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.

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Class Lesson March 28, 2021

 



Question 1:

When have you been frustrated by your

inability to fix something?



THE POINT

Forgiveness is possible

because Jesus died for our sins.



THE BIBLE MEETS LIFE

We have become a nation of do-it-yourselfers. In one sense that has always been the case, but with the growing popularity of DIY shows, more people are being challenged to fix or upgrade something without calling a trained professional.

“I can do that!”

If you get stuck, don’t worry. Whether you’re trying to install a Model #237H water faucet or repair the back door lock of a 2010 Ford Escape, someone very likely has created an online video showing you what to do.

It feels good, too, when you can step back and see that you fixed something on your own. Even if it took you much longer than the professional, you can say, “I did it!”

You can’t fix everything, though. Sometimes you have to call the licensed plumber or trained mechanic—and nobody would recommend that you attempt to perform your own heart surgery!

A broken relationship with God is something else you can’t fix on your own. Plenty of religions and philosophies suggest you can, but their methods are ineffective. Only one Person can fix your sin problem.


WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?


John 19:8-11

8 When Pilate heard this statement, he was more afraid than ever. 9 He went back into the headquarters and asked Jesus, “Where are you from?” But Jesus did not give him an answer. 10 So Pilate said to him, “Do you refuse to speak to me? Don’t you know that I have the authority to release you and the authority to crucify you?” 11 “You would have no authority over me at all,” Jesus answered him, “if it hadn’t been given you from above. This is why the one who handed me over to you has the greater sin.”

If you were to take a close-up view of a television screen, you would see nothing but a series of red, green, and blue dots. Those dots would fill your vision, none of it making very much sense at all. But as you step back a bit, the colors start making little patterns. Little pockets of color would start peppering in among the seemingly random scatter of colored light. The further you move away from the TV screen, the more those dots blend together until they become shapes you recognize: a person’s face, a landscape, or text on the screen. One single pixel on a screen might look like it is blinking on and off, changing colors seemingly at random, but what is really happening is that pixel is being controlled by a main chip that has a much bigger picture in mind. It only seems random because you have to be farther away to see the full picture.

John 19:8 picks up about halfway through the account of Jesus’ death. One of His disciples had already betrayed Him. The authorities had arrested Jesus, dragged Him out in front of an angry mob, and had Him flogged. The Jewish leaders were calling for Jesus to be crucified. Now He was in yet another private meeting with Pilate, the Roman official governing over Judea. On the surface, it might seem like everything was spiraling out of control for Jesus, His mission, and His Messiahship, the result of terrible timing and randomness.


Question 2:

What evidence do you see in these

verses that God was in control?


Pilate was in a bit of a pickle. As far as he could tell, the tension between Jesus and the Jewish leaders was just that: tension. Jesus had said things the Jewish leaders didn’t like. Prior to having Jesus flogged, Pilate had told the Jewish leaders: “I find no grounds for charging him” (John 18:38). In Pilate’s eyes, Jesus was innocent.

But the angry mob outside was causing problems. If Pilate didn’t give them what they wanted, he ran the risk of seeing his district descend into a riot. Pilate had the full authority to release Jesus or crucify Him; in fact, he was the only one able to order the death penalty. He reminded Jesus of that fact: “Don’t you know that I have the authority to release you and the authority to crucify you?” (v. 10).

Jesus’ response was significant: “You would have no authority over me at all . . . if it hadn’t been given you from above.” Think of what all Jesus could have said or done. He could’ve fought for His innocence. He could’ve started an argument. He could’ve changed everyone’s minds with the snap of His fingers. Instead, He humbled Himself and turned Himself over to the whims of the angry mob.

Jesus understood that even though things seemed to be spiraling into chaos, everything was actually functioning perfectly within the Father’s plan. Like the TV when we step away from it, we see the fuller picture: this was all part of God’s plan.

God is a perfect and just God, and the work for salvation was perfectly complete when Jesus died. Even when the circumstance seemed out of control, Jesus was able to complete His task, knowing full well He was held perfectly in the center of God’s will.


John 19:16b-18

16b Then they took Jesus away. 17 Carrying the cross by himself, he went out to what is called Place of the Skull, which in Aramaic is called ‘Golgotha’. 18 There they crucified him and two others with him, one on either side, with Jesus in the middle.

As Jesus’ trials concluded, He was led away for execution. He was not alone, though, for they crucified two criminals with Him. The three men were taken to the “Place of the Skull” outside the walls of Jerusalem. The place received its name probably because the shape of the place resembled a skull (which is Golgotha in Aramaic and Calvariae in Latin, the word from which we get Calvary).

The incredible event that took place on the Skull was captured in three words—“They crucified Him”—but those three words are powerful. The apostle John did not go into the graphic details of how extreme and horrific crucifixion was. The first readers of this account would have understood, since it was a common form of execution.


The typical cross resembled a T, with no top part against which the criminal could rest his head. At the place of execution, the soldiers laid the cross flat on the ground and fastened the criminal. Sometimes they might tie a criminal to the cross by ropes, but they also used nails. This was certainly the case with Jesus, since Thomas referred to the nail marks in Jesus’ hands. Then the soldiers raised the cross so that the criminal was upright, perhaps only two or three feet from the ground. In this position, the criminal experienced a number of agonies: severe inflammation, swelling of wounds caused by nails, torn tendons, throbbing headaches, burning thirst, inability to breathe, and incredible discomfort from the strained position. As terrible as the pain was, it often was not enough to kill a person, so the criminal was left to die from hunger and thirst, or asphyxiation. Some criminals were known to hang on a cross for a week, driven mad by their unbearable conditions.

