Wednesday, September 13, 2017

The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection in Leawood, Kansas, United States Weekly Devotions: Grow Pray Study Guide - “I have prayed for you, Peter” for Wednesday, 13 September 2017

The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection in Leawood, Kansas, United States Weekly Devotions: Grow Pray Study Guide - “I have prayed for you, Peter” for Wednesday, 13 September 2017 
-------
Questions in this GPS marked with Ø are particularly recommended for group discussion. Group leaders may add other discussion questions, or substitute other questions for the marked ones, at their discretion. 
-------
“I have prayed for you, Peter” 
Wednesday, 13 September 2017 
Luke 22:31 “Shim‘on, Shim‘on, listen! The Adversary demanded to have you people for himself, to sift you like wheat! 32 But I prayed for you, Shim‘on, that your trust might not fail. And you, once you have turned back in repentance, strengthen your brothers!” 33 Shim‘on said to him, “Lord, I am prepared to go with you both to prison and to death!” 34 Yeshua replied, “I tell you, Kefa, the rooster will not crow today until you have denied three times that you know me.”
-------
Where Mark recorded a generalized warning to all the disciples, Luke’s research (cf. Luke 1:1-3) led him to write that Jesus addressed a personal warning to Peter. In a touching moment, he told Peter that he had prayed for him. But the Lord responded to Peter’s “I’m ready to go with you” boast with the same somber pessimism that Mark recorded as part of Jesus' talk with the disciples.
Ø Another of the self-examination questions John Wesley, Methodism’s founder, encouraged people to regularly ask (and answer) was, “Am I consciously or unconsciously creating the impression that I am better than I really am?” Do you believe Peter was, in some measure, trying to convince Jesus (and maybe himself) that he was better than he really was? When do you find the same tug at work in your own life?
• Jesus told Peter, “I have prayed for you that your faith won’t fail.” Now (spoiler alert), most of us already know that at the end of this story, Peter’s faith did buckle, moving him to deny even knowing Jesus. Did that mean that God did not answer Jesus’ prayer? What is the point of praying for someone else when we realize that God will not take away their moral freedom, and force them to do the (good) thing we’d like to see them do?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, you value me enough that, through the Bible and sometimes through your Spirit’s presence in me, you warn me about dangers on my spiritual journey. Teach me how to be attentive to what you want to teach me. Amen. 
-------
Wendy Connelly
Wendy Connelly is wife to Mark, mom to two kids and a seminary student at Saint Paul School of Theology. She teaches classes at Resurrection Downtown and hosts an interfaith podcast, which you can subscribe to at TheLiftPodcast.org.

On a visit to a farm with my son’s Cub Scout troop, I once had the chance to sift wheat. It’s a two-step process of threshing and winnowing.
Threshing loosens the chaff from the edible grain, and involves beating the grain with a flail against a stone or hard surface.
Winnowing takes the loosened chaff, and separates it from the grain. During the winnowing process, the grain is tossed into the air: the lighter chaff is released into the breeze as the hard grain is flipped and caught, flipped and caught.
In life, no one escapes threshing and winnowing. Not even Peter.
Tragedy strikes.
Suffering befalls us.
Our identity is shaken to the core.
Life gives us a threshing, followed by long, tumbling winnowing.
In the midst of this painful and disorienting process, it’s easy to lose heart. Sometimes we discover our faith has been defined by borders that can no longer contain the contents of our lives. It’s as if Jesus intuits this of Peter.
So what does Jesus do? He prays on Peter’s behalf, and infuses his painful loss and perceived failure with a future hope and purpose: “I have prayed for you that your faith won’t fail. When you have returned, strengthen your brothers and sisters.”
Are you being threshed and winnowed? Does someone need your prayers in the midst of suffering? Know that as we approach Jesus, he appeals to the Father on our behalf, giving us strength so that, when we have returned, our sifting will be redeemed so that we can strengthen others.
-------
“He found them sleeping” 
Thursday, 14 September 2017
Mark 14:32-38
-------
Jesus had a profound and powerful sense of mission guiding his steps toward the cross. But that did not make the prospect of a humiliating, violent execution any easier to face. Mark wrote that “he began to feel despair and was anxious.” He took his three closest disciples with him, including Peter, and asked them to “stay alert and pray.” But, any prior boasting notwithstanding, they couldn’t do it.
• One element of this story is simple irony. Peter, the disciple who confidently said, “Even if everyone else stumbles, I won’t,” couldn’t even stay awake for Jesus! Jesus’ response about the eager spirit and weak flesh recalled the psalm that said God shows compassion “because God knows how we’re made, God remembers we’re just dust” (Psalm 103:149). When have you meant well, but just not been up to living out what God wanted you to do?
Ø The story also shows us an important truth. If any human ever had a direct connection to God, it was Jesus. Yet he asked his three closest friends to be with him, stay alert and pray. Do you try to hide your hurts and your needs from your friends, to handle them on your own? Or are you, like Jesus, open to asking people you trust for the friendship and support you need?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, I’m so tempted to say, “Well, I’d have stayed awake with you.” Then I realize I sound like Peter. Keep me humble, putting my confidence in you more than in my own spiritual strength. Amen. 
-------

