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Lesson 51: The Path to Greatness (Luke 9:46-48)

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We all live in the light of the beautiful profundity of the life, work, and message of Jesus Christ. Despite this fact, we can act and think and converse with one another as if such huge realities had no bearing on us. The original disciples struggled with this too, and Luke brings this out in his gospel account by recalling a much-needed dialogue about true greatness; he does this on the heels of writing about Jesus foretelling his death. Through giving numerous examples of what it means to have a prideful or humble heart, and by drawing out the truth of how children are an example to us of what actual greatness looks like, Pastor Daniel drives home the point that “the path to true greatness is trod upon not by the boots of the victorious warrior, or the cleats of a multi-million dollar ballplayer, or the wing-tipped business shoes of the CEO but by the cracked, blistered bare feet of the servant.” A desire to be great in God’s economy will only be satisfied in humbly attending to the needs of others and seeing their needs as greater than one’s own.

Summary by Seth Kempf, Bethany Community Church Staff

Related Topics: Christian Life, Leadership

Lesson 52: Promoting Mercy, Protecting Truth (Luke 9:49-56)

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Following Jesus is a trial and error process, a realization any Christian today will face and one that the twelve disciples had to come to grips with as well. Their ideas for ministry were developing as they followed Jesus and sought to put into practice the things they were learning. Such times were followed by course-correcting instruction by the Master, instruction that might have sometimes seemed harsh, but ones that gave them (and us today) the correct understandings of truth and practice in Christian living. Pastor Daniel then, from this passage, makes the argument that there is a responsibility for believers to promote mercy while protecting truth; principles counteract arrogance and judgmentalism but not at the expense of truth. The principles referred to are as follows: 1) No one has a monopoly on gospel ministry—get over yourself. 2) Rejection is a normative part of gospel ministry—get used to it. 3) The gospel is universally humbling in its exclusiveness—be humbled. Finally, 4) God graciously allows time for people to repent and believe the gospel—go and do likewise.

Summary by Seth Kempf, Bethany Community Church Staff

Related Topics: Christian Life

Lesson 53: Reasons Not to Follow Jesus (Luke 9:57-62)

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Our tendency toward self-reliance and human wisdom doesn’t simply disappear when we’ve made up our minds to follow Jesus. We see Him here dealing with those who knew something of the value of being near to the One who could feed a crowd with a single sack lunch, calm a raging storm with a word, or hang out on a mountain with prophets who lived hundreds of years prior. What Jesus showed, however, was that coming to Him on any terms and timing other than His own was completely out of the question. Pastor Daniel helps us to understand the seemingly harsh words from Jesus in this passage by reminding us that, “discipleship means certain loss.” This includes the loss of physical possessions, the loss of family, and in essence, the loss of everything. While this is a sobering reality, it is put into perspective through the reminder that disciples also gain everything in gaining Christ.

Summary by Seth Kempf, Bethany Community Church Staff

Related Topics: Discipleship

Lesson 54: Compelled by Compassion: Principles for Harvest Ministry, Part I (Luke 10:1-9)

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(Part I) What we know as the Great Commission may have really “taken off” following the ascension and Pentecost, but earlier times of sending also took place such as the one that we see in this passage. The instructions that Jesus gave at that time are similarly instructive for us today for the gospel ministry believers have been called to. In this two-part message, Pastor Daniel pulls out such principles to minister by, principles which all flow from the fact that we consider a harvest in need of workers and then proceed into it with compassionate hearts. Those who have experienced the grace of God through Jesus Christ are, in this harvest ministry, to pray for God’s grace, go into enemy territory, trust God’s provision, proclaim God’s peace, remain where God bears fruit, minister to the sick, and warn of God’s wrath.

Summary by Seth Kempf, Bethany Community Church Staff

Related Topics: Evangelism

Lesson 55: Compelled by Compassion: Principles for Harvest Ministry, Part II (Luke 10:1-9)

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(Part II) What we know as the Great Commission may have really “taken off” following the ascension and Pentecost, but earlier times of sending also took place such as the one that we see in this passage. The instructions that Jesus gave at that time are similarly instructive for us today for the gospel ministry believers have been called to. In this two-part message, Pastor Daniel pulls out such principles to minister by, principles which all flow from the fact that we consider a harvest in need of workers and then proceed into it with compassionate hearts. Those who have experienced the grace of God through Jesus Christ are, in this harvest ministry, to pray for God’s grace, go into enemy territory, trust God’s provision, proclaim God’s peace, remain where God bears fruit, minister to the sick, and warn of God’s wrath.

