Two Steps Forward Study Guide - Sharon Garlough Brown - E-Book

Two Steps Forward Study Guide E-Book

Sharon Garlough Brown

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Beschreibung

The women of Sensible Shoes encounter new adventures and roadblocks in their spiritual journeys in Two Steps Forward. With this study guide, you can explore your own next steps as you dive into the book's spiritual formation themes along with Mara, Meg, Hannah, and Charissa. In this eight-week study guide you'll find daily Scripture readings, reflection questions, and spiritual practices designed to help you be attentive to the invitations of the Holy Spirit. Each week concludes with discussion questions and suggested practices for reading groups to do together. Individually or with a group, you are invited to meet with God and find encouragement for the path ahead.

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TWO STEPS FORWARD

Sharon Garlough Brown

Contents

Introduction
Week One: Prologue and Chapters One and Two
Week One Group Discussion
Week Two: Chapters Three and Four
Week Two Group Discussion
Week Three: Chapters Five and Six
Week Three Group Discussion
Week Four: Chapters Seven and Eight
Week Four Group Discussion
Week Five: Chapter Nine
Week Five Group Discussion
Week Six: Chapter Ten
Week Six Group Discussion
Week Seven: Chapter Eleven
Week Seven Group Discussion
Week Eight: Chapter Twelve
Week Eight Group Discussion
The Sensible Shoes Series
Praise for Two Steps Forward Study Guide
About the Author
More Titles from InterVarsity Press

Introduction

The setting for Two Steps Forward: A Story of Persevering in Hope is the season of Advent, a season that invites us to keep watch and remain attentive to all the ways Christ comes into our world and our lives. Advent is a season of prayerful preparation, a season to practice hope—not the kind of hope that’s synonymous with “wishing for” certain outcomes, but a hope firmly rooted in the person, work, and promises of God in Jesus Christ.

Sybil MacBeth, author of The Season of the Nativity: Confessions and Practices of an Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany Extremist, writes,

During Advent we are reminded of the paradoxes and incongruities of life: light and darkness; faith and fear; joy and sorrow; vulnerability and power; weakness and strength; done, but not complete; already and not yet. These pairs of contrasting ideas are not just for Advent. They are the daily themes and dilemmas of ordinary, everyday Christians—the people who believe that an embodied, flesh-and-blood Messiah has already come, but that the transformation of the world is not yet complete.

We are called to be Advent people, to live in a posture of readiness and expectation, every day of the year.

This study guide is not an “Advent guide” (though it could be adapted for use during Advent), but rather an eight-week journey in spiritual formation, using the book’s characters as windows and mirrors for better understanding our own life with God, our receptivity and resistance, our longings and fears, and our two steps forward and frequent steps back. Each week you’ll find daily Scripture readings and reflection questions as well as a spiritual practice to integrate into your rhythm of life. This guide also includes group discussion questions and exercises to explore and practice in community. (Please note, if you are using the guide with a group, week seven is an invitation to serve together, which may require advance planning.)

You can decide whether to read Two Steps Forward first in its entirety and then return to do a slow study with the guide, or to read it a section at a time, matching your pace to the daily questions. I recommend keeping a travelogue of your journey. Even if you aren’t in the habit of using a journal, you’ll benefit from having a record of what you’re noticing as you move forward.

Not every question will resonate with you. That’s okay. You don’t need to answer every question every day. But do watch for any impulse to avoid a question because it agitates you or makes you feel uncomfortable. That’s probably the very question you need to spend time pondering! If you don’t have time to answer the questions you want to reflect on, simply mark them and return on the review days. If something in the chapter speaks to you and isn’t addressed in a question, spend time journaling and praying about it.

Christ has come. Christ still comes to us. Christ will come again. May the Spirit prepare and enable you to receive Christ daily, in the midst of the challenges and the joys, with wonder and gratitude and hope.

Sharon Garlough Brown

Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen.

(EPHESIANS 3:20-21)

Reading for Week One: Prologue and Chapters One and Two

SPIRITUAL PRACTICE: BREATH PRAYER

Meg practices breath prayer as a way to center herself in God’s presence and to be continually reminded that God is with her. This week practice matching a short prayer to your rhythm of breathing. You might choose a verse and divide it into an inhale-exhale pattern. For example: “Be still [inhale], and know that I am God [exhale]” (Psalm 46:10). Or choose a name for God from Scripture and then express a brief declaration of faith, petition, or desire. Examples: “Emmanuel [inhale], you are with me [exhale].” “Author of life [inhale], renew me in your love [exhale].”

Spend time listening for a prayer. How is God inviting you to name him? What does God invite you to declare about who he is or what you need? As you breathe, receive the very breath of God enlivening you. Practice being attentive to your breathing throughout the day so that prayer becomes habitual.

Week One: Day One

PROLOGUE (P. 9)

Scripture Meditation: Hebrews 10:24-25

Slowly read the text out loud a few times, listening for a word or phrase that catches your attention and invites you to linger with it in prayer (lectio divina). How does this particular word or phrase connect with your life? How does it comfort or confront you? Talk with God about your response to this word, your thoughts and feelings that arise. Then listen for God’s invitations to you. Finish with a time of silence, resting in God’s presence.

For Reflection and Journaling

1. Who are your trustworthy companions on the spiritual journey? Give God thanks for the gift of community and for the ways you have been shaped, encouraged, and challenged (even provoked) by others.

2. How is God inviting you to pray for your fellow travelers? Who do you need to release to God’s care today?

3. If you have struggled to find or connect in community, offer your longings, fears, or hurts to God in prayer. Ask God to guide you toward someone who can walk with you.

Week One: Day Two

CHAPTER ONE:MEG AND CHARISSA (PP. 13-25)

Scripture Meditation: 1 Peter 5:7

Read the verse aloud a few times. Then match it with the palms down/palms up prayer (described in Sensible Shoes). With your palms down, release your cares and concerns to God. With your palms up, receive God’s care and concern for you.

For Reflection and Journaling

1. What comes to mind when you think about the word hope? What helps you persevere in hope? As you move forward with this study, light a hope candle when you pray as a declaration of God’s presence with you.