger and thirst for you, I hunger and thirst for you.
Heaven’s Manna, Bread of Life, fill the emptiness inside
Nothing else can satisfy me like your do.
 I hunger and thirst for you, I hunger and thirst for you.

Deeper
            My daughter was 4 months old when I got a call from the emergency room. My husband had been working in construction when a table saw on his work site fell off of its makeshift stand and deeply cut his fingers. With the rest of the week off to recuperate, we went to visit his parents over the weekend and came home to get the call Monday morning that he had been fired. That Thursday, we got another call that his mother had passed away. After two funerals and two weeks away from home, we came home to discover our electricity had been out and all of our perishable food had perished. Our credit cards were maxed out and we had no income. It was the desert of our need.
God fed us in that desert. A Methodist woman came by with groceries to fill our house. Our church provided baby clothes. Most miraculous of all, within a week we got a call about a church in need of a pastor. We had sent that resume long enough before that we had forgotten we sent it.
God met our every need, just as he met the need of the Hebrews in the desert. God doesn’t promise life will be smooth sailing when we trust in him. But when we trust him, he provides what we NEED to get through the desert.     

Personal Reflection
1.     What deserts has God fed you in?