Pray On and Pray Through – Luke 11:5-13

In the parable of the Friend at Night, Jesus shares a scene from everyday life – something like borrowing a cup of sugar from the neighbor. Maybe it’s not something we do today, but it was common practice when I was sent to get that cup of sugar and it was common in Jesus’ time.

The story is not about the grumpy neighbor, the late arriving house guest, or the bread – the story is about someone in need who is willing to ask for help. And he doesn’t just ask once, but is persistent until he gets what he needs.

God will supply our needs according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus. (Philippians 4:19) However, God waits for us to ask for help and He wants us to ask. Before Jesus teaches his disciples to pray He affirms that God knows what you need before you ask him. (Matthew 6:8) He then goes on to teach them how to ask God for all they need in life.

He will meet our needs, but we have to ask and keep on asking. We have to seek and keep on seeking. We have to knock and keep on knocking knowing that He will open the door and pour out His provision to meet our needs. May we trust Him for all we need. He’s waiting for you to ask.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, February 4, 2024. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is Jesus Storyteller: Timeless Truths from His Parables. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at: https://gc2press.org/jesus-storyteller-luke-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

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Like a Good Neighbor – Luke 10:25-37

Some of the parables which Jesus told were in response to a particular question. The Parable of the Good Samaritan is just that. A lawyer, one trained and very knowledgeable in the Torah asked Jesus a question. The question could have been a “gotcha question” or it could have been born of a sincere search for clarification on the law. Either way, Jesus answered with a straight forward response and, when pressed further by the lawyer, shared this parable.

Within the ruling ranks of the Hebrew nation, there was an insistence on following the Law as handed down to Moses and as further clarified by those who studied the Law. Their whole focus was on “getting it right.” So questions like “What is the greatest commandment?” would have been common in their discussions concerning the Law.

However, Jesus uses the Law itself to take this lawyer beyond the Law of the Torah and into the world of Kingdom Law – the true Law He wanted to usher in. Jesus tells us in Matthew 5:17 that He didn’t come into the world to abolish the Law, but that through Him it might be fulfilled. The Law was given to show us our sin, but Christ came to fulfill the law and its requirements so that we could be free to live as He commands us. (Galatians 3:18-27)

The lawyer’s final response to Jesus was that the true neighbor was the one who didn’t stand idly by as the man died. Jesus’ final word to the lawyer now comes to us – “Go and do likewise.”

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, January 28, 2024. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is Jesus Storyteller: Timeless Truths from His Parables. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at: https://gc2press.org/jesus-storyteller-luke-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

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How to Cultivate a Teachable Heart – Luke 8:4-15

When you want to get a point across to a group of farmers and/or gardeners you need to be conversant in the various aspects of planting, growing, and harvesting. You might be able talk with them and even persuade them that what you’re saying is true without such knowledge, but if you can drive the point home within the context of what they know – in other words, speak their language – you can be successful in communicating with them in a way that goes far beyond just talk.

In Jesus’ day, everyone knew about planting, growing, and harvesting. So he tells them the Parable of the Sower. The point of the story is that the Kingdom of God will be open to some, but will be hidden from others. It’s not that God deliberately hides something from them, but that they won’t see what is staring them in the face. He offers them the truth of the gospel, but their hearts are hardened, their hearts are shallow, their hearts are crowded with the influences of the world.

As we look at this parable it is my hope that we would see the need to cultivate the soil of our friends’ and neighbors’ hearts so that they will be receptive to the Word of God when it is cast into their lives.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, January 21, 2024. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is Jesus Storyteller: Timeless Truths from His Parables. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at: https://gc2press.org/jesus-storyteller-luke-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

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How to Build a Storm-Proof Life – Luke 6:46-49

In the 6th Chapter of Luke’s Gospel we find the parable of the wise man who built his house on the rock. Jesus begins by separating the wise from the foolish by saying that the wise do what He says and the foolish don’t. Then He uses the parable to bring it home.

