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  1. Jun 18, 2012 · Jesus, in short, had an uncanny ability to immediately focus in on each individual’s particular needs. This led to immediate rapport and engagement. Here are just a few examples of different types of questions he employed: Questions to engage others. Jesus used simple, short questions to create a connection and draw people in. In the Gospel ...

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  2. Jan 24, 2020 · Jesus asked a variety of questions. Here are a few examples. Questions to make a human connection: When a Samaritan woman came to draw water, Jesus said to her, “Will you give me a drink?” The Samaritan woman said to him, “You are a Jew and I am a Samaritan woman.

    • Bob Tiede
  3. Jesus asks questions that can be easily answered (Matthew 5:13) and questions with no obvious answer (Luke 18:19). And he answers questions with questions of his own, either to drive home a point (Luke 7:42) or to expose duplicity (Mark 12:14–15), or to get people thinking.

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  4. Aug 11, 2015 · When Jesus taught one of the most important things in the Bible, he chose to ask a question first. Why? All the great Sunday school lessons , small group discussions, and Bible study meetings have something in common: they involve engaging questions.

    • Early Years of Discovery
    • Jesus The Master Communicator
    • Relevancy and Why Questions
    • Jesus’ Discovery Style

    Very early in our ministry experiences among oral learners in the villages of Mexico, we often asked some “analytical, expository” questions about the Scripture passages we were introducing. In our ignorance about oral tradition and learning styles, our questions were directed at abstract nuances of meaning, at implied inferences and broader applic...

    From then on, our dialogue in the villages changed. We began to pattern our questions after the dialogue style of Jesus Himself. He already was our inspiration for using the mother tongue and for using parables. Jesus used Aramaic, the mother tongue of his audience, so they would understand. Likewise, He chose parables to provide contextualized ill...

    In learning more about the dialogue style of Jesus, we recognized that intuitively, Jesus seemed to stay away from WHY questions. In Luke 17:17-18, Jesus performed a miracle, healing ten lepers. He asked: Another of Jesus’ questions in Matthew 7:4 avoided the word WHY in a rather spectacular way: Jesus’ simple, direct questions and answers were par...

    Jesus modeled His own kind of discovery learning. Listeners were required to observe, participate, answer questions, and take action. Jesus sometimes responded to questions with a story, followed by questions of His own. He encouraged two-way conversation, giving specific, contextualized examples. His characters themselves provided the truth, illus...

  5. John uses questions to convince readers to “believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God” that they might have life in his name (pp. 11–12). The title captures the author’s objective, to examine the questions of Jesus in John in light of their logical, rhetorical, and linguistic virtues (p. 13).

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  7. Nov 12, 2021 · To determine why Jesus frequently used questions in His teaching, first consider the types of questions He asked. Jesus didn’t limit His questions to those that elicited what people knew. He went beyond mere recall of information to causing people to reflect or evaluate. Here are some examples: