Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Week 7, Chapter 10 Standing Tall, Falling Hard

Week 7, Chapter 10: Standing Tall, Falling Hard
Associated Scripture: 1 Samuel 1-4; 8-13; 15

Discussion Questions:

1.       What do you learn about the prayer from Hannah?  Hannah was a faith driven woman.  A lot of other women may have been very angry.  As the other wife, Peninnah, teased her she chose not to reflect in her behavior and as Peninnah was able to have children, Hannah did not covet her blessing.
2.       How did Samuel show his faith in God?  As a leader, he continued to put his faith in the Lord.  His loyalty was to God, regardless of what the people thought.  He followed God through the small things and big things.  Samuel was one of the greatest judges in history because of this obedience to the Lord.
3.       Why was it wrong for the Israelites to ask for a king?  Simply because God was supposed to be their King.
4.       What factors led to King Saul’s demise?  He made several choices without God’s involvement.  He would then rationalize his decisions.  He should have involved God with each and every decision but instead he would make the decision without the Lord—and this eventually led to his demise.
5.       How did Saul respond when confronted with his sin? How do you respond when confronted with your own shortcomings?  This was already stated above—oops!  But he rationalized his decisions.  I think we all do this from time to time—we want our lives to happen the way we want them to and WHEN we want them to…it is easy to get impatient.  However, we must live our life with the Lord by our side and involve him first when making decisions.
6.       What instances of God’s grace do you see in this chapter?

Video

Video Discussion:

1.       First Samuel 1 (The Story pp. 129-131) tells Hannah’s heartbreaking account of barrenness and how her prayer for a child is finally answered.  What strikes you about Hannah’s character and faith?  God can use human weakness to gain glory through him.  God knows we have these faults-from beginning to end and we need to have this faith and put our faith in him.  These verses are symbolic for how we should give our faith to the Lord.  She brought her problem to the Lord and He answered her prayer.
2.       What does Eli teach Samuel about listening to God (1 Samuel 3:1-10; The Story, pp. 131-132)?  What can we learn about communicating with God as we see Samuel’s story unfold?
3.       According to 1 Samuel 8 (The Story, pp. 135-136), how does Samuel feel about the leaders of Israel’s request to give them a king so they can be like all other nations?  How does God feel about it?  God looks for people who are like God- not like everyone else.  Leviticus 20: 26 states: You are to be holy to me because I, the Lord, am holy, and I have set you apart from the nations to be my own.  The Israelites were chosen as the all-powerful nation.  The others saw the other “kings” and thought of them as powerful…when God was the all-powerful king.
4.       How does Samuel’s description of the consequences of having an earthly king instead of a heavenly King parallel to the actions of those who govern in our modern world today?  This is a good point and a great parallel to today’s society.  Earthly rulers appear to get greedy as years go on—
5.       God’s Upper Story plan if for him alone to rule as King over his people.  In the Lower Story, the people insist on having an earthy king as their ruler.  God gives in to their request.  Do you believe God still allows us to have our way (on occasion) even if it is not his perfect will for us?  If so, give an example of what this can look like?  Yes…absolutely.
6.       Saul does not follow God’s instructions, which leads to Samuel telling him that he will lose his throne because God has rejected him as King.  Randy points out that one of Saul’s big mistakes was distorting and misrepresenting God as cruel and greedy rather than showing he is just and holy.  Why is God so concerned about his people giving an accurate portrayal of who he is?  What can we do to present God to the world with greater clarity and accuracy?  We must reflect God’s example.  “You may be the only bible that people ever “read.”  God wants obedience from the heart.
7.       God’s desire is to reveal his presence, power, and plan to the world and thus restore people’s relationship with him.  How do you see God do each of these in this chapter of The Story:
Reveal his presence.  The arc was stolen…and the birth of children reveals his presence.
Display his power:  The arc was the example of his power.

Execute his plan to get us back: This is a repeating theme throughout the bible.  He always gives abilities to be leaders to the underdogs—and shines through them helping them succeed…

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