August 24, 2010 · 12:57 pm
Time
10-15 minutes
Description
This object lesson teaches that we should not try to cover up our sin but instead recognize that it has been covered by the blood of Jesus.
Scriptures
- Psalm 32:1-5; 103:12
- 1 John 1:7
Materials
- Foot air pump (like you use to pump up a bicycle tire)
- Two large balloons (the same color)
- Permanent marker with a wide tip
- Piece of red felt or other fabric (at least 12”x12”)
- Piece of dark blue felt or other fabric (at least 12”x12”)
- Table
- Tablecloth
- Tape (duct tape is preferable)
- Straight pin or push pin
- Bible
Preparation
- Set up the table at the front of the teaching area. Try to elevate it so that it will be above the eye level of your participants.
- Place the tablecloth over the table so that it hangs down to the floor and prevents participants from seeing what is happening behind it.
- Write the word, “SIN,” on one of the balloons (while deflated) in bold letters so that participants will be able to read it when you hold it up.
- Put the other balloon on the nozzle of the air pump. You may want to tape it on to make sure that it doesn’t fly off when it gets some air in it.
- Hide the air pump on the floor behind the table so that it cannot be seen.
- Tuck the balloon that is attached to the nozzle underneath the tablecloth. If you can get it to stay in the middle of the table, that’s great. If not, you may need to tape the hose to the table. Make sure that participants won’t be able to see the bulge caused by the air pump nozzle and balloon.
- Lay the pieces of fabric and the 2nd balloon close by for use during the lesson.
- Practice the lesson so that you are sure the participants won’t be able to see what you are doing behind the table. (NOTE: if your air pump makes noise when you pump it, you might need to pump more slowly or oil the parts.)
Procedure
Use the following script (or modify to suit your needs):
- “All of us sin sometimes, right?” (Look for agreement. If you don’t get agreement, you can have a volunteer read Romans 3:23.)
- “God is not surprised when we sin. He wants us to quickly admit it and start obeying Him again.”
- “Unfortunately, what a lot of us do is we hide our sin from the people we love and even from God sometimes.”
- “King David in the Old Testament was very close to God most of his life, but even he tried to hide his sin sometimes.” (Ask volunteer to read Psalm 32:1-5.)
- “David had done something very bad. He had stolen something from a friend and then had his friend killed to hide what he had done.”
- “For a long time after he did this terrible thing, he tried to hide it.”
- “But then, a good friend of David’s – the prophet Nathan – came to David and told him that he knew AND GOD KNEW what David had done.”
- “When David heard this from his good friend, He confessed his sin and asked for forgiveness. Then he wrote this Psalm.”
- “Notice that he says, ‘When I kept silent, my bones wasted away through my groaning all day long. For day and night, your hand was heavy upon me; my strength was sapped as in the heat of summer.’”
- “David was saying that he was miserable the entire time he tried to hide his sin.”
- “He was being eaten up on the inside even though he tried to pretend that everything was okay on the outside.”
- “You see, many times when we sin, we are so afraid of what will happen if people find out that we try to hide it.”
- “Sometimes we say that we hide the bad things we do and that it is like trying to ‘sweep them under a rug.’”
- “Have you heard this expression before?” (Look for responses. If they haven’t heard it, explain that sweeping sins under the rug means that we try to hide them where people can’t see them – like sweeping dirt under a rug instead of really cleaning it up.)
- “Let’s say that this balloon (show the balloon that isn’t attached to the foot pump) represents our sin.”
- “When we are afraid of the punishment or consequences of our sin, we might try to ‘sweep them under the rug’ so that no one will be able to see our dirt, our filth.” (Lay the balloon on the table at about the same spot where the hidden balloon is. Then cover it with your ‘rug,’ which will be your dark blue piece of fabric.)
- “But you know what happens when we try to hide our sins, to sweep them under the rug?” (Listen for responses.)
- “They GROW!” (As you say this, begin to secretly pump air into the hidden balloon, letting it get bigger and bigger.)
- “Sins are like mushrooms. They grow best in the dark.”
- “When we hide our sins, Satan will tempt us to sin more.”
- “He will try to get us to lie about our sins and to do even bigger sins to hide what we’ve already done – like when David killed his friend just so that he wouldn’t have to admit that he stole something from him.” (Keep pumping until the balloon is an impressive size under the dark fabric.)
- “In darkness, our sins get bigger and bigger until they are impossible to hide.”
- “Then, they start to show even though we’ve done our best to cover them up.” (Pump balloon a few more times, until it lifts the cover so high that the balloon is clearly visible to everyone in the room.)
