Tag Archives: Bible

Faithful Journaling: Genesis 45-48

How are you doing with Genesis? We’re almost done!

Week 45: Read Genesis 45 and write down your thoughts about these prompts in your journal:

What explanation did Joseph give his brothers for his unexpected mercy and forgiveness?

How does this scene prefigure the role Christ took on for all of us?

How has your response been similar to that of the brothers? How has it been different?

Week 46: Read Genesis 46 and answer some or all of these questions in your journal.

What promise did Joseph make to his family when they moved to Egypt?

From your knowledge of what comes next in the Bible, how did this all work out?

Consider a time when God led you and/or your loved ones forward into the unknown, and then things seemed to go wrong.  What happened?  Why, do you think?  Where was God in all of that?

Week 47: Read Genesis 47 and consider some or all of these prompts in your journal:

Summarize the events of this chapter.

In some circles, the “Land of Goshen” is a favorite saying.  What do you think is meant by that?

What/where is your personal “Land of Goshen”? How so, and why?

Week 48: Read chapter 48 in Genesis. Answer some or all of the following questions in your journal.

What other stories from the family’s past does this story remind you of?

Why do you think Jacob/Israel did this?

How does this story relate to Jesus’ pronouncement that “the first shall be last and the last first”?

 

Faithful Journaling: Genesis 40-44

Please continue your journey through Genesis this month!

Week 40: Read Genesis 40 and write about some or all of these prompts in your journal:

Summarize the events of this chapter.  How do you think Joseph’s interpretation of the dreams will affect his life?

Do you set much store by the meanings of dreams? Why or why not?

Tell about the most recent dream you can recall. Look at it with an eye for messages from God. What do you see?

Week 41: Read chapter 41 and consider some or all of these questions:

How did Joseph’s imprisonment in Egypt prepare him for this moment?

What happened to Joseph because of his interpretation of Pharaoh’s dreams? How did that turn out?

It’s easy to see God’s hand in events that we read about or learn about, but it’s much more difficult to tell when these things are happening to us right now. What events in your life do you believe that God will use? How do you think they might be used?

Week 42: Read Genesis 42 and share your thoughts about these questions in your journal:

Looking back, why do you think God arranged for Joseph to be taken to Egypt? What role did his brothers play in the plan?

Describe how Joseph must have felt when he recognized his brothers coming to him for help. What were his choices of responses? Why did he choose as he did?

Why do you think Joseph made the request for the brothers to bring the youngest brother back with them?

Have you ever been in a situation where you had choices about your response? How do you decide what to do?

Week 43: Read chapter 43 and consider the following questions in your journal.

Why did Jacob send the brothers back to Egypt if he was so worried about their safety?  Have you ever taken risks to take care of your family? In what ways?

Why do you think Joseph did not immediately make himself known to his brothers on their second trip?

How did Joseph treat his brothers when they arrived?

Week 44: Read Genesis 44 and consider some or all of the following questions in your journal:

What happened in this chapter? Why?

How did Joseph react? Why do you believe he would do this?

It seems like an elaborate charade. Joseph went to great lengths not only to conceal his identity, but also to bring his brothers back. When have you hatched a scheme to accomplish a goal? How did it turn out? Why?

 

Faithful Journaling: Genesis 36-39

And another set of things to ponder in your journal:

Week 36: Read Genesis chapter 36 and consider these questions:

This chapter is mostly made up of lists. What else is in here?

Use a map and locate the land of Edom. What is there today? What is the significance of this area in present-day politics?

How are the Edomites represented in God’s Promised Land? Why do you think God included this chapter in Genesis?

Week 37: Read Genesis 37 and respond to this questions in your journal as you feel led.

How did Jacob’s feelings toward Joseph affect the young man’s life and development?  Was this a good or a bad thing? Or both?

Why were Joseph’s brothers so hostile towards him? What did they do?

When have you attempted to cover up a wrong in the way that Joseph’s brothers did? How did that turn out? How did it make you feel?

Week 38: Read Genesis 38. Answer the questions.

