• Complain

Craig Groeschel - Altar Ego Study Guide: Becoming Who God Says You Are

Here you can read online Craig Groeschel - Altar Ego Study Guide: Becoming Who God Says You Are full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2013, publisher: HarperChristian Resources, genre: Religion. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

Craig Groeschel Altar Ego Study Guide: Becoming Who God Says You Are

Altar Ego Study Guide: Becoming Who God Says You Are: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Altar Ego Study Guide: Becoming Who God Says You Are" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Many people are obsessed with the approval of others. The problem is that living for what people think of you is the quickest way to forget what God thinks about you.

In Altar Ego, author Craig Groeschel shows individuals and small groups how to abandon self-worth based on accomplishments and possessions, turning instead to the eyes of God to define them. Participants will learn to expose false labels and selfish motives as the roadblocks they are, going instead to the altar of Gods truth and pursuing the higher values he sets above the world.

You dont have to get caught up in your self-worth or lack thereof. Your worth is not based on your opinion of yourself. You are valuable because God says you are His. You are not your past. You are not what you did. You are not who others say you are. You are who Christ says you are.

This study guide (DVD/digital video sold separately) offers discussion questions and other supplemental material to delve further into Gods divine plan, and will ultimately help you sacrifice any old, unhealthy, untrue, and unbiblical thoughts about yourself and introduce you to your altar-egowho you are in Christ.

Sessions include:

  • Overcoming the Labels that Bind You
  • You Are Gods Masterpiece
  • Trading the Immediate for the Ultimate
  • Living with Integrity
  • Developing Spiritual Boldness
  • Designed for use with Altar Ego Video Study 9780310894933 (sold separately).

    Craig Groeschel: author's other books


    Who wrote Altar Ego Study Guide: Becoming Who God Says You Are? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

    Altar Ego Study Guide: Becoming Who God Says You Are — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

    Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Altar Ego Study Guide: Becoming Who God Says You Are" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

    Light

    Font size:

    Reset

    Interval:

    Bookmark:

    Make
    STUDY GUIDE FIVE SESSIONS Becoming Who God Says You Are altar ego CRAIG - photo 1
    STUDY GUIDE
    FIVE SESSIONS
    Becoming Who God Says You Are
    altar
    ego
    CRAIG
    GROESCHEL
    with Christine M. Anderson

    Altar Ego Study Guide Becoming Who God Says You Are - image 2

    Group Size

    The Altar Ego video curriculum is designed to be experienced in a group setting such as a Bible study, Sunday school class, or any small group gathering. To ensure everyone has enough time to participate in discussions, it is recommended that large groups break up into smaller groups of four to six people each.

    Materials Needed

    Each participant should have his or her own Study Guide, which includes notes for video segments, directions for activities and discussion questions, as well as personal studies to deepen learning between sessions.

    Timing

    The time notations for example (17 minutes) indicate the actual time of video segments and the suggested times for each activity or discussion. For example:

    Individual Activity: What I Want to Remember (2 Minutes)

    Adhering to the suggested times will enable you to complete each session in one hour. If you have a longer meeting, you may wish to allow more time for discussion and activities. You may also opt to devote two meetings rather than one to each session. In addition to allowing discussions to be more spacious, this has the added advantage of allowing group members to read related chapters in the Altar Ego book and to complete the personal study between meetings. In the second meeting, devote the time allotted for watching the video to discussing group members insights and questions from their reading and personal study.

    Facilitation

    Each group should appoint a facilitator who is responsible for starting the video and for keeping track of time during discussions and activities. Facilitators may also read questions aloud and monitor discussions, prompting participants to respond and assuring that everyone has the opportunity to participate.

    Personal Studies

    Maximize the impact of the curriculum with additional study between group sessions. Every personal study includes reflection questions, Bible study, and a guided prayer activity. Youll get the most out of the curriculum by setting aside about one hour between sessions for personal study. For each session, you may wish to complete the personal study all in one sitting or to spread it out over a few days.