- “But you know what? God doesn’t want us to hide our sins. He wants us to confess them.”
- “In our Bibles, God tells us that he doesn’t want our sins covered up – He wants them covered!”
- “You see, Adam and Eve tried to cover up their sin by wearing fig leaves, and the ancient Hebrews tried to cover up their sin by sprinkling animal blood over the box (the Arc of the Covenant) that held God’s law.”
- “But neither of these were good ways to cover sin.”
- “Fig leaves are itchy, and animal blood only covered up the Hebrews’ sin for a short time.”
- “So, God provided a better way to cover our sins. He sent His son Jesus.”
- “When Jesus died on the cross, His perfect blood (perfect because Jesus never sinned) covered our sins for ever!” (Cover the dark blue fabric with the red fabric.)
- “In fact, the blood of Jesus does more than just cover our sins; it cleans them.” (Have volunteer read 1 John 1:7.)
- “So, it’s much better than just covering our sins.” (Have volunteer read Psalm 103:12.)
- “How far do you think the east is from the west?” (Listen to responses.)
- “It’s pretty far, since the east and the west will never meet.”
- “The blood of Jesus first covers our sins, and then Jesus removes them completely.” (Use the pin to pop the balloon through the fabric.)
- “Now we can understand what David says in his psalm.” (Have a volunteer read Psalm 32:1-2.)
- “We are blessed when our sins are covered by the blood of Christ.”
- “So don’t try to cover up your sins; if you believe that Jesus is your Savior, then He has already covered them with His blood, removed them as far as the east is from the west and forgiven them so that they won’t count against you.”
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Tagged as 1 John 1:7, Adam, admission, admit, animal sacrifice, as far as the east is from the west, atonement, balloon, Bathsheba, blood, bones wasted away, Confess, Confession, cover up, covered, darkness, Eve, fig leaves, forgave, forgiven, forgiveness, grows in darkness, guilt, hide, Jesus Christ, King David, misery, mushroom, my strength was sapped, Nathan, Obedience, obey, original sin, prophet, Psalm 103:12, Psalm 32:1-5, Romans 3:23, sacrifice, shame, sin, substitution, sweep it under the rug, Uriah the Hitite, your hand was heavy upon me
February 12, 2010 · 9:20 am
Scriptures:
Romans 3:23
Romans 6:23
Romans 5:8
Romans 10:9
Romans 10:13
Description: Within the book of Romans, the author has given us a path toward salvation. Some call it the Roman Road. This lesson helps participants to memorize the Scriptures of the Roman Road so that they can share it with their friends.
Time: 45 minutes
Materials:
- Printouts of the Roman Road pictures (You can find these on the Lesson Materials and Downloads page on www.teachingthem.com. The file is called, “Roman Road – Cards.ppt.” You will want one enough flash-card size sets for every person to have one. To get this size, go to File, then Print on the Menu Bar of PowerPoint. Then, under “Print What:,” choose Handouts (6 slides per page). Change the slides that you want to print to “From: 2” and “to: 19.” This will give each person three sets of the six pictures (one with just the chapter and verse, one with just the Scripture words and one with neither). If you don’t want each person to have all three sets, choose just the ones you want.
- Scissor or a cutting board to cut out the flash cards
- Rubber bands or envelopes (one per person in your group)
- Cut out the flash cards, and put them in rubber bands or in envelopes to make them easy to distribute.
- Practice the lesson.
o LCD projector, computer and screen to project the slides (if you don’t have these, you can print out full-sized versions of the slides to use as displays.)
o Bible
Preparation:
o Print all the sets of the flash cards
o Cut out the flash cards, and put them in rubber bands or in envelopes to make them easy to distribute.
o Practice the lesson.
Procedure:
Use the following script or modify to suit your needs:
- “The author of the book of Romans gave very clear instructions about how we can be saved and go to heaven.”
- “Several Scriptures in the book link together to give us the plan of salvation.”
- “These Scriptures are often called “The Roman Road.” (Show title slide.)
- “There are two reasons for this. The first is that the Scriptures are in the book of Romans, and they describe the path (or road) to salvation.”
- “The other reason is called a play on words, or a clever way of using a familiar term in a new way.”
- “The roads built by the Romans a few thousand years ago were famous around the world during the early church period, because they were all straight, paved roads that led back to Rome.”
- “The Roman Road in Scripture won’t lead you to Rome, Italy, but it will help you to walk the straight path to Jesus Christ.”
- “So calling it a ‘Roman Road’ is just a way to make it easier to remember.”
- “I’m going to take you down the Roman Road, and we are going to memorize the Scriptures together.”
