A well-structured Sabbath School lesson does not merely give information — it leads a person step by step to discovery. Jesus Himself showed this principle when He walked with the disciples to Emmaus:
“And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, He interpreted to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning Himself.” Luke 24:27
He built it progressively — from foundation to culmination. The same principle lies at the heart of an effective lesson.
Step 1 — Begin with the key text
Every lesson has a central idea. Start with the text that expresses it most clearly. Read it together and ask simple questions: “What does this text say about God? What problem or hope does it reveal?” In this way, people understand from the beginning what the lesson will be about.
“All Scripture is inspired by God and is profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness.” 2 Tim 3:16–17
Step 2 — Build the context: from the broader picture to the specific
After the key text — move from the general to the specific: first the background (who, when, to whom it was said), then the main message, then parallel texts. The Old Testament often gives the root of what the New Testament reveals in fullness. For example, if the topic is forgiveness, begin with Psalm 32, then Isaiah 1:18, then 1 John 1:9.
Step 3 — One or Two "From Christ" Texts
Every lesson should lead to the person of Jesus. Find a text where Christ personally speaks or acts in relation to the lesson topic. This is not just a good tradition — it is a theological principle: Jesus is the heart of all Scripture (John 5:39).
Step 4 — Finish with Practical Application
The final text — or question — should be addressed to those present personally: "How does this change my relationship with God today?" A lesson that does not end with a personal challenge remains a lecture — but not an encounter with the Word.
Practical tips
- No more than 5–7 texts per lesson — better deeper than broader.
- Avoid "decorative" quotations — every text should carry meaningful weight.
- Leave room for silence — after reading, give 30 seconds to think before discussing.
A good Sabbath School lesson is not a lecture with illustrations, but a shared journey to the heart of Scripture. Lead people step by step — and God Himself will reveal to them what He wants to say.