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CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
CrossWay Community Church
1442 episodes
23 hours ago
CrossWay exists to glorify God through the transformation of lives by the power of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Our hope is that all people find their satisfaction in God alone.
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Religion & Spirituality
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CrossWay exists to glorify God through the transformation of lives by the power of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Our hope is that all people find their satisfaction in God alone.
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Religion & Spirituality
Episodes (20/1442)
CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
"Blessed is the King Who Comes in the Name of the Lord!"

Discussion Questions:


Sermon Overview 

Receive Jesus as the king who restores peace with God for all creation.


Digging Deeper   

Read Luke 19:28-48


1. What role does waiting have in your life currently as a follower of Jesus? What role should it have? What does it look like to wait well?


2. It was Jesus’ intention to communicate clearly that he is the long-awaited King. What are some of the things Jesus does in this passage to communicate that?   


3. In vv. 28-40, we see the first truth from this passage: “Jesus is the King who will restore peace to all creation.” What does that mean?  


4. In what way is all creation in need of being restored to peace? 


5. In vv. 41-44 we see the second truth of this text: “Our reception of peace depends on our reception of the King.” Do you believe this to be true? Why or why not? 


6. What are some things you can be tempted to think will “make for peace” in your life (e.g., a raise at work, less conflict at home, etc.)? 


7. Why don’t (can’t) these things ultimately bring the peace we long for? 


8. There is one way for us to be reconciled to God, namely by receiving the King (Jesus) who came to bring peace. Who is someone in your life who has not yet received Jesus as King? What would be a good next step for you as you seek to be used by God in his or her life? 


9. How can we, as a Gospel Community, help each other grow in boldness and faithful witness for our King? 


10. The third truth we saw from this passage (in vv. 45-49) was that “The primary peace he restores is peace with God.” Jesus has brought this about through his death. Why was it necessary for Jesus to die in order to restore peace between God and man? What did his death accomplish that made peace with God possible? 


11. Peace comes to those who receive Jesus as King by submitting to him and surrendering their lives to him. Why is this necessary?  


12. How might the peace we have with God through faith in Christ effect other parts of your life?


Prayer

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23 hours ago
38 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
Serving the King to Share in His Rule

Discussion Questions:


Sermon Overview 

As you wait for Jesus, live as a faithful steward and you will reign with him forever


Digging Deeper    

Read Luke 19:11-27


1. How does verse 11 help us understand what Jesus wants to teach through the parable in v. 12ff? 


2. Luke 19:12 says, He said therefore, “A nobleman went into a far country to receive for himself a kingdom and then return.”  Who should we understand the nobleman to be?  What is the far country?  What is the return? 


3. What can we learn from this parable about the person of Christ? 


4. What does it look like for you to “engage in business until (Christ) comes (again)” (v. 13)? 


5. How would you rate your stewardship of the following things God has entrusted you with: relationships, spiritual gifts, and money?


6. What are you stewarding well? How?


7. What could you grow in stewarding? How?


8. How can we help each other be more focussed on and more eager for the return of Christ?   


9. God promises eternal rewards for faithful stewardship. How can eternal rewards help us live a life of loyalty and obedience to God?


10. In the parable, the third servant did nothing with what was entrusted to him, because he was afraid of the nobleman (v.20-21).  Our perception of God, his character, and his posture toward us will inevitably affect the choices we make. Have you seen this to be true in your own life (either in a positive or negative way)?  Please share.  



 Prayer


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1 week ago
37 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
The Reason for Christmas

Discussion Questions: On break until January

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2 weeks ago
40 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
The God Who Comforts with His Coming

Discussion Questions: On break until January 2026

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3 weeks ago
38 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
A King Who Will Rule with Righteousness

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

Hope in the King whose righteous rule will produce perfect peace.