As Jesus carried the cross by himself up to Golgotha, He was walking a path reserved for us. We are the ones deserving death. As He was nailed in place, His hands and feet were nailed when it should’ve been our hands and feet. And when He died, He died a death we deserved to pay a price we could never afford.

Question 3:

What emotions do you experience when you

think about Jesus’ crucifixion?



John 19:28-30

28 After this, when Jesus knew that everything was now finished that the Scripture might be fulfilled, he said, “I’m thirsty.” 29 A jar full of sour wine was sitting there; so they fixed a sponge full of sour wine on a hyssop branch and held it up to his mouth. 30 When Jesus had received the sour wine, he said, “It is finished.” Then bowing his head, he gave up his spirit. 

When God made Adam and Eve, they lived in perfect community with Him. But it didn’t take long for them to break that community by placing their desires above God’s command to them. When they did this, they brought sin into a world where it previously had no hold. Throughout the Old Testament, God wanted to help His people understand just how serious sin is—how damaging it is to our relationship with Him.


Question 4:

What do you find hopeful about

Jesus’ declaration, “It is finished”?


Jesus was a Rabbi who taught Scripture, and He is the Messiah who also fulfilled Scripture. And because He is the Son of God, He completed God’s plan for salvation once and for all. When Jesus said, “I’m thirsty” (v. 28), He was doing two things.

  1. He was expressing His thirst! It’d been a long day, and Jesus had gone without food and water since the Passover meal with His disciples. He had lost a lot of blood from the flogging and the crucifixion, and the body needs fluids to replace lost blood, so Jesus experienced extreme thirst.                                                                            
  2. He was calling attention to the fulfillment of Scripture. Both Psalms 22 and 69 are about a suffering servant—accused, insulted, humiliated, and in need of rescue.

Jesus was completing the picture He’d been painting with His whole life. He was proving He was the final substitutionary sacrifice who would bring salvation. As God’s Son, Jesus didn’t bring salvation from an earthly ruler; He brought deliverance from the force of sin and death that has plagued us since sin first entered the picture with Adam and Eve.

John wanted his readers to know without a doubt that every part of Jesus’ death was according to God’s plan of redemption. God is sovereign. Through the Son of God, the plan of salvation was fulfilled. “It is finished” (v. 30).


Question 5:

Why is the crucifixion of Jesus an

essential element of the gospel?




GOD’S COSTLY LOVE

In the first column, list several costly ways you’ve shown love to someone.

In the second column, list several costly ways someone has shown love to you.

In the third column, list ways Jesus’ death cost God in order to lovingly forgive and save you.


My Ways           Others’ Ways           God’s Way




Write a short prayer expressing your response to God’s costly love:




“When the time came to completion, God sent his Son,

born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those

under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons.”

GALATIANS 4:4-5


LIVE IT OUT

Jesus’ death was the final sacrifice that covered the sins of the world. In light of this historic moment, choose one of the following applications:

Give thanks. Reflect on all Jesus has saved you from. Spend time in prayer, thanking Him for forgiving your sins.

Offer forgiveness. Since you have been forgiven by the blood of Christ, identify someone in your life who has wronged you and reach out to them with a word of forgiveness.

Share the message. The forgiveness and salvation Jesus provided through His death is available to all. Share this truth with a friend who does not know Christ.

There are lots of things we can do for ourselves—and we can have fun doing them. But forgiveness for our sins was accomplished on the cross through Christ once and for all. We have only to receive that forgiveness by repenting and turning to Him in faith.


Teacher's Notes:




Video: Mel Gibson The Passion of The Christ




 Click Play to Watch


Love. That’s a word that gets thrown around a lot, and it’s used for a lot of things that aren’t really love. “I love my car.” “I love ice cream.” “I love the Tigers.” “I love my job.” And, “I love my spouse.” Out of all of those, only the last one is really related to love, all the others are just measures of extreme likes.

 

While the message of sin and separation from God was seen in the Isaiah 59 passage, there is good news. God loves us — He loves you. Despite the fact that humanity has sinned and rebelled against God, He still loves us. He loved us so much that He did what we could never do for ourselves. He sent His only Son, Jesus Christ, to bear the punishment we rightly deserve for our sin. The work of Jesus provides a way for all us — including you — to be forgiven and experience salvation.

 

Q: In your opinion, which was more important, Jesus' death on the cross or His resurrection from the dead?

 

A: Both Jesus’ death on the cross and His resurrection from the dead are equally important; they cannot be separated from each other. Without Jesus’ death, we have no hope of God’s forgiveness; and without Jesus’ resurrection, we have no hope of eternal life. Like the two wings of an airplane, both are essential!

 

Why is this? The reason is because our greatest need is to be forgiven of our sins. Sin separates us from God, and until we’re forgiven and cleansed of our sins, we have no hope of eternal life in heaven. But we can’t cleanse ourselves of our sins, no matter how hard we try—and that’s why we need Christ. He was without sin, but on the cross all our sins were placed on Him, and He took the judgment we deserve. In other words, on the cross Jesus became the final and complete sacrifice for our sins.

 

 

John 19:8-11

8 When Pilate heard this statement, he was more afraid than ever. 9 He went back into the headquarters and asked Jesus, “Where are you from?” But Jesus did not give him an answer. 10 So Pilate said to him, “Do you refuse to speak to me? Don’t you know that I have the authority to release you and the authority to crucify you?” 11 “You would have no authority over me at all,” Jesus answered him, “if it hadn’t been given you from above. This is why the one who handed me over to you has the greater sin.”

