10/18 From Every Land to Every Land

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October 18, 2015This week: From Every Land to Every LandIn this week’s lesson, based upon the chapter “From Every Land to Every Land” by Michael Oh in Finish the Mission, we examine the Lord’s Prayer in light of God’s global mission. For many of us, we have grown too familiar with the Lord’s Prayer. We say it by memory, without thinking. Yet, within the prayer contains the heart of God. It is in these words that Jesus summarizes His teaching on the foundational, essential Christian life and purpose.This Week's Resources:The Compass Bible Study (pdf)Lighthouse Discussion Guide (pdf)Lighthouse Leader Study Guide (pdf) Word Search Answer (pdf)This Week's Take Home TruthIn Jesus’s foundational, model prayer, we can find tremendous insight—perhaps even call it a summary of Jesus’s teaching on the foundational, essential Christian life and purpose.Introduction

  1. What images or thoughts come to mind when you hear the word “prayer”?

2.  What role did prayer play in your family’s life when you were growing up?Read the Text (Matthew 6:9-13)The Lord’s Prayer is perhaps the most beautiful prayer ever prayed, but it is so often just rambled through instead of understood and embraced and truly prayed and truly lived. And as we ramble through the prayer, we miss out on the opportunity to understand not just prayer but the Lord’s teaching on the purpose of life. Read Matthew 6:9-13.

In this manner, therefore, pray:Our Father in heaven,Hallowed be Your name.10 Your kingdom come.Your will be doneOn earth as it is in heaven.11 Give us this day our daily bread.12 And forgive us our debts,As we forgive our debtors.13 And do not lead us into temptation,But deliver us from the evil one.For Yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.

Digging Deeper3.  How does the Lord’s Prayer suggest that which is both foundational and essential for the Christian life?4.  What is the hidden truth we see in the opening words, “Our Father in Heaven”?5.  Let’s look at the first three petitions Jesus mentions in the first part of the prayer (vs. 9b-10). What do we learn from these simple petitions?“Hallowed Be Your Name” (worship)“Your Kingdom Come” (kingdom)“Your Will Be Done” (obedience)6.  The second part of the Lord’s Prayer is a prayer for provision. Let’s examine each petition:“Give Us This Day Our Daily Bread”“Forgive Us Our Debts as We Have Forgiven Our Debtors”“Lead Us Not Into Temptation”“Deliver Us From Evil”How many of us so easily choose the path of comfort and safety—the path that is our answer to the question, what is best for me? We seek the provisions of God but neglect his purposes. And in holding on to those provisions, we halt the advance of his kingdom, which Jesus teaches us to pray for and to pursue.May God grant us the grace to serve with undeniable, unshakable, illogical, and foolish passion for the hallowing of God’s name and the building of his global kingdom.Concluding Thoughts Praying the Lord’s prayer should impact us at a core level, for it is within this prayer that we see the what the Lord Jesus is teaching us is foundational and essential for the Christian life. Reflect on these four things this week as we pray together as a church, asking God to use us to reach the nations.

  1. Revisit the gospel. Refocus on the gospel. Rehearse the gospel, and live your life as an echo to the gospel. Look at your life. Honestly, what does your life say about your purpose or goal in how you use your time, in how you spend money, in what drives you, in your passions, in what you pray about, and in how you view the world? Is your life a gospel-centered, gospel-focused, gospel-empowered, gospel-adoring, and gospel-advocating life? To answer “I think so” is to answer no. So we need that gospel even more.
  2. Repent. Let’s not just talk casually and say, “Yeah, in this and that way my life is out of line with the purposes of God.” May Christians not take any sin lightly. Our response to sin must not be resignation or “Oh, well,” but, “Oh, Lord, have mercy! Change me. Turn me away from sin. Turn me toward yourself and your purposes.”
  3. Pray. Pray the Lord’s Prayer. Pray the prayers of Scripture back to God. Pray God’s purposes back to him. Make God’s agenda your agenda and God’s passions your passions. Pray for the world. Hallowed be your name in Asia! Your kingdom come in North Africa! Your will be done in Europe! In the Lord’s Prayer Jesus is teaching us and empowering us for prayer ministry for the world.
  4. Finally, live it out. Live out the passions and purposes of God. How? Invest in God’s purposes with the whole of your life. It starts with the basic question, how are we to enjoy life properly? This is so basic but so easy to forget. Every gift of God is to be enjoyed as from God and not like it’s a god. Everything that is enjoyed and captures our affection must be enjoyed theistically, and christocentrically. Every blessing must be recognized as a blessing from God and every resource mobilized toward his purposes.