Summary by Seth Kempf, Bethany Community Church Staff

Related Topics: Evangelism

Lesson 56: The Eternal Consequences of Rejecting the Gospel, Part I (Luke 10:10-16)

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(Part I) In as much as it is hoped that people respond to the gospel message they hear (as we are moved by the fact that “the harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few”), it is the sad reality that many will hear and choose not to believe. Jesus makes it clear that rejecting this message, dismissing this gracious gift of God is extremely consequential. While false ideas about who Jesus is, what His judgment (or lack thereof) looks like, and whether or not an actual place of hell exists are all controversies that make their way into the church, Jesus make some things very understandable through the text at hand. Pastor Daniel emphasizes, over this two-part sermon, that people must know there are eternal consequences for rejecting the gospel, that unbelievers will be sent to a place of eternal and conscious torment, that there will be degrees of punishment based upon one’s access and response to God’s revelation, that it is difficult to fully comprehend the reality and justice of hell at this point in time, and that God is perfectly just and right in His judgments. It is upon Christians then to warn people of God’s wrath and tell them of His gift of Christ.

Summary by Seth Kempf, Bethany Community Church Staff

Related Topics: Evangelism, Soteriology (Salvation)

Lesson 57: The Eternal Consequences of Rejecting the Gospel, Part II (Luke 10:10-16)

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(Part II) In as much as it is hoped that people respond to the gospel message they hear (as we are moved by the fact that “the harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few”), it is the sad reality that many will hear and choose not to believe. Jesus makes it clear that rejecting this message, dismissing this gracious gift of God is extremely consequential. While false ideas about who Jesus is, what His judgment (or lack thereof) looks like, and whether or not an actual place of hell exists are all controversies that make their way into the church, Jesus make some things very understandable through the text at hand. Pastor Daniel emphasizes, over this two-part sermon, that people must know there are eternal consequences for rejecting the gospel, that unbelievers will be sent to a place of eternal and conscious torment, that there will be degrees of punishment based upon one’s access and response to God’s revelation, that it is difficult to fully comprehend the reality and justice of hell at this point in time, and that God is perfectly just and right in His judgments. It is upon Christians then to warn people of God’s wrath and tell them of His gift of Christ.

Summary by Seth Kempf, Bethany Community Church Staff

Related Topics: Evangelism, Soteriology (Salvation)

Lesson 58: Joy in a Sovereign God (Luke 10:17-24)

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It’s hard to imagine not being excited over the fact that, after being sent out by Jesus to proclaim the gospel, you find that His power at work through you is effective in even drive out demons. The disciples were certainly charged up about such, but Jesus reoriented their perspective a bit, much in the way He does with us through His Word today. What is it that is really worth being thrilled about? Pastor Daniel gives three reasons for true Christian excitement, reasons gleaned from the text at hand. 1) Rejoice that our sovereign God wrote your name in heaven. 2) Rejoice that our sovereign God revealed truth to you through His Son. 3) Rejoice that our sovereign God allowed you to witness the coming of His kingdom.

Summary by Seth Kempf, Bethany Community Church Staff

Related Topics: Christian Life

Lesson 59: My Neighbor, Compassion & Eternal Life (Luke 10:25-37)

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“And who is my neighbor?” The lawyer in this story was, like so many of us, much more eager to justify himself than to humbly take in the words of Jesus and shift his focus and life accordingly. What does it look like to truly obey the most foundational instructions in God’s Word? Is it left up to interpretation or is it a mere matter of semantics? Jesus didn’t answer this with a quick sentence but with a story, the story we have come to know as “The Good Samaritan.” From this account, Daniel emphasizes the point that, “Impossible and extraordinary acts of compassion should be common place among those of us who have received eternal life.” By way of more specific application then, we should understand that the one who has eternal life 1) loves their neighbor, 2) has an unlimited concept of who their neighbor is, and 3) has a compassion that compels them to action.

Summary by Seth Kempf, Bethany Community Church Staff

Related Topics: Christian Life, Love

Lesson 60: The Distracted Disciple (Luke 10:38-42)

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You could probably feel the rising tension in the room. Martha, the one who had actually invited Jesus to come to her house, wanted to make everything perfect for Him while sister Mary seemed to hardly care what did and didn’t get done. It’s easy to imagine Martha darting in and out of the room Jesus and Mary are sitting in, trying each time to make eye contact with Mary so that she could at least give a quick head-jerk toward the kitchen. Was Martha the only one who knew how many important things needed to be taken care of? As Jesus then reoriented her thinking, ours likewise becomes reoriented if we are willing to apply Jesus’s words to our own hearts. Pastor Daniel shepherds his listeners through that in calling us to “relentlessly pursue fellowship with God through careful study of His Word. “ To get to that place, we first must understand that “the distracted disciple is distracted by good things.” He/she is furthermore “resentful of others.” Then, “the distracted disciple is anxious and troubled over many things,” and finally, “is drawn away from the abiding Word of God.”

Summary by Seth Kempf, Bethany Community Church Staff

Related Topics: Christian Life, Fellowship

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