 

1.   Jesus’ death was under God’s control.

 

While it was Pilate who held Jesus in custody, make no mistake, God was in control. There was nothing about any of this that surprised God. In order for the penalty for sin to be paid, Jesus had to be arrested and stand trial. This was all in God’s plan. Verse 11 reflects Jesus’ understanding that what was happening to Him was not because of Pilate’s authority, but because of God’s. From our vantage point in history, we understand the spiritual ramifications of Jesus’ arrest and crucifixion. Yet, we may struggle with the realization that God was in control of the events that led to Jesus’ death. Galatians 4:4-5 reminds us that God, in His own timing, brought about these events that would lead to the redemption of humankind.

  • Jesus was arrested, accused, and condemned, although He had done no wrong, by a people who refused to acknowledge their own guilt before a righteous God.
  • The Lord loves us and befriends us; but we need to exercise caution in presuming on His goodness to the neglect of fearing and revering Him as Holy God.
  • Sometimes the best answer to those who falsely accuse us is no answer.
  • We need to honor, respect, and fear the sovereign rule of God over that of human authorities, expectations, and regulations.
  • Each person is accountable for his or her sin—now and in the day of eternal judgment.


Why was Pilate so afraid?

The Jewish leaders based their demands on Jewish law whereby one who blasphemed God — as they were saying Jesus had — must be put to death (Lev. 24:16). Moreover, in their view, death on a cross would add to Jesus’ humiliation (Deut. 21:23).

When Pilate therefore heard that saying, he was even more afraid.

The saying was the demands in verses 6-7 that Jesus be crucified for claiming to be “the Son of God. He probably was afraid, if for no other reason, for his political future. No one wanted to experience the disfavor of Caesar. He likely was a superstitious man too; and his wife had already shared her concerns with him (Matt. 27:19).

Possibly, growing out of his own interview with Jesus, Pilate, who had declared Jesus’ innocence three times, may have developed a fear of the divine, for he realized something unusual about this man before him that did not seem to match up to the picture his accusers had painted to him in their charges (Luke 23:1).

Therefore, Pilate went again into the judgment hall to have another conversation with Jesus. His question was simple and direct: Where are You from? In his earlier conversation, Jesus had said to Pilate He was “not of this world” (John 18:36). Pilate did not pursue that response then, but now, having heard the phrase Son of God used in reference to Jesus, Pilate may have wanted to know just who he was dealing with. Could this indeed be some kind of God-man? But Jesus gave him no answer. “His silence echoes the silence of the Suffering Servant of Isaiah 53:7. He is silent, it seems, because Pilate has already revealed that he is not a man of truth and thus would not benefit from an answer to his question.” 1 Jesus knew Pilate wouldn’t understand, for he obviously had not understood Jesus in the earlier encounter (John 18:33-38).

Spiritually, Pilate was unable to grasp who Jesus was. The tone of Pilate’s reaction to Jesus’ silence may have been one of exasperation. “Do you refuse to speak to me? It was not a question that actually called for an answer. It was designed to set up what he would say next. Don’t you know that I have the authority to release you and the authority to crucify you? Power denotes “power of choice, authority.” The statement was true in terms of Pilate’s legal position. He had the authority to execute and the authority to acquit.

Yet from the view of divine, salvation history, were it not so sad, it could be laughable that this weak governor actually believed the destiny of Jesus, who truly was God’s Son, lay in his hands or would be determined by his word. So, to this assertion, Jesus did respond. He might not speak in His own defense, but He felt compelled to challenge Pilate’s errant thinking.  You would have no authority over me at all,” Jesus answered him, “if it hadn’t been given you from above. Jesus’ reply is a reminder to Pilate that no matter what authority one has, someone above has more. The political or governing authority Pilate had was given to him by the authority of the emperor in Rome. And maybe—if Pilate was beginning to realize Jesus was no mere man—Jesus seized this as a moment to remind Pilate that another greater authority existed; one who truly came from above, denoting the authority of God.

Neither must we miss the importance of the words against me. When it came to Jesus, neither Pilate, the Jewish rulers, nor the emperor in Rome could hold sway over Him. Jesus had come under the authority of His Father. Even in the throes of death, that had not changed. His destiny was according to the Father’s plan and purposes. Jesus’ words were an indictment of Pilate and a reminder that he had responsibility for the way he exercised his authority. At that moment he stood on the threshold of using his power in opposition to God. By turning Jesus over to death, he would be personally rejecting Jesus as One sent from God. Yet, Jesus added, “The one who handed me over to you has the greater sin” . At least two questions arise. Who was Jesus talking about? And how are we to understand the idea of there being greater sin?

 

In John 18:35 Pilate told Jesus His own people and the chief priests were the ones who had handed Jesus over to him. So, even though the words are grammatically singular

in form, Jesus could be speaking collectively of the people who rejected him. Or he could be singling out Caiaphas, the chief priest, who by abuse of his authority blatantly rejected Jesus and persuaded others to do the same, thus intensifying the depth of his own sin before the very God he professed to represent. Furthermore, he was guilty of manipulating Pilate and the Roman system to accomplish what he could not do otherwise—kill Jesus.

Sin is sin, no matter what form it takes. Sin is that state in which we live in violation of God’s law, whether in thought or action. Sin is the human refusal to acknowledge the authority of the holy, sovereign God who has made Himself known in His Son Jesus. Therefore, to reject Jesus is to rebel against God, thus committing sin. We are responsible to God personally for our sin. Jesus spoke to the concept of accountability in Luke 12:48. We are accountable for what we know, what we have been given, and what we do. We are not informed enough to know how that greater accountability will be measured and judgment administered. But neither should we have the desire to test it to the point of finding out.

 

 

John 19:16b-18

16b Then they took Jesus away. 17 Carrying the cross by himself, he went out to what is called Place of the Skull, which in Aramaic is called Golgotha. 18 There they crucified him and two others with him, one on either side, with Jesus in the middle.

