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C
ontact
Chapter 6:
Freedom from Generational Sin
Questions 17-33
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17.
What is most likely going to happen the longer you hold onto generational sin patterns?
18.
Why is it that people see themselves in their children and find themselves being harsh to them?
19.
Give three examples of generational sin patterns being described.
a)
b)
c)
20.
How are a family’s generational sins like a Japanese Bonzai tree?
21.
_____ good and bad, can be passed down to the next generation.
22.
What two scriptures state how God will punish the iniquity of the fathers unto the children all the way to the third and fourth generations of those that hate God?
a)
b)
23.
How does the author simply explain the working of a generational sin pattern, which is sometimes referred to as a “generational curse?”
24.
Give an example of the above statement.
25.
What spiritual law is at work when we see these types of things happening?
26.
How can God allow such things?
27.
The threat of generational sins being passed on to a generation beyond the first will greatly depend on what?
28.
What scripture says that children are not actually “punished” by God for the sins of their parents?
29.
Children who are struggling with the consequences of sowing and reaping, if they accept Christ, can experience what kind of breakthrough?
30.
What curse remains for the unregenerate?
31.
If someone is under the curse of sin, what Scripture talks about the fact that they are not truly born again?
32.
What scripture talks about the effect of a Christian coming under an undeserved curse?
33.
What do the use of the terms “fluttering sparrow” or “darting swallow” indicate will happen to the curse that comes undeservingly against a believer? (Answers may vary in wording).
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Continue to
Chapter 6, Questions 34-50