Showcase
Actual lesson plans DiviNav AI generated across 6 doctrinal traditions — including hard pastoral topics and 30 contested-doctrine cases deliberately chosen to try to trip it up. Each is aligned to a church's Statement of Faith and run through an automatic theology, sensitivity, and plagiarism review.
We try to break our own review. We plant known problems — shaky doctrine, borrowed prose, unsafe advice — into test plans and check that the review catches them, across six traditions (Baptist, Presbyterian/Reformed, Methodist/Wesleyan, Pentecostal/Charismatic, non-denominational, broad evangelical). We keep expanding the tests — and a human always has the final read.
Concretely: we planted one known error in each of 20 test plans, and the review caught all 6 safety-critical ones (stopping medication, suicide without a crisis line, staying in abuse). When a reworded lift from a published devotional once slipped past, we fixed it and re-tested. Internal testing, not a guarantee — always your call; review before you teach.
The truly blessed life is not the one the world chases but the one Christ describes—a grace-given character that marks the citizens of His kingdom.
Prayer is not a performance or a formula but an ongoing, honest conversation with a Father who loves you, invites you near, and listens.
When we bring our worries to God in prayerful, thankful surrender, He gives a peace that guards our hearts beyond what we can understand.
The certain, glorious, bodily return of Christ is essential Christian hope; the exact timing of a 'rapture' relative to a tribulation is a secondary matter where faithful Christians disagree — so we hold the essentials firmly and the details humbly.
God gives every believer real spiritual armor in Christ, so we don't have to fight life's battles in our own strength—we stand firm by putting on what He has already provided.
Because Christ's finished work fully secures the believer, our confidence for those who die in Christ rests not in our prayers for them but in Jesus' complete and sufficient sacrifice.
God alone creates by His word; our calling is not to command reality but to trust His sovereign will, pray according to it, and steward our speech for life-giving truth.
Jesus gives us more than words to repeat — He gives us a pattern for relationship with the Father that shapes how we worship, depend, forgive, and trust.
Faithful Christians have wrestled with whether hell is unending conscious suffering or final destruction; rather than rushing to certainty, you can hold the biblical texts with humility, take God's judgment seriously, and let the weight of it drive you to the cross.
Whatever the unseen causes of our distress, Jesus draws near to the brokenhearted — and trusting Him means receiving both His comfort and the wise care He provides through prayer, community, and trained helpers.
Christian hospitality is not entertaining our friends but extending the welcome of God—who first welcomed us in Christ—to the stranger, the outsider, and the overlooked.
Real friendship isn't just hanging out—it's loving and encouraging each other the way Jesus loves us, building one another up instead of tearing down.
Sabbath rest is God's gracious gift, rooted in creation, fulfilled in Christ, and pointing us to the eternal rest we have by faith — not a burden to perform but a grace to receive.
God in His love offers grace to all and predestines no one to damnation; those who are lost are lost because they reject the grace freely held out to them, not because God decreed their ruin.
Because Jesus truly rose from the dead, our sins are forgiven, our faith is not futile, and we are called to live new lives of bold, living hope.
Faithful Christians who love the same Bible reach different conclusions about whether women may serve as elders or senior pastors; our calling is to study Scripture carefully, honor our local church's convictions, and steward the gifts God has given every woman to serve His kingdom.
The fruit of the Spirit is not a self-improvement checklist we manufacture, but the natural overflow of a life connected to Jesus and yielded to His Spirit.
God calls every believer to relentlessly pursue holiness, but Scripture pictures this as a Spirit-empowered, lifelong process we never fully complete on our own before glory—so we press on with both hope and humility.
It is the blood of Jesus, received by grace through personal faith, that cleanses us from sin; baptism is the believer's joyful response to that grace, not the act that washes sin away.
The Bible teaches that we are saved by grace through faith in Jesus, and the evidence of that salvation is a changed life and the indwelling Holy Spirit—not any single spiritual gift like speaking in tongues.
Baptism is the covenant sign of God's gracious promise — its validity rests on God's faithfulness, not on the timing, depth, or memory of our faith, so a baptism rightly administered is never to be repeated.
Biblical gratitude is not a feeling that waits for good circumstances—it is a chosen response of trust that flows from knowing the goodness and steadfast love of God in Christ.
