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Heavenly Places

The Taste of
Good Fruit
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Book title: Brother Word
By Derek Jackson
Reading
Group Questions:
The following list of questions is designed to
enhance a group or individual's thinking
about or discussing some of the issues we hope you will consider
after reading this book. This is
designed as a starting point only and is not meant to limit the
discussion.
- “Strong faith in the area of healing or not, his present
chest pains were real. Painfully real.” How does
your faith coexist with a painful reality? Does living or speaking
in faith mean denying a physical experience? Why or why not?
- “Ministry and emotional burnout mixed together like oil
and water.” How do you guard yourself against burnout in
ministry—or in life in general? How have you made time
and space in your life for Sabbaths such as vacation, recreation,
and a day of rest?
- What do you think—what is the “fine line
between anger and stupidity in questioning the Almighty”?
- Many people share Travis’s awkwardness around people
with disabilities. What experience do you have relating to children
or adults who have special needs? How do you handle interactions
with people who have some kind of handicap?
- What is the worst possible handicap that you can imagine
for yourself? What physical (or mental) capacity would be most
difficult for you to lose (e.g., sight, hearing, voice, ability
to walk or use hands, etc.)? How do you think your faith would
respond to such a loss?
- “It’s one thing to believe for someone else’s
healing,” Lynn realized. Why is it different—more difficult—to
believe for your own healing?
- What knowledge or experience do you have of divine healing?
What do you think or believe about such miracles?
- How would you minister to someone in Lynn’s situation
after the accident? Would you exhort her to greater faith, comfort
her in her mental and physical anguish, encourage her to trust,
bear her company in silence, or serve her needs in practical
ways? Why?
- Prayer, familiar Scriptures, and recollections of her own
faith history—how God had worked in and through her in the past—were
an encouragement to Lynn in her darkest hours. What encourages
you in such times—and how?
- Would you allow a stranger to pray over you or someone
you loved? Why or why not—or in what circumstances?
- After the accident, Lynn asked, “Why me, God?” At
the healing service, she wondered, “Why not me?” When
have you asked one of those questions? Did you feel like God
answered you, and if so, how? How did you ultimately
handle the question (and answer)?
- Many of us acknowledge a belief in healing and
other miracles—and then we are amazed when we see one take
place. Why is that? What does it suggest about the nature of
faith and belief?
- What role do divine miracles have in God’s work on earth
today? What purpose did they serve in Jesus’ ministry?
- Rev. Gentry regards the newspaper article as “spiritual
warfare 101.” What does he mean by that?
- Chance tells Lynn that his healing ministry is “more
a principle of obedience than faith.” What does he mean
by that? What does that idea mean to you?
- Salvation is free, Chance notes, but everything else God
gives has a price. Our anointing is proportionate to our sacrifice.
Do you agree? Why or why not? What has your own experience taught
you about this aspect of God’s empowerment?
- Nina had thought it would show a lack of faith to go to
a doctor to have her healing confirmed. Do you agree? Why or
why not?
- Nina was convinced she would be healed at the conference;
Floyd Waters said Nina was healed; Nina herself experienced what
she believed was healing. Then she died—and an autopsy revealed
the cancer had killed her. How do you deal with such situations
where you seem to hear God say one thing—and time seems
to prove you (or God) wrong?
- Chance experienced his calling and anointing as a burden.
How have you experienced the call of God on your life or the
gifts of God to be a burden? How have you responded to that experience?
- Have you ever met someone like Chance—someone with great
gifts who also had great needs? How can you—and the church
at large—minister to such a person?
- Most of us have a family member, friend, or coworker who
is a bit like Travis. How do you relate to that kind of “stubborn
agnostic”? What strategies have you employed to share God’s
love and power with him or her?
- What do you think about the follow-up strategies of Faith
Community Church—the prayer calls, the emphasis on continuing
in divine health, and on developing healthy living alternatives?
Have you ever encountered a church that balanced belief in divine
healing with such practical or “earthy” follow-up?
What is the value—and biblical foundation—for such
a holistic approach?
- Chance had never felt led to lay hands on his own father
to pray for divine healing. Why might a family member not be
the best candidate for your ministry? What other reason(s) might
Chance have for not sharing his gift with Pop?
- What gift(s) has God given to you? How is it developing?
What are you doing to cultivate it? In what ways has that gift
ever made you feel like “some weird traveling sideshow”?
- Lynn reflects that Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego had
a faith that would believe even if God did not deliver
them. Many people would think that foolish. Do you? Why or why
not? What is significant about that kind of faith?
- What do you think: Is it God’s will for
all people to be healed and live in divine health? Why or why
not?
- As he sinks into the water, Chance figures he’s probably
dying—and he wonders, “This is my life?” If
you were dying today, how would you sum up your life? How would
you feel about its conclusion at this point in time?
- By virtue of being alive, Lynn asserts, we can assume we
have some unfinished Kingdom business. What is your part
in God’s unfinished business? What treasure is God unveiling
in you?
- Chance is startled when Lynn talks about his ministry.
He doesn’t really think of his itinerant healings as ministry.
What gifts are you operating in that might be organized into
a ministry?
- Family, love, money… What would it take to make you happy?
- Pastor Gentry’s Bible study (see chap. 53) deals
with a lot of issues related to healing. Which insights or arguments
stood out for you? Why?
- Compose your own litany of God’s goodness, based on
your own life. Allow that realization of God’s grace to
bring you to your knees in worship!
- What do you think Chance meant when he told Travis the
greatest healings are those in the heart?
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