I. His qualification is unquestionable (vv. 1-3a)

II. His rule will be righteous (vv. 3b-5)

III. His peace will be perfect (vv. 6-9)

IV. His majesty will be magnetic (v. 10)


Digging Deeper    

Read Isaiah 11:1-10


1. What injustices in our world make you wish for peace? What does the coming of Jesus have to say about this?


2. When you want peace, who or what do you look to?


3. In the sermon, a distinction was made between what delights human rulers and what delights our King, Jesus. What is different about what Jesus desires from us, versus what earthly leaders and rulers often desire? (see Isa. 1:23)


4. What would it look like to grow in delighting in God, fearing him in a way that longs to honor him?


5. This sermon focused on the kind of righteous rule that Jesus, this promised King, will have. What do you most look forward to about his promised rule?


6. In Jesus’s righteous rule, he will enact justice always. As was said in the sermon, if this is our king, we had better live like him. How can we obey this call in our daily lives?


7. Reread Isaiah 11:6-9, which gives us a picture of what eternity with the Prince of Peace will be like. Which of these particular pictures of peace do you long for? Why does your heart long for this?


8. To get another picture of the peace which comes in eternity, read Revelation 22:1-5. What do these verses mean to you, and how can we start to live out this peace now between one another?


9. “When the King came the first time, it wasn’t to judge, but to save.” How did Jesus fulfill this purpose in his life on earth? What will be different about his second coming?


10. It can feel counterintuitive to consider this majestic, righteous, peacemaking king when Christmas is supposed to be about baby Jesus lying in the manger. Why do you think there is goodness in thinking this way about Jesus at Christmastime?


 Prayer


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4 weeks ago
36 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
2025 Women's Christmas Brunch
4 weeks ago
24 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
A Child Who Will Make Peace

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

Our hope for endless peace rests on a child who will reign forever.


I. The future for God's people is a dawn that drives out darkness (vv. 1-3)

II. This dawn will mean the end of enslaving enemies (vv. 4-5)

III. God will make this endless peace through a child who will reign forever (vv. 6-7)


Digging Deeper    

Read Isaiah 9:1-7


1. “To be in darkness is to seem to be abandoned by God.” By a show of hands, have you ever or do you now feel this way? Share more if you’re comfortable. 


2. “The first coming of Jesus was the beginning of the end of the darkness of the world.” How have you experienced this line from the sermon? How has darkness begun to end? How is it still present? Think in terms of the world and your own life.


3. Anticipating that Christ has come and is coming again should lead to hope and joy. How might we help one another be more intentional about giving thought to Christ’s first and second coming?   


4. Do you see spiritual enemies (like sin, demons, the fear of death) as your greatest enemies? Why or why not?


5. How did Jesus’ death on the cross defeat our spiritual enemies?


6. Reread Isaiah 9:6, especially the end. Which of the four descriptors of Jesus catches your attention? Why?


7. What is a takeaway (s) for us from the fact that roughly 700 years prior to the birth of Jesus, Isaiah so clearly and so specifically foretold his coming?


8. Where do you long for peace in your life? With God? With yourself? With others?

 

9. There are many aspects to the peace Jesus came to bring for his people (e.g. - peace with God, peace among ourselves, peace within ourselves, etc.). Are there any aspects of the peace he brings that you have perhaps not appreciated as much as you should? Why might that be?  How might we grow in gratefulness for all that Christ came to do for us?    


10. Read Isaiah 53:5 “But he was pierced for our transgressions; he was crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace, and with his wounds we are healed.”  How has Jesus brought us peace through his death?  How might we use this verse to share the gospel with someone this Advent season?  


 Prayer


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1 month ago
44 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
Entering the Kingdom

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

Those who enter the kingdom depend on Jesus completely and treasure him supremely.


I. Who enters: those who depend on Jesus completely (vv. 15-17)

II. Who enters: those who treasure Jesus supremely (vv. 18-30)

III. How Jesus makes entry possible: suffering in our place (vv. 31-34)

IV. How entry looks: dependent faith produces joyful following (vv. 35-43)


Digging Deeper    

Read Luke 18:15-43


1. Jesus exhorts us to receive the kingdom of God like a child, in complete dependence. How does this help us in entering his kingdom? 


2. What’s the opposite of being like a child in approaching God? How could/does this show up in your life?


3. Wealth isn’t evil, but it is a danger. How is wealth a powerful rival to God?


4. Where do you struggle when thinking about money? Greed? Discontentment? Jealousy? Overreliance on it for security? What might you do or change to grow in this area?