 

2.   Jesus’ death was for us. 

Jesus endured the awful death by crucifixion to pay the penalty for our sin. Jesus was completely sinless and didn’t deserve to die. But His death was foretold in Scripture. The events that took place were all fulfillments of Old Testament prophecies concerning the coming Savior, the Messiah.

Crucifixion was the cruelest death the Romans could devise. They reserved crucifixion for the most serious of crimes. The Romans didn’t invent crucifixion. It was originally used by the Assyrians and Babylonians. The Romans, however, refined the punishment. Their goal was to inflict as much pain and blood loss as possible before crucifixion, but just to the point of death. Then they would let the victim hang on the cross in terrible pain until they could no longer breathe. Rest assured of this fact: Jesus endured the pain of the cross for you and for me.

 

Why is the crucifixion of Jesus an essential element of the gospel?

·        Christ suffered and died for the sin of the world.

·        Jesus’ atoning death is the centerpiece of the gospel.

 

The typical cross resembled a T, with no top part against which the criminal could rest his head. At the place of execution, the soldiers laid the cross flat on the ground and fastened the criminal. Sometimes they might tie a criminal to the cross by ropes, but they also used nails. This was certainly the case with Jesus, since Thomas referred to the nail marks in Jesus’ hands. Then the soldiers raised the cross so that the criminal was upright, perhaps only two or three feet from the ground. In this position, the criminal experienced a number of agonies: severe inflammation, swelling of wounds caused by nails, torn tendons, throbbing headaches, burning thirst, inability to breathe, and incredible discomfort from the strained position. As terrible as the pain was, it often was not enough to kill a person, so the criminal was left to die from hunger and thirst, or asphyxiation. Some criminals were known to hang on a cross for a week, driven mad by their unbearable conditions.

 

John 19:28-30

28 After this, when Jesus knew that everything was now finished that the Scripture might be fulfilled, he said, “I’m thirsty.” 29 A jar full of sour wine was sitting there; so they fixed a sponge full of sour wine on a hyssop branch and held it up to his mouth. 30 When Jesus had received the sour wine, he said, “It is finished.” Then bowing his head, he gave up his spirit.

 

3.   Jesus’ death completed the work of salvation. 

Jesus endured the pain of the cross and the agony of crucifixion until all of Scripture related to God’s plan for salvation had been accomplished. Verse 28 makes it clear that Jesus was still understanding all that was taking place. He knew that the Scripture was fulfilled. When Jesus said, “It is finished,” He meant that the work necessary for salvation—God’s redemptive plan—was completed. He had done everything He had to do in order to provide the gift of salvation to you and me. To be complete means there was nothing else that needed to be added to what He had done. Yet, we still try to earn salvation by our works, don’t we? What could we do that would be greater that what Jesus has already done for us? The penalty of sin is death. Either you can pay the penalty, or you can accept the price that Jesus paid for you in His death.

 

What does the price Jesus paid for our forgiveness communicate about the weight of our sin?

 

·        Jesus’ sufferings and death were real.

·        Jesus accomplished all the Father had sent Him to do.

·        Jesus gave of Himself freely that we might be forgiven and saved from sin.

 

When God made Adam and Eve, they lived in perfect community with Him. But it didn’t take long for them to break that community by placing their desires above God’s command to them. When they did this, they brought sin into a world where it previously had no hold. Throughout the Old Testament, God wanted to help His people understand just how serious sin is—how damaging it is to our relationship with Him.

 

The Point: Forgiveness is possible because Jesus died for our sins.

 

Conclusion:

The crucifixion of Jesus, while carried out by Romans soldiers under Pilate’s authority, was God’s plan. God was in control of all of the events of Jesus’ death. Jesus’ death was for all of humanity, even though it was over 2,000 years ago. And Jesus’ death completed—fully—the work of salvation. There is nothing that you need to do, or can do, to earn your salvation. Jesus paid the price for you. Forgiveness of your sins is possible because Jesus died for your sins.

 

 

7 Reasons Christ Suffered and Died

God’s purposes for the world in the death of Jesus are unfathomable, writes John Piper in his latest book, The Passion of Jesus Christ: Fifty Reasons Why He Came to Die. He adds, “Infinitely more important than who killed Jesus is the question: What did God achieve for sinners like us in sending His Son to die?”

How vital it is that we grasp–and share–the sovereignly designed purposes behind the Passion of Jesus Christ. Here are seven of them:

 

1. To achieve His own resurrection from the dead.

The death of Christ did not merely precede His resurrection – it was the price that obtained it. The Bible says He was raised not just after the blood-shedding, but by it. The wrath of God was satisfied with the suffering and death of Jesus. The holy curse against sin was fully absorbed. The price of forgiveness was totally paid. The righteousness of God was completely vindicated. All that was left to accomplish was the public declaration of God’s endorsement. This He gave by raising Jesus from the dead. When the Bible says, “If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins” (1 Corinthians 15:17, ESV), the point is not that the resurrection is the price paid for our sins. The point is that the resurrection proves that the death of Jesus is an all-sufficient price.

 

2. To show His own love for us.

The death of Christ is not only the demonstration of God’s love (John 3:16), it is also the supreme expression of Christ’s own love for all who receive it as their treasure. The sufferings and death of Christ have to do with me personally. It is my sin that cuts me off from God, not sin in general. I am lost and perishing; all I can do is plead for mercy. Then I see Christ suffering and dying. For whom? Ephesians 5:25 says, “Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her.” And John 15:13, “Greater love has no one than this, that someone lays down his life for his friends.” And Matthew 20:28, “The Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.” And I ask, Am I among the “many”? Can I be one of His “friends”? May I belong to the “church”? And I hear the answer, “To all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God” (John 1:12). My heart is swayed, and I embrace the beauty and bounty of Christ as my treasure. And there flows into my heart this great reality–the love of Christ for me.

