Footsteps of Service Discussion Questions

Friday:Footsteps of Service
Main Passage: Philippians 4:10-19, 2nd Kings 4:8-13
Other Passages: Acts 9:36-39, 1st Corinthians 12-14, Romans 12:4-13
Memory Verse: Philippians 2:4
  1. What was the name of the man who helped Paul by taking him the money collected by the churches?
  2. How are prisons today different from prisons in Bible times?
  3. Can you think of any other examples in the Bible of people who served God by serving people?
  4. Why did the church in Philippi collect money for Paul? Why is their motive important?
  5. Does following the Shunnemite's footsteps mean that each one of you will have to have missionaries or pastors stay in your home? Why or why not?
  6. How do we figure out what we can do in the church to serve God by serving others?
If you need hints to answer some of the questions, look up the listed scripture passages.

Footsteps of Service, Teen Version

Friday:Footsteps of Service
Main Passages: Philippians 4:10-19, 2nd Kings 4:8-13
Other Passages: Acts 9:36-39, 1st Corinthians 12-14, Romans 12:4-13
Objective: We should serve God by serving others.
Visuals Available (updated 2016)
Memory Verse: Philippians 2:4, Each of you should look not only to your own interests, but also to the interest of others.
Introduction: Footsteps
This week we're learning about people in the Bible, whose footsteps we should follow. Following their footsteps means doing the same kinds of things that they did, or being the kind of people that they were. Tonight we're going to talk about two examples – one from the Old Testament and one from the New Testament – of people who offered God their time and money. These people served God by the way that they served other people. The first example is a man named Epaphroditus, who helped the apostle Paul.
Story: Epaphroditus
Paul spent many years in prison. He had been put in prison for telling people about Jesus. Back then, the government didn't guarantee people the freedom to talk about their religion, so if you were talking about Jesus and there were some people in town who didn't like it, sometimes they could get you arrested and thrown into prison. This happened to Paul a lot.
Prisons were different in Paul's day, too. While he was in prison, the prison guards were not going to bring him food. If his friends and family didn't bring it to him, he would starve, and would no longer be able to help the churches. So it was important for others who believed in Jesus to take care of Paul. Someone needed to bring him food and other things that he needed. Someone did. Someone named Epaphroditus left his home, his job, and his family, and took the gifts that the church collected to help Paul. He took it all the way to Rome, where Paul was, and brought it to him. Because Epaphroditus did that, Paul was able to write letters to churches, letters that we now have in our Bible: Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, Philemon. Epaphroditus served God by taking care of Paul.
Application: Giving Time
[On the blackboard/whiteboard/overhead/whatever, write Giving Your Time at the top, and underline it. Ask the class for ways that we today can spend our time to serve other people and thus to serve God. e.g., we can rake leaves for the pastor, we can pray for missionaries, we can serve food at a funeral dinner, we can babysit kids for a sick woman at church, etc. List a whole bunch of possibilities – things that don't cost money, but are just things we can do that are a service.]
Story: The Shunemmite
In the Old Testament, there was a prophet named Elisha. Sometimes Elisha had to go to Shunem, and he had no place to stay. He would have been sleeping outside. But there was a woman who lived there, whose husband was old and rich. She noticed that Elisha was a man of God. So one day, when Elisha came to Shunem, the woman asked him to stay for a meal and eat with her family. She had plenty, so it was no big deal. So then every time Elisha passed through Shunem, he stayed for a meal at her house.
Then the woman noticed that he was coming to town a lot, and had no place to stay. There were no hotels. So she said to her husband, I know that this man who often comes our way is a holy man of God. Let's make a small room on the roof and put in it a bed and a table, a chair and a lamp for him. Then he can stay there whenever he comes to us. So they did. She wanted to serve God by taking care of the prophet Elisha.
Elisha noticed her kindness, and wanted to repay her, by giving her a blessing. But he didn't know what she wanted. So he asked her, You have gone to all this trouble for us. Now what can be done for you? But the woman didn't want to be repaid for her service. She said, I have a home among my own people. In other words, I'm already taken care of. When you're serving God, you don't need to be repaid. You're not doing it to gain something. You're doing it for God. (Now, Elisha did go on to do something very special for the woman later. But that's another story.)
Application: Giving Stuff
[On the blackboard/whatever, write Giving Stuff, and underline it. Ask the class for ways that we today can give stuff to other people and thus serve God. e.g., we can send money to missionaries, bring food to people who are sick, letting traveling missionaries stay in your home, helping people who have lost their jobs, contributing money for poor kids to go to church camp, etc.]
Invitation: Service
Invite any children who want to serve God in the church to stay after the lesson and discuss it further.