5. Those who follow Jesus give up much now, but also receive much now. If you follow Jesus, what good things have you already experienced because you are a part of God’s kingdom now?


6. It was asked in the sermon, “Do you see Jesus’s love?” What does it mean to see His love, and how does it help us enter his kingdom?       



7. The blind man at the end of the passage is a picture of the one who enters the kingdom. How do we live our lives marked by the kind of joyful following that the blind man exhibits upon being healed?


 

8. What is one specific thing that keeps you from entering the kingdom? Self-righteousness? Pride? Wealth that consumes your life? How do you flee from it? 


9. How can we live in such a way that witnesses to unbelievers about the goodness of entering the kingdom of God?


Prayer


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1 month ago
39 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
The One God Receives

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

Come to God, trusting not in yourself, but in Jesus. God's saving mercy and grace are only for those who know they don't deserve it.


Digging Deeper    

Read Luke 18:9-14


1. In our passage, the Pharisee comes to God trusting in himself (and how good he is). Where do we see this in the text?


2. What are subtle or obvious ways we can trust ourselves instead of Jesus?


3. “Whenever we feel God does not love us because we have failed, we have adopted the Pharisee's approach.” Do you experience this? If so, how can you respond to these feelings? How can we help each other?


4. One of the ways Pharisee-like self-righteousness reveals itself is in a propensity to treat others with contempt (cf. v.9b). Reflect on some of the words (and tone) you have used with others around you in the past. Do you see any supporting evidence that you may have, at times, been guilty of treating others with contempt?  What heart-level attitudes might such words reveal? 


5. How tempted are you to compare yourself with others to determine how good or bad you are? A lot? A little? Something else?


6. What’s the problem with assessing yourself based on comparison to others?


7. How easy is it to view yourself like the tax collector, claiming no righteousness of your own?



8. It was said in the sermon, “... we are all far more sinful than we think. And it is only when we grasp this that we can receive the good news.” What was meant by this?  Do you agree?       



9. How might we use this parable (and the truths it teaches) to engage with unbelievers about the good news of the Gospel?  


 

10. What one specific application from this passage might God want you to consider and take with you into the week ahead?  Please share. 


Prayer


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1 month ago
29 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
"When the Son of Man Comes"

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

Jesus' sure and sudden return calls for wholehearted loyalty and persevering prayer.


Digging Deeper    

Read Luke 17:20-18:8


1. Did this sermon help you in your understanding of what the Kingdom of God is? How so? 


2. How does Daniel 7:13-14 shed light on what Jesus meant when he spoke of “the kingdom of God” and “the Son of Man”?


3. The coming of the Son of Man will be unmistakable to all (17:22-25). Why do you think Jesus wants his disciples (including us) to know this? What does this truth help guard against? 


4. The coming of the Son of Man will be unexpected by many (17:26-30). In mercy, Jesus is warning his people, lest we be numbered among those who are not ready for his return. How can we help one another guard against complacency and against living with no sense of urgency (as those in Noah’s and Lot’s day did - until it was too late)? 



5. The coming of the Son of Man will be for salvation and judgment (17:27, 29, 34-35). Apart from God’s grace, we can be inclined to think that we’re really not all that bad, and certainly not worthy of God’s judgment. How might we use the truths taught in this passage to help unbelievers see both the sober reality of coming judgment and the salvation Christ offers?      


6. One rightful response to what Jesus shows us in this passage about his return is to live with wholehearted loyalty to God. Is there a specific area of your life in which you are okay with something less than wholehearted loyalty to God? Please share. What would be a good next step toward change in this area? 


7. Another rightful response in light of the second coming of the Son of Man is persevering prayer to God (18:1-8). Are there things you have prayed for, and yet God has not answered the way you hoped he would?  Have you found yourself tempted to give up praying, and “lose heart”?  Please share. 


8. It was said in the sermon that “the key to not losing heart (in prayer) is the character of God.”  What aspects of God’s character would you say are most important for you to be mindful of as you seek to persevere in prayer until the Son of Man comes again? 