 

3. In order to cancel the legal demands of the law against us.

What a folly to think that our good deeds may one day outweigh our bad deeds. First, it is not true. Even our good deeds are defective, because we don’t honor God in the way we do them. “Whatever does not proceed from faith is sin.” Without Christ-exalting faith, our deeds will signify nothing but rebellion. Second, this is simply not the way God saves us. If we are saved from the consequences of our bad deeds, it will not be because they weighed less than our good deeds. There is no salvation by balancing records. There is only salvation by canceling records. The record of our bad deeds (including our defective good deeds), along with the just penalties that each deserves, must be blotted out–not balanced. This is what Christ suffered and died to accomplish (Colossians 2:13). He endured my damnation. He is my only hope. And faith in Him is my only way to God.

 

4. To provide the basis for our justification and to complete the obedience that becomes our righteousness.

To be justified in a courtroom is not the same as being forgiven. Being forgiven implies that I am guilty and my crime is not counted. Being justified implies that I have been tried and found innocent. The verdict of justification does not make a person just. It declares a person just. (The moral change we undergo when we trust Christ is not justification. The Bible usually calls that sanctification–the process of becoming good.) Justification is a declaration that happens in a moment. A verdict: Just! Righteous! In the courtroom of God, we have not kept the law. Therefore, justification, in ordinary terms, is hopeless. Yet, amazingly, because of Christ, the Bible says God “justifies the ungodly” who trust in His grace (Romans 4:5). Christ shed His blood to cancel the guilt of our crime: “We have now been justified by his blood” (Romans 5:9). But canceling our sins is not the same as declaring us righteous. Christ also imputes His righteousness to me. My claim before God is this: “not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which comes through faith in Christ” (Philippians 3:9). Christ fulfilled all righteousness perfectly; and then that righteousness was reckoned to be mine, when I trusted in Him. Christ’s death became the basis for our pardon and our perfection.


5. To obtain for us all things that are good for us.

“He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things?” (Romans 8:32). I love the logic of this verse. Not because I love logic, but because I love having my real needs met. The two halves of Romans 8:32 have a stupendously important logical connection. The connection between the two halves is meant to make the second half absolutely certain. If God did the hardest thing of all–namely, give up His own Son to suffering and death–then it is certain that He will do the comparatively easy thing, namely, give us all things with Him. God’s total commitment to give us all things is more sure than the sacrifice of His Son. But what does “give us all things” mean? He will give us all things that are good for us. All things that we really need in order to be conformed to the image of His Son (Romans 8:29). All things we need in order to attain everlasting joy. “In any and every circumstance, I have learned the secret of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and need. I can do all things through him who strengthens me” (Philippians 4:12-13, emphasis added). Notice “all things” includes “hungering” and “needing.” God will meet every real need, including the ability to rejoice in suffering when many felt needs do not get met. The suffering and death of Christ guarantee that God will give us all things that we need to do His will and to give Him glory and to attain everlasting joy.

 

6. To bring us to God.

What is the ultimate good in the Good News? God Himself. Salvation is not good news if it only saves from hell and not for God. Forgiveness is not good news if it only gives relief from guilt and doesn’t open the way to God. Justification is not good news if it only makes us legally acceptable to God but doesn’t bring fellowship with God. Redemption is not good news if it only liberates us from bondage but doesn’t bring us to God. Adoption is not good news if it only puts us in the Father’s family but not in His arms. There is no sure evidence that we have a new heart just because we want to escape hell. It doesn’t take a new heart to want the psychological relief of forgiveness, or the removal of God’s wrath, or the inheritance of God’s world. The evidence we have been changed is that we want these things because they bring us to the enjoyment of God. This is the greatest thing Christ died for. “Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God” (1 Peter 3:18).

 

7. To give us eternal life.

In our happiest times we do not want to die. The wish for death rises only when our suffering seems unbearable. What we really want in those times is not death, but relief. We would love for the good times to come again. We would like the pain to go away. We would like to have our loved one back from the grave. The longing of the human heart is to live and to be happy. God made us that way. “He has put eternity into man’s heart” (Ecclesiastes 3:11). We are created in God’s image, and God loves life and lives forever. We were made to live forever. And we will. The opposite of eternal life is not annihilation. It is hell. Jesus spoke of it more than anybody, and He made plain that rejecting the eternal life He offered would result not in obliteration, but in the misery of God’s wrath: “Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life; whoever does not obey the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God remains on him” (John 3:36). And it remains forever. Jesus said, “These will go away into eternal punishment, but the righteous into eternal life” (Matthew 25:46). All that is good–all that will bring true and lasting happiness–will be preserved and purified and intensified. We will be changed so that we are capable of dimensions of happiness that were inconceivable to us in this life. “What no eye has seen, nor ear heard, nor the heart of man imagined … God has prepared for those who love him” (1 Corinthians 2:9). For this Christ suffered and died. Why would we not embrace Him as our treasure, and live?













































































Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Class Lesson March 21, 2021

 



Question 1:

What’s an early memory of being punished

for doing something wrong?




THE POINT

We are sinners, and

on our own, we can do nothing about it.



THE BIBLE MEETS LIFE

Kids are experts at “no.”
“Kids, get in the car.”
“No!”
“Hurry. We’re going to be late.”
“No!”

Nobody has to teach kids to do this. I certainly didn’t teach my children to do this! Admittedly, I frequently said no to my parents, and they didn’t teach me that. It is something we are born with.

By saying “no,” we are in essence rejecting the authority of whomever we are responding to. Kids can love their parents deeply, but in that moment, they are rejecting the authority of their parents. From birth, we all are good at rejecting our parents’ authority. We are also adept at rejecting God’s authority, saying no to what He wants, and doing what we want instead. It’s called sin, and we are born with a nature that leads us to sin.

