Galatians 5:16-18

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:

1.) What does it mean to “walk” by the Spirit?

2.) Why are we so drawn to the desires of the flesh?

3.) Do you think this battle between Spirit and flesh is part of the Sanctification process?

4.) How can you do both: walk by the Spirit, and be led by the Spirit? (V. 18)

Galatians 5:13-15

Discussion Questions:

  1. What does it mean that we’ve been called to freedom?

  2. Why is it important to understand that we are to not use our freedom as “an opportunity for the flesh?” How do we do this?

  3. What does it practically mean to “serve one another through love?

  4. Paul uses the law to support the call to serve one another in love. Does this contradict the argument that he’s been making against the law up until this point? Why? Or why not?

Galatians 5:7-12

Discussion Questions:

  1. What does the “Christian race” practically look like? What does it mean to “obey the truth?” What truth is Paul referring to here?

  2. What does verse 10 mean?

  3. Why does Paul use such strong language in verse 12? Also, does Paul’s example here teach us that there is a time and a place to use strong language?

  4. If you were to survey your heart, do you feel like the warning/rebuke here applies to you?

Galatians 5:2-6

discussion Questions:

1. In verse 2, accept = to put trust in, what are you tempted to put trust in rather than Jesus?

2. Verse 4 mentions “you have fallen away from grace” what does that mean?

3. Since faith energizes our love, how have you seen God at work around you this week? How could you join Him in that work?

Galatians 4:28-5:1

Discussion Questions:

  1. Paul, a Jew, refers to a group of Gentile believers in Galatia as “brothers.” Why is that important? And how should that shape the way we view and treat one another within the church?

  2. What does it mean to be a “child of promise?”

  3. Why is it important for us to protect the truth of the gospel?

  4. In speaking on the freedom we have in Christ, Timothy Keller says, “Despite its divine source, our freedom is fragile and can slip from our grasp.” How do you find yourself slipping back into slavery?

Galatians 4:12-20

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:

  1. Why is the doctrine of grace so important to the health of the church?

  2. How is the fact that God used Paul’s bodily ailment as an instrument to advance the gospel both encouraging and convicting?

  3. Paul reminds the church that his “condition was a trial to them.” Yet, we see that the church did not “scorn of despise him.” How should that shape the way we view service?

  4. In looking at these verses, how is the way Paul acted toward the church different from the way the false teachers acted toward the church? What can we practically learn from looking at these differences?

Galatians 4:8-11

Discussion Questions:

  1. On Sunday we saw Paul use two different words when it comes to knowing God. Why is it important to understand that knowing God is both intellectual and intimate?

  2. Read Matthew 7:21-23. How are these words both terrifying and comforting?

  3. How is “observing days and months and seasons and years” similar to worshipping pagan gods?

  4. How is legalism a form of idolatry?

Peace pt. 2

Discussion Questions:

  1. How does “vertical peace” lead to both “internal peace” and “horizontal peace?”

  2. Read Romans 12:14-21. How does the gospel shape the way we interact with both believers and nonbelievers?

  3. Why is it so difficult to bless our enemies?

  4. Romans 12:18 says, “If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all.” What does the caveat “so far as it depends on you” mean for us today?

  5. Think about your relationship with your non-Christian friends, family, or co-workers. What are some ways that you can better live out what these verses are describing?

Galatians 3:23-29

Discussion Questions:

  1. Why is it important that we believe the bad news about ourselves before we believe the good news of the gospel?

  2. What emotions do you feel when you think about the fact that you are an adopted “son of God?”

  3. What does it mean to “put on Christ?”

  4. When it comes to the family of God, why is it important to understand that unity doesn’t equal uniformity?

Galatians 3:15-18

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:

  1. How would you seek to summarize Galatians 3:15-18? How do these verses offer you comfort?

  2. What point is Paul seeking to make in verse 16, and why is this point important?

  3. When do you find yourself most tempted to look to your own efforts to make yourself acceptable to God?

  4. Read Galatians 3:18, then read Ephesians 1:13-14, 1 Peter 1:3-5, and Hebrews 9:15. What emotions do you feel whenever you begin to realize that we have an eternal inheritance kept in heaven for us on the basis of a promise?

Galatians 3:10-14

Discussion Questions:

  1. What does it mean that “all who rely on works of the law are under a curse?” How is it evident that “no one is justified before God by the law?”

  2. Read verse 13. How should this verse shape the way that we view ourselves and other Christians? How should it impact the way we interact with nonbelievers?

  3. How is the fact that we have received “the promised Spirit through faith” a blessing?

Galatians 3:6-9

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Discussion Questions:

  1. How does Paul’s reference to Abraham support the point that we are justified by hearing with faith and not by works of the law?

  2. How does Paul’s words in Galatians 3:7 shape the way we view the church?

  3. What does it mean that God “preached the gospel to Abraham?” Why is it important for us to understand that God preached the gospel to Abraham?

  4. In verses 8 and 9, Paul connects God’s blessing for the nations with justification by faith. In other words, justification = God’s blessing. How does this comfort us as we walk through life?