When you see the pencil icon above, you may want to fill out your answers on a separate piece of paper or use the Notes functionality on your eReader.
If you are using a touch-screen reader or app, simply hold your finger over the first word in the line and then select Note to create a note and begin typing your answer.
If you are using a non-touch-screen reader, move your cursor up to the line where you want to enter an answer and then begin typing to create a new note.
You can then reference your answers anytime you are reading the eBook as they will be stored as notes on your device.
HOW TO USE THIS STUDY
This small-group study is for people who are interested in learning for themselves more about what the Bible says on various subjects, but who have only limited time to meet together. Its ideal, for example, for a lunch group at work, an early morning mens group, a young mothers group meeting in a home, a Sunday-school class, or even family devotions. (Its also ideal for small groups that typically have longer meeting timessuch as evening groups or Saturday morning groupsbut want to devote only a portion of their time together to actual study, while reserving the rest for prayer, fellowship, or other activities.)
This book is designed so that all the groups participants will complete each lessons study activities at the same time. Discussing your insights drawn from what God says about the subject reveals exciting, life-impacting truths.
Although its a group study, youll need a facilitator to lead the study and keep the discussion moving. If you are your groups facilitator, the leader, here are some helpful points for making your job easier:
Go through the lesson and mark the text before you lead the group. This will give you increased familiarity with the material and will enable you to facilitate the group with greater ease. It may be easier for you to lead the group through the instructions for marking if you, as a leader, choose a specific color for each symbol you mark.
As you lead the group, start at the beginning of the text and simply read it aloud in the order it appears in the lesson, including the Insight boxes that appear throughout. Work through the lesson together, observing and discussing what you learn. As you read the Scripture verses, have the group say aloud the word they are marking in the text.
The discussion questions are there simply to help you cover the material. As the class moves into the discussion, many times you will find that they will cover the questions on their own. Remember, the discussion questions are there to guide the group through the topic, not to squelch discussion.
Remember how important it is for people to verbalize their answers and discoveries. This greatly strengthens their personal understanding of each weeks lesson. Try to ensure that everyone has plenty of opportunity to contribute to each weeks discussions.
Keep the discussion moving. This may mean spending more time on some parts of the study than on others. If necessary, you should feel free to spread out a lesson over more than one session. However, remember that you dont want to slow the pace too much. Its much better to leave everyone wanting more than to have people dropping out because of declining interest.
If the validity or accuracy of some of the answers seems questionable, you can gently and cheerfully remind the group to stay focused on the truth of the Scriptures. Your object is to learn what the Bible says, not to engage in human philosophy. Simply stick with the Scriptures and give God the opportunity to speak. His Word is truth (John 17:17)!
JESUS:
UNDERSTANDING
HIS DEATH AND
RESURRECTION
A nd the sons of Israel sighed because of the bondage, and they cried out; and their cry for help because of their bondage rose up to God (Exodus 2:23).
Exodus, the second book of the Bible, tells us that after four hundred years of bondage in Egypt, the sons of Israel groaned to God and He heard them. As their cries arose in His ears, He remembered His covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. It was His time to set His people free, to deliver them from slavery. The sign for deliverance would be the blood of a spotless lamb painted on the doorpost of each Israelite house. The angel of death, seeing the blood, would pass over the house. Wherever the blood was absent, the firstborn male in the household would dieand Pharoah finally would be convinced to let Gods people go!
Are you sighing, groaning because you want to be free from that which enslaves you?
Or maybe you have friends, family, associates who want what you have: freedom from bondage to sin, peace with God. Reconciliation! The power to live a life pleasing to God!
Whether the cries for deliverance are your own or come from someone you know, we have good news! This good news is the gospel, the account of the death and resurrection of the Son of God, who became the Son of Man. Through the next six weeks you will discover and study for yourself the record of this story in a way that will help you know that you know what God has written in His Word.