Saying no to our parents’ commands often led to punishment, and the same is true when we say no to God’s commands. And no amount of good on our part will cancel out that punishment.

Thankfully, God did not leave us in this state.




WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?

Isaiah 59:1-5

1 Indeed, the Lord’s arm is not too weak to save, and his ear is not too deaf to hear. 2 But your iniquities are separating you from your God, and your sins have hidden his face from you so that he does not listen. 3 For your hands are defiled with blood and your fingers, with iniquity; your lips have spoken lies, and your tongues mutter injustice. 4 No one makes claims justly; no one pleads honestly. They trust in empty and worthless words; they conceive trouble and give birth to iniquity. 5 They hatch viper’s eggs and weave spider’s webs. Whoever eats their eggs will die; crack one open, and a viper is hatched.

In 1990, President George H. W. Bush made a funny statement: “I do not like broccoli. And I haven’t liked it since I was a little kid and my mother made me eat it. And I’m president of the United States and I’m not going to eat any more broccoli!”1 Of course, President Bush was perfectly capable of eating broccoli. But as president, he now chose to have nothing to do with it.

God has a far-greater reaction to sin. He absolutely detests it. He hates it so much that it repulses Him. Look at how Isaiah described our sins: worthless, like “viper’s eggs” and “spider’s webs.” Because a holy God will have nothing to do with sin, “your iniquities are separating you from your God” (v. 2). Because of our sin, He hides His face from us.

What exactly is sin? Consider the first sin ever committed. Adam and Eve deliberately disobeyed God’s order not to eat from a certain tree (Gen. 3:2-7). As a result, God sent them out of the garden of Eden and they were separated from God’s presence. Previously, they had been able to walk and talk with God (v. 8), like a family together in one house, but now they never would be allowed back in. Humanity’s relationship with God was damaged from that point on.

Question 2:

What evidence do you see in this

world that everyone has sinned?


That seems a little extreme, doesn’t it? After all, it was just a piece of fruit—but the issue was far greater than it might appear on the surface. The issue was their disobedience. Let’s not confuse sin simply with “bad things we do.” Sin is so much deeper than that. Sin is what we do when we place our desires and our agendas above God. It’s not “just a piece of fruit.” By eating what God said not to  eat, we are placing our small choice ahead of God, and to place anything ahead of God is rebellion and mutiny.

Sin puts everyone on a level playing field. Since all rebellion is rebellion, we are all seen as sinful people. No one can justify his or her sin by saying, “At least I’m not as bad as that person.” Each of us has a sick heart set on rebellion against a holy and perfect God. As we shall see in the next session, it’s not that God doesn’t care or is incapable of helping us. As Isaiah said, “Indeed, the Lord’s arm is not too weak to save, and his ear is not too deaf to hear” (v. 1), but our sin is the barrier. God desires to save us, “but your iniquities are separating you from your God.”



Isaiah 59:6-8

6 Their webs cannot become clothing, and they cannot cover themselves with their works. Their works are sinful works, and violent acts are in their hands. 7 Their feet run after evil, and they rush to shed innocent blood. Their thoughts are sinful thoughts; ruin and wretchedness are in their paths. 8 They have not known the path of peace, and there is no justice in their ways. They have made their roads crooked; no one who walks on them will know peace.

My house is slowly turning into a zoo. OK, not exactly a zoo, but we’re getting pretty close. We have a few farm animals that live outside, but two animals have a special place in our house: our dogs Annie and Nola.

The thing is, dogs tend to be messy, especially our Goldendoodles. They have a limitless supply of energy and, like most dogs, they are not bothered in the least by mud. When it rains and the dogs have been outside, they bring mud with them the second they come inside. If we don’t clean them up first, everything they touch in the house will need to be cleaned. It doesn’t matter what they do to try to clean themselves, they only end up making everything they touch a muddy mess.

That is the idea that Isaiah was pointing to in this passage. We can’t cover up our sinful works, because on our own we’re completely unable to repair the damage our sin does. Our “works are sinful works” and our “thoughts are sinful thoughts.” Even the “good” we attempt to do to cover our sin is marred with sin! We simply cannot “make up” for our sin. We can’t just do more good things to outweigh the bad things and call the relationship good. As the prophet Isaiah said later, “All our righteous acts are like a polluted garment” (Isa. 64:6).



IMAGERY FROM ISAIAH 59

Isaiah 59 is packed with vibrant imagery. 
Use the space below to record or draw some of the images that catch your attention most, and then explain what those images
communicate in the context of Isaiah’s teaching.








“I have come to the conclusion that none of

us in our generation feels as guilty about sin

as we should or as our forefathers did.”

FRANCIS SCHAEFFER




The picture Isaiah painted goes against how most people view themselves. Most people won’t deny they’ve made mistakes and done things they shouldn’t have, but they see themselves as basically good people.

Isaiah is clear; as he said in verse 8, we have made our own roads crooked. We’ve laid the road we walk on—and we can’t straighten it!


Question 3:

What are some common ways people

try to cover over their sinfulness?




Isaiah 59:9-13

9 Therefore justice is far from us, and righteousness does not reach us. We hope for light, but there is darkness; for brightness, but we live in the night. 10 We grope along a wall like the blind; we grope like those without eyes. We stumble at noon as though it were twilight; we are like the dead among those who are healthy. 11 We all growl like bears and moan like doves. We hope for justice, but there is none; for salvation, but it is far from us. 12 For our transgressions have multiplied before you, and our sins testify against us. For our transgressions are with us, and we know our iniquities: 13 transgression and deception against the Lord, turning away from following our God, speaking oppression and revolt, conceiving and uttering lying words from the heart.


