March 25, 2024
March 31 | Discovery Questions
These Discovery Questions are for use with this week’s Lookout Bible Lesson, "Edification" (1 Corinthians 12:12-26; 14:1-12), by Mark Scott.
The Lookout’s story begins in 1888. At the time, a young people’s prayer movement known as Christian Endeavor was sweeping the nation. In response, Standard Publishing introduced Young People’s Standard, a journal created to encourage and promote the work of young adults in the local church. On March 10, 1894, the journal was renamed The Lookout. The new name reflected an expanded purpose as a magazine of Christian education for older young people and adults. “The Lookout” was drawn from the most influential committee in Christian Endeavor work—the Lookout Committee—a group responsible for attendance, promotion, and growth.
Since then, The Lookout has faithfully served the local church by promoting Christian education and Christian living. Influential leaders such as James DeForest Murch and Guy P. Leavitt guided the magazine as editors. Trusted Bible teachers—including P. H. Welshimer of Canton, Ohio, and Orrin Root of Cincinnati, who wrote the Sunday school lesson commentary for more than 50 years—provided rich, biblically grounded content week after week. From the moment it first rolled off the presses, The Lookout has appeared weekly in homes and churches across the United States and around the world—without interruption—except for a single issue (February 7, 1937), when a flood prevented shipping from the magazine’s Cincinnati office near the Ohio River.
In December 2015, the publishing company adopted the corporate name Christian Standard Media, LLC, continuing to publish The Lookout and Christian Standard as flagship publications and serving as a trusted ministry partner in a rapidly changing world. For more than 120 years—and more than 125 when including the Young People’s Standard era—The Lookout has equipped Christian adults with biblical teaching and timely insight, helping readers grow in Christ, cultivate godly relationships, and live as faithful witnesses in the world.
March 25, 2024
These Discovery Questions are for use with this week’s Lookout Bible Lesson, "Edification" (1 Corinthians 12:12-26; 14:1-12), by Mark Scott.
March 18, 2024
A secular proverb says, “When all else fails, read the directions.” The Corinthian church had trouble following directions . . .
March 18, 2024
Throughout history, Christ’s followers have placed high value on the Lord’s Supper. Whatever else takes place in our weekly worship gatherings, the bread and the cup focus attention on the central facts of our faith: the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus. . . .
March 18, 2024
These Discovery Questions are for use with this week’s Lookout Bible Lesson, "Communion" (1 Corinthians 11:17-34), by Mark Scott.
March 11, 2024
Simon Sinek emphasized that “Great leaders sacrifice their own comfort—even their own survival—for the good of those in their care.” The apostle Paul could have written that line. . . .
March 11, 2024
It’s creepy if a stranger looks directly at your face. In some situations, though, the best way to communicate is eyeball to eyeball. . . .
March 11, 2024
These Discovery Questions are for use with this week’s Lookout Bible Lesson, "Selfless Liberty" (1 Corinthians 8:9-13; 9:19-23; 10:23-33), by Mark Scott.
March 4, 2024
The divisions in the church at Corinth were mostly caused by pride, which ran counter to servant leadership. . . .
March 4, 2024
Uppercase leaders demand attention; lowercase leaders quietly do God’s work. . . .
March 4, 2024
These Discovery Questions are for use with this week’s Lookout Bible Lesson, "Servant Leadership" (1 Corinthians 3:5-15; 4:1-5), by Mark Scott.
February 26, 2024
To say that the church in Roman Corinth had trouble with unity would be a gross understatement. They were divided over leaders, the nature of the gospel, the use of Christian freedom . . .
February 26, 2024
Are we willing to make Christian unity a personal goal? Practically speaking, how can we encourage the unity of God’s people? . . .
February 26, 2024
These Discovery Questions are for use with this week’s Lookout Bible Lesson, "Unity" (1 Corinthians 1:10-17; 12:12-20), by Mark Scott.
February 19, 2024
People in Jesus’ day saw the miracles, heard him teach, and watched him interact with people high and low. Still, many of them refused to believe. But for the Jesus followers of John 20, seeing was believing. . . .
February 19, 2024
Thomas is known for his wavering faith, but he wasn’t alone in his skepticism. At first, the other apostles considered the initial reports of Jesus’ resurrection nonsense until they saw him with their own eyes . . .
February 19, 2024
These Discovery Questions are for use with this week’s Lookout Bible Lesson, “Seeing and Believing” (John 20:19-31), by Mark Scott.
February 12, 2024
The secular proverb, “There are none so blind as those who will not see,” is certainly true. That proverb would describe many of the Pharisees of Jesus’ day. . . .
February 12, 2024
How could they miss it? How could the Pharisees interact so closely with Jesus but fail to recognize him as God’s Son? His miracles weren’t done in a corner. . . .
February 12, 2024
These Discovery Questions are for use with this week’s Lookout Bible Lesson, “The Unbelief of the Pharisees” (John 9:1-7, 13-16, 24-38), by Mark Scott.
February 5, 2024
The Bible has a love/hate relationship with signs or miracles. On the one hand they can engender faith (John 10:25). On the other hand they can derail faith in the miracle worker (John 6:26). . . .