Our Prayer

Our Prayer

Heavenly Father, I know that I have sinned against You and that my sins separate me from You. I am truly sorry. I now want to turn away from my sinful past and turn to You for forgiveness. Please forgive me, and help me avoid sinning again. I believe that Your Son, Jesus Christ, died for my sins, that He was raised from the dead, is alive, and hears my prayer. I invite Jesus to become my Savior and the Lord of my life, to rule and reign in my heart from this day forward. Please send Your Holy Spirit to help me obey You and to convict me when I sin. I pledge to grow in grace and knowledge of You. My greatest purpose in life is to follow Your example and do Your will for the rest of my life. In Jesus' name I pray, Amen.

Thursday, October 28, 2021

Class Lesson October 31, 2021

 


SCRIPTURE TEXT: ISAIAH 6:1-8 - PRE-GROUP STUDY 


Before interacting with this guide, all leaders and group members should study the referenced text using the HEAR Method. 

H: Highlight, or take note of, things in the passage that stick out to you as you read. 

E: Explain what the passage means by asking simple questions of the text: • Why was this written? • To whom was it originally written? • How does it fit with the verses before and after it? • Why did the Holy Spirit include this passage in the book? • What is He intending to communicate through this text? 

A: Apply the text to your life. What does God want you to learn from this text? 

R: Respond to God in prayer. 


Study Question: 

1. What are some of the main things you notice about God in this text? How does it move you to worship? 

2. What does Isaiah’s response to seeing God in His holiness teach us about ourselves? 

3. God removes Isaiah’s sin. What does that teach us about the gospel? 

4. In response to God’s mercy, Isaiah is eager to minister. Has this been true in your own life in response to God’s mercy? 


Group Lesson 


Main Idea: When people meet God and are forgiven by God they become passionate about being used by God. 


Introduction: 

I once read a story about Kobe Bryant’s passion for basketball. Evidently, his love of the game made him do some pretty obsessive things, like show up to practice at 4 A.M. and make teammates play one-on-one games to 100. 

I was struck by how passion leads to a desire to act, to work, to be “in the game” so to speak. 

Who is the most passionate person you know? What are they passionate about? 

How does it show up in their life?


Passion leads to action. There is no way around it. God is calling our church to be passionate people who act for His glory. 

When it comes to scripture, we see an example of this passion in the prophet Isaiah. 


Understanding 

Read: Isaiah 6:1-8 

Isaiah shows us that the foundation for Christian passion and Christian action is the glory of God and the grace of God. When people see God’s glory and God’s grace, they become passionate to live lives sold out for Him. 

Isaiah had an experience with God that few people ever have this side of heaven. He saw God in all His glory. 

What are some of the attributes of God that Isaiah lists?

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The main attribute that Isaiah relays to us is God’s holiness. 

That God is holy means that He is completely set apart from us, completely different than us. This doesn’t mean that He is unknowable to us. It means that He is not like us. He is pure and we are not. He is sinless and we are not. He is good and we are not. He is whole and we are not. 

The most important take away from Isaiah’s description of God is that we serve a big God. God cannot be reduced to deserving only a part of our life. 

This God that Isaiah describes is worthy of the entirety of our lives. 

When we settle for a small idea of God, we are content to give Him the bits and pieces of our lives. Isaiah will not let us settle for such an understanding of God. 

In what ways have you settled for a small view of God? How has that impacted your passion for God?

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In what ways does this passage move you to worship God? How does worship make us passionate about being used for Jesus?

__________________________________________

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God’s glory moves us to live lives centered around Him. 


When we see who God is, our prayer becomes, “God use me.” 


Isaiah not only experienced God’s glory. He experienced God’s grace in a radical way. 

Notice Isaiah’s response to God’s glory in v. 5. Why do you think his response is so dramatic? 

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Isaiah is convinced that he is about to die because he is a sinful man in the presence of God. Yet, God does the unimaginable. He takes his sins away. In Isaiah we have a perfect illustration of the gospel. A sinful man stands before a holy God. Then, the holy God does what the sinful man could never do for himself. He takes away his sin. This is God’s grace. 

“When we understand the character of God, when we grasp something of His holiness, then we begin to understand the radical character of our sin and hopelessness. Helpless sinners can survive only by grace. Our strength is futile in itself; we are spiritually impotent without the assistance of a merciful God. The hands of God are gracious hands. 

They alone have the power to rescue us from certain destruction.” - RC. Sproul 

God’s grace moves us to live lives centered around Him. 