Hannah's Prayer Discussion Questions

Thursday:Hannah's Prayer
Main Passage: 1st Samuel 1
Other Passages: Matthew 6:24-34, James 5:13-20, Luke 18:1-14, Philippians 4:6-7, Deuteronomy 16:16-17
Memory Verse: James 5:16
  1. What was the name of Hannah's husband?
  2. What was Hannah's problem?
  3. Why did Elkanah and his family go year after year to Shiloh to worship the Lord? Shouldn't we worship the Lord day by day all year long?
  4. What kinds of things should we pray about?
    • Answer from James 5.
    • Answer from Luke 18.
    • Answer from Philippians 4.
  5. In the last two or three weeks, has there been something you should have prayed about, that you didn't think to pray about at the time?
  6. Should we pray alone, or in groups? Why?
If you need hints to answer some of the questions, look up the listed scripture passages.

Hannah's Prayer, Teen Version

Thursday:Hannah's Prayer
Main Passage: 1st Samuel 1
Other Passages: Matthew 6:24-34, James 5:13-20, Luke 18:1-8, Philippians 4:6-7
Objective: When we have problems, we should pray to God.
Visuals Available (updated 2016)
Memory Verse: from James 5:6, The prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective.
Introduction: Footsteps
This week we're learning about people in the Bible, whose footsteps we should follow. Following their footsteps means doing the same kinds of things that they did, or being the kind of people that they were.
Story: Hannah
In the Old Testament, there's a story about a woman named Hannah, who was married to a man named Elkanah. Even though they had been married for a while, Hannah had no children. She wanted to have children, but she was barren. Being barren wasn't her fault; sometimes a woman, medically, just can't have children. It happens. Even today with more advanced medical care, some women can't get pregnant. And it was happening to Hannah. Other women were having children, but Hannah was barren. Hannah's husband loved her very much. He said, Am I not better to you than ten sons? But she still wanted children.
Peninnah had children, and she taunted Hannah and made fun of her because she didn't have any. Peninnah irritated Hannah deliberately. This bothered Hannah, not just because she didn't like being picked on, but also because it reminded her of a sad thing – that she couldn't have any children. Hannah wanted children, and Peninnah knew it. Picking on her for it wasn't very nice, but Peninnah kept doing it anyway. Every time Hannah went up to the temple to worship God, Peninnah was there, picking on her, making fun of her for not having any children. This went on for years.
Hannah could have been angry at Peninnah. But what Hannah really wanted was to have a child. She knew that attacking Peninnah wouldn't solve her problem. Only God could give her a child.
So one year, when they made their trip all the way to Shiloh to visit the temple, when Hannah went up to the temple to worship the Lord that year, she prayed to God for a child. She took her request to him. Hannah didn't just pray a simple, short, mindless prayer: Dear God, please give me a child, amen. She cried to the Lord, and she wept, and she prayed and prayed for God to see her misery and give her a son. And she promised that if she could only have a son, she would give him back to God: she would send him to work in the temple and serve the Lord.
As she was praying, one of the priests, a man named Eli, noticed that she was crying and her mouth was moving. He didn't know about her situation, so he didn't realize she was praying for a child. In fact, when he saw her lips moving and no sound coming out, Eli assumed she was drunk! Then he spoke to her. He yelled at her for being drunk and told her to get rid of her wine.
Hannah told Eli the priest that she wasn't drunk, just deeply troubled and sad, and that she had been praying earnestly to God. Then Eli told her to go in peace. May the God of Israel grant you what you have asked of him, he said.
And God did. Later that year, Hannah had a son. She named him Samuel, and when he was old enough, she took him to the temple to serve the Lord, just like she had promised. When he grew up, Samuel became a prophet and a leader, one of the most famous men in the whole history of Israel. The books of 1st and 2nd Samuel, in the Bible, are named for him. And he was born because Hannah prayed to God. Hannah believed God could help her, and he did.
Application: Prayer
When there's something that you need, or that you want, do you pray, or do you just wish for it and forget to tell God? And if you do pray, do you really trust that God can answer your prayer? When we go to God, and we ask him for what we need, he listens. The Bible says that God loves us. He made the flowers, and he made them beautiful. He takes care of the birds. But he loves us more than the birds or the flowers. So when we ask him for something that we need, he's even more likely to give it to us.
Invitation: Prayer
Invite any children who want to learn to pray to stay after the lesson and discuss it further.

