This week, I'll be
posting a study: Walk with Jesus: Holy Week 2020. You can download the entire study, or just visit this
page every day. (If
you download the pdf, you should be able to print it 2 pages to a sheet (8.5 x
11) if you set it to landscape.)
We'll journey through Israel, pausing to read and reflect at various events of His life and ministry. These events took place at specific locations, so you’ll learn a bit about Israel in 30AD, too. There are questions to inspire you to meditate on your response to Jesus’ ministry and how that may be different this year due to self-isolation and social distancing. After completing the daily study, take time to reflect and journal on the questions. If you are doing this study with friends, share you insights with each other. Each session has an activity to do as well to help you move faith into action.
Close each session with the prayer in the lesson.
We'll journey through Israel, pausing to read and reflect at various events of His life and ministry. These events took place at specific locations, so you’ll learn a bit about Israel in 30AD, too. There are questions to inspire you to meditate on your response to Jesus’ ministry and how that may be different this year due to self-isolation and social distancing. After completing the daily study, take time to reflect and journal on the questions. If you are doing this study with friends, share you insights with each other. Each session has an activity to do as well to help you move faith into action.
Close each session with the prayer in the lesson.
Opening Prayer
Lord Jesus, walk with me
and open my heart to what you would have me learn from these lessons. Amen.
Power of Christ (Wednesday): Bethlehem & Bethany
Power can have many meanings and connotations. The people of Israel in Jesus’ time had good reason to fear the powerful, esp. the Romans. A soldier could coerce anyone into working. The average person had no rights. Beatings and death were common ways power was exerted. Currently, the Coronavirus has a certain power over our actions. It is also causing us to try new ways of doing things, so it is both good and bad.
Power is also positive. We need electric power to run our homes. The power of nature can awe us, even though it can be destructive. Jesus had spiritual power, which he used to heal and also to confront the religious establishment. It got him into trouble.
Do you think of Power as mostly a positive or negative thing? How about the Coronavirus?
The southern part of Israel, called Judea, was under control of the Roman procurator, Pontius Pilate. Rome had installed Pontius Pilate as procurator in 26CD to keep the fragile peace. His uses of power to keep order were hated by the Jews. It was in this area that Jesus performed his greatest works of power.
Read Luke 13:1-9
Jesus uses the example of those killed by Pilate and by the disaster of the tower falling to urge repentance not revolt. How do you respond to evil in the world?
What good do you see could come from the current Coronavirus responses?
Bethlehem is a little town nestled in the hills five miles south of Jerusalem. It is closely linked to the capital. The name Bet Leven means House of Bread and the wheat grown here is used for the shewbread in the temple.
The nearby hills are home to the temple shepherds and their flocks. The little fat-tailed sheep that dot the hills provide lambs for the temple sacrifices. They must be entirely white, without any spot of another color. During lambing season, the numerous hill caves are used to shelter the ewes and newborn lambs from the chill spring winds.
Bethlehem is revered as the ancestral home of the family of David. No Hebrew child in Israel is unaware of the story of Ruth from Moab. This famous great-grandmother of King David came to Bethlehem with her mother-in-law, Naomi, after both women were widows. In obedience to the Law, she gleaned grain in the barley and wheat fields during the harvests. Here she met Boaz who offered her the protection of marriage.
Jesus was born in Bethlehem during the rule of Herod the Great. His birth caused a great tragedy in the area.
Read Matthew 2:1-18
Being of the house of David was an honor to the ancient Jews. How much greater honor is it to be of the ‘house and lineage’ of Christ?
What harm do we do, knowingly or unknowingly, out of fear?
North of Bethlehem lies Bethany. This small village is almost a suburb of Jerusalem. The name means “House of Dates” because of the many date palm trees in the area. The branches are used to make the booths during the Feast of Booths (Succoth) every fall. The leaves are also used to make baskets and for thatching the roofs of the houses.
Scribes and some temple priests make their home in Bethany because it is so close to Jerusalem and the duties of the temple, without the dust and crowds of the larger city. Many wealthy families live in the estates in and around the town.
Bethany was the home of Jesus’ friend Lazarus who he raised from the dead. This miracle was the catalyst that convinced the Jewish leaders that Jesus had to die.
Read John 11:45-53
The priests were trying to protect the status quo. Is there something you are protecting?
Are you afraid, or do you have confidence in Christ at this time?
Take Action:
Prayer is a powerful activity. Use the Doxology and pray through the alphabet, adding 3 or 4 things for each letter that offer praise to God. For instance, for ‘A’:
Praise God from whom all blessing flow, praise God all [anteaters, anglers, angels, and albatross].
Praise God above you heavenly host, Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.
(Then continue with ‘B’, ‘C’, etc.)
Prayer Today
Lord Christ, I want you to be in charge of my life, but I can become fearful that you will ask too much of me, so I try to save my life just like the Roman and Jewish leaders did. Help me to trust you with my life. Amen.
Prayer for Wednesday of Holy Week
Lord God, whose blessed Son our Savior gave his body to be whipped and his face to be spit upon: Give us grace to accept joyfully the sufferings of the present time, confident of the glory that shall be revealed; through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.