When we see how God loves us, our prayer becomes, “God use me.” 


Read Isaiah 6:8. 

All of this results in Isaiah longing to be used by God. People who have encountered God’s glory and God’s grace long to be used for God’s mission. 


Application 

Read Acts 20:22-24 

What does Paul consider his main goal in life? How can we make our main goal in life living for Christ’s mission?


Two little lines I heard one day, Traveling along life’s busy way; Bringing conviction to my heart, And from my mind would not depart; Only one life, ’twill soon be past, Only what’s done for Christ will last. Only one life, yes only one, Soon will its fleeting hours be done; Then, in ‘that day’ my Lord to meet, And stand before His Judgment seat; Only one life, ’twill soon be past, Only what’s done for Christ will last. -C.T. Studd



Questions for Personal Reflection 

1. Can I honestly say that I want God to use me? 


2. Have I been more concerned about what I can get from God instead of how I can serve God? 


3. Have I ever experienced God’s grace and glory like Isaiah? 


Prayer 

Close the group in prayer focusing on the reality that we all only have one life to give Christ.


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Teacher's Notes:


Group Lesson

Main Idea: When people meet God and are forgiven by God, they become passionate about being used by God.

 

Introduction:

I once read a story about Kobe Bryant’s passion for basketball. Evidently, his love of the game made him do some pretty obsessive things, like show up to practice at 4 A.M. and make teammates play one-on-one games to 100.

I was struck by how passion leads to a desire to act, to work, to be “in the game” so to speak.


Have you ever been that passionate about something?

 

Passion leads to action. There is no way around it. God is calling our church to be passionate people who act for His glory.

 

When it comes to scripture, we see an example of this passion in the prophet Isaiah.

 

Understanding: Read: Isaiah 6:1-8

 

6 In the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord, high and exalted, seated on a throne; and the train of his robe filled the temple. 2 Above him were seraphim, each with six wings: With two wings they covered their faces, with two they covered their feet, and with two they were flying. 3 And they were calling to one another: “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord Almighty; the whole earth is full of his glory.” 4 At the sound of their voices the doorposts and thresholds shook and the temple was filled with smoke. 5 “Woe to me!” I cried. “I am ruined! For I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips, and my eyes have seen the King, the Lord Almighty.” 6 Then one of the seraphim flew to me with a live coal in his hand, which he had taken with tongs from the altar. 7 With it he touched my mouth and said, “See, this has touched your lips; your guilt is taken away and your sin atoned for.” 8 Then I heard the voice of the Lord saying, “Whom shall I send? And who will go for us?” And I said, “Here am I. Send me!”

 

Isaiah shows us that the foundation for Christian passion and Christian action is the glory of God and the grace of God. When people see God’s glory and God’s grace, they become passionate to live lives sold out for Him.

 

Isaiah was given a difficult mission. He had to tell people who believed they were blessed by God that instead God was going to destroy them because of their disobedience.

 

Isaiah’s picture of forgiveness reminds us that we too are forgiven. When we recognize how great our God is, how sinful we are, and the extent of God’s forgiveness, we receive power to do His work.

Holiness means morally perfect, pure, and set a part from all sin. We also need to discover God’s holiness.

 

Isaiah had an experience with God that few people ever have this side of heaven. He saw God in all His glory.

 

What are some of the attributes of God that Isaiah lists?

___________________________________________

The main attribute that Isaiah relays to us is God’s holinessThat God is holy means that He is completely set apart from us, completely different than us. This doesn’t mean that He is unknowable to us. It means that He is not like us. He is pure and we are not. He is sinless and we are not. He is good and we are not. He is whole and we are not.

 

The most important take away from Isaiah’s description of God is that we serve a big God. God cannot be reduced to deserving only a part of our lifeThis God that Isaiah describes is worthy of the entirety of our lives. When we settle for a small idea of God, we are content to give Him the bits and pieces of our lives. Isaiah will not let us settle for such an understanding of God.

 

In what ways have you settled for a small view of God? How has that impacted your passion for God?

_________________________________________

 

In what ways does this passage move you to worship God? How does worship make us passionate about being used for Jesus?

__________________________________________

 

God’s glory moves us to live lives centered around Him.

 

When we see who God is, our prayer becomes, “God use me.”

Isaiah not only experienced God’s glory. He experienced God’s grace in a radical way.

 

Notice Isaiah’s response to God’s glory in v. 5. Why do you think his response is so dramatic?

