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Biblical Insights: What's the Bible Have to Say About...?
Contents
Introduction to Biblical
Insights
Three Bible Study Ideas
10 Passages to Comfort
Workers
10 Bible Studies that
Affirm Workers
Characters in the Bible
Passages to Play With
What's the Bible Have to
Say About...?
Five Hard Questions
Other Bible Links
There are many places in the Bible
where the lives and witness of God's people jump out at you as
emblematic of how life under God's rule might be lived (see
Characters in the Bible).
But there are other places where a second look reveals answers to
some interesting questions about the church and the place of lay
people in its enterprise. And in other places, the "answers" might
themselves be really no more than questions solidified over time,
taking the appearance of answers. The question for Christians, then,
is to discern from the Bible what God has in mind for their lives
and for the church.
What's the Bible Have to Say
About....
- The role and place
of professional clergy in the life of the church.
- The value of money
in the lifestyle of Christians.
- The centrality of
the church — as institution — in the lives of faithful believers.
- Funding the
mission of God through the local congregation.
- The existence and
function of denominations.
- The true purpose
of the congregation.
- The meaning(s) of
"the Good News."
- God's rule over
both the sacred and secular realms.
- Power already held
by individual Christians.
- God's disbursal of
gifts among God's people.
- The supposed needs
which the church fills.
Some Passages and Chunks of
Scripture to Re-examine:
- Song of Solomon
(as metaphor for the relationship of Christ and the church)
- 2nd Timothy
(to see where Timothy learned his pastoral abilities)
- Matthew 23
(to find out where Jesus' condemnations of religious leaders of
his day might fit into our own day)
- Mark 7 (to
see how Jesus' teachings supplant the religious teachings of the
ancestors)
- Luke 16 (to
see how easily we could condemn people whose shrewdness makes them
a living)
- Revelation 2-3
( to compare models of congregations — good and not so good — with
contemporary fads for "church")
- 2 Corinthians
10:1 - 13:10 (to see how Paul's struggles with authority as an
apostle compared with contemporary pastors' struggles with their
roles)
- 1 Corinthians
12 (to plumb the possibilities in "body" analogies for the
church)
- Proverbs 31 (to
see how women live faithfully and invisibly powerful)
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