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Sermon on the Mount

Adult Object Lesson: Matthew 5

silver bulletMatthew 5:38-48  •  Leviticus 19: 9-18
Psalm 119:33-40  •  1 Corinthians 3:10-11,16-23

The Christian’s Silver Bullet

Christianity is an attractive religion in that it centers on love more than deeds. God is our loving Father. We are his cute-as-a-button children.

This relationship comes with challenges. There is always the danger that God’s faithful will enjoy the protection of their Father to the point that they seek to have Him wrapped around their little fingers. Get as much of God’s love for ourselves as possible.

All children have a knack for drawing attention to our own needs—real and imagined.

Jesus addresses this temptation in his Sermon on the Mount.

We’ve been reading Jesus’s sermon in ten-verse segments for the last few weeks. Now might be a good time to piece together all of Matthew 5.

Lone Ranger Christianity

Today’s object is a bullet—a silver bullet.

As you talk to you adult learners channel their memories back to the Saturday matinée or Saturday morning television.

The Lone Ranger’s mission was to help the individually oppressed. He and Tonto rode about the West looking for damsels, ranchers, bankers, and children in distress. They would rescue them in as peaceful a way possible and ride off into the sunset, leaving behind a memento. An unspent silver bullet. “Who was that masked man? I didn’t have time to thank him.”

In today’s section of the Sermon on the Mount (verses 38 to 48), Jesus illustrates the Sermon’s opening list of “blessed” people. Remember that strange list?

Jesus probably gave this same sermon over and over again—the better that Matthew might record it years later. Imagine him delivering it to you!

Jesus is opening the church doors and letting the faithful out into the world. Our relationship can grow only so far within our own circle. The Father is telling His children it is time to grow up.

As God’s children, we will leave “home” and face a gauntlet of challenges. We will become “Rangers” of sorts.

We will face unpleasantness.

  • People will argue with us and ridicule us.
  • We will be tired and feel like failures.
  • People will seek to take advantage of us.
  • People will turn to us for help when we are feeling needy ourselves.

We will be tempted to point them toward the church door. “Here’s where I found peace. You are welcome. Sunday morning. 10 am. See you there.”

We will ask: When did it become our job to solve everyone’s problems?

We know the theory. It became our job the day we were baptized and accepted as Children of God.

How do we put that theory into action?

And so Jesus gives us a list of behaviors that are in keeping with God’s wishes for his people.

Talk about the scenarios in today’s lesson. Compare worldy advice with the advice Jesus gives.

Display the bullet (you can use a picture) and talk about Silver Bullet or godly advice.

The Christian’s silver bullet is in godly behavior.

  • Somebody is giving you a rough time.
    Turn the other cheek.
  • Are you working hard and feeling like you are getting nowhere?
    Go the extra mile.
  • Are the needy begging for help? Don’t they know how you worked for what you have?
    Give them the shirt off your back.

Our earthly parents would caution us. “Learn to fight back.” “Tough time? Find a way to move on.” “Walk around the beggar.” “Don’t lend money.”

But that’s not God’s way. If it were, where would we be!

How often when we watched the Lone Ranger, was the focus on the needs of the hero?  The focus of the serial stories is always on the people in distress.

God’s silver bullet is in putting other peoples’ needs ahead of our own—which brings us back to the Beatitudes. Take another look at the people who are blessed in God’s eyes.

As we reach the end of the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus is taking us out of our comfort zones.

What are Jesus’ final words in Matthew’s Chapter 5?

Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect.

Tall order. It’s all right to take baby steps.

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Consider Subscribing to 2×2

2x2virtualchurch adds a new object lesson to our library each week. There are nearly 100 in our collection. If you like our easy, interactive approach to preaching and teaching adult learners, please consider subscribing.

You will receive a weekly slideshow (which you can use on your church website or during worship), an object lesson and many other church planning ideas—all geared for small church use. Thank you.

