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Example Lessons

These read-only examples show what a completed lesson looks like: a clear title, optional preparation notes (audience, theme, and sources), and a finished lesson outline with sections, questions, quotes, and activities.

Finding Joy in the Journey

Joy can coexist with hardship and grow through faith-filled spiritual practice

Audience:Adults carrying long-term burdens who want to find resilience through faith
Theme:Joy can coexist with hardship and grow through faith-filled spiritual practice
Sections:6 items

Finding Joy in the Journey

Prepare Yourself

Who this lesson is for

Adults carrying long-term burdens who want to find resilience through faith

Major theme

Joy can coexist with hardship and grow through faith-filled spiritual practice

Call to action

  • Name one small joy you noticed this week
  • Choose one spiritual practice that keeps you grounded

Sources

  • Philippians 4:4 - 'Rejoice in the Lord always'
  • Personal reflection on finding joy amid trials

Outline

notes

Open by acknowledging real pain while naming that joy is still available.

question

What is one small joy you noticed recently, even in a hard week?

quote

Rejoice in the Lord always. I will say it again: Rejoice!

Philippians 4:4

question

What does 'be of good cheer' mean when life is genuinely difficult? (See John 16:33)

activity

Invite the group to write one practice that helps them choose joy and share in pairs.

call to_action

This week, practice one small habit that keeps your heart open to joy.

Grace That Enables Effort

Grace is the power that enables our discipleship, not a backup plan for failures

Audience:Adults wrestling with perfectionism and the tension between human effort and divine grace
Theme:Grace is the power that enables our discipleship, not a backup plan for failures
Sections:6 items

Grace That Enables Effort

Prepare Yourself

Who this lesson is for

Adults wrestling with perfectionism and the tension between human effort and divine grace

Major theme

Grace is the power that enables our discipleship, not a backup plan for failures

Call to action

  • Seek grace to enable your effort, not just to recover from failure

Sources

  • 2 Corinthians 12:9 - 'My grace is sufficient for you'
  • Reflection: How does grace empower rather than excuse?

Outline

question

When have you felt like your efforts were not enough?

notes

Frame grace as fuel for discipleship rather than a last-resort rescue.

quote

My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.

2 Corinthians 12:9

question

What would change if you saw grace as the power that helps you act?

activity

Invite each person to name one place they need enabling grace this week.

call to_action

Pray for enabling grace before you start the thing you are avoiding.

Questions as Acts of Faith

Faith grows and deepens through honest questions, not silence

Audience:Young adults and teens navigating doubt while building personal faith
Theme:Faith grows and deepens through honest questions, not silence
Sections:6 items

Questions as Acts of Faith

Prepare Yourself

Who this lesson is for

Young adults and teens navigating doubt while building personal faith

Major theme

Faith grows and deepens through honest questions, not silence

Call to action

  • Write down one question about faith that still matters to you

Sources

  • James 1:5-6 - Seeking wisdom and asking in faith
  • Reflection: How can sincere questions strengthen rather than weaken faith?

Outline

notes

Set a tone of safety: questions are welcome and do not disqualify faith.

question

What is a question you have carried that still matters to you?

quote

If any of you lacks wisdom, you should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to you.

James 1:5

question

How can questions become an act of trust rather than a threat?

activity

Small groups: list ways to seek answers with scripture, prayer, and leaders.

call to_action

Bring one question to God this week and record what you feel.

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