Episodes
Episodes



Wednesday Dec 13, 2017
Romans 5:5-11
Wednesday Dec 13, 2017
Wednesday Dec 13, 2017
Learning the Way - Romans 5:5-11
In what way do you allow your relationships with people to change the way you view your relationship with God? Do you live as though it is God who has reconciled you to Him? Does it frustrate you to know that this reconciliation is completely through Him, or does it free you?An important part of our walk with God is having sin revealed to us, confessing and repenting from it, and growing in our relationship with God. Do you have anyone in your life that is close enough to you to show you areas in your life where you need to confess and repent? If not, why?Name at least one criticism of the person sitting to your right. Be kind, but be honest.



Tuesday Dec 12, 2017
Romans 5:1-4
Tuesday Dec 12, 2017
Tuesday Dec 12, 2017
Learning the Way - Romans 5:1-4
Our justification through faith ends our conflict with God. But it isn’t just an end to conflict. Instead it’s the beginning of peace and a relationship with Him as we are ushered into His presence as sons and daughters of the King. Do you live as though this is true? When difficult times come, do you revert back and flee from His presence as one who is still fighting Him? Or do you run to Him seeking repentance and forgiveness?The scripture taught us that suffering leads to endurance, endurance to character, and character to hope. Think of a time when you went through a period of suffering. What was your response? What does this tell you about your understanding of justification? Is there an area of suffering or disappointment in your life which you are seeing as punishment from God, instead of God working to bring you closer to Him?



Monday Dec 11, 2017
Romans 4:9-25
Monday Dec 11, 2017
Monday Dec 11, 2017
Learning the Way - Romans 4:10-25
Paul seems to be addressing a disunity among Gentile believers and Jewish believers in Rome. They both were following Messiah, but there were other issues that were causing division. What are issues in our church, specifically, and in the larger church, generally, that cause division fruitlessly and/or over open-handed issues? What should your role be within these conflicts?For Paul believing in God means have faith not in what we can see but what God has promised. How is having a hope that goes beyond all human hope of particular encouragement or comfort to you today? Can you think of ways recently that you have acted in faith when it was hard? Are you being called to do so right now?Throughout this text, Paul uses Abraham as an example to prove his point regarding salvation and the law. For we say that faith was counted to Abraham as righteousness… It was not after, but before he was circumcised. So, Abraham’s faith came first, then his obedience through circumcision. It isn’t circumcision (keeping the law) that saves him, just as it isn’t our works that save us. How does it make you feel knowing that there isn’t anything you can do that will make God love you more or less? Is your initial response positive or negative? What does this say about your view of God and your view of salvation?As we make our way through the book of Romans, do you find yourself understanding more clearly our natural state apart from God, and the overwhelming steps He has taken to bring us back to Him? Does this clearer (hopefully) understanding make it easier for you to tell others about this good news? Do you think about God’s actions both corporately (the steps He has taken to bring us back to Him) and personally (the steps He has taken to bring me back to Him)? Reflect on this as a group.



Sunday Dec 10, 2017
Romans 4:1-9
Sunday Dec 10, 2017
Sunday Dec 10, 2017
Learning the Way - Romans 4:1-9
Romans 4:3, quoting Genesis 15:6 - “Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness.” We learned from the message that this righteousness is a status that is conferred to us, but doesn’t inherently belong to us. How does it make you feel, knowing that it isn’t something you do?The first of two key points from the message: A believer does not work for his or her salvation. How does it make you feel knowing that there isn’t anything you can do that will make God love you more or less? Is your initial response positive or negative? What does this say about your view of God and your view of salvation? The second of the key points: A believer trusts God who justifies the wicked. The message described this as a trust transfer, when we stop trusting in ourselves and shift that trust to God. We now trust Him for our salvation and not ourselves. Do you agree with this in theory, but fight it in your everyday life? Does your behavior betray where your trust actually lies?



Friday Dec 08, 2017
Romans 3:27-31
Friday Dec 08, 2017
Friday Dec 08, 2017
Learning the Way - Romans 3:27-31
In light of the events of the election, what are ways you can be showing the love of God regardless of your personal political beliefs? In the message we learned that boasting and believing are complete opposites. Discuss with your group why this is true. In what ways are you guilty of boasting? When your sin is revealed to you, does it move you closer to God or further from God? Does it move you into community or isolation?



Thursday Dec 07, 2017
Romans 3:21-26
Thursday Dec 07, 2017
Thursday Dec 07, 2017
Learning the Way - Romans 3:21-26
Romans 3:24 - "...and are justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus" The message was clear that your faith is not the cause of your salvation, instead it's the instrument of your salvation. For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast. Thinking that your faith causes your salvation gives us glory rather than God. Where do you struggle with this? Have you had a time in your life when terrible circumstances made you question God? Romans 3:26 - It was to show his righteousness at the present time, so that he might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus. Understanding that God is both the just and the justifier gives us a clear picture of both God's holy, wrathful anger, but also His love, kindness, and forgiveness. The just God is the one who is cannot turn a blind eye to sin. The justifier God is the one who loves, is kind, and forgives. Which of these two ends of the spectrum do you focus more on? Why? How does this change your perception of God?



Wednesday Dec 06, 2017
Romans 3:9-20
Wednesday Dec 06, 2017
Wednesday Dec 06, 2017
Learning the Way - Romans 3:9-20
Romans 3:9 - For we have already charged that all ... are under sin." The message made it clear that you can be better at not sinning, but you are still under sin. What are specific sins that you struggle with? What specific sins have you struggled with this week? Have you confessed and repented from these? If not, why not? Romans 3:10 - "None is righteous, no, not one..." Romans 3:12 - "no one does good, not even one." The message talked about the importance of our motives. Describe a time when you did a good thing, but with a poor motive? What is the motivation of your heart? Will you confess these motives to your group? Romans 3:11 - "No one understands; no one seeks for God." Are you seeking God or seeking things from God? What are the things you are seeking or have sought from God? Do you think you deserve those things? Why? Romans 3:18 - "There is no fear of God before their eyes" Do you have a fear of God? Psalm 111:10 tells us "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom." Describe to your group what you think the fear of God looks like?



Tuesday Dec 05, 2017
Romans 3:1-8
Tuesday Dec 05, 2017
Tuesday Dec 05, 2017
Learning the Way - Romans 3:1-8
In Romans 3 we see Paul speaking to a group of Jews that began to think that God's faithfulness was equivalent to Him upholding the nation of Israel. That began to translate into "we are the most important people in the world." This is a man-centered view of God and it ignores a variety of God's character traits like His judgment, wrath, and righteousness. This can lead us to completely miss our need for a Savior. In what ways do you see this happening today in our culture and in what ways are you guilty of this in your own life?The message pointed out that this passage could be removed from Romans and Paul's point would still be made. But he adds this point to address a very specific issue that he knew some of this letter's recipients would question. He goes out of his way to speak to his audience. This is an important principle for us to follow! Are you willing to do the hard work of understanding the objections of other people (ages, people groups, races, denominations, anyone who doesn't think identically to you)? Are you willing to learn their language and speak Gospel truths to them? What does this look like practically in your everyday life?The message talked about some believers having a false sense of security (whether Jews in the first century or Christians today). As believers, we aren't called to a life of complacency and solitude. Instead we're called to live in community, bear fruit, and finish the race (James 2:26, 2 Timothy 4:7). Do you simply fall back to your promise of eternal security or are you actively fighting the good fight? Is being a follower of Christ an active, daily pursuit, or a prayer that you said once?