Look and Live Discussion Questions

Wednesday:Look and Live
Main Passage: Numbers 21:4-9
Other Passages: John 3:1-18, Hebrews 4
Memory Verse: John 3:14-15
  1. How did God save the Israelites when they were bitten by snakes?
  2. Why were there venomous snakes among them in the first place?
  3. How did Jesus explain salvation to Nicodemus? What does it mean to be born again?
  4. Why did Jesus expect Nicodemus to understand what he was saying?
  5. Why did Nicodemus have difficulty understanding what Jesus was talking about?
  6. The usual answer to the question, Why did Jesus die on the cross? is that the penalty for our sins had to be paid. This is true, but Jesus gives Nicodemus another reason. What is it?
  7. In Hebrews 4, what is the relationship between belief and obedience?
If you need hints to answer some of the questions, look up the listed scripture passages.

Look and Live, Teen Version

Wednesday:Look and Live
Main Passage: Numbers 21:4-9
Other Passages: John 3:1-18
Objective: We should look to Jesus, trusting God for our salvation.
Visuals Available (updated 2016)
Memory Verse: John 3:14-15, Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, that everyone who believes in him may have eternal life.
Introduction: Footsteps
This week we're learning about people in the Bible, whose footsteps we should follow. Following their footsteps means doing the same kinds of things that they did, or being the kind of people that they were. Today's lesson is about some people who had to learn to trust God, just like people today also need to learn to trust God. We aren't born trusting God. We need to follow in their footsteps and make the right choice to trust God, just like they did.
Story: The Bronze Snake
When the Israelites were wandering in the desert, they started to complain and grumble. They blamed God and they blamed their leader Moses for their unhappiness. Because they spoke against God and didn't trust him, God punished them by sending poisonous snakes to bite them!
So the people ran to Moses and begged for help. They said they were sorry, that they were wrong to rebel against God, and they asked Moses to pray to God, and remove the snakes. Moses did pray to God, but God didn't take the snakes away.
Instead, he told Moses how to keep the people from dying from the poison when they were bitten. He told him to make a bronze snake, and put it up high on a pole, where anyone could see it. God said that if someone was bitten by one of the snakes, they should look at the bronze snake on the pole, and then they wouldn't die. And because God said it, it worked: when people who were bitten by the snakes looked at the bronze snake, they didn't die. But people who didn't look at the snake on the pole died from the snakebites. It was their choice. They had to believe God and trust in his ability to save them from the snake venom.
Looking at the snake on the pole didn't work because bronze snakes are magic. If you get bitten by a poisonous snake today, you wouldn't look for a bronze snake. You'd look for a hospital. So why did looking at the snake on the pole work for the Israelites?
The snakes weren't their real problem. Their real problem was that they needed to trust God. That's why God sent them the snakes in the first place: because they needed to trust God. Looking to the snake, like God said to do, was something they could do to obey and to show that they were trusting in God to save them. Bronze snakes don't save people from snakebite venom. But God can.
Application: Salvation
In the New Testament, a pharisee named Nicodemus came to talk with Jesus. Nicodemus knew that Jesus was from God. Jesus told Nicodemus that he needed to be born again, but Nicodemus didn't understand what it meant.
So Jesus explained it with a simile: Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, that everyone who believes in him may have eternal life. Jesus was saying that in order to be saved from our sins, we have to trust in him, just as the Israelites in the desert who needed to be saved from snake poison had to trust in God's ability to save them, by looking at the bronze serpent. Jesus was going to be lifted up on the cross, and when we look to him in faith, believing that God can save us through him, we can be saved from our sins.
Invitation: Salvation
Invite anyone who wants to be saved to stay after the lesson and discuss it further.