Explain this tangled story in your own words. What happened, to whom, and why?

What do you see to be the main wrong in this story? How so?

Why would it have been important to know which twin came out first? What can you discover about Perez and his actions later in Scripture?

Week 39: Read Genesis 39. Consider these questions in your journal:

What kind of life did Joseph end up having in Egypt as a slave?

How did Joseph respond to Potiphar’s wife’s advances? Why? What happened?

When have you been in a situation where doing the right thing ended up causing you a lot of grief? What happened? What was the final outcome? Was it “worth it”?

Faithful Journaling: Genesis 32-35

Keep going! Journaling through Genesis will strengthen your foundation.

Week 32: Read Genesis 32, then consider some or all of these questions in your journal:

Why was Jacob so worried when Esau was coming to meet him with 400 men?  When have you been concerned about the reception you would meet with a certain person? Why? What happened?

Why did God choose this moment to wrestle with Jacob? Has God ever given you a message in a similar way?

Why did God change Jacob’s name to Israel? What kind of a change in your life would be so significant as to cause a name change for you?

Week 33: Read Genesis 33 and answer the questions that speak to you.

Why did Jacob send his flocks, herds, and family ahead to meet Esau? What does this say about him?

Why did Jacob fail to follow through on his promise to follow Esau to his home? What does this say about him?

All in all, how does Jacob stack up as an example of a “man of God”? What does this say about God’s choices and about your service?

Week 34: Read Genesis 34 and continue answering questions in your journal.

Summarize the events of this chapter. Did you notice that there is no mention of God? Why do you think that is?

Why would intermarriage with the Canaanites be such a problem for Jacob’s family?

In what way did Jacob’s sons show that they were very much like their father?

What traits have you “inherited” from someone close to you that you would like to excise from your life? How can you manage this?

Week 35: Read Genesis 35 and respond to any or all of these questions in your journal.

Jacob and his family have now come full circle and are back in the land where they came from. What full circles have you made in your life? What was gained from them?

Rachel’s loss must have been heavy for Jacob, since she was the favored wife.  What loss in your life has affected you the most, and in what way?

In retrospect, we can see that God was preparing Jacob’s family to become the nation of Israel. Looking at your own life and God’s movements within it, what do you believe God is preparing you to become?

Faithful Journaling: Genesis 27-31

Ready to continue with your reading and journaling in Genesis? Here are some questions to consider.

Week 27: Read Genesis 27 and answer the questions that speak to you in your journal.

This story is a great example of conniving by humans to influence events in God’s plan.  Was it successful?  What were the outcome(s) of Jacob and Rebekah’s plotting?

In what way did God influence the events in this story? To what end?

How have you seen the plans of manipulating people affect what you perceive to be God’s plan? Can God’s plan be thwarted?

 

Week 28: Read the words of Genesis 28 and then respond to these questions as you feel led.

Why was Esau so set on displeasing his father? When have your (or someone in your life) done something that was probably not the best choice for the sole purpose of getting even with someone else?

What relation did Jacob’s dream at Bethel have to previous events in this family? What similarities do you see? What differences?

When have you made a covenant with God similar to the one that Jacob made after his dream? Have you kept up your end? Has God kept his end? Why or why not?

Week 29: Read Genesis 29 and consider the following questions in light of what you have read.

What happened when Jacob agreed to work 7 years for Laban in exchange for Rachel? Why?

Why do you think that God gave Leah children but not Rachel?  What was the impact of this situation?

What parallels do you see between Rachel and Leah’s story and that of Jacob and Esau?  Why do you think this story became a part of our Scriptures? What are we to learn?

Week 30: Read and think about Genesis chapter 30, then answer some or all of these questions.

This chapter tells the story of the beginnings of Jacob’s family. Why does God allow/cause things to turn out in this way?

Why did Jacob follow a superstition about the coloring of the sheep?  Why did God intervene to allow it to work? Can you think of other stories in Scripture where God has intervened in natural processes to make a point or accomplish a goal?