- “That way, you will be able to share it with your friends if God provides you an opportunity to share your faith with them.” (Show Romans 3:23 slide, and ask for a volunteer to read it out loud from his or her Bible.)
- “This means that there isn’t anyone who has ever lived with the except of Jesus Christ who has lived without sinning.”
- “Our sin makes us fall short of God’s glory, but God is perfect and without sin.”
- “In the game of ice hockey, if a player breaks a rule, he gets sent to the penalty box, also known as the ‘Sin Bin.’”
- “In the same way, when we break one of God’s rules, we have to pay a penalty in the ‘sin bin.’”
- “We put ourselves into spiritual prison, and Satan is the prison warden.”
- “He can keep us locked up, because we broke the rules. God has given him that authority over sinners, because God is too holy to allow sinners into His presence.” (Show Romans 6:23a slide, and ask volunteer to read just the first part of the Scripture from his or her Bible.)
- “Wages are what you get paid for work you do.”
- “This Scripture is saying that our payment for the work of sin that we have done is death.” (RIP on the tombstones in the picture stands for “Rest In Peace,” which used to be a common sentiment when someone died.)
- “We have earned death because of our sin, and there are two kinds of death that this Scripture is talking about.”
- “First, there is spiritual death in our relationship with God.”
- “Sin separates us from God. It creates a giant chasm between us, and none of us can leap over that chasm to get back to God.”
- “The second kind of death is the one we are more familiar with – death of our bodies.”
- “Before Adam and Eve sinned in the garden, they were going to live forever, but because of sin, they ruined their physical bodies.”
- “What that physical body wears out of gets too sick or suffers a mortal injury, it dies.”
- “So far, the death rate for human beings is just about 1 to 1 – one death for every life.” (Exceptions might be Enoch and Elijah. Show Romans 6:23b slide and have volunteer read it out loud.)
- “This is a GREAT Scripture!”
- “We earned death because of our sin BUT God has given us a gift – the gift of living forever with Jesus!”
- “But notice that it’s a gift.”
- “A gift is FREE! There is nothing that you can do to earn it.”
- “It comes from the generosity of the giver.”
- “That means that we can’t earn our way into heaven; we can only receive it as a free gift from God.”
- “Also, a gift is free, but you don’t have to accept it.”
- “Millions and probably billions of people will live their lives here on earth and never accept the gift that Jesus bought for them.”
- “Sometimes they don’t accept it, because they don’t know that it exists. That’s why you have to tell everyone about the incredible gift Jesus bought for them.”
- “Even more often, though, people don’t accept the gift, because they don’t trust the Gift Giver.”
- “They think the gift is a trick or too good to be true or not worth having, so they don’t take it, and that’s a terrible shame, because Jesus was thinking about them when He bought it.” (Show Romans 5:8 slide, and have volunteer read it out loud.)
- “I said the gift was free, but that’s not totally true.”
- “Someone had to pay for it.”
- “It’s free to us, but it cost Jesus dearly.”
- “Remember that I said that the wages of sin is death – the payment for our sin is that we have to die?”
- “And remember that we are in the Sin Bin because we broke the rules and that Satan keeps the keys to our prison cell?”
- “Well there is a way to pay the payment for our sin without us having to personally die.”
- “In the Old Testament, the Hebrew/Israelites would kill animals to pay for their sins.”
- “Animals could pay the debt we owed for our sin, because they were innocent and hadn’t sinned.”
- “The problem with this arrangement, though, was that the death of the animal (really the blood of the animal) couldn’t clear our debt.”
- “Animals are innocent, but that’s because they couldn’t sin if they wanted to – they don’t have the ability to choose to sin or to not sin.”
- “So using their blood to pay for their debt was kind of like cheating.”
- “It wouldn’t really pay for it. It would just cover their debt for a year, but then the Israelite priests had to kill another animal to cover their sin again.”
- “This had to happen every year, and they never really got out of Satan’s prison. We just got to walk around the prison yard some. (joke – not meant to represent anything in doctrine)”
- “In the end, Satan still owned us. The Bible says we were his slaves.”
- “We needed a better solution.”
- “This is why Jesus came to live as a man on the earth.”
- “He had to become like one of us and live a life completely free of sin.”
- “That way, He qualified to pay our debt, because when He died, He didn’t have any debt of His own.”
- “He took our punishment of death. He paid our debt for us.”
- “And the incredible thing is, He came and died for us ‘while we were still sinning.’”
- “Who does something like that?”
- “Do you give your friend money when he hasn’t paid you back the money you already gave him?”
- “Do you buy your enemy a gift while he is cursing your name?”