Do What It Says Discussion Questions

Tuesday:Do What It Says
Main Passage: Nehemiah 7-8
Other Passages: Leviticus 23:33-43, Numbers 29:12-39, Deuteronomy 16:13-17, 2nd Chronicles 36:14-21, Hebrews 3:7-4:2, Exodus 23:10-11, Jeremiah 25:1-14
Memory Verse: James 1:22
  1. Why were the people weeping?
  2. Why did Nehemiah tell them not to grieve?
  3. What was the point of the booths? Why did God want them to observe this holiday?
  4. Why had the people been in exile in the first place? Why were they back now?
  5. How long had it been since the Israelites had celebrated the holiday like this? (See 8:17.) Why had they let it go for so long?
  6. Why did the Levites have to explain the meaning of the text to the people? It was written in Hebrew. What language had the people been speaking? Why?
If you need hints to answer some of the questions, look up the listed scripture passages.

Do What It Says, Teen Version

Tuesday:Do What It Says
Main Passage: Nehemiah 7-8
Other Passages: Leviticus 23:33-43, Numbers 29:12-39, Deuteronomy 16:13-17, 2nd Chronicles 36:21, Hebrews 3:7-4:2
Objective: We should study God's word and obey it.
Visuals Available (updated 2016)
Memory Verse: James 1:22, Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says.
Introduction: Background
This week we're learning about people in the Bible, whose footsteps we should follow. Following their footsteps means emulating the kinds of things that they did, or the kind of people that they were.
Two books of the Bible, Ezra and Nehemiah, are named after two men in our story today. Nehemiah was the governor of Judea, and Ezra was a priest.
Nehemiah was in charge of rebuilding the city of Jerusalem. It had been seventy years since the Israelites had last lived in the city, because of the exile, and now that they were back, the city was in bad shape. Nehemiah was concerned about the city – buildings in poor condition, the city's defensive wall crumbled to pieces, and so on – but Nehemiah was also concerned that the people had not been able to study God's word or worship God properly while they were away in Babylon.
Story: Reading from the Book of the Law
Back then the people didn't all have their own Bibles, and many of them couldn't read anyway. So they planned for a day when they could all gather together and hear Ezra the priest read from God's word. They knew that there would be a big crowd, so they built a special platform for Ezra to stand on so he'd be high enough for everyone to see and hear him.
When the day came, everyone gathered together, and Ezra got up on the platform and read aloud from the book all morning long. For about six hours, the people stood quietly and listened carefully, everyone who was old enough to understand. Ezra praised God and read to the people from God's word.
As the people listened to the word that Ezra was reading, they started to cry, because there were things written in God's word that they had not been obeying, things they didn't even know about. For seventy years they had not heard from God's word like this. Many of the people weren't even that old, so they'd never heard these things.
Ezra and Nehemiah told the people to stop crying, because this was a good day. They had heard God's word, and now they knew what it said. It was a good day. So for the rest of the day they celebrated. They ate, and they shared, and they celebrated because they had learned from God.
One of the things that they learned about that they had not been remembering to do was the Festival of Booths (Sukkot), which God had told the Israelites to do every year. In the seventh month they were supposed to gather sticks from the countryside and make temporary shelters, and live in them for a week instead of their regular houses, to remind them of the forty years that their great-great-great-... grandparents lived in tents wandering in the desert, because of their unbelief, when God brought them out of Egypt and into their own land. The Israelites were supposed to celebrate this holiday every year, but for the last seventy years they hadn't been doing it.
So the next day, they went out and started gathering branches and making the shelters. They heard, and then they obeyed.
Application: Obeying God's Word
The Israelites understood that it wasn't enough to just read the Bible and then go about their lives just like they had been. They needed to do what it said. That's still true today: when we study the Bible, we should be looking for things we can apply to our lives. We should do what God's word tells us. We should follow in the footsteps of Ezra, Nehemiah, and the Israelites who listened to God's word and wanted to obey it.
In today's culture many people, if they even hear God's word, think that they can choose to change or ignore it. They say things like, I know what the Bible says, but what I think is... This is wrong. God didn't give us the Bible so we can ignore it, or pay lip service to its teachings. He gave it to us so that we could follow it. He gave us examples of people doing the right things, so that we could follow them, and he also gave us examples of people doing the wrong things, so that we can turn and run the other way.
Invitation: Obedience
Invite anyone who wants to learn to obey God's word to stay after the lesson and discuss it further.