Isaiah was writing to people who were spiritually dead, given over completely to their addiction to sin. He described them as people who “grope like those without eyes . . . stumble at noon as though it were twilight” (v. 10) and “growl like bears and moan like doves.”

Isaiah also told us why they were like this: “our transgressions have multiplied before you” (v. 12). Instead of improving themselves (as many people think they can do), the people’s sins were only growing and multiplying. They couldn’t hide who they were. They were sinners and their sins testified against them.

It’s the same for us. The apostle Paul said it in a similar way. “And you were dead in your trespasses and sins in which you previously walked according to the ways of this world” (Eph. 2:1-2a). We weren’t incapacitated or knocked down; we were dead.



Question 4:

How have you experienced

the futility of trying to deal with your sin by yourself?



Before coming to faith in Christ, we are all in the same boat: spiritually dead, enslaved to sin, and in possession of a debt far greater than we could pay on our own. We stand no chance of paying it back or of working our way back to life.

On our own, we were less than powerless—we were blind people stumbling down the street, dead people with no hope for revival. God decided that something had to change, and since none of us could do it ourselves, He would—and did. It was God who took the first step toward us. It was God who delivered a way for us to be free of the debt of our sin. It was God who made it so that our relationship with Him could be repaired.

Without salvation from the sin that infests our hearts, we are completely without hope. But as we will see in the next session, His intervention breathed hope and life into our dismal condition.


Question 5:

What are some ways our group can

help one another in our struggle against sin?


LIVE IT OUT

We are all sinners. In the next session, we will focus on the solution and salvation offered through Jesus Christ. For the moment, consider what you will do with the truth that you have a sin nature and are prone to sin. Choose one of the following applications:

  • Confession. Admit that you are a sinner who has fallen short of God’s standard. Confess your sin to Him and ask for forgiveness. He is faithful and just to forgive you.                                                                                                                                        
  • Prevention. Evaluate where you are most prone to give into temptation. Being tempted is not sin, but it can easily lead to sin. Draft some safeguards to help you avoid temptation in the first place.                                                                                                                        
  • Accountability. Reach out to one or two believers (of the same gender) in whom you can confide. Talk through areas in which you are weak and ask them to hold you accountable and walk with you so that you will not fall.

Though we will never attain a sinless life, with the help of the Holy Spirit and those around us, we can identify the spots where we need help and take bigger steps toward living in a way that honors God.

Teacher Notes:







The Most Effective Punishment Ever Created!


Beyond Meat, the plant-based meat alternative company, has announced a three-year partnership with McDonald’s to become the “preferred supplier for the patty in the McPlant.” Bill Gates is also bringing attention to plant-based meat alternatives, suggesting that “all rich countries should move to 100% synthetic beef” as part of the fight against climate change. Gates added, “You can get used to the taste difference.”

 

We can “get used to” many things when we forgo the original. A McPlant may taste a lot like a hamburger, but once you take a bite of an all-beef McDonald’s Quarter Pounder, the difference becomes clear. Whether you agree that giving up beef for the sake of climate change is a reasonable decision, it is hard to deny that beef is the taste-standard for hamburgers.

 

What does this have to do with SIN?

 

We often measure our actions and decisions against others, whom we think are setting the standard for behavior. Our mistakes and poor decisions don’t seem that bad when we compare them to the scandals in the news. However, politicians, celebrities, and our neighbors aren’t the standard for our behavior; God is. When we stop looking to God, we can “get used to” a lot of sins. But once we turn our focus back to God, the difference becomes clear, and we fail to measure up.

 

The Point: We are sinners, and on our own, we can do nothing about it.

The Passage: Isaiah 59:1-13

 

Isaiah 59:1-5

1 Indeed, the Lord’s arm is not too weak to save, and his ear is not too deaf to hear. 2 But your iniquities are separating you from your God, and your sins have hidden his face from you so that he does not listen. 3 For your hands are defiled with blood and your fingers, with iniquity; your lips have spoken lies, and your tongues mutter injustice. 4 No one makes claims justly; no one pleads honestly. They trust in empty and worthless words; they conceive trouble and give birth to iniquity. 5 They hatch viper’s eggs and weave spider’s webs. Whoever eats their eggs will die; crack one open, and a viper is hatched.


What exactly is sin?

·        Sin is described in the Bible as transgression of the law of God and rebellion against God. Sin had its beginning with Lucifer, probably the most beautiful and powerful of the angels. Not content with his position, he desired to be higher than God, and that was his downfall, the beginning of sin. Renamed Satan, he brought sin to the human race in the Garden of Eden, where he tempted Adam and Eve with the same enticement, “you shall be like God.” Genesis 3 describes Adam and Eve’s rebellion against God and against His command. Since that time, sin has been passed down through all the generations of mankind and we, Adam’s descendants, have inherited sin from him. Romans 5:12 tells us that through Adam sin entered the world, and so death was passed on to all men because “the wages of sin is death.” (Romans 6:23).

 

·        Let’s not confuse sin simply with “bad things we do.” Sin is so much deeper than that. Sin is what we do when we place our desires and our agendas above God. It’s not “just a piece of fruit.” By eating what God said not to eat, we are placing our small choice ahead of God, and to place anything ahead of God is rebellion and mutiny. Sin puts everyone on a level playing field. Since all rebellion is rebellion, we are all seen as sinful people. No one can justify his or her sin by saying, “At least I’m not as bad as that person.” Each of us has a sick heart set on rebellion against a holy and perfect God.

 


It's a God Complex


1.   Our sin separates us from God

 

It’s as if there is a huge chasm between where we are standing and where God is standing. There is absolutely no way to be in God’s presence because of our sin. God is holy and cannot allow sin into His presence.

 

How have you experienced separation from God because of sin?

