Asking Abba, Part 3

Matthew 6:11-15

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Asking Abba, Part 3 -- Lonnie Bell
Sermon Series: The Sermon on the Mount
Matthew 6:11-15
8 August 2017


Deep Sheet: Sermon Study Questions
1.  Discuss the two negative responses to the Lord’s Prayer mentioned at the beginning of the sermon: “going overboard” or “reacting against.” How much thought have you given to the idea that prayer is work/labor/struggle? (Colossians 4:12; Romans 15:30)
2.  Where do we see our weakness and vulnerability in the Lord’s Prayer and in the final petition in particular?
3.  How does God provide protection both from and in/through temptation? What actions can you take to avoid entering into temptation? (James 1:13-14; Matthew 4:1; Genesis 22:1; Matthew 26:41)
4.  Why is it so dangerous not to believe in the “evil one” and take him seriously? Discuss Satan’s nature, rule, craftiness, mission, and ferocity. (John 17:15; Luke 10:18; Isaiah 14:12-14; Ezekiel 28:12-15; 1 Timothy 3:6; 2 Corinthians 4:4; Ephesians 2:2; 2 Corinthians 11:14; John 10:10; 1 Peter 5:8)
5.  How is Satan often active in the small things?
6.  Why must our confidence be in Christ and not ourselves as we face temptation?
7.  What role do the Bible and prayer play in overcoming temptation? (Psalm 119:11; Matthew 26:41)

Asking Abba, Part 2

Matthew 6:11-15

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Asking Abba, Part 2 -- Lonnie Bell
Sermon Series: The Sermon on the Mount
Matthew 6:11-15
30 July 2017


Deep Sheet:  Sermon Study Questions
1.      In what ways have you struggled to view God as your “Forgiving Father”?  Are you confident that God is ready and able to forgive when you ask?  (Exodus 34:6-7; Psalm 32:5; Nehemiah 9:17; Ephesians 1:7)
2.      What does it mean to recognize that “all sin goes straight to heaven”?  (Psalm 51:4)
3.      How do “debts,” “trespasses,” and “sins” capture different aspects of our wrongdoing and guilt before God?  (Matthew 6:12, 14-15; Luke 11:4)
4.      How does Colossians 2:13-14 vividly portray our “Past Pardon”?
5.      Why do Christians, those who have already been forgiven, need to ask God continually for forgiveness? What are some of the negative effects of not doing this daily? (1 John 1:9)
6.      In what ways have we already seen the relationship between God’s forgiveness of us and our forgiveness of others in the Sermon on the Mount?
7.      Who do you need to forgive, and how might a lack of forgiveness be hindering your prayer life? (Matthew 5:7; Mark 11:25)

Asking Abba, Part 1

Matthew 6.11-15

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Asking Abba, Part 1 -- Lonnie Bell
Sermon Series:  The Sermon on the Mount
Matthew 6.11-15

23 July 2017

Deep Sheet: Sermon Study Questions:
1.  How has our time spent discussing prayer altered your priorities? Have you
tried using the Lord’s Prayer as a skeleton for your prayers?
2.  What does it look like to really believe that God rules, owns and dispenses?
How does the petition, “Give us this day our daily bread,” force us to
acknowledge that everything we have is “from God”? (Matthew 5:34-35;
Romans 11:36; James 1:17; Genesis 1:1; Psalm 104:10-15; 1 Corinthians 4:7)
3.  What does “bread” symbolize? In what ways do you struggle to believe that
God cares even for your smallest, seemingly insignificant physical needs?
 4.  As we consider how God meets our needs, what does it mean to say that he
does so in his wisdom, in the midst of a fallen world, through our labor, and
through others? (Philippians 4:19; Proverbs 30:8-9; Psalm 34:19; Genesis
3:19; 2 Thessalonians 3:12; Acts 2:45; Romans 12:13; Titus 3:14)
5. How does praying for our “daily” bread keep us from complacency and
worry? In what particular ways have you seen God provide for you and your
family day-by- day? (Exodus 16:4)
6. What does it mean to view our physical needs with a proper, eternal
perspective? How does this petition for daily bread lead us to consider our
spiritual nourishment? (Matthew 6:32-33; John 6:35; Matthew 4:4; 1
Corinthians 10:31)

Adoring Abba, Part 2

Matthew 6:9c-10

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Adoring Abba, Part 2 -- Lonnie Bell
Sermon Series: The Sermon on the Mount
Matthew 6:9c-10
16 July 2017