9. What might be some ways we can encourage one another to persevere in prayer until the Son of Man returns?  


Prayer


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1 month ago
39 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
What Faith Makes Possible

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

The whole Christian life is enabled by faith in Christ.


Digging Deeper    

Read Luke 17:1-19


1. Faith in Christ gives us a sort of superpower to do things that are really hard (some would say impossible). From the passage or the sermon, what kinds of things does faith enable?


2. After all the hard things Jesus has been calling the disciples to, they feel that they need an increase of faith (vs. 5). Why do you think they ask for more faith, instead of more of something else?


3. What is or may be an area you have freedom to pursue that you intentionally don’t because you want the spiritual good of someone weaker in the faith?


4. Christians are commanded to reconcile wrongs with others. What makes it difficult to be reconciled with someone who has wronged us (or make amends to someone whom we have wronged)?


5. Where do you need to go and be reconciled? Consider both relationships in which you need to forgive, and relationships in which you need forgiveness.


6. Have you ever experienced a surprising ability to serve God (through increased grace for others, stamina in ministry, resistance to sin, etc.)? Where did this come from, according to Luke 17? 


7. In the sermon, it was said that faith enables us to receive God’s mercy. Is it ever hard for you to receive mercy from others? What about from God?


8. Where in your life do you need to have faith in God right now and ask him to move? Do you trust Him to do what you’re asking? Be specific. 


Prayer


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2 months ago
39 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
A Great Reversal

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

Because death reverses the wrongs of life, the living should hear God now and respond.


Digging Deeper    

Read Luke 16:19-31


1. Money is a recurring theme in Luke 16. What does Jesus say about money? Why do you think he talks about it so much?


2. When you think about someone spending an eternity without God, do you struggle with whether it is just? Why, or why not?


3. Real people go to a real hell. What difference should this reality make in our lives now?


4. It can be easy to feel like we have to get it all right in this life so we don’t end up like the rich man in the parable. What helps us avoid thinking we can earn our way to heaven due to a fear of hell?


5. The great news of the gospel is that if we are in Christ, we are beneficiaries of a second reversal, greater than that of death. What was that reversal, and what does it mean for believers?


6. What brokenness in our world now might we joyfully anticipate being reversed in eternity later?


7. How do you do justice and show mercy in your everyday life? If you struggle with this, how can you grow in showing mercy?

8. In the sermon, we heard that part of responding to the reversal that is death is “to be generous and prepare.” What are some needs around us that we can anticipate and meet as a community? 


9. How do we share this truth of the gospel - this reversal of right and wrong - to someone who doesn’t believe there is anything other than this life?


Prayer


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2 months ago
36 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
Righteousness from the Heart

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

Pursue a God-pleasing righteousness from the heart, including in your marriage


I. The righteousness God seeks is from the heart (vv. 14-15)

II. The kingdom Jesus brings fulfills the law but does not relax righteousness (vv. 16-17)

III. God's enduring desire for righteousness is shown in his enduring instruction about marriage (v. 18)


Digging Deeper    

Read Luke 16:14-18


1. In the sermon, righteousness is “being right, doing right, before God.” The righteousness God is seeking is righteousness from the heart. What’s the difference between being righteous just on the outside (like the Pharisees) and being righteous from the heart?


2. Have you ever found yourself resisting a teaching in the Bible, only to later realize (or experience a sense of conviction from the Holy Spirit) that it is a truth that was pressing on something you were loving as a rival to God?  Please share.


3. If you were to be honest, is there an area of your life where you are settling for outward conformity (a merely external righteousness)?  What might be a good step toward pursuing change in this area of your life?



4. After hearing this sermon, how might you respond to someone who thinks they can live however they want because Jesus counts us as righteous through trust in him?


5. Jesus didn’t come to make righteousness unnecessary, but rather to make it possible.  What does that mean?  Do you find this truth encouraging?  How so? 