_________________________________________

Isaiah is convinced that he is about to die because he is a sinful man in the presence of God. Yet, God does the unimaginable. He takes his sins away. In Isaiah we have a perfect illustration of the gospel. A sinful man stands before a holy God. Then, the holy God does what the sinful man could never do for himself. He takes away his sin. This is God’s grace.

 

“When we understand the character of God, when we grasp something of His holiness, then we begin to understand the radical character of our sin and hopelessness. Helpless sinners can survive only by grace. Our strength is futile in itself; we are spiritually impotent without the assistance of a merciful God. The hands of God are gracious hands.

 

They alone have the power to rescue us from certain destruction.” - RC. Sproul

God’s grace moves us to live lives centered around Him.

 

When we see how God loves us, our prayer becomes, “God use me.”

 

 

Read Isaiah 6:8.

All of this results in Isaiah longing to be used by God. People who have encountered God’s glory and God’s grace long to be used for God’s mission.

 

Application

Read Acts 20:22-24

 

What does Paul consider his main goal in life? How can we make our main goal in life living for Christ’s mission?

Two little lines I heard one day, Traveling along life’s busy way; Bringing conviction to my heart, And from my mind would not depart; Only one life, ’twill soon be past, Only what’s done for Christ will last. Only one life, yes only one, Soon will its fleeting hours be done; Then, in ‘that day’ my Lord to meet, And stand before His Judgment seat; Only one life, ’twill soon be past, Only what’s done for Christ will last.  - C.T. Studd

 

 

When we meet God, things happen.

There are three remarkable changes that we may pray for our in our own encounter with God.

 

The first personal transformation you experience from an encounter with God is this:

 

1.   When You Meet God, You Encounter Perfected Glory

2.   When You Meet God, You Encounter Piercing Humility

3.   When You Meet God, You Encounter Prioritized Living

 

When we move from the God of glory to the God of mercy, and we experience this God in our person every facet of living is now transformed in such a way as we must prioritize the answer to the question. “Who will go?” There is no other response but Isaiah’s response, “Here am I! Send me.”

 

This reply is not only the response of the preacher or missionary or some other vocational minister. This reply is the response of the sinner who says “I will receive you, Lord Jesus Christ. I repent and turn to you and you alone.” It is the response of every believer who has encountered the holiness of God and the mercy of God. How can we say anything but “Here am I! Send me.” Send me to do your will in my workplace. Send me to do your will and my family. Send me throughout all the days and the years of my life to serve you in such a way as when I stand before you I will hear, “well done, thou good and faithful servant.” There is no other response but prioritizing God in all of our lives when we experience his mercy.

 

Perhaps you don’t know the fullness of his mercy because you don’t know the extent of his Majesty. Maybe you do not know his mercy because you have never moved from the fear of his glory. Today is the day where you are a witness to the vision of Isaiah in your own life. Today is the day when you say, “Oh my God, you are so glorious, and I am a sinner. But you have sent your only begotten Son, our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, from the very altar of Paradise and through the power of the Holy Spirit your forgiveness has seared the sinful nature of my soul. You have cleansed me by covering me with the righteousness and the atonement of your only begotten Son. I yield my life to you.”

 

Conclusion

So, we, also, experience the vision of God through his word and the person of our Lord Jesus Christ. The transforming vision of God changes us. And when we meet our Lord Jesus Christ we, also, experience the transformative consequence: as perfected glory moves us to a piercing humility that brings about prioritized living.

 

We ask ourselves how we can be better witnesses for Christ? How can the Church be strengthened to proclaim the unsearchable riches of Christ in this present evil age? We ask ourselves how the church can have a more significant impact on the culture? The answer, my dearly beloved, is not in some ingenious methodology or in a new way to conduct church or in anything of the sort. The answer to the question of power in the Christian life and in fulfilling the mission of God in the world is, now as in Isaiah’s day, a fresh encounter with the living God. Such a meeting is available to you today, but it will require something of you. God is calling you to listen to his Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, who says, “Come up here . . .” (Revelation 4:1 ESV).  Commit today to take the time in your life to put your mind on the things that are above. Commit in your life today to separate yourself, if only for a short while each day, to seek God and His word. When you approach the table of the Lord’s Supper, pause to gaze with the eyes of your praying soul upon Jesus Christ dying on the cross for you. When you see the baptismal waters of the Covenant of Grace dripping from the heads of God’s children, close your eyes and give thanks to God has washed you in his forgiving grace. Dear friend, often speak to God in prayer through all of the days of your life, so that on the day when you are translated from this life to the next you will come upon a vision of God that you have been anticipating all of your life.