There is a focus on the foundation laid by the wise and the foolish builders. One lays his foundation on the rock; the other lays no foundation at all. As we read Luke 6 in The Message we see the bottom-line of what Jesus is saying:

“Why are you so polite with me, always saying ‘Yes, sir,’ and ‘That’s right, sir,’ but never doing a thing I tell you? These words I speak to you are not mere additions to your life, homeowner improvements to your standard of living. They are foundation words, words to build a life on. (Luke 6:46-47 MSG)

So the question to us as followers of Jesus is simple. If we claim Jesus to be our Lord, then we need to build our lives on Him as the foundation using the words He has taught us for the framework and finishing work.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, January 14, 2024. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is Jesus Storyteller: Timeless Truths from His Parables. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at: https://gc2press.org/jesus-storyteller-luke-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

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Parties, Patches, and Wineskins


Parties, Patches, and Wineskins – Luke 5:33-39

Today we began our study of the parables of Jesus as found in Luke’s Gospel.  Parables are short stories about everyday life that Jesus used to teach about eternal concepts.  In Luke 5 we have a brief look at the attitudes displayed during the Jewish wedding celebration as Jesus taught us about the joy we should experience when the bridegroom is in the house.  Then Jesus uses the the patching of old garments with pieces of fabric from new garments as well as the pouring of new wine into old wineskins to help us see the importance of embracing the new while leaving behind the old.  

We have laid aside the old self with its evil practices, and have put on the new self who is being renewed to a true knowledge according to the image of the One who created him.  (Colossians 3:9-10)   If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold,
all things have become new.  (2 Corinthians 5:17)      We were buried with Him through baptism into death, that just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life!  (Romans 6:4)

Instead of recognizing that we are totally new people in Christ, we try to fit Jesus stuff into our old lives.  We try to look at our old lives through Biblical glasses and make our old lives work with a fresh perspective.  We must learn to walk in NEWNESS OF LIFE.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, January 7, 2024. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is Jesus Storyteller: Timeless Truths from His Parables. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at: https://gc2press.org/jesus-storyteller-luke-study-guide/ .
Handouts with slide content can be requested at:
fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com .
Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .


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Of Shepherds and Joy – The 3rd Sunday of Advent

Advent is that time of year when we look forward to Christmas – as we remember and look forward to the coming of Mashiach – the Messiah – Christ, the Lord. This week we lit our third candle in our Advent Wreath – the Shepherd’s Candle of Joy.

The shepherds who received the announcement concerning the new born king, the Messiah, the Savior have long been thought of as those shunned by society and outcasts. This may or may not be true, but the Bible doesn’t say that. A look at shepherds in the Bible allows us to see an honorable profession that was actually central to the heart of the Jewish faith. From Moses to David to even Jesus Himself (John 10) the role of the shepherd was and is exalted. They were no doubt poor and, as such, were no doubt looked down on by the elites of society, but they were just simple working folks.

And on that night in the fields outside of Bethlehem they were just doing their job when their quiet world came to life with a message of joy and hope. They went to see the child and then went back to work. As they returned to work, they praised God and shared the story of all they had witnessed. People were amazed at their tale of angels and babies and the new born king.

As we go to work today, may we take another look at the infant king, marvel anew, and then tell the folks we meet on the way to work and at work what we have seen – what we have experienced through the saving grace of Jesus.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, December 10, 2023. It is part of an Advent series of lessons that will run through Sunday, December 17, 2023.

Handouts with slide content can be requested at
fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com .
Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

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The Road to Bethlehem – The 2nd Sunday of Advent


Advent is that time of year when we look forward to Christmas – as we remember and look forward to the coming of Mashiach – the Messiah – Christ, the Lord. This week we lit our second candle in our Advent Wreath – the Bethlehem Candle of Faith.

When the wise men came into Judea they went to Herod, the King, figuring that he would no doubt have all of the up-to-date information on the new king they were looking for. Herod’s scriptural advisors rightly told Herod that Bethlehem was the place where the Messiah King was to be born because it was prophesied in the 5th chapter of the prophet Micah. The little town of Bethlehem has always been a defining proof of the Messiah. He would come from the line of David and would be born in Bethlehem. Yeshua – Jesus – did have the ancestral link to David and was, indeed, born in Bethlehem.