MARRIAGE

In our culture, the starting point for thinking about marriage is often self-fulfillment: my wants, my needs, my goals. It’s easy to miss God’s design for marriage, which is a covenant to which we must be faithful, a union that is only broken with great trauma, and a picture of God’s love and faithfulness. It is, therefore, not surprising that so many fail to see the grievousness of divorce as God does. 


6. How can we speak and act about marriage so that those around us are pointed toward God’s good design of marriage?


7. This passage urges us to “Pursue a God-pleasing righteousness from the heart, including in (our) marriages.”  If you’re married, what would this practically look like?


8. Given your marital situation and background, what was one takeaway from this sermon God might want you to remember in the days ahead? 



Prayer


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2 months ago
39 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
Shrewdness, Mammon, and A Crook

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

Followers of Jesus shrewdly manage mammon now for eternal purposes.


Digging Deeper    

Read Luke 16:1-13


1. How was the crooked manager in the parable shrewd?


2. If you’re a follower of Jesus, what would it look like to be shrewd for kingdom purposes?


Mammon can be defined simply as money and possessions (like in verses 9 and 11). And it can be understood as a demonic power that uses money and possessions to lure people away from God (like in verse 12).


3. Mammon will fail (v. 9) because it goes up and down in life, and when we die, it will be worthless. If you believed this through and through, how would it change your life?


4. Western culture is a materialistic culture. What blind spots do you think this causes in our lives and church when it comes to spending your money with kingdom priorities?


5. How have you experienced the influence of mammon inside of you? How have you looked to money to give you peace, security, significance, adventure, pleasure, etc?


6. In what ways is Jesus a better God to serve than Money? Why is this easy to forget in day-to-day life?


7. Often, we connect with what Jesus has done in the past to motivate our lives now (e.g., Jesus was generous, so we should be generous). In our passage, Jesus motivates generosity and faithfulness with future eternal rewards (see v. 9 and v. 11). Do you think much of eternal rewards? Why or why not?


8. Imagine the eternal rewards God promises for shrewd stewardship of mammon, like eternal friends (v. 9) and true riches (v. 12). What comes to your mind? 


9. How can we, as a Gospel Community, together encourage one another to look forward to eternal rewards? 


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2 months ago
44 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
Lost, Found, Joy

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

Disciples should share Jesus' joy in lost sinners becoming found sons.


Digging Deeper    

Read Luke 15:1-32


1. Do you now, or have you ever felt estranged from God? If so, what is/was it like?


2. In the sermon, Brett mentioned that happiness dependent on something that could be lost is fragile. What makes you happy? How durable or fragile is it?


3. Have you ever hit rock bottom? What was it like?


4. Read Luke 15:20. When you think of God’s love, how similar or different is it to what’s described? 


5. There are two ways to be lost: self-indulgence or self-righteousness. Which way did/do you gravitate towards?


6. How is the insight this passage gives us to what brings heaven joy both a thrill for us and a challenge to us?


7. If your joy is the same as what brings God joy, how will it affect:

a. Your view and relationship with those who don’t know Jesus?

b. Your prayer life?


Prayer


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3 months ago
38 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
Noble by Design

Women's Fall Gathering

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3 months ago
36 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
What Following Jesus Requires

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

Not all who are interested in Jesus are disciples of Jesus (v. 25)


Digging Deeper    

Read Luke 14:25-35


1. What does Jesus mean when he says in verse 26 that to follow him means hating our family? What other passages in the Bible can help bring clarity?


2. Are there any dynamics within your family that can, at times, make it challenging to put Jesus first? How do you typically handle those situations? 


3. Verse 27 teaches us that to be a disciple of Jesus involves a willingness to take on the death of self-denial. What are some of the things you might otherwise say yes to, but now say no to, in order that you might say yes to Christ?  


4. What is the gain of following Jesus?


5. In verse 33, Jesus tells us that renouncing all that we have is a requirement for being his disciple. What does this mean? What does this look like for you? 


6. To trust Jesus as our Savior and our Lord means there is nothing he does not have the right to ask of us. Is there anything that comes to mind you really hope Jesus does not ask you to give up? If so, share. How can you determine if that thing is being held on too tightly in light of Jesus? 