What would be your prediction about Jacob’s continuing relationship with Laban? Why?

Week 31: Read Genesis 31, and then consider the following questions in your journal:

Why did Rachel steal her father’s household gods in verse 19?  What was God’s instruction on the matter? What was the outcome of this action?

These past few chapters have given us a clear picture of the kind of people that were a part of this family. What do you think? How can God choose and use such flawed individuals?

How has God chosen and used you in these past few months? What was the outcome?

Faithful Journaling: Genesis 23-26

Here are some guiding questions as you continue to read a chapter a week in Genesis and writing about your experience in your journal.

 

Week 23: Read Genesis 23 and answer the questions that speak to you in your journal.

Abraham has been hit by one of the most profound griefs that people can suffer-the loss of his life-long spouse. Why do you think, in this difficult time, that he is so set on burying Sarah in this particular place? Commentaries say that the Hittite was cheating him in this deal. Why was it so important to him to bury her in this land?

Have you faced a profound grief such as Abraham’s?  If so, how has God upheld you through the difficult time? If not, what other difficulty has God made easier for you and in what ways?

Abraham’s faith in God’s promise to give the land to his descendants shines through in this chapter. What promise of God are you clinging to in your life? What actions have you taken because of that promise?

Week 24: Read Genesis 24 and consider some or all of the following questions in your journal.

What do you think of the servant’s request to God in vv. 12-14? In your view, is it OK to ask God for signs such as this one?  There are other examples of this in Scripture.  Can you find them?  Have you ever done this?  What was the outcome?

When have you seen God’s hand at work in your life in these past few weeks in the same profound way that God provided a wife for Isaac?

Isaac took comfort in Rebekah though he was still grieving for his mother. Who in your life can give you that kind of comfort? Who can you give that kind of comfort to?

Week 25: Read Genesis 25 and answer some or all of the following questions in your journal.

Once again, in the births of Jacob and Esau, we see God separating out the line of His chosen people and creating other groups. Why do you thing He might be doing this?

Consider the story of Esau, Jacob, and the stew. What actually happened there? What does the entire incident tell you about Esau? About Jacob?

How does the transfer of the birthright affect the two men legally? Recall the prophecy made at their birth.  How does the incident change things in the eyes of God?

Week 26: Read Genesis 26, and then consider some or all of these questions in your journal.

Why does the story in vv. 7-9 sound familiar? How is this episode similar and different than the ones before it?

Why did Abimelech send Isaac and his family away? Why did he later want to make a treaty with Isaac?  When have you noticed this type of response from someone who became aware of your relationship with God?

Esau chose to marry outside of God’s people. How did this impact Isaac and Rebekah? Have you been a part of any “unequal” marriage situation or close to one? What was/is that like? Do you believe that Christians should only marry other Christians? Why or why not?

 

 

Faithful Journaling: Genesis 10-13

Welcome back!  I hope you’ve been keeping up with reading and journaling about Genesis this past month.  Here are the next few chapters and questions to get you thinking this month!

Tenth Week: Read Genesis 10. Answer some or all of these questions in your journal.

  • This is an account of how the world was repopulated after the flood.  Scholars believe these nations lived around the Middle East and Southeastern Asia, even up to the Black Sea and over to Greece. Can you see the beginnings of groups of people or nations that later stood against God’s Chosen People? How about connections to nations in existence today?  How can you connect this to God’s plan for our world?
  • God’s chosen people descended through Noah’s son Shem. These “Shemites” were later called “Semites.” The name “Eber” is said to be the origin of the word “Hebrew.” How does it make you feel to think that even in this dimly-remembered time, God was arranging and planning for Christ’s birth and His Church?
  • Do you believe all people came from one of these three groups?  Many other cultures have a Flood story similar to the one found in the Bible. Even the Islamic account of the story, found in the Quran, seems to be about the same people but has different details.  For example, Noah left his wife and one son off of the boat in that version, because of wickedness.  How do you account for the variances?