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photo credit: RW PhotoBug via photopin cc

Slideshow: Epiphany A7—Go the Extra Mile

Love Your Neighbor As Yourself
and Other Challenging Teachings of Christ

  • Turn the other cheek.
  • Go the extra mile.
  • Give to those who beg.
  • Love your neighbor as yourself.

Tough teachings to put into practice.

Sixteen slides illustrate the lessons for February 23, 2014.

Slides illustrate Bible verses from Matthew, Leviticus, Psalm 119 and 1 Corinthians. Images spark conversation about difficult teachings.

The Powerpoint presentation is fully editable. Individual slides can be used to illustrate weekly blog posts, embedded on a church blog or website or projected during worship.

———————————————————————————————

Consider Subscribing to 2×2

2x2virtualchurch adds a slideshow and object lesson to our library each week. There are nearly 100 in our collection. If you like our easy, interactive approach to preaching and teaching adult learners, please consider subscribing.

You will receive a weekly slideshow (which you can use on your church website or during worship), an object lesson and many other church planning ideas—all geared for small church use. Thank you.

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Adult Object Lesson: Keeping the Law

cageMathew 5: 21-37  •  Deuteronomy 30:15-20
Psalm 119: 1-8  •   1 Corinthians 3:1-9

What Are the Consequences
of Breaking the Law?

Each of the lectionary readings for February 16, 2014, or the sixth Sunday in Epiphany, has to do with keeping the law.

 

The Gospel keeps us in the Sermon on the Mount where we’ve spent the last few weeks. Today’s passage is just one part of Jesus’s longest (but still short) sermons. He is talking to people who take the law seriously. The people gathered around Jesus on the hill live under the law of the land (Roman rule). They must also keep the law of their religion, which has consequences that are more dire than today. And then there is tradition—perhaps the hardest task-master of all.

 

Consequences of breaking any of these laws were swift and harsh.

 

In walks Jesus, with a new message. Let’s not dwell so much on things like murder and adultery and the trouble they bring.

 

Let’s talk about how we live our lives before we reach extremes.

Today’s object is a cage. It can be a bird or pet cage.

 

The cage is a symbol of consequences for failing to follow law.

 

Harm, steal, murder and expect to go to jail.

 

Today’s lesson suggests that there is a lot going on inside our heads and heart before we ever get to crimes that call for such drastic intervention by society.

 

They are crimes against God’s intent for us. They are laid out early in the Ten Commandments—before we get to murder, theft, lying, adultery and coveting.

  • Love God. Treat God with respect.
  • Honor mom and dad—the foundation of societal structure.
  • and coming up in Matthew 22 but hinted at here: Love your neighbor as yourself.

 

Disobeying these laws today will not put you in jail.

 

Disobeying the later commandments might get you there.

 

Today’s message reinforces these early commandments. If we set standards for our lives that honor God’s intent, the consequences are freeing.

  • Don’t insult one another.
  • Work harder at making peace than strife.
  • Respect the relationships of others and the boundaries that come with them.

 

Do these things because you love and honor God.

 

These are rules for happy living—rules that set us free.

 

You might use your cage in this way.

 

Write down on separate index cards each of the infractions listed in any of today’s lessons.

 

ANGER, INSULTS, LUST, CONTENTION, LYING, SWEARING, etc. You can expand on them.

 

As you talk about each, toss its card into the cage, repeatedly locking the door.

 

As you near the end of the list, pick up the cage, unlock the door and allow the cards to fall out.

 

Following God’s rules sets us free to do good and honor God. We’ll have our place in the kingdom—close to God.

photo credit: Pensiero via photopin cc

———————————————————————————————

Consider Subscribing to 2×2

2x2virtualchurch adds a new object lesson to our library each week. There are nearly 100 in our collection. If you like our easy, interactive approach to preaching and teaching adult learners, please consider subscribing.

You will receive a weekly slideshow (which you can use on your church website or during worship), an object lesson and many other church planning ideas—all geared for small church use. Thank you.

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