 

Isaiah 59:6-8

6 Their webs cannot become clothing, and they cannot cover themselves with their works. Their works are sinful works, and violent acts are in their hands. 7 Their feet run after evil, and they rush to shed innocent blood. Their thoughts are sinful thoughts; ruin and wretchedness are in their paths. 8 They have not known the path of peace, and there is no justice in their ways. They have made their roads crooked; no one who walks on them will know peace.

 

2.   Our sin can’t be covered up.

When we recognize our sinful condition, and realize that God cannot allow sin into His presence, we try to rationalize our actions. We try to cover up our sin— bury our sin—by doing a bunch of good works. Our thinking is that if we do enough good works, volunteer enough hours at a non-profit organization, or give enough money to charities that all the good will outweigh all the bad. The problem is that God doesn’t see things that way. Because of our sinful condition, any works that we do are, by nature, sinful works. And God can see right through our attempts to cover up our sin. He sees, and knows, that our hearts are still sinful and bent toward sinful activity.

 

What are some common ways people try to cover over their sinfulness?

  

Isaiah 59:9-13

9 Therefore justice is far from us, and righteousness does not reach us. We hope for light, but there is darkness; for brightness, but we live in the night. 10 We grope along a wall like the blind; we grope like those without eyes. We stumble at noon as though it were twilight; we are like the dead among those who are healthy. 11 We all growl like bears and moan like doves. We hope for justice, but there is none; for salvation, but it is far from us. 12 For our transgressions have multiplied before you, and our sins testify against us. For our transgressions are with us, and we know our iniquities: 13 transgression and deception against the Lord, turning away from following our God, speaking oppression and revolt, conceiving and uttering lying words from the heart.

 

Isaiah was writing to people who were spiritually dead, given over completely to their addiction to sin. He described them as people who “grope like those without eyes . . . stumble at noon as though it were twilight” (v. 10) and “growl like bears and moan like doves.” Isaiah also told us why they were like this: “our transgressions have multiplied before you” (v. 12). Instead of improving themselves (as many people think they can do), the people’s sins were only growing and multiplying. They couldn’t hide who they were. They were sinners and their sins testified against them.

 

3.   Our sin needs a Savior

These verses describe the despair that comes from a realization of our sin. That realization leads us to groan aloud and mourn over our sinful condition. Verses 12 and 13 identify how our sin has multiplied before God. He sees it. We know it. Without God’s intervention, we are completely separated from God and hopeless in our inability to resolve our sin issue on our own.

 

  • The first step in deliverance from sin is confession.
  • As long as we are separated from God, salvation is far off from us.
  • God knows our sin; thus, it is useless to deny it.
  • No matter how it is expressed, our sin is against the Lord; therefore, salvation comes only by returning in faith to Him who has come to redeem us.

 

What do you do when you feel overwhelmed by your sin nature?

 

 

Conclusion: The bottom line is this: We are sinners, and on our own, we can do nothing about it. That sounds like awful news—and it is. But look back at verse 1. The Lord is not so weak that He cannot save us; He is not so deaf that He can’t hear our cry of repentance. The good news is that God is always ready to welcome and forgive the sinner who earnestly desires to change his or her ways. Redemption is possible—but there is nothing we can do to earn it on our own.

 

READ: From the very beginning, God told man what was right and wrong. To Adam in the Garden, God said, “You are free to eat from any tree in the garden; but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat of it you will surely die”. When the children of Israel came out of Egypt, God established His Law with them at Mount Sinai. The Ten Commandments were not the whole law, but a summary of all that God had to tell them. The entire books of Leviticus and Deuteronomy are devoted to revealing to the Israelites God’s laws. Jewish rabbis say that there are 613 laws in the Torah (Books of Moses). Of those, 365 are in the “thou shalt not...” category.

 

What are some examples of these sins? From the Ten Commandments we have false worship, idolatry, misusing God’s name, violating the Sabbath, dishonoring parents, murder, adultery, stealing, lying/libel, and coveting. In the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5–7), Jesus took some of these same sins to a new level. Regarding murder, Jesus said, “Anyone who is angry with his brother will be subject to judgment.... But anyone who says, 'You fool!' will be in danger of the fire of hell” (Matthew 5:22). Regarding adultery, Jesus said, “Anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart” (Matthew 5:28). In Galatians 5:19-21, we are told, “The acts of the sinful nature are obvious: sexual immorality, impurity and debauchery; idolatry and witchcraft; hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish ambition, dissensions, factions and envy; drunkenness, orgies, and the like. I warn you, as I did before, that those who live like this will not inherit the kingdom of God.” Just these brief lists will give most people plenty of things to work on for a lifetime. In addition to the various lists that can be found in Scripture, we are told in 1 John 5:17 that “all wrongdoing is sin.” Not only does the Bible tell us the things not to do, but in James 4:17, we are informed that anyone “who knows the good he ought to do and doesn’t do it, sins.”

 

When we try to compile a list of sins, we find ourselves buried under the guilt of our own failures because we discover that we have sinned far more than we realized. The Scriptures inform us, “All who rely on observing the law are under a curse, for it is written: ‘Cursed is everyone who does not continue to do everything written in the Book of the Law’” (Galatians 3:10). While that statement might seem self-defeating, it is actually the best news possible. Since we can never fully keep God’s Law, there must be another answer, and it is found a few verses later: “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us, for it is written: ‘Cursed is everyone who is hung on a pole.’ He redeemed us in order that the blessing given to Abraham might come to the Gentiles through Christ Jesus, so that by faith we might receive the promise of the Spirit” (Galatians 3:13-14). The Law of God, or the lists of sins that we find in the Bible, serve as a tutor to “lead us to Christ that we might be justified by faith” (Galatians 3:24).