Lighthouse Calendar

  • Oct. 18 — Lighthouse Leader Meeting, 10:00 a.m.
  • Oct. 18 – GO Month Study: “From Every Land to Every Land: The Lord’s Purpose and Provision in the Lord’s Prayer”
  • Oct. 25 – International Dinner
  • Nov. 1 – “Paul’s Postcard to Philemon”
  • Nov. 8 — Church-wide Fireside Chat, 5:00 p.m.
  • Nov. 15 — Lighthouse Leader Meeting, 10:00 a.m.
  • Nov. 15 — “Truth Walkers #1” (2 John)
  • Nov. 22 — Autumn Night of Worship/Thanksgiving
  • Nov. 29 — “Contending for the Faith” (Jude)
  • Dec. 6 — To Fulfill: Christmas Scene 1
  • Dec. 13 — To Fulfill: Christmas Scene 2
  • Dec. 20 — Begin Christmas Break
  • Dec. 27 — Christmas Break
  • Jan. 3 — Christmas Break
  • Jan. 10 — Lighthouse Spring Semester Begins

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10/11 Christ, Courage and Finishing the Mission

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October 11, 2015This week: Christ, Courage and Finishing the MissionIn this week’s lesson we look at the necessity for Christian Courage which comes directly from strong faith. Too often, we lack faith to walk in obedience to the Lord, not because we desire to be disobedient, but because we are afraid. Fear and faith do not go well together. Fear is the enemy of faith, and points to evidence that we are more concerned about our own well-being than trusting God to take care of us, even if He chooses to send us into dangerous, life-threatening situations.We will also look at the threat of affluence and how our comfortable lifestyle combined with our untamed fear leads us to become Christians unwilling and unable to take even the first step towards obedience to Christ in finishing the mission.This Week's Resources:The Compass Bible Study (pdf)Lighthouse Discussion Guide (pdf)Lighthouse Leader Study Guide (pdf)There is no Word Search this week.This Week's Take Home TruthThe courage we need to finish our mission is not something that we can simply arouse in ourselves. Hebrews talks of those who “were made strong out of weakness” (Heb. 11:34). The implication is not that they made themselves strong, just that they made themselves available. As a result, they were made mighty. God is able to do more than we can imagine.Introduction

  1. When you hear the word “missions,” what is the first thing that comes to mind?

  2. When you hear the words “go and make disciples,” what is the first thing that comes to your mind?

  3. When we hear that missions is going to cost us something, what is the first thing that comes to your mind?

Read the Text (Hebrews 11:32 - 12:2)Hebrews 11—known as the Bible’s “Hall of Faith”—is a testimony to those who followed God regardless of the cost. These were the men and women of courage who obeyed the Lord, even if it meant their own death. The writer to the Hebrews concludes this chapter with a rousing summation describing those who were flogged, mocked, imprisoned, stoned, and even sawn in two! As you read this familiar passage, don’t let the fact that this description is of people who lived centuries ago; may God impress upon you the real pain, and courage, that made these men and women heroes of the faith. Read Hebrews 11:32-12:2.Digging Deeper4.  As you read the scenes described in Hebrews 11:32ff, do you find it difficult to even imagine such times as this?5.  Are there examples from our current events that ring similar to what is described in Hebrews 11?6.  Is there any reason from a biblical perspective Christians should expect to be free from persecution?7.  What do we learn John 15:27, which is the verse immediately before John 16?8.  Is it possible to be a witness for Jesus without any personal cost?9.  As Christians, how should we respond to opportunities to share the gospel, even in places that are not physically safe?10.  As an encouragement, how would you summarize the message of Hebrews 12:1-2?11.  If Jesus is clear in His command to be witnesses to an unreached world, even in the face of persecution, what is the primary reason we fear persecution?12.  In your opinion, aside from fear of persecution, what is the single greatest hindrance to Christians fully and actively engaging in missions and discipleship?Concluding Thoughts13.  What is something the Lord has been impressing upon you to do out of obedience to Him that is going to cost you something?14.  What is causing you to not follow the leading of the Lord?15.  Are you willing to commit this issue to the Lord in prayer this next week, asking Him to give you the faith to be fully obedient to Him as He calls you into active service?

