Study Plans
Guided journeys through Scripture — from a single week to sixty days. Each plan is built around a real arc with daily passages, reflection questions, and prayers.
Medium Plans
10–14 daysBorn in Fire: The Early Church
This ten-day journey traces the early church from its explosive, uncertain birth through its struggles, fractures, and faithful persistence — and arrives at a vision of what it means to belong to one another across every difference. Small groups will find themselves not just studying the first believers, but recognizing their own community in them: the same fears, the same hopes, the same God holding it all together.
Hope in Hard Seasons
This fourteen-day journey begins by honestly naming the weight of hard seasons — the confusion, the grief, the silence — and gradually moves the reader toward a steady, tested hope that is not the absence of pain but the presence of God within it. Each day invites personal reflection and self-examination, pressing the reader to look inward before looking upward. By the end, the reader arrives not at easy answers, but at genuine consolation: a deepened trust in the God who is near in the dark.
Long Plans
21–30 daysCalled Out: Walking with Abraham
This 21-day journey follows Abraham not as a distant hero but as a mirror — a man called out of comfort, repeatedly tested, and slowly reshaped by a God he was still learning to trust. Each day moves inward, asking the reader to sit with the same tensions Abraham faced: the cost of obedience, the silence of waiting, and the strange arithmetic of faith. By the end, the reader arrives not with all answers resolved, but with a deeper, more honest understanding of what it means to walk with God over the long haul.
The Kingdom of God Is at Hand
This 21-day journey takes small groups from a comfortable but vague idea of "the Kingdom" into a full-scale confrontation with what it actually demands. Readers will be unsettled, reoriented, and ultimately called to decide — not just what they believe about the Kingdom, but whether they are willing to live inside it. By the end, the group should feel the weight of arrival: this is not a concept to study, but a reign to submit to.
Learning to Live by Faith
This 21-day journey takes the reader from an honest confrontation with the limits of self-reliance, through the difficult and practical work of building a faith that holds under real pressure, to a place of grounded, daily trust. By the end, the reader will have moved from understanding faith as a concept to inhabiting it as a posture — a lived, practiced orientation toward God in ordinary life.
The Throne Above All Things
This 21-day journey moves through the full weight of what it means to live under a sovereign God — beginning with the disorienting questions that sovereignty raises, descending into its tensions and paradoxes, and arriving at a posture of trust that has been tested and refined rather than assumed. By the end, the reader will not have resolved every mystery, but will have been reshaped by sitting inside them long enough to find a different kind of ground to stand on.
Extended Plans
40–60 daysThe Psalms: A Journey Through Emotion
This 40-day study leads the reader through the full emotional landscape of the Psalms — from raw honesty about pain and confusion, through the slow work of trust and transformation, to a settled place of worship and rest. Each day invites personal reflection rather than quick answers, guiding the reader to meet themselves — and God — with greater depth and authenticity by the end.
The Whole Story: Genesis to Revelation
This 60-day journey traces the single, unified narrative of Scripture — from creation's first light to the New Jerusalem's eternal dawn — not as a survey of books, but as a deep immersion into the Bible's grand themes of covenant, fracture, redemption, and consummation. The reader will move through the full arc of God's story at a contemplative pace, sitting with its tensions, its silences, and its beauty, arriving at the end not merely more informed, but more formed — with a sense of having inhabited the whole story and found their place within it.