Worship God
Worship is the primary way to follow Jesus and other practices flow from this communal activity. This understanding of worship does not ignore all other practices but emphasizes that the worship actions we do together on a regular basis shape us to be people following Jesus in the world. Worship, usually Sundays, the Lord’s Day, is the source for how we make choices about our lives and our behaviors, how we treat neighbor and stranger, how we care for resources of land and sea, and how we learn and grow into our baptismal identity as Christ’s own body in the world.
In this unit, participants will learn that worshiping God involves disciples (and seekers!) gathered then sent out and then gathered again, creating an ebb and flow of the communal to individual and societal and back again to communal. The four dimensions of the practice discussed in this unit highlight that when we worship together: we gather, we participate, we are changed and transformed, and we bless God.
Adult Leader's Guide
This leader’s guide uses the Adult Reflection Guide to lead a small group study on the practice. This guide contains a summary of the practice and the four (or six) sessions, background information on the Bible study for the session, and any preparation the leader may need to do ahead of the session. There are different options of activities and discussions to choose from throughout the session. Participants are asked to read through the Adult Reflection Guide, if possible, before each session. There are other great resources for adults in the Congregational Guide.
Featured in the Adult Leader’s Guide:
Gather (Luke 24:13–35)
Participate (Nehemiah 8:1–3, 5–12)
Be Changed (Luke 9:28–36)
Bless God (Psalm 104)
Series Description
Follow Me: Biblical Practices for Faithful Living is a twenty-seven-unit curriculum based on practices Jesus did and taught us to do as faithful followers. Written for people of all ages who wish to live out their faith, this new curriculum examines where these practices are found in the Bible and how they have been used in Christian faith then and now.