-------
"Peter drew his sword" 
Friday, 15 September 2017 
Luke 22:49-51, John 18:3-12
-------
Led by Judas, what seems an absurdly large force arrived to arrest Jesus. Peter, who said, “I’ll give up my life for you” (John 13:37), bravely drew his sword to defend Jesus. Had he kept fighting, he’d likely have died. (Living for Jesus proved the harder task.) Luke, probably showing his physician’s heart (cf. Colossians 4:14), recorded that even amid all that turmoil, Jesus paused to heal the ear that Peter’s slightly misaimed blow had cut off.
Ø Later Jesus told the Roman procurator Pilate, ““My kingdom doesn’t originate from this world. If it did, my guards would fight…. My kingdom isn’t from here.” Peter tried to fight, and Jesus stopped him. We still live in a world where violence often feels like the only viable response to evil. Is it? To what extent do you believe Jesus was right, and to what extent was his situation different from “real life”?
• Think about the man Malchus. “A personal servant of the high priest could wield much authority, including over the temple police.” * The text didn’t follow him further. Do you imagine that, with his ear restored by Jesus’ healing touch, he stayed busy the next day arranging Jesus’ execution? Might that experience have so altered his outlook that, if not immediately, perhaps by the day of Pentecost he was part of the group who responded to Peter’s preaching by joining the Jesus movement (cf. Acts 2:36-41)?
Prayer: King Jesus, when I see things that seem wrong, I so readily use words like “destroy,” “smash” or even “nuke.” But even as you faced the cross, you tried to stop the cycle of violence, not feed it. Teach me more about your ways, your kingdom. Amen. 
* HarperCollins Christian Publishing. NIV, Cultural Backgrounds Study Bible, eBook: Bringing to Life the Ancient World of Scripture (Kindle Locations 241308-241309). Zondervan. Kindle Edition.
-------

-------
“Peter went out and cried uncontrollably”
Saturday, 16 September 2017 
John 18:15-18, 25-27, Luke 22:59-62
-------
Let’s review: of all the disciples, only Peter walked on water (Matthew 14:28-29). He was the first to say flat out that Jesus was the Messiah (Mark 8:27-29). On this fateful evening, Luke wrote, “Lord,” Peter said, “I’m ready to go with you, both to prison and to death!” (Luke 22:33) Yet, when the crunch came, he wasn’t, in fact, “ready.” He discovered that Jesus knew him better than he knew himself. He was no coward—but he was a human being facing kinds of pressure he’d never faced, and didn’t anticipate.
• Pastor Adam Hamilton wrote, “The incident [Peter’s denial] is one of the few that is mentioned in all Four Gospels…. It was not included to embarrass Peter…. The gospel writers knew the story because Peter must have regularly told the awful truth of that episode himself.” * Has pressure ever led you to be ashamed of and to hide your allegiance to Jesus? What do you think Peter saw in Jesus’ eyes when Jesus looked straight at him that broke his heart (and may have preserved his eternal life)? When have you grown through a failure that God’s grace enabled you to embrace and learn from?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, like Peter, I need to keep learning things about myself, finding room to grow even in areas I thought I had mastered. Thank you for your ongoing grace, for nudging me to grow even in places where I may think I’m done growing. Amen. 
* Adam Hamilton, 24 Hours that Changed the World. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2009, p. 58. Family Activity: Jesus often shows us the power of forgiveness. Blow up one balloon for each family member. Place them in the center of the room. Invite each family member to choose one balloon and a marker. Ask each person to draw a picture or write words representing something they have done wrong. Read I John 1:9 aloud. Explain that this means that no matter what we do, we can tell God we are sorry and God forgives us. Pray together, asking God to forgive what is written on your balloons. After you pray, have each person pop his or her balloon, representing God forgiving and forgetting your sin. Continue until each person has popped their balloon. Thank God for forgiving our sins.
-------

-------
Prayer Requests – cor.org/prayer Prayers for Peace & Comfort for:
•Christy Bradley and family on the death of her mother Carolyn McDonald, 9/6
• Julie Allison and family on the death of her mother Barbara Jean Allison, 9/5
•Clay Patterson and family on the death of his step-mother Jeanne Lillig-Patterson, 9/4
•Karl Neybert and Anne Marie Wells and families on the death of their father Gregory Neybert, 9/2
•Cathy AuBuchon and family on the death of her husband Jim AuBuchon, 9/1
•Nancy Kilpatrick and family on the death of her father Jim Merritt, 8/30
• Marcy Henderson and family on the death of her mother Margery “Midge” White, 8/30
•Bonnie Gleason and family on the death of her brother Bobby Ray Thomason, 8/11
-------


©2017 Church of the Resurrection. All Rights Reserved.
The United Methodist Church of the Resurrection
13720 Roe Avenue
Leawood, Kansas 66224, United States
-------

No comments:

Post a Comment