Sunday, January 28, 2007

IDC - John 1-6

At our IDC (Intentional Discipleship Community) meeting last week, we started discussing the first 6 chapters of John. We're trying to work our way through the Gospels and Acts and Romans. With the Gospels, we're approaching them with these questions: What do we see Jesus concerned about? How do they apply to me? What can I take away from these stories of Jesus' life?

Some things we talked about this past week:

* It seemed that no matter how many supernatural things Jesus did and said, people still had trouble doubting him, or worse, wanting more of the flash than the substance. A good question to ask ourselves was: is that how we would respond if we were there then, or better yet, how do we respond to him now?

* Jesus was not concerned necessarily about drawing attention to himself. Like at the wedding in Cana, he only shared his miracle working power with the servants and his disciples. Are we drawn to spiritual experiences so it looks good on us, or that people will think we're something special?

* Jesus was always concerned about the marginalized, those who could be taken advantage of, the ones who the culture left out. Example, turning over the money-changers' tables in the Temple, speaking to the woman at the well, healing the man at the pool. He never seemed to care what the PC police thought of his actions. He healed on the Sabbath, he broke the rules of engagement with people outside of the Jewish culture, and he cared more about what God's opinion was than that of the religious elite. What motivates us? How much do we allow others to shape who we are or who we aren't by their opinions or judgments of us?

* Jesus challenged the religious to look beyond their understanding of the Law to see the principles of life behind them. Religion was not to be a box, or a prison, but a relationship with God and his children. The needs of others were more important than the religious rules or regulations of the day.

* How would we respond to Jesus if he came to earth as he did back then, or if we had lived in his day? Would we have followed or doubted?

Any thoughts?

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