Join us for a class learning about the remarkable Jephthah, and how God called upon him. He appears in the Book of Judges as a judge who presided over Israel for a period of six years (Judges 12:7). Jephthah led the Israelites in battle against Ammon and, in exchange for defeating the Ammonites, he makes a vow to God which is when a major twist in the story happens! Don’t miss it!
Our reading to prepare for Lesson 3 - “Jephthah” is broken down as the following:
Mon Jan 20 Jephthah, Rejected by His Family, Flees Judges 11:1-3
Tue Jan 21 Jephthah Tries Diplomacy Judges 11:12-18
Wed Jan 22 Jephthah Reveals God’s Aid of Israel Judges 11:19-22
Thu Jan 23 Ammonite King Rejects Jephthah’s Claims Judges 11:23-28
Fri Jan 24 Jephthah Fulfills Vow Judges 11:34-40
Sat Jan 25 Leaders Discern the Way Forward Acts 15:6-21
Sun Jan 26 Jephthah Called to Lead Israel Judges 11:4-11
Our daily readings this quarter focus on “God’s Urgent Call.” God continues to call people to mission and ministry just as God has done for thousands of years. God has a call on our lives. God has a purpose for our being and has given us a mission in life. The abundant life we seek is found in that purpose, experienced as we carry out that mission. We will learn our Lessons in three divided units…
Unit 1, “Called to Be Strong,” spotlights the era of the judges. In the Book of Judges, we read how God called a series of national leaders and military commanders, known as judges, to deliver the Israelite people from their enemies. In this unit, we will read how God used people such as Deborah, Barak, Gideon, Jephthah, and Samson to do amazing things in spite of their shortcomings.
Unit 2, “Called of Prophets”, focuses on some of the well-known prophets in the Old Testament and how God used them to accomplish the divine purpose. Like the judges before them, the prophets were far from perfect people, yet God used them in mighty ways because they were willing to be used.
And, Unit 3, “Calls in the New Testament”, reveals that God continued to use ordinary people to accomplish the divine will. Readings in this unit focus on characters from the Book of Acts such as Stephen, Peter, Philip, Ananias, Paul, and Cornelius to once again show how God uses ordinary, fallible, flawed imperfect people to build the Kingdom.