Eleventh Week: Read Genesis 11. Consider any or all of these questions in your journal:

  • What was the sin of the people on the Plain of Shinar?  How have you committed this same sin?  What will you do to change?
  • One way to interpret this story is that efforts to usurp God’s rightful place will be stopped.  Where have you seen this in recent history (either your own or society’s)?
  • What strikes you as interesting about Abram’s grandparents and extended family? Why?

Twelfth Week: Read Genesis 12. Answer some or all of these questions in your journal.

  • God’s promise to Abram (12:2-3) has seven parts. Which part or parts can you claim today?
  • When God called, Abram dropped what he was doing and responded. What is God calling you to do right now, and what do you need to “drop” to respond?
  • How did Abram’s deception in Egypt turn out?  Why might God have allowed him to benefit from this?

Thirteenth Week: Read Genesis 13. Consider these questions in your journal:

  • What caused the disagreement between Lot and Abram? Have you ever had a similar dilemma? What did you do?
  • Lot chose the better land. What did Abram do? Whose example would you recommend to people and why?
  • Look at a map from this time period and compare it to a map of the area today. Can you figure out what area God gave to Abram? What bearing does this have on political situations in the area today?

Watch for the next installment in this study on the first Sunday in April (April 3).

Faithful Journaling: Genesis 6-9

How did it go last month?  I hope you’re enjoying this slow, low-key journey through Genesis.  Here’s the next installment:

Sixth Week: Read Genesis 6.  Here are some prompts to consider for your journal (do any, all or none!):

  • What do you think was going on in the world in the beginning of chapter 6 that grieved God so?  How are things similar today? How are they different?
  • What do you believe Noah did to find such favor with God?  What changes will you make in your life to find similar favor?
  • Describe how Noah must have felt to know he was chosen for such a job.  What work is God choosing you to do?  How will you respond?

Seventh Week: Read Genesis 7.  Consider these prompts for your journal:

  • What surprises you about this account? Did you discover anything you didn’t already know?
  • Many cultures around the world have a Flood story similar to this one.  The names of the main characters vary, as do the number of people selected for salvation.  Why do you believe this is so?
  • God saved His natural world for a reason. What will you do this week to show your appreciation of the many gifts He blesses you with?

Eighth Week: Read Genesis 8.  Give some thought to these questions in your journal:

  • There have been several incidents where archaeologists believed they had found physical remains of the Ark.  What difference would it make in your life (if any) if this turned out to be the case?  Why?
  • Describe Noah’s response when God dried the Earth and released them all from the Ark.  How did he show his gratitude?  How will you show your gratitude this coming week for God’s salvation in your life?
  • What does God’s promise in verse 22 mean to you?  Write a prayer of thanksgiving for this promise.

Ninth Week: Read Genesis 9.  Respond to these prompts in your journal:

  • What rainbows does God place into your life?  How do you respond?
  • In this chapter, God restates man’s dominion over the animals and plants.  How does this relate to stewardship and ecology?
  • Some find the end of this chapter to be troubling.  How do you feel about it?  Why is this story included?  What warning or admonition can you take away from it?

Watch for the next installment on the first Sunday of March!

Journaling From Sermons

Any good pastor or preacher is trying to inspire you to take action through his or her sermon.  In order for that to happen, you have to take in the message, ponder it, and then come up with a way to act upon it.  However, many of us let the Sunday sermon go in one ear and out of the other, so to speak.

Oh, don’t get me wrong-we have the best of intentions.  We hear the message and think, “This is exactly what I needed to hear today!”  We think about the impact that the sermon will have on our lives in those few moments.  And then we head home to our daily routines, and the important message is too soon forgotten.

One way that you can keep your focus on how that sermon spoke to you is to journal about it in the week following the church service.  I’ve designed a series of prompts that you could use each week, one for each day following the service.  I intentionally did not attach weekday names to them, since I realize that not everyone hears sermons on Sunday.  Just pick right up with the beginning of the series each time you listen to a sermon, and see what happens.  Try them out, and let me know what you think!