- “Nobody does that but God!”
- “God loves us soooooooooo much that He overlooks our sin, our pride, our selfishness, our betrayal, and He pays the prison warden to get us out of prison!”
- “That is an awesome God!” (Show Romans 10:9 slide and have volunteer read it out loud.)
- “I told you that what Jesus did was a gift and that you don’t have to take it.”
- “But if you want to take it, this is the way to do it: confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead.”
- “That’s how you accept the gift. That’s how you walk out of Satan’s prison.”
- “You see, when Jesus died for us, He broke the lock off of the prison door.”
- “Unfortunately, many people are staying in prison, because (like I mentioned before) they either don’t know the lock is broken, or they don’t trust the One who broke it off for them.”
- “All they have to do is accept the gift Jesus bought, and they can walk straight out of that prison cell, but many choose to stay. It’s very sad.”
- “One way of summarizing what you have to do to be saved from the punishment for sin is A-B-C.”
- “A is for Accept the gift that Jesus bought for you.”
- “B is for Believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead.”
- “C is for Confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord!” (Review A-B-C, Accept-Believe-Confess several times so that they remember it. Then show the Romans 10:13 slide, and have a volunteer read is out loud.)
- “This Scripture says that ‘Only God’s favorite people will be saved, right?’” (They should respond with a loud, “NO!”)
- “Only those who lead a good life will be saved?” (Get them to respond with a loud, “NO!”)
- “Only those who go to church every Sunday?” (Allow responses.)
- “Only those who give to the poor?” (Allow responses.)
- “Only those who help little, old ladies across the street?” (Allow responses.)
- “What does it say? ‘EVERYONE who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved!’”
- “Halleluja! That’s the best news you will ever hear in your life!”
- “God doesn’t want to leave ANYONE behind!”
- “EVERYONE who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved!”
- “You don’t have to be good looking or strong or smart or even good – God bought this gift for EVERYONE! You just have to accept it!”
- “On the cross, Jesus paid our entire debt!”
- “Our bill is cancelled!”
- “Satan has nothing against us! He has no power to keep us in prison any longer!”
- “That’s called the ‘Gospel!’ ‘Gospel’ means ‘good news,’ and this definitely qualifies!”
- “That’s news so good you just HAVE to share it with somebody!”
- “So I’m going to help you memorize this so that you can share it whenever God leads you to tell a friend or someone you meet.” (Go through the next six slides slowly, allowing everyone to say the Scriptures out loud a few times before advancing to the next slide. After the six slides that show the Scriptures, there are six slides with blank spaces where the Scripture or verse reference use to be. See if anyone is brave enough to stand up and say it from memory.)
- “Fantastic, but we need more practice, so I’ve made up some flash cards for each of you.” (Hand out flash cards to each person.)
- “I want you to find a partner and go through these flash cards to help each other memorize each step of the Roman Road.”
- “You will notice that you have three sets of the six pictures.”
- “One set shows the actual words of the Scripture.”
- “One set shows just the chapter and verse reference, and the third set is blank – just the picture.”
- “You can use whatever set you think you are ready to use.”
- “If you don’t have anything memorized yet, use the one with the words.”
- “If you kinda have the words, you might want to use the one with just the chapter and verse reference.”
- “If you think you have it all memorized, use the blank flash cards.”
- “Tell your partner which ones you want to use, and have him or her hold them up for you until you can say the Scripture.”
- “Then trade, and you hold up the flash cards for your partner.” (Ask for questions. After you have answered them, have them start helping each other. Allow ten minutes or so depending on time available. Then give opportunities for individuals to come up front and recite all six Scriptures (if you count Romans 6:23a and b as two Scriptures).)
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Filed under Belief, Christianity, Evangelism, forgiveness, God's Plan, Great Commission, Jesus, memory, salvation, sanctification, Transformation, unconditional love, Witness
Tagged as A-B-C, ABC, Accept, accept it, Adam, all roads lead to Rome, atonement, Believe, bill, blood, Confess, covering, devil, Evangelism, Eve, flash cards, free, gift, Gift Giver, Great Commission, hockey, innocent, Jesus Christ, justification, Lord and Savior, Lucifer, memorization, memorize, original sin, path, payment, penalty box, practice, prison, receive it, relationship, Roman Road, Romans 10:13, Romans 10:9, Romans 3:23, Romans 5:8, Romans 6:23, rules, sacrifice, salvation, Satan, saved, Savior, share faith, sharing the Gospel, sharing your faith, sin bin, slaves, straight way, substitution, wages of sin is death, warden