When we talk about courage, we often talk about it in the face of unlikely odds or in the face of the unknown. Yet Christian courage is of a slightly different order. We know what the final outcome will be. The Lamb wins. Hence why “some were tortured, refusing to accept release, so that they might rise again to a better life” (Heb. 11:35). The outcome of our own lives is unknown to us, but it is known to God. So we may have great confidence in the errands on which he sends us.

--Michael Ramsden

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10/04 - The Glory of God, the Lostness of Man, and the Gospel of Christ

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October 4, 2015This Week: The Glory of God, the Lostness of Man, and the Gospel of ChristAs we study Isaiah 6, we can get a glimpse of God’s glory and of His holiness; but too often we give the lostness of man a passing glance. To fully appreciate God’s complete love for His children, we must fully embrace the absolute corruptness and rebellion that rules in the heart of man. We often hear it said, God hates the sin, but loves the sinner. The Bible argues against this theology. We are so corrupt in our sin that the Bible tells us God hates the sinner, yet at the same time He died for us. How do we reconcile these polar opposites?This Week's Resources:The Compass Bible Study (pdf)Word Search Answer Key (pdf)Lighthouse Discussion Guide (pdf)Lighthouse Leader Study Guide (pdf)This Week's Take Home TruthGospel truths permeating Isaiah 6 reveal deafening realities that compel us to lead our churches and give our lives—and lose them, if necessary—for the spread of the gospel among unreached people groups. Indeed, the glory of God among the nations is not simply a reason for a conference or a book; the glory of God among the nations is the reason for which we have breath.Introduction

  • Think for a moment about the most incredible tasting food you have ever tasted. Describe this food or meal to your group members.
  • What is a metaphor? Can you use a sentence with a metaphor in it? What is a simile? Can you use a sentence with a simile in it?
  • Using just language with metaphors and similes, can you develop a description of what baking bread smells like for someone who has no concept of what bread is or how bread is created?

Read the Text (Isaiah 6:8-13)Too often, when we read the incredible narrative of Isaiah’s vision of the Lord, we stop at verse 8 with Isaiah’s solemn response to the Lord’s question, “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us? Isaiah responds, “Here I am! Send me.” The remainder of Isaiah 6 tells us more about the message the Lord wants to get to the people. This awe-inspiring narrative reveals life-altering realities that, if we really believe and actually embrace them, change the trajectory of our lives and our churches, particularly regarding our focus on those not yet reached with the gospel. Read Isaiah 6:8-13.Digging Deeper

  • We speak of “the glory of God,” but this is an attribute of God that is nearly impossible for us to understand or appreciate. As an attribute, God’s glory refers primarily to his majestic beauty and splendor. Using some of the selected scriptures below, what can we learn about God’s glory
    • Romans 3:23 Refers to the expression of God’s character.
    • Nehemiah 9:5 The Scriptures record praise to his glorious name.
    • Ephesians 1:17  Describe him as the glorious Father.
    • Psalms 57:5 & 11  He is exalted above the heavens, and his glory is over all the earth (also Psalm 108:5; 113:4).
    • Acts 7:2  He is the God of glory who appeared to the patriarchs of the OT.
    • Isaiah 42:8  He is jealous to maintain his glory and unwilling that it be given to another.
    • Psalm 79:9 and Isaiah 48:11  He acts to bring glory to himself.
    • Psalm 19:1, 97:6, and Romans 1:20  The glory of God is proclaimed by the Creation.
    • Psalm 24  Describe him as the King of glory
  • In addition to God's glory, we must try to understand his holiness. As a group, develop a working definition of God's holiness.
  • What does Romans 3:10-18 say about man’s lostness? Read this text as a group.
  • Do you think mankind collectively has any concept of what is described as “the lostness of man”? Why or why not
  • What is God’s judgment against mankind that has openly rebelled against Him as creator and God?

