Bible study November 23rd

“Father, forgive them…”

Week beginning Sunday 23rd of November
Lectionary Reading: Luke 23:33–43


Christ the King and the Paradox of the Cross


Icebreaker

Tell a story of a time when strength or leadership looked different from what you expected — gentler, quieter, or more vulnerable.
Or
Say something about a leader that you admire or respect.

First Reading of the Text

Read Luke 23:33–43 aloud once.
Invite a time of silence
What word or phrase caught your attention?
No discussion yet — just offer the word or phrase.

Second Reading of the Text

(Notice More Deeply)

Read the passage aloud a second time, by a different voice if possible.
Invite silence

Ask:
What did you notice this time that you didn’t hear before?
Again, no explanations — just noticing.

Going Deeper into the Text

Move slowly, offering short insights with space for response.
These are prompts, not a lecture.

a. The Setting: Power Turned Upside Down

Luke’s crucifixion scene is marked by gentleness, mercy, and presence.
Jesus is mocked, but Luke shows these taunts revealing truth.

Prompt:

  • Where in this passage do you see strength showing up in vulnerability?

b. The Inscription: “This is the King of the Jews

Rome meant it as humiliation.
Luke hears it as proclamation.
The Cross becomes a throne of compassion.

Prompt:

What does kingship look like here? How is it different from human ideas of power?

c. Forgiveness: “Father, forgive them…”

Jesus entrusts forgiveness to God.
This is a model for when we cannot forgive fully ourselves.

Prompt:

  • What might it mean in our lives to entrust forgiveness to God when we are not ready?

d. The Two Criminals: Theology from the Margins

The “penitent thief” speaks truth more clearly than anyone:
“We are guilty … this man is innocent … remember me.”
He asks not for rescue, but for relationship.

Prompt:

  • What surprises you about the thief’s request?What surprises you about Jesus’ response?

e. “Today you will be with me…”

In Luke, “today” means the present breaking-in of salvation.
Grace is immediate. Not after improvement. Not after proof. Today.

Prompt:

  • Where might we need to hear a “today” in our own lives or communities?

Wonderings (Intergenerational)

These are open-ended. No right answers. Allow silence.

  • I wonder what it feels like that the last person Jesus speaks to is a criminal.
  • I wonder how God’s power looks when it shows up as compassion rather than force.
  • I wonder which voice in the story you relate to today — the mockers, the thief, the silent onlookers, Jesus? Why?
  • I wonder what “Paradise today” might look like in an ordinary place — a home, a ward, a classroom, a street.

Prayer

Christ our King, whose throne is a cross
and whose crown is mercy,
help us to see your power in unexpected places.
Teach us the strength of compassion,
the courage to forgive,
and the hope of “today.”
Remember us, hold us,
and make us people who bring your kingdom
through love that never walks away. Amen.


PDF

You can download the printable bible study here

Image: The Crucifixion, by Giambattista Tiepolo, 1696–1770 (Saint Louis Art Museum)

Share:

Other HeartBeats

“God comes to the wilderness precisely because it is wilderness.”
Healing, justice, reconciliation, the renewal of all things.
“Father, forgive them…”
“You will not fear the terror of the night.”
“I know that my Redeemer lives.”
Scroll to Top