 

7. “There is nothing Jesus calls us to in this passage that he hasn’t already done for us.” What does that mean?  Do you find encouragement from this? How so?


8. Think about how you talk about the Christian life to others. How is that similar or different from Jesus’ description here?


Prayer


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3 months ago
35 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
Whose Kingdom?

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

The Pharisees were too busy building their own kingdom to bother with following Jesus in his. 


Digging Deeper    

Read Luke 14:1-24


1. We can all, at times, find ourselves living for the “kingdom of self” rather than for the Kingdom of God. What are some of the ways you see that happen in your life? (e.g., work, responsibilities, possessions, activities, etc.)


2. How does a greater focus on the Kingdom of God (with a corresponding decreased focus on the “kingdom of self”) lead to greater compassion for others?


3. What are places and situations where you may be tempted to care too much about what others think of you? (e.g., work, school, neighbors, friends, kids’ abilities, etc.)


4. Why is it liberating to be freed from living for the recognition of others? What difference will that make at work? Home? Church? Evangelism?


5. In verses 13-14a, Jesus encourages us to pursue a generosity that will not be repaid in this life. What could it look like to show compassion and generosity to “the poor, the crippled, the lame (and) the blind”?  


6. Jesus promises in verse 14b a reward for moving towards those who can give you nothing in return. What is the reward? Is it motivating? Why or why not?


7. “Live for the line, not for the dot” is a common phrase in the history of CrossWay that captures the desire to live now for the life to come (the line) and not for the short few years we have on earth (the dot). If we believe this to be good, how can we help one another pursue it?

 

8. It is a tragic and grievous reality that many around us fail to heed the invitation into the kingdom Jesus has inaugurated because they are consumed with the things of this world. What might it look like for us (in an appropriate manner) to “compel” those outside the kingdom to lay down their excuses and come join “the banquet” of the kingdom? 


Prayer


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3 months ago
37 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
A Door, a Table, and an Abandoned House

Discussion Questions

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3 months ago
36 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
Unstoppable Restoration

Discussion Questions


Sermon Overview 

Rejoice in the restoration God's kingdom unstoppably brings.


1) Jesus has come to restore and set free (vv. 10-17)

2) This restoration will spread quietly but unstoppably despite opposition (vv. 18-21)


Digging Deeper    

Read Luke 13:10-21


1. God often furthers his Kingdom on earth through the weak and unimpressive (like the disabled woman in the passage) to show that the power belongs to him. How should this reality encourage us to be faithful in what may seem like small things? 


2. Jesus freeing the crippled woman physically (vv. 10-13) is a picture of what he intends to do for the world spiritually. If you’re a follower of Jesus, how have you experienced spiritual freedom? If you’re not, what do you hope Jesus could do for you?


3. Jesus has come to restore and set free. In what area(s) of your life are you most eager to see Jesus restore and set free?  


4. Freedom is something that is valued and often spoken of in America. How might we pivot in a conversation with an unbeliever about political freedom to speaking of the freedom Christ brings from sin, Satan, and death?


5. When we see the brokenness and “bent-ness” of the world around us (in the news headlines or in our own lives), what truths from this would it be good for us to keep in mind? 


6. How do we know that Jesus' healing the disabled woman (vv. 10-17) is connected to his answer of what the Kingdom of God will be like (vv.18-21)?


7. Verses 18-21 give us a picture that the Kingdom of God will be established often in slow, seemingly unnoticeable ways rather than spectacular displays of spiritual might and triumphant conquest. How have you seen this in the history of the church? How does this encourage you now? 


8. Jesus’ For followers of Jesus, his restoration work in us has already started, but not yet fully completed. How might knowing the “already … not yet” nature of God’s restoring work in us lead to increased hope, joy, and peace in our hearts?    


9. What is one area of your life where you could make a small beginning (as small as a mustard seed) of faithfulness, that God might use to further his unstoppable Kingdom?


Prayer


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3 months ago
38 minutes

CrossWay Community Church | Bristol, WI
CrossWay exists to glorify God through the transformation of lives by the power of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Our hope is that all people find their satisfaction in God alone.