Two Obedient Men Discussion Questions

Monday:Two Obedient Men
Main Passage: Numbers 13-14
Other Passages:
Memory Verse: 1st John 2:5
  1. Why were twelve men chosen to explore the land, not five or ten or twenty?
  2. What did they bring back from the trip? Why?
  3. Why did the people, who had seen what they brought back (13:26), believe the bad report that the ten men gave about the land (13:32)? Shouldn't the fruit that was brought back have convinced them that the land was good? Why didn't it?
  4. Why did Caleb and Joshua think the Israelites could take the land?
  5. Why was Moses concerned about what the Egyptians and the Canaanites would think? Why did God agree?
  6. What happened to the ten men who gave the bad report? What did the people do when they saw this? Why didn't God allow it then?
If you need hints to answer some of the questions, look up the listed scripture passages.

Two Obedient Men, Teen Version

Monday:Two Obedient Men
Main Passage: Numbers 13-14
Other Passages:
Objective: We should trust and obey God.
Visuals Available (updated 2016)
Memory Verse: 1st John 2:5, But if anyone obeys his word, God's love is truly made complete in him.
Introduction: Footsteps
This week we're going to be learning about some people in the Bible, whose footsteps we should follow. What does it mean to follow in somebody's footsteps? [Accept some answers.] It means we emulate them: we do the same kinds of things that they did, or be the kind of person that they were. What kind of person would we want to emulate? A rock star? A famous singer? A successful business executive? How about a godly person?
Today, we're going to talk about following in the footsteps of two men named Caleb and Joshua. God honored them for what they did, because they obeyed God. So we know these are good footsteps to follow.
Story: Caleb & Joshua
The Lord told Moses to pick out twelve men from Israel, one from each tribe, and send them to investigate the land that God was going to give them. Two of them men Moses chose were Joshua and Caleb. He also sent ten other men. They explored the land for forty days: they looked around to see how strong the people were who lived there, what kind of cities they had, what fortifications, ... and they took samples of the fruit that grew there.
When they came back to the camp to report to Moses, they told him that the land was very good. They showed him one cluster of grapes that was so big, two men had to carry it. But ten of the men were afraid to go take the land, because they were afraid of the people who lived there, and the strong walls around the cities. They didn't trust God to help them take the land. Now, Joshua and Caleb knew that God had said he was going to give them the land, so Caleb said, We should go up and take possession of the land, for we can certainly do it.
The Point: Obey God
You see, Caleb believed God, and wanted to obey what God had told them to do. Caleb said that they should go take the land, because he trusted God, and knew that doing what God said to do was the best thing.
Story: What Happened Next?
Caleb and Joshua wanted to obey God, but the other ten men were afraid, so they started spreading rumors, exaggerating how big and bad the people were. They said that they felt like grasshoppers next to them, even though really they were only a little smaller. Also, they lied about the land, and said that it wasn't very good land. (Apparently a cluster of grapes so big two men had to carry it was not going to help feed the people.)
The Israelites decided to go on the recommendation of the ten men who were afraid. God punished the people for their disobedience. Because they were unwilling to obey, they had to wander around in the desert for an extra forty years. Of the twelve men who had explored the land, only Caleb and Joshua, the ones who had wanted to obey, lived through the forty years and got to go into the land. God rewarded them for their obedience.
Application: Group Disobedience
Have you ever been in a group of people who were all disobeying? Imagine you and your buddies are hanging out at the mall, and they all decide to start vandalizing the mall fountain. You know you shouldn't, but you know, they're all doing it. Together. Maybe you could just stand there and not really participate, but is that the right thing to do? [Discuss.]
It's hard to obey when all the people around you are going the other direction. But Caleb and Joshua obeyed. When their friends said, we can't do it, we can't go into that land, it's too scary, Caleb and Joshua spoke up. They tried to remind the people of what God had said. They didn't get the people to obey, but they tried, and God honored Caleb and Joshua for their obedience. So even if you can't get all your friends to do the right thing, it's still important for you to obey, and to stand for what is right, and to trust God to take care of you.
Invitation: Obedience
Invite anyone who wants to follow in the footsteps of Caleb and Joshua to stay after and discuss it further.

