Description
Overview
In his great literary classic, Miguel de Cervantes gave us a wonderfully comedic picture of the legendary Don Quixote, who was a romantic in an age when Enlightenment logic was taking over the world. He was chivalrous at a time when individualism was robbing graciousness from society. He was an oddball who couldn't see or hear well and was ridiculed as an out-of-touch misfit.
But when he dreamed of doing great deeds, was he wrong? Were his exploits mere madcap, or was Cervantes trying to tell us something about ourselves? Is there a way to be a "fool for Jesus" that allows us to be prophetic without becoming either lost in the whirlwinds of our time or defeated into Christian isolationism? Frederica Mathewes-Green explores this in her article "Loving the Storm Drenched."
Table of Contents
SCRIPTURE: Isaiah 40:15–24; Matthew 5:1–16; Romans 13:1–7; Galatians 5:22–23; Philippians 2:12–16a; Colossians 1:9–17
LEADER'S GUIDE
• Identify the Current Issue
• Discover the Eternal Principles
—Teaching point one:God continues to shape human society and history, even in a fallen world.
—Teaching point two: There are different theological perspectives on how Christianity can influence culture.
—Teaching point three: Regardless of our theological perspective on the big issues, Christian morality requires that we faithfully serve those in need.
• Apply Your Findings
• Recommended Resources
ARTICLE FROM CHRISTIANITY TODAY
• Loving the Storm Drenched, by Frederica Mathewes-Green (2006, 12 printed pages)
Total number of pages—