Introduction
In this session, chap 12: 9-21, we focus on understanding the appropriate and inappropriate response to neighbors around us and especially those who are hurting you and are hurting themselves. The two sons are challenged to consider that all their responses to service of their neighbors come from the basis of God’s mercies shown to them through the cross. In this way they are acting like good neighbors to those different to you.
Objectives
By the end of this session, the learner will have:
- Understood how to service others out of genuine love
- Evaluated how to respond to the neighbors who are hurt and hurting others (Mercies the Lord has shown you)
- Challenged to respond because of God’s mercies only (what he has already done for you).
Outline
- Who is a neighbor?
- The definition of true worship
- True Service and sacrifice defined
- Responding to neighbors because of God’s mercies to us
Group Study Time
Romans 12: 9-21
Connecting
- Gather with two or more people for a community discovery bible study session.
- Start with a heartfelt prayer, inviting God to guide and bless your understanding.
- Explore the passage by reading it at least twice, using different Bible versions if available, then retell the story together as a group.
- Reflect and share the challenges and blessings you experienced from the previous study.
Comprehending
Responses to the Neighboring community
- What is genuine service to humanity? Who is a good neighbor?
- Read Romans 12: 9-13. List down sacrificial things you should do or not do to others, or neighbors because of God’s mercies?. Discuss each of those things? How easy or hard do they seem?
- Read Romans 12: 14-21. What should you do or not do to those who hurt you and those who are hurting around you?
Committing
- Engage with the Bible—read, study, memorize, meditate, pray, listen, and live it out.
- List three lessons you have learnt as an agent of change that you would like to put into practice and teach others about.
- Take time and worship Jesus with the attributes revealed about Christ.
- Use the SPACEPETS model, to assist you in putting God’s word into practice. Look for:
- Sin to confess
- Promise to claim
- Attitude to change
- Command to keep
- Error to change
- Prayer to make
- Example to copy
- Truth to obey and
- Something praiseworthy
Communicating
- Identify one person you can connect with and share the valuable insights and lessons you gained from this session.
- Reach out to a new believer—either in person or by phone—and pray with them to support them through their challenges, including any concerns about attending church.
- Create a new group and guide others through this study to help them grow in their understanding.
Post Lesson Teaching Summary
Great job completing the study! Take a moment to listen to this summary to reinforce your group’s understanding of the text and ensure you’re all on the same page. We’re here to support your learning journey!
Be a living sacrifice to the wounded neighbors
Romans 12: 9-21
Audio Summary
Romans 12:9-21
- Context:
- Prodigal (Luke 15) received mercy, not judgment; Romans 12:9-21 extends mercy-driven living from self/body to neighbors.
- Mercy—God’s unearned favor—fuels sacrifice, not expectation of reward.
- Genuine Love (Romans 12:9-13):
- Love sincerely, hate evil, cling to good (v. 9); honor neighbors eagerly, serve God fervently, help the needy, show hospitality (v. 10-13).
- Mercy received inspires active, joyful sacrifice for all neighbors—good or struggling.
- Response to Neighbors (Romans 12:14-16):
- Bless, don’t curse, persecutors (v. 14); rejoice with the joyful, weep with the suffering (v. 15); live humbly and harmoniously (v. 16).
- Mercy mirrors the father’s heart—empathizing with wounded or hostile neighbors (Good Samaritan, Luke 10).
- Overcoming Evil (Romans 12:17-21):
- Reject revenge, pursue peace, honorably bless enemies with kindness (v. 17-20, Deuteronomy 32:35); conquer evil with good (v. 21).
- Mercy triumphs—heap coals of shame through love, not vengeance.
- Application:
- Live sacrificially for neighbors—rejoicing, suffering, or hostile—reflecting God’s mercy to us, not their merit, with grace-enabled love.