    Ebook Instructions

    In this ebook edition, please use your devices note-taking function to record your thoughts wherever you see the bracketed instructions [Your Notes] or [Your Response]. Use your devices highlighting function whenever you are asked to checkmark, circle, underline, or otherwise indicate your answer(s).

    OVERCOMING THE
    LABELS THAT BIND YOU

    World conditions are constantly at work eroding the high profile specifics of each person into a flat and featureless generality, identified by label: Introvert, Elder Material, Ectomorph, Unsaved, Anorexic, Bipolar, Single Parent, Diabetic, Tither, Left-brained. The labels are marginally useful for understanding some aspect of the human condition, but the moment they are used to identify a person, they obscure the unprecedented, unrepeatable soul addressed by God.

    E UGENE H. P ETERSON , S UBVERSIVE S PIRITUALITY

    Welcome (5 Minutes)

    Welcome to Session 1 of Altar Ego. If this is your first time together as a group, take a moment to introduce yourselves to each other before watching the video. Then lets get started!

    Video: Overcoming the Labels that Bind You (12 Minutes)

    Play the video segment for Session 1. As you watch, use the accompanying outline to follow along or to take notes on anything that stands out to you.

    Notes

    Negative labels: You are not who others say you are.

    [Your Notes]

    Gods truth is bigger than other peoples opinions about you.

    [Your Notes]

    An altar ego is who God says you are.

    [Your Notes]

    Two helpful thoughts to establish a God-centered view:

    1. God can give you a new name.

    [Your Notes]

    You will be called by a new name that the mouth of the LORD will bestow (Isaiah 62:2).

    [Your Notes]

    You will grow into your new name.

    [Your Notes]

    2. God will give you a new purpose.

    [Your Notes]

    Simon means unpredictable, unstable, unfaithful. Jesus gave Simon the new name Peter, which means rock.

    [Your Notes]

    God often takes our greatest weakness and makes it our greatest strength.

    [Your Notes]

    Its time for you to become who God says you are.

    [Your Notes]

    Group Discussion (40 Minutes)

    Take a few minutes to talk about what you just watched.

    1. What part of the teaching had the most impact on you?

    [Your Response]

    The Labeled Life

    2. Briefly recall a few of the people you encountered in the last day or two family, friends, neighbors, coworkers, restaurant or store staff, strangers you passed in your daily travels, etc.

    What labels went through your mind as you encountered these people? Consider positive, negative, and neutral labels. For example: team player (positive), freeloader (negative), clerk (neutral).

    [Your Response]

    What similarities and differences do you see between the labels you applied to people over the last day or two and the labels you imagine these same people may have applied to you?

    [Your Response]

    When you think about any negative labels you may have for people you know well, what makes it especially difficult for you to let those labels go or to see the unprecedented, unrepeatable soul behind the label?

    [Your Response]

    3. Craig described struggling with two kinds of labels: idealized, people-pleasing labels like good son and good student; and negative, confining labels like tightwad and Scrooge. He failed to live up to the idealized labels and couldnt seem to live down the negative ones.

    What labels come to mind when you think about your own struggles? For example, what idealized images have you wanted people to believe about you so you could fit in and win approval? What negative characterizations have left you feeling trapped by past behavior?

    [Your Response]

    How have these idealized or negative labels which are largely about how others see you impacted the way you see yourself? For example, how might they have led to self-defeating thought patterns that keep you stuck or mental labels that you use to beat yourself up?

    [Your Response]

    Altar Ego

    4. The alternative to a labeled life is an altar ego. Developing an altar ego requires sacrificing false labels in order to discover your true identity in Christ. The apostle Paul describes how this happens in his letter to the church at Colossae:

    Next page
    Light

    Font size:

    Reset

    Interval:

    Bookmark:

    Make

    Similar books «Altar Ego Study Guide: Becoming Who God Says You Are»

    Look at similar books to Altar Ego Study Guide: Becoming Who God Says You Are. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


    Reviews about «Altar Ego Study Guide: Becoming Who God Says You Are»

    Discussion, reviews of the book Altar Ego Study Guide: Becoming Who God Says You Are and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.