Hannah's Prayer

Thursday:Hannah's Prayer
Story Passage: 1st Samuel 1
Other Passages: Matthew 6:24-34, James 5:13-20, Luke 18:1-8, Philippians 4:6-7
Objective: When we have problems, we should pray to God.
Visuals Available (updated 2016)
Memory Verse: from James 5:16, The prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective.
Introduction: Footsteps
This week we're learning about people in the Bible, whose footsteps we should follow. Following their footsteps means doing the same kinds of things that they did, or being the kind of people that they were.
Story: Hannah
In the Old Testament, there's a story about a woman named Hannah, who was married to a man named Elkanah. Even though they had been married for a while, Hannah had no children. She wanted to have children, but she was barren. That means her body couldn't have kids. It wasn't her fault: sometimes a woman just can't have any children. It happens. And it was happening to Hannah. Other women were having children, but Hannah was barren. Hannah's husband loved her very much. He said, Am I not better to you than ten sons? But she still wanted children.
Peninnah had children, and she teased Hannah and made fun of her because she didn't have any. Peninnah irritated Hannah on purpose. This bothered Hannah, not just because she didn't like being picked on, but also because it reminded her of a sad thing – that she couldn't have any children. Hannah wanted children, and Peninnah knew it. Picking on her for it wasn't very nice, but Peninnah kept doing it anyway. Every time Hannah went up to the temple to worship God, Peninnah was there, picking on her, making fun of her for not having any children. This went on for years.
Hannah could have been angry at Peninnah. But what Hannah really wanted was to have a child. She knew that attacking Peninnah wouldn't solve her problem. Only God could give her a child.
So one year, when they made their trip to Shiloh to visit the temple*, when Hannah went up to the temple to worship the Lord that year, she prayed to God for a child. She took her request to him. Hannah didn't just pray real quick: Dear God, please give me a child, amen. She cried to the Lord, and she wept, and she prayed and prayed for God to see her misery and give her a son. And she promised that if she could only have a son, she would give him back to God: she would send him to work in the temple and serve the Lord.
As she was praying, one of the priests, a man named Eli, noticed that she was crying and her mouth was moving. He didn't know about her situation, so he didn't realize she was praying for a child. In fact, when he saw her lips moving and no sound coming out, Eli thought she was drunk! Then he spoke to her. He yelled at her for being drunk and told her to get rid of her wine.
Hannah told Eli the priest that she wasn't drunk, just deeply troubled and sad, and that she had been praying earnestly to God. Then Eli told her to go in peace. May the God of Israel grant you what you have asked of him, he said.
And God did. Later that year, Hannah had a son. She named him Samuel, and when he was old enough, she took him to the temple to serve the Lord, just like she had promised. When he grew up, Samuel became a prophet and a leader, one of the most famous men in the whole history of Israel. The books of 1st and 2nd Samuel, in the Bible, are named for him. And he was born because Hannah prayed to God. Hannah believed God could help her, and he did.
Application: Prayer
When there's something that you need, or that you want, do you pray, or do you just wish for it and forget to tell God? And if you do pray, do you really trust that God can answer your prayer? When we go to God, and we ask him for what we need, he listens. The Bible says that God loves us. He made the flowers, and he made them beautiful. He takes care of the birds. But he loves us more than the birds or the flowers. So when we ask him for something that we need, he's even more likely to give it to us.
Invitation: Prayer
Invite any children who want to learn to pray to stay after the lesson and discuss it further.
Footnotes:
* - Traditionally, this temple has often been called the tabernacle. (This was before Solomon constructed the more permanent temple building in Jerusalem.)

