| Bill Hill Adult
• 4 Sessions of Learner’s Materials
• 4 Sessions of Teaching Materials
• 4 Sessions of Bible Background
1. Exodus 14:10-18 2. Exodus 18:13-26 3. Exodus 33:12-23 4. Deuteronomy 6:1-12
The life of Moses has been scrutinized from every angle, but his call experience is often emphasizedand with good reason. That experience reveals how humbling it is to be a human being called into the service of our powerful Creator God. But Moses’ life instructs us in many ways, even though some 3,500 years have passed since he lived.
Moses experienced a significant growth curve in his relationship with God. He did not finish the way he began. The stuttering, stammering, insecure shepherd described in Exodus 3 grows into the wise, capable leader in Exodus 33 who asks God to “show me your glory.” We would do well, then, to trace the life of Moses so we might discover how his life changed, both personally and as Israel’s leader, as he learned what it meant to love God with all his heart, soul, and strength.
A part of the NextSunday Resources line of adult Bible studies, Moses: From the Burning Bush to the Promised Land contains four lessons for use as individual study or group discussion. Each study contains lessons on the biblical material, combined with an additional commentary from an alternate, but complementary, viewpoint.
Bill Hill is the author of the Moses: From the Burning Bush to the Promised Land study. A resident of the San Antonio area, he serves as pastor of Sphere of Faith Community Church and works as a chaplain for Heart to Heart Hospice. He is the author of Jeremiah: Raising Faith from the Fire, the Smyth & Helwys Annual Bible Study. He and his wife, Laura, have six children and four grandchildren.
Cecil Sherman is the commentary writer for Moses: From the Burning Bush to the Promised Land. A native of Fort Worth Texas, he has pastored churches in Texas, North Carolina, Georgia, and New Jersey. He has most recently served as visiting professor of pastoral ministries at the Baptist Theological Seminary at Richmond. He is the author of the five-volume Formations Commentary series and the autobiography By My Own Reckoning.
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