After exploring this facet of the Nativity Narrative (and after answering a few questions about whether or not there was a donkey in the story as well as what type of place Jesus was actually born in – hint – it wasn’t a barn, a cave, or a stable) we went on to explore the significance of small things in God’s economy. Micah 5:2 says “But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah, Though you are little among the thousands of Judah, Yet out of you shall come forth to Me The One to be Ruler in Israel, Whose goings forth are from of old, From everlasting.” (NKJ) At the time Bethlehem probably had a population of about 500-1,500 people – a small town even by today’s standards. Yet, in this small town we find the biggest event in human history – the birth of God!


God specializes in using small things to accomplish big things. Think about the rod that Moses used. It was an insignificant shepherd’s tool that was used to do miraculous things. How about the jawbone of a donkey that Samson used to slay 1,000 Philistines? Or five fish and few pieces of bread that were used to feed 5,000? And don’t forget the slingshot and that smooth river stone that David used to take down the arrogant Goliath. Small things used by God to accomplish big things.

And so it continues today. Even our small faith, if it be only the size of a mustard seed, can move mountains because when that small faith meets up with God’s omnipotence, big things happen.

O little town of Bethlehem – teach us that when we are weak it is then that we are strong, because the strength of God shows up best when we are week, when we are small, and even when we feel small.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, December 3, 2023. It is part of an Advent series of lessons that will run through Sunday, December 17, 2023.

Handouts with slide content can be requested at:
fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com .
Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

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The Hope of Prophecy – 1st Sunday of Advent


Advent is that time of year when we look forward to Christmas – as we remember and look forward to the coming of Mashiach – the Messiah – Christ, the Lord. This Sunday we lit our first candle in our Advent Wreath – the Candle of Prophecy and Hope.

In the Old Testament the people who walked in darkness were looking ahead to a great light – one who come to deliver them from their darkness and their oppression – one who would restore God’s Kingdom. There are many prophecies in the Old Testament concerning the Messiah; over 300 in fact. The fact that one man could fulfill all of the prophecies is mind-blowing. It is statistically impossible and yet He did. We looked at a few of them and then discussed what the coming of the Messiah would have meant to the Jewish people in Jesus’ time.

Isaiah 53 is known as The Forbidden Chapter in many Christian groups. In it we find “the Suffering Servant.” Messianic scriptures point to a victorious King who would restore the Kingdom of God and throw off the oppression of conquering nations. The followers of Jesus, as well as many Jewish scholars of the day, saw and proclaimed Isaiah 53 as describing the Messiah with the Christ followers seeing it as clearly pointing to Jesus. Jewish leaders responded to the focus on Jesus by asserting that that the “suffering servant” was the nation of Israel. And so it continues today. As we looked at the chapter in class we saw Jesus throughout. He is the Messiah and He is the Suffering Servant.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, November 26, 2023. It is part of an Advent series of lessons that will run through Sunday, December 7, 2023.

Handouts with slide content can be requested at:
fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com .
Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

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What You Say and What You Do – James 5:12-10

At the end of the book of James we find some timely advice on what we say and what we do in relation to our brothers and sisters in Christ as well as on what we say and do in prayer.

Verse 12 speaks to our integrity in what we say. We shouldn’t have to swear to something or take an oath to support what we say or to prove that our word is good. Our word should stand on its own. Our word should be as good as gold. Our yes should be yes and our no should be no.

In prayer we should submit to God. James has already told us why we don’t get what we pray for in James 4:3. But it goes deeper. Praying for healing is something the church must do. Prayer offered in faith will bring healing. The prayer of faith offered up by the righteous is powerful – as powerful as that of Elijah the prophet.

Finally, in loving our fellow believers, we must be mindful of those who are struggling in their faith. As we read in Galatians 6 we who spiritual are to assist those who have wandered from the faith, remembering that next time it might be us who will be in need of assistance.

This Bible study was presented to the Agape Life Bible Study Class of the First Baptist Church in Brenham, Texas, on Sunday, November 19, 2023. It is part of a series in a Bible study curriculum called Connect 360, published by the GC2 Press of the Baptist General Convention of Texas. The overall title of the current set of lessons is The Making of Authentic Faith. You can find printed and digital versions of this series online at: gc2press.org/the-making-of-authentic-faith-james-study-guide/ .

Handouts with slide content can be requested at: fromthebackporchintexas@gmail.com . Handouts are also available at: fromthebackporch.org .

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