Footsteps of Service

Friday:Footsteps of Service
Story Passages: Philippians 4:10-19, 2nd Kings 4:8-13
Other Passages: Acts 9:36-39, 1st Corinthians 12-14
Objective: We should serve God by serving others.
Visuals Available (updated 2016)
Memory Verse: Philippians 2:4, Each of you should look not only to your own interests, but also to the interest of others.
Introduction: Footsteps
This week we're learning about people in the Bible, whose footsteps we should follow. Following their footsteps means doing the same kinds of things that they did, or being the kind of people that they were. Tonight we're going to talk about two examples – one from the Old Testament and one from the New Testament – of people who offered God their time and money. These people served God by the way they served other people. The first example is a man named Epaphroditus, who helped the apostle Paul.
Story: Epaphroditus
The apostle Paul spent many years in prison. He had been put in prison for telling people about Jesus. Back then, the government didn't guarantee people the freedom to talk about their religion, so if you were talking about Jesus and there were some people in town who didn't like it, sometimes they could get you arrested and thrown into prison. This happened to Paul a lot.
Prisons were different in Paul's day, too. While he was in prison, the soldiers were not going to bring him food. If his friends and family didn't bring it to him, he would starve, and would no longer be able to help the churches. So it was important for others who believed in Jesus to take care of Paul. Someone needed to bring him food and other things that he needed. Someone did. Someone named Epaphroditus left his home, his job, and his family, and took the gifts that the church collected to help Paul. He took it all the way to Rome, where Paul was, and brought it to him. Because Epaphroditus did that, Paul was able to write letters to churches, letters that we now have in our Bible. Epaphroditus served God by taking care of Paul.
Application: Giving Time
[On the blackboard/whiteboard/overhead/whatever, write "Giving Your Time" at the top, and underline it. Ask the kids for ways that we today can spend our time to serve other people and thus to serve God. e.g., we can rake leaves for the pastor, we can pray for missionaries, we can serve food at a funeral dinner, we can babysit kids for a sick woman at church, etc. List a whole bunch of possibilities – things that don't cost money, but are just things we can do that are a service.]
Story: The Shunammite
In the Old Testament, there was a prophet named Elisha. Sometimes Elisha had to go to Shunem, and he had no place to stay. He would have been sleeping outside. But there was a woman who lived there, whose husband was old and rich. She noticed that Elisha was a man of God. So one day, when Elisha came to Shunem, the woman asked him to stay for a meal and eat with her family. She had plenty, so it was no big deal. So then every time Elisha passed through Shunem, he stayed for a meal at her house.
Then the woman noticed that he was coming to town a lot, and had no place to stay. There were no hotels. So she said to her husband, I know that this man who often comes our way is a holy man of God. Let's make a small room on the roof and put in it a bed and a table, a chair and a lamp for him. Then he can stay there whenever he comes to us. So they did. She wanted to serve God by taking care of the prophet Elisha.
Elisha noticed her kindness, and wanted to repay her, by giving her a blessing. But he didn't know what she wanted. So he asked her, You have gone to all this trouble for us. Now what can be done for you? But the woman didn't want to be repaid for her service. She said, I have a home among my own people. In other words, I'm already taken care of. When you're serving God, you don't need to be repaid. You're not doing it to gain something. You're doing it for God. (Now, Elisha did go on to do something very special for the woman later. But that's another story.)
Application: Giving Stuff
[On the blackboard/whatever, write "Giving Stuff", and underline it. Ask the kids for ways that we today can give stuff to other people and thus serve God. e.g., we can send money to missionaries, bring food to people who are sick, letting traveling missionaries stay in your home, helping people who have lost their jobs, contributing money for poor kids to go to church camp, etc.]
Invitation: Service
Invite any children who want to serve God in the church to stay after the lesson and discuss it further.

Look and Live: the Snake and the Son

Wednesday:Look and Live: the Snake and the Son
Story Passage: Numbers 21:4-9
Other Passages: John 3
Objective: We should look to Jesus, trusting in God for our salvation.
Visuals Available (updated 2016)
Memory Verse: John 3:14-15, Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, that everyone who believes in him may have eternal life.
Introduction: Footsteps
This week we're learning about people in the Bible, whose footsteps we should follow. Following their footsteps means doing the same kinds of things that they did, or being the kind of people that they were. Today's lesson is about some people who had to learn to trust God, just like people today also need to learn to trust God. We aren't born trusting God. We need to follow in their footsteps and make the right choice to trust God, just like they did.
Story: The Bronze Snake
When the Israelites were wandering in the desert, they started to complain and grumble. They blamed God and they blamed their leader Moses for their unhappiness. Because they spoke against God, God punished them by sending poisonous snakes to bite them!
So the people ran to Moses and begged for help. We're sorry! We were wrong. Pray to God, and ask him to make the snakes go away. Moses did pray to God, but God didn't take the snakes away.
Instead, he told Moses what to do, to keep the people from dying from the poison. He told him to make a metal snake, and put it up high on a pole, where anyone could see it. God said that if someone was bitten by a snake, they should look a the metal snake on the pole, and then they wouldn't die. And because God said it, it worked: when people who were bitten by the snakes looked at the metal snake, they didn't die. But people who didn't look at the metal snake died from the snakebites. It was their choice. They had to believe God and trust in his ability to save them.
Looking at the snake on the pole didn't work because metal snakes are magic. If you get bitten by a poisonous snake today, you wouldn't look for a metal snake. You'd look for a hospital. So why did looking at the snake on the pole work for the Israelites?
The snakes weren't their real problem. Their real problem was that they needed to trust God. That's why God sent them the snakes in the first place: because they needed to trust God. Looking to the snake, like God said to do, was something they could do to show that they were trusting in God to save them. Metal snakes don't save people from snakebite venom. But God can.
Application: Salvation
In the New Testament, a man named Nicodemus came to talk with Jesus. Nicodemus knew that Jesus was from God. Jesus told Nicodemus that he needed to be born again, but Nicodemus didn't understand what it meant.
So Jesus explained: Just as Moses lifted up the snake in the desert, so the Son of Man must be lifted up, that everyone who believes in him may have eternal life. Jesus was saying that in order to be saved from our sins, we have to trust in him, just as the Israelites in the desert who needed to be saved from snake poison had to trust in God's ability to save them, by looking at the metal snake on the pole. Jesus was going to be lifted up on the cross, and when we look to him and believe that God can save us through him, we can be saved from our sins.
Invitation: Salvation
Invite any children who want to be saved to stay after the lesson and discuss it further.