  • The day you hear the sermon: Begin by summarizing the message that you heard.  Write it down clearly and in your own words.  Now, write a prayer asking for help to apply these truths into your life in the next few days.
  • Day 2: What Scripture passages did the pastor refer to in the sermon?  Or, if you prefer, what Scripture passages does this sermon bring to mind for you?  Note the Biblical reference and read them.  What thoughts come into your mind based on these verses?  How do they connect with or support the sermon you heard yesterday?
  • Day 3: All good sermons include some kind of a call to action.  What was the call to action in the sermon you heard the other day?  In what way does it apply to you?  What aspect of your behavior, your spiritual life, your relationships, or other part of your life will you change as a result of hearing this sermon? What can you do differently right now?
  • Day 4: What did you do differently today than yesterday as a result of hearing the sermon this week?  What difference did that change make?  Will you continue in this new direction tomorrow?  Why or why not?  Write a prayer asking for God’s guidance in this matter.
  • Day 5: What will it take to make this new change a habit in your daily life?  What steps can you take today to make this change permanent?
  • Day 6: Looking back, how have you truly grown from hearing the sermon last week?  What has changed?  Find a Scripture verse that will remind you of what you have been called to do and write it in your journal.  You can also put it on a card or note and post it somewhere that you see regularly.  Set a date to look back to examine your routines and discover if this change that you have implemented truly was permanent.

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Don’t forget that we are journaling our way through Genesis, and the next installment will be posted on Sunday, January 31, 2016.  You’ll want to become a member of the group to get the prompts, so sign up today at Journaling Through the Bible.  It’s free, private and completely personal.  There’s an optional group for sharing the things you feel comfortable with, but absolutely no pressure.  Enjoy!

 

Faithful Journaling: Genesis 1-5

Join me as I read through the Bible, one chapter at a time! Let’s see just how far we can go. On the first Sunday of the month, I’ll try to post a chapter-by-chapter guide, and all you’ll need to do is read one chapter each week. Let’s see how long we can keep it up together.
Let’s start with Genesis. There are five Sundays in January, so we’ll think about five chapters this month. Now, don’t worry if you didn’t start right on January 3rd; you can join us at any time!

First week: Read Genesis 1. Consider these prompts for your journal (do any, all or none!):

  • Why did God create in the order that He did?
  • Which day of Creation was the most important?
  • How does it make you feel to know that God “saw that it was very good”?

Second Week: Read Genesis 2. Consider these prompts for your journal:

  • Describe Eden in your own words. Is there any place on earth today that comes close?
  • How is the story of Adam and Eve’s creation related to marriage? Have you found this to be true in your own life?
  • What would the world be like today if God still walked among us? How would that change your life and/or the lives of those around you?

Third Week: Read Genesis 3. Consider these prompts for your journal:

  • Was there any way God could have prevented this event? Was there any way Eve could have? Adam? What would have changed if any of the three had responded differently?
  • What do you think would have been the most shocking change for Adam and Eve after God decreed their punishment?
  • Are you closer or farther away from the Garden of Eden than Adam and Eve were at the end of this chapter? How so and why?

Fourth Week: Read Genesis 4. Consider these prompts for your journal:

  • Why did God find Abel’s sacrifice pleasing but not Cain’s?
  • How have you responded like Cain when God showed you an error in your thinking?
  • In what ways did Adam’s family follow God? In what ways did they stray? In what ways are you following God? In what ways are you straying?

Fifth Week: Read Genesis 5. Consider these prompts for your journal:

  • What do you believe is the purpose of including this genealogy? What message does it have for you today?
  • What is the difference between the reference about Enoch and those of the other people listed? Why is this important? How does it affect your life today?
  • What do you make of the extremely long lifespans listed? Are they intended to be taken literally, simply literary devices, or is there a meaning hidden in the numbers? Why do you think so?

Did you enjoy this set of journaling prompts to guide you through regular Bible readings?  New sets are posted on the first Sunday of each month.   Get access to the complete set of journal prompts that have been written to date by clicking the link below:

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