If you are looking for the beginning of study guide for Tales of Ancient Egypt by Roger Lancelyn Green then you should start HERE with the brief introduction. The links to each set of study questions will be posted at the bottom of that original post as they are completed so you can easily find whichever section you are looking for.
Grammar Questions: (The Information of the Text)
What are Setna and Se-Osiris observing at the start of this story? (pg. 118)
What does Se-Osiris say to his father that hurts his feelings? (pg. 119)
What does Se-Osiris say he can do so that he and Setna can learn the fates of the two deceased men? (pg. 119)
Which of the three spiritual parts of Se-Osiris and Setna go to the Duat? (pg. 120)
Which of the three spiritual parts of men go to the Duat for judgment? (pg. 121)
What do we learn about the First Region of the Night? (pg. 121)
What do we learn about the Second Region of the Night? (pg. 121-122)
What do we learn about the Third Region of the Night? (pg. 122)
How many total “Regions of the Night” are there? (pg. 122)
What must Ra do every night in the 10th region? (pg. 122)
What does the “Door-Keeper” demand of those who would enter the Hall of Osiris? (pg. 122-123)
Who announces the Kas to Osiris? (pg. 123)
What does each Ka say about themself before they are judged? (pg. 124)
How is each Ka judged to see whether or not they are good or bad? (pg. 124-125)
What is the fate of evil men? (pg. 124)
What is the fate of good men? (pg. 124-125)
What happened to the rich man and the poor man? (pg. 125)
Logic Questions: (The Interpretation/Comparison of the Text)
Why does Setna assume that the rich man will fare better in the underworld? (pg. 118)
In this story we see what is perhaps the clearest picture of the Egyptian concept of the three spiritual parts of man (pg. 120). Explain, as best you can, what is unique to each part.
Why do Setna and Se-Osiris enter the Duat with their Bais instead of their Kas? (pg. 120-121)
Why would Osiris’ throne room have a “ceiling of fire” and walls that are “living serpents” with pavement of “water”? (pg.123) Are these symbolic of anything?
Rhetoric Questions: (The Analysis of Ideas in the Text)
What other well known stories have tales of traveling to the underworld? What are some similarities and dissimilarities in them?
What should we think about stories in our own day where people claim to have gone to heaven or hell and then come back?
Theological Analysis: (Sola Scriptura)
Compare this story to Luke 16:19-31. What similarities and dissimilarities do you see? Why are the differences important?
On page 124 the Kas of the dead declare their righteousness before their judgment. Read Luke 18:9-14. What is similar and what is different? Why do the differences matter?
Compare the same passage where Kas are justifying themselves before Osiris to Matthew 25:31-46. What is similar and what is different? Why do the differences matter?
Virtues/Vices/Great Ideas: (Find them in the Text)
Being Known, Eschatology