This is why Isaiah said, “Woe is me, for I am lost.” His lostness is not his own. It is shared by all humanity, including hundreds of millions of unreached men and women. They—and we—are sinfully lost apart from Christ. Cut off from God, condemned by God, enemies of God, slaves to sin, dominated by Satan, children of wrath, lovers of darkness, with depraved minds and disordered emotions and defiled bodies, morally evil, spiritually sick, continually perishing, and destined to hell. This is the condition of man before God.

  • How is it possible for a holy God (who does everything right and is in all ways just) to look at a guilty sinner completely lost in his open rebellion against God and say, “You are innocent”? Does this seem right?
  • As a group read Isaiah 53:4-6. In this later chapter in Isaiah, what is the prophet describing?
  • We often hear the statement, “God hates sin, but not sinners.” David Platt argues that this is not biblically true. What do you think?
  • Based on your answer to the question above, what would you say to the feel-good preacher who teaches that “You’re good! You’re fine!”
  • Does God hate sinners or does God love sinners? How do we reconcile this question?

Concluding Thoughts

  • As you read the Scriptures and study God’s Word this week, what do you hear God saying to you?
Lighthouse Calendar
  • Oct. 4 – GO Month Study: “The Glory of God, the Lostness of Man, and the Gospel of Christ”
  • Oct. 11 – GO Month Study: “Christ, Courage, and Finishing the Mission”
  • Oct. 18 — Lighthouse Leader Meeting, 10:00 a.m.
  • Oct. 18 – GO Month Study: “From Every Land to Every Land: The Lord’s Purpose and Provision in the Lord’s Prayer”
  • Oct. 25 – International Dinner
  • Nov. 1 – “Paul’s Postcard to Philemon”
  • Nov. 8 — Church-wide Fireside Chat, 5:00 p.m.
  • Nov. 15 — Lighthouse Leader Meeting, 10:00 a.m.
  • Nov. 15 — “Truth Walkers #1” (2 John)
  • Nov. 22 — Autumn Night of Worship/Thanksgiving
  • Nov. 29 — “Contending for the Faith” (Jude)
  • Dec. 6 — To Fulfill: Christmas Scene 1
  • Dec. 13 — To Fulfill: Christmas Scene 2
  • Dec. 20 — Begin Christmas Break
  • Dec. 27 — Christmas Break
  • Jan. 3 — Christmas Break
  • Jan. 10 — Lighthouse Spring Semester Begins

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9/27 - The Galactic God Who Invites Us Into His Glorious Plan

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September 27, 2015

This Week: The Galactic God Who Invites Us Into His Glorious Plan

The Lord asked Isaiah a simple question—“Whom shall I send?” He is still asking that question today. In this lesson we look not only at the question, “Whom shall I send,” but even more importantly, we will try to grasp the magnificence of the God who is asking us to join Him in His work of saving a people for Himself.

This Week's Resources:

This Week’s Take Home TruthChristians are not at their leisure. Rather, we are under the mandate of the grace of God—grace that found us, restored us, redeemed us, breathed life back into our dormant lungs, and brought us back from the grave for a purpose. And that purpose is that we would, with everything in us, become an amplifier of the beauty of Jesus among all the peoples on this planet. This mission is crystal clear.Introduction

  • If you were given the opportunity to spend one month in any place in the world, where would you choose? Why?
  • Explain a time when you had to get an urgent message to someone, and you didn’t have access to a phone. How did you communicate the message? Explain the situation.
  • If you had to communicate an urgent message, and you couldn’t do it yourself, who would you turn to? Why?

Read the Text (Isaiah 6:1-8)

As we begin this study on finishing the mission let’s focus on the God who is inviting us into it. Isaiah 6 seems to say it all. When you have a vision, as Isaiah had, about who God is, that’s all you really need. If you see what Isaiah saw, that should do it. There doesn’t need to be any application at the end of a pure vision of the glory of God. When you get a vision of who God is, of his magnificence and splendor, you don’t need somebody to come along and give you three steps to take. When we have a true vision, even a fleeting glimpse of the glory of God, it absolutely wrecks us but in a good way. The Spirit of God then leads us through a process of reclaiming the wreckage and putting us back together again and on a new track, the track of his glorious plan. Read Isaiah 6:1-8.