Deep Sheet: Sermon Study Questions
1.
 In what ways have you been most challenged as we’ve discussed the topic of prayer? How has your own self-examination revealed pretentious, mindless, fatherless, Christ-less, self-centered, or infrequent prayers?
2.  Why does the petition “your kingdom come” point to both evangelism and discipleship? (Mark 1:15; Colossians 1:13-14; Matthew 5:3-12; Romans 14:17)
3.  When it comes to the salvation of others, do you really think your prayers matter? To what extent do you think God wants to accomplish his purposes through your prayers?
4.  If the kingdom of God is “a matter…of righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit” (Romans 14:17), what does it look like to grow as a kingdom citizen?
5.  Why does praying “your kingdom come” ultimately mean praying for Christ’s return? How might praying “Come, Lord Jesus!” change the way you live the Christian life? (Daniel 2:44; Revelation 22:20)
6.  How can we easily become self-centered in praying “your will be done”? How does the structure of the Lord’s Prayer help us to understand the meaning of this petition?
7.  How does Jesus demonstrate in his own life what it means to pray “your will be done”? (Matthew 26:39; John 4:34)  

Hello, World!

Adoring Abba, Part 1

Matthew 6:9c-10

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Adoring Abba, Part 1 -- Lonnie Bell
Sermon Series:  The Sermon on the Mount
Matthew 6:9c-10
9 July 2017

Deep Sheet: Sermon Study Questions
1
.  How does the opening address, “Our Father in heaven,” naturally lead into the first three petitions?
2.  How does beginning with God rather than our own circumstances or experiences provide a more solid foundation and greater confidence in prayer, even when we don’t “feel it”?
3.  How would you briefly describe the meaning of the first petition, “hallowed be your name”? What is God’s “Name”? (Psalm 30:4; Exodus 19:14-16; Exodus 34:5-8; Matthew 1:21)
4.  Discuss the seven implications noted in the sermon for the petition “hallowed be your name”: bowing, centering, knowing, spreading, reflecting, speaking, and depending? (Exodus 34:8; John 5:23; 12:28; 17:1; Habakkuk 2:14; Matthew 5:16; Ecclesiastes 5:2; Matthew 5:3)
5.  In our desire to have greater praise and adoration towards God, what does it look like to be dependent without being passive?

Addressing Abba

Matthew 6:9b

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Addressing Abba -- Lonnie Bell
Sermon Series: The Sermon on the Mount
Matthew 6:9b
2 July 2017


Deep Sheet: Sermon Study Questions
1.   How do we already see God’s fatherliness and heavenliness in the verses leading up to The Lord’s Prayer? (Matthew 6:6, 8)
2.   How does this address – “Our Father in heaven” – instruct us not to pray in isolation? What does it look like to interlace our prayers with intercession?
3.   What does it mean that Jesus Christ is the only unique Son? What is the problem with appropriating God as Father without being mindful of the Son? (John 1:14; 3:35; Luke 1:35; Matthew 11:27)
4.   Why do we say that God is not the Father of every person? What are some symptoms that a Christian has lost sight of the right and privilege of knowing and addressing God as Father? (John 1:12; Galatians 4:5-6)
5.   How does this address call us to readiness and reverence in prayer? What are some signs that we may be dethroning God as we approach him in prayer? (Ecclesiastes 5:2)
6.   What does this address communicate about God’s willingness and ability to meet our needs? (Philippians 4:19; Ephesians 1:3; John 10:29; 1 Peter 5:7)
7.   How does this address also function as a call to holiness? (Matthew 5:48)

Approaching Abba

Matthew 6:7-9a

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Approaching Abba -- Lonnie Bell
The Sermon on the Mount
Matthew 6:7-9a
25 June 2017


Deep Sheet: Sermon Study Questions
1.  How is prayer both assumed and commanded in our passage? Why should prayer be a habitual way of life for the Christian?
2.  Why is prayer the greatest test for spiritual life and health?
3.  What is the “wrong thinking” as well as “thoughtlessness” that Jesus is criticizing in pagan approaches to prayer? Discuss the mindset reflected in the prayers of the prophets of Baal in 1 Kings 18:26-29?
4.  How do we love God with our mind in prayer? What does it look like to heap up empty phrases, and how can we avoid it?
5.  Do you find yourself trying to win God’s favor when you pray? Do you think you need to inform him of your needs? How does Jesus’ emphasis on God as our “Father” instruct us?
6.  What does it mean to tailor our prayers to the priorities and purposes of God? How could you practically begin using The Lord’s Prayer as a model, guide or skeleton for your prayers?
7.  When it comes to The Lord’s Prayer, what does it mean that we have a tendency “to invert and then erase”?