Christ Community - Downtown Campus
Romans - November 17 | Downtown
A Family Where We Are Known - 9, 10:45 AM & ON-DEMAND
Locations & Times
Christ Community - Downtown Campus
208 W 19th St, Kansas City, MO 64108, USA
Sunday 7:00 AM
Conversation Starters
1. Read Romans 16:1-16.
2.What is something new you learned about the people listed here by Paul?
3. Why do you think it is important that Paul specifically named so many people in this passage? What do you think is the significance in knowing people by name?
4. Think about how it feels when someone either does or doesn’t know your name. How might knowing (and actually using) the names of people within a church community help to strengthen that community? How might not knowing them have an adverse effect?
1. Read Romans 16:1-16.
2.What is something new you learned about the people listed here by Paul?
3. Why do you think it is important that Paul specifically named so many people in this passage? What do you think is the significance in knowing people by name?
4. Think about how it feels when someone either does or doesn’t know your name. How might knowing (and actually using) the names of people within a church community help to strengthen that community? How might not knowing them have an adverse effect?
Title: A Family Where We Are Known
Reference: Romans 16:1-16
Speaker: Gabe Coyle, GabeC@cckc.church
Reference: Romans 16:1-16
Speaker: Gabe Coyle, GabeC@cckc.church
They share their table with all, but not their bed with all. They are poor and make many rich; they are short of everything and yet have plenty of things. (Letter to Diognetus, c.100-150 A.D.)
The church welcomes.
– Welcome means being happy to see each other.
Recognition is the first human quest. After an ordinary delivery, after the first few startled cries, newborn infants typically spend an hour or so in the stage doctors call “quiet alert.” Though they can only focus their vision roughly eight to twelve inches away, their eyes are wide open. They are searching, with an instinct far deeper than intention. They are looking for a face, and when they find one — especially a face that gazes back at them — they fix their eyes on it, having found what they were most urgently looking for. ~ Andy Crouch, The Life We’re Looking For
– Welcome means expecting Christ in each other.
Diversity shaped every moment of the Roman house churches, but Paul sought for a unity in the diversity, a sibling relationship in Christ that both transcended and affirmed one’s ethnicity, gender, and status. Paul was never non-Jewish, and he often affirmed his Jewishness (cf. Rom 9:1–5; 11:1; Phil 3:5–6), but he also celebrated sibling relationships that transcended his Jewishness (Gal 3:28 with 1:13). ~ Scott McKnight
– Welcome means knowing names.
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