Digging Deeper

  • As you read Isaiah 6:1-8, describe in your own words what Isaiah saw and how it impacted him. Circle words that seem most descriptive.
  • Why do you think in the midst of this incredible vision of God’s majesty and glory, the Lord would ask Isaiah a simple question: “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?” (v. 8a).
  • A common response when we are challenged by a question is “Who’s Asking?” We want clarification. If it’s someone important, we will respond one way; if it’s someone we don’t deem as important, we might respond another way. In this next section, we will try to put some color to the simple response, “Who’s Asking?”

Illustration #1: Do a Google search on “Hubble” and “ten thousand galaxies” before your Lighthouse meeting. What do you see? As you read a couple of the articles on this topic, what facts can you note? Be prepared to talk about this with your group.

  • Read Psalm 33:6 and Psalm 33:9. What does this tell us about God?

Illustration #2: Do a Google search on “Hubble” and “Sombrero Galaxy.” Again, makes some notes about this particular galaxy for your group discussion.

  • Why do you think the universe is so big? Read Psalm 148 and make some notes to answer this question.

Why me? God didn’t ask mankind to help Him create the universe, but He did ask us to join him in the miraculous process of redemption. Prophets proclaimed the way. A baby needed a parent. Even soldiers, in God’s time, carried out the execution. Certainly, Jesus was born to die alone—because he was sinless and the only one who could die for our sins. None of us could be a part of that. But in his resurrection, he said partnership is still very much alive, and we are to be those proclaiming life and grace and the possibility of peace with God to all the people on the planet. I’m choosing you, he says, to help finish the job in the strength I supply.

  • Read Matthew 28:18-20. This is known as “The Great Commission.” It was given by Jesus to His disciples shortly before He ascended into Heaven. What is significant about “The Great Commission?” Make a few notes that jump out at you as you read these words.
  • At the conclusion of The Great Commission Jesus tells us “I am with you always, to the end of the age.” You may not feel like Jesus is very close to you. How can you be close to Jesus?

Concluding Thoughts

  • As you read the Scriptures and study God’s Word this week, what do you hear God saying to you?
  • Only a small percentage (roughly 2 percent) of us are called to leave our homes and go to a foreign land to bring the gospel message. For the remaining 98 percent of us, we have a critical role to play. Over the next month of this study, ask the Lord to reveal to you what your role is in His mission. If the Lord is revealing some thoughts to you right now, take a minute to jot them down and pray over these thoughts this coming month.

Lighthouse Calendar

  • Sept. 20 - Lighthouse Leader Meeting, 10:00 a.m.
  • Sept. 20 - Launch Week
  • Sept. 27 - GO Month Study: “The Galactic God Who Invites Us Into His Glorious Plan”
  • Oct. 4 - GO Month Study: “The Glory of God, the Lostness of Man, and the Gospel of Christ”
  • Oct. 11 - GO Month Study: “Christ, Courage, and Finishing the Mission”
  • Oct. 18 — Lighthouse Leader Meeting, 10:00 a.m.
  • Oct. 18 - GO Month Study: “From Every Land to Every Land: The Lord’s Purpose and Provision in the Lord’s Prayer”
  • Oct. 25 - International Dinner
  • Nov. 1 - “Paul’s Postcard to Philemon”
  • Nov. 8 — Church-wide Fireside Chat, 5:00 p.m.
  • Nov. 15 — Lighthouse Leader Meeting, 10:00 a.m.
  • Nov. 15 — “Truth Walkers #1” (2 John)
  • Nov. 22 — Autumn Night of Worship/Thanksgiving
  • Nov. 29 — “Contending for the Faith” (Jude)
  • Dec. 6 — To Fulfill: Christmas Scene 1
  • Dec. 13 — To Fulfill: Christmas Scene 2
  • Dec. 20 — Begin Christmas Break
  • Dec. 27 — Christmas Break
  • Jan. 3 — Christmas Break
  • Jan. 10 — Lighthouse Spring Semester Begins

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