He’s a sensation. He attracts people, not just for what he does but for what he says. And, in some sense, what he is. Though probably not especially handsome or prepossessing, don’t you imagine there was something about him–some literally otherworldly quality–that drew crowds?

Then, at the height of this rock-star ministry, he takes a turn. A literal turn: Luke says, “He set his face toward Jerusalem.” The verb indicates a very purposeful, no-looking-back journey toward a particular destination. And for a particular reason, which he shares with his inner circle. At least three times he tells them plainly what his purpose is, and they refuse to believe him. His disciples, and probably everyone else, assume he’s going to claim his crown. They’re right, in a way; they just don’t know what kind of crown it will be.
But first he has to get there. And the Road to Jerusalem begins with the most vital question anyone can ever ask.
To find out what the question was, click below for the printable .pdf of this week’s challenge, with more questions, scripture passages, and activities:
Bible Reading Challenge Week 39: The Road to Jerusalem
(This is a continuation of a series of posts about the “whole story” of the Bible. I plan to run one every week, on Tuesdays, with a printable PDF. The printable includes a brief 2-3 paragraph introduction, Bible passages to read, a key verse, 5-7 thought/discussion questions, and 2-3 activities for the kids. Here’s the Overview of the entire Bible series.)
Previous: Week 38: Messiah – Signs and Wonders
Next: Week 40: Messiah – The Last Days







Few prophets–few men or women, period–lived through as much dramatic and consequential history as Jeremiah, but he’d rather have skipped it all. Most of us would–he was a living, breathing example of “shoot the messenger.” His ministry spanned King Josiah’s reformation (he wrote an elegy for the funeral) to King Zedekiah’s rebellion that ended it all for the southern kingdom.
(throughout the period of the Judges), and failed as a Kingdom, first with Saul and then with a whole line of despotic, unfaithful kings. But this is much worse than failure.