Do What It Says

Tuesday:Do What It Says
Story Passage: Nehemiah 7-8
Other Passages: Leviticus 23:33-43, Numbers 29:12-39, Deuteronomy 16:13-17, 2nd Chronicles 36:21, Hebrews 3:7-4:2
Objective: We should study God's word and obey it.
Visuals Available (updated 2016)
Memory Verse: James 1:22, Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says.
Introduction: Background
This week we're learning about people in the Bible, whose footsteps we should follow. Following their footsteps means doing the same kinds of things that they did, or being the kind of people that they were.
Two books of the Bible, Ezra and Nehemiah, are named after two men in our story today. Nehemiah was the governor, and Ezra was a priest.
Nehemiah was in charge of rebuilding the city of Jerusalem. It had been seventy years since the Israelites had last lived in the city, and now that they were back, the city was in bad shape. Nehemiah was concerned about the city – buildings in poor condition, the city's defensive wall crumbled to pieces, and so on – but Nehemiah was also concerned that the people had not been able to study God's word or worship God properly while they were away.
Story: Reading from the Book of the Law
Back then the people didn't all have their own Bibles, and many of them couldn't read anyway. So they planned for a day when they could all gather together and hear Ezra the priest read from God's word. They knew that there would be a big crowd, so they built a special platform for Ezra to stand on so he'd be high enough for everyone to see and hear him.
When the day came, everyone gathered together, and Ezra got up on the platform and read aloud from the book all morning long. For about six hours, the people stood quietly and listened carefully, even the kids, everyone who was old enough to understand. Ezra praised God and read to the people from God's word.
As the people listened to the word that Ezra was reading, they started to cry, because there were things written in God's word that they had not been obeying, things they didn't even know about. For seventy years they had not heard from God's word like this. Many of the people weren't even that old, so they'd never heard these things.
Ezra and Nehemiah told the people to stop crying, because this was a good day. They had heard God's word, and now they knew what it said. It was a good day. So for the rest of the day they celebrated. They ate, and they shared, and they celebrated because they had learned from God.
One of the things that they learned about that they had not been remembering to do was the Festival of Booths (Sukkot), which God had told the Israelites to do every year. In the seventh month they were supposed to gather sticks from the countryside and make temporary shelters, and live in them for a week instead of their regular houses, to remind them of the forty years that their great-great-great-... grandparents lived in tents wandering in the desert, because of their unbelief, when God brought them out of Egypt and into their own land. The Israelites were supposed to celebrate this holiday every year, but they hadn't been doing it.
So the next day, they went out and started gathering branches and making the shelters.
Application: Obeying God's Word
The Israelites understood that it wasn't enough to just read the Bible and then go about their lives just like they had been. They needed to do what it said. That's still true today: when we study the Bible, we should be looking for things we can apply to our lives. We should do what God's word tells us. We should follow in the footsteps of Ezra, Nehemiah, and the Israelites who listened to God's word and wanted to obey it.
Invitation: Obedience
Invite any children who want to learn to obey God's word to stay after the lesson and discuss it further.