 

This is what happens when you meet God. Everything changes.

 

Questions for Personal Reflection

 

1.   Can I honestly say that I want God to use me?

2.   Have I been more concerned about what I can get from God instead of how I can serve God?

3.   Have I ever experienced God’s grace and glory like Isaiah?

 

 

Resources on Isaiah 6

The Bible Panorama

CHAPTER SIX

V 1–4: GOD’S GLORY Before Isaiah is called and commissioned to be a prophet, God gives him a glimpse of His wonderful glory and awesome holiness. V 5–7: UNWORTHILY UNCLEAN The response, as always, when one understands something of the holiness of God, is that Isaiah sees himself as undone, unclean, and unworthy. Through a seraph touching his lips with a live coal, God demonstrates that Isaiah’s iniquity is taken away and his sin is purged. He knows God’s complete cleansing. V 8: READY RESPONSE Only then does God ask, ‘Who will go for Us?’ Recently cleansed and put right by God, Isaiah readily says, ‘Here am I! Send me.’ V 9–12: DIFFICULT DUTY God underlines that the task will be hard. Isaiah will be sent to unresponsive people to give them God’s word until the cities are laid waste and the land uninhabited, because the citizens will be taken into captivity. V 13: RETURNING REMNANT The encouragement, however, is that there will be a remnant that returns, which God regards as a holy seed or as a stump. This will provide the nucleus of future believers who will walk with God.

 

 

The Teacher’s Bible Commentary

A Commissioning Call (Isa. 6:1–13)

The passage. — At some event in the Temple, either in a public worship service or in private prayer, in the year of King Uzziah’s death (742 B.C.), Isaiah had a life-changing vision of God. Likely the death of Uzziah was a traumatic experience in the life of the young Isaiah. While in the Temple the physical surroundings faded into the background and Isaiah had an encounter with God.

He had a new consciousness of God. He saw God as sovereign over all the world. His majesty filled the place as though royal robes had filled the Temple. Created creatures were present to serve him. In reverence, humility, and service the seraphim stood in his presence. In antiphonal singing they expressed the holiness of God.

 

Struck by his own sinfulness Isaiah confessed his sin before the holy God. From the altar one of the seraphim took a coal to touch it to his lips signifying his forgiveness.

Having been forgiven of sin, Isaiah made a commitment of his life to God. Upon hearing the question, “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?” he quickly answered, “Here am I; send me” (v. 8).

With Isaiah’s commitment came a commission from God. He commanded him to go and he gave the prophet a message. The message is presented from the standpoint of its inevitable result. It was not the purpose of the message to make the people unrepentant; because of the people’s sinfulness it was known that this would be the result.

How long was he to minister? To the very end. Even until a time of devastation and destruction he was to be faithful in announcing God’s word.

But it would not all be fruitless. A remnant (v. 13) would remain. From the stump of the fallen nation would come the seeds of new life. There was always hope when God was at work.

Special points. — While some interpreters consider the reference to King Uzziah’s death (v. 1) simply a method of dating the experience, most understand it to indicate a shattering experience for Isaiah. In his grief he went to the Temple and there saw God.

Why should Isaiah be so conscious that his lips were unclean (v. 5)? Perhaps it is because of his responsibility as a spokesman for God. Perhaps, too, it is because promises are broken and covenants are renounced with the mouth.

Only in this passage are seraphim mentioned in the Bible. They are pictured as living creatures who were attendants of God. Their real significance may be in what they conveyed by the use of their three pairs of wings: reverence, humility, and service.

The remnant (v. 13) became a prominent part of Isaiah’s message. Some who were faithful to God would remain to serve and worship him.

Truth for today. — When do we encounter God?

For many people their most realistic experience with God has been in a time of deep personal need when they threw themselves completely on God. It is not just at the crisis times that God approaches us, but at those times we are often most receptive to him.

At any time that we become conscious of God in His holiness and glory we become aware of our own unworthiness. The purity of God convicts us of our uncleanness.

With every confession of sin and plea for forgiveness God gives purification. Sin is drastic and must be dealt with drastically. But God answers in forgiving grace.

Concern for others is a result of encountering God and experiencing forgiveness. We must share what we have felt.

Others may not always be receptive to our message. Faithfulness is our responsibility. The results are God’s business.