Because God in Christ has freely and lavishly given Himself to us, we are freed to give cheerfully and generously — not under compulsion, but as an overflow of grace.
Because God sovereignly weaves even the evil done against us into His good purposes, we can release our offenders and forgive the way He has forgiven us in Christ.
Our salvation rests on the finished work of Christ and the unbreakable grip of God's love — not on the manner or circumstances of our final moments — so we can grieve with real hope.
At the Lord's Supper we don't chew on Christ's physical flesh; by the Spirit and through faith we truly commune with the living, risen Christ as we remember His death, proclaim it, and look for His return.
Ongoing, unrepentant sin is a serious warning to take to heart, but those truly saved are kept by God's grip — so we run to Jesus in repentance instead of living in fear.
Real strength looks like Jesus on his knees with a towel — men who follow Christ lead by serving, putting the needs of others ahead of their own status.
Scripture calls us to honor Mary as the blessed, faithful mother of our Lord and a model disciple — while reserving the saving work of redemption to Jesus Christ alone, the one Mediator and Savior.
Election is God's gracious, loving purpose to save people through Christ — a purpose offered to all, awakened by prevenient grace, and embraced through faith — so that we rest in His love rather than argue about it.
Our salvation rests securely in God's faithful, never-failing love—yet because grace honors our freedom, we are called to keep abiding in Christ rather than presume on grace; true assurance and active perseverance belong together.
Depression is not proof of weak faith; Scripture shows godly people walking through deep darkness, and the God of all comfort meets us there with His presence, His people, and His grace.
The same Spirit who empowered the early church is still at work today—Scripture gives us no expiration date on His gifts, so we pursue them with discernment, hunger, and love.
Jesus teaches us that loving our neighbor means showing kindness and helping anyone in need, even when it costs us something.
Long before we ever reached for God, God in love set His saving purpose on a people — and a right understanding of His electing grace humbles us, secures us, and fuels Spirit-empowered worship and mission.
Because God has forgiven us an unpayable debt in Christ, we are freed and called to extend that same mercy to those who have wronged us — from the heart.
In Christ, believers are a new creation—no inherited sin pattern, family wound, or 'curse' can hold final power over a daughter of God who is redeemed by Jesus and walking in the freedom of His Spirit.
Scripture unmistakably condemns drunkenness as sin and warns of alcohol's dangers, yet it treats the moderate use of alcohol as a matter of Christian liberty and conscience rather than declaring all drinking sin — so godly men pursue self-control, love for the weaker brother, and the glory of God in whatever they choose.
God is perfectly just and perfectly good, salvation is found only in Jesus Christ, and we can trust the Judge of all the earth to do right—while He calls us to take the gospel to those who have not heard.
God truly delights to bless generous givers and promises to provide for those who trust Him — but the Bible reframes "return on tithing" away from a vending-machine transaction and toward joyful worship, deepened trust, and God's faithful provision (which includes, but is far bigger than, money).
We can wholeheartedly believe God is our Healer and still see a doctor — faith and medicine are not rivals, because God works through both, and seeking care is an act of trust, not a denial of it.
Jesus takes the covenant of marriage with utmost seriousness, yet the same Lord who upholds God's design also extends justifying and sanctifying grace to those whose marriages have broken — calling all of us to holiness, honesty, and hope rather than to condemnation.
God kept His promise and sent Jesus, His Son, to be born as a baby because He loves us — and that is the best gift of all.
Paul's instruction for women to "keep silent" addresses a specific problem of disorder in Corinthian worship, not a timeless ban on women speaking — and the wider witness of Scripture celebrates women who pray, prophesy, teach, and lead in Christ.
Patience is not merely self-effort or a personality trait—it is fruit the Holy Spirit grows in surrendered lives, especially as we trust God in waiting and trials.
Integrity means being the same person on the inside and outside, in public and in private — and because God sees and loves us, we can choose honesty even when it costs us.
Scripture clearly teaches every believer is baptized into Christ by the one Spirit; faithful Christians disagree about whether speaking in tongues is the required evidence of that baptism, and we can study this honestly, charitably, and with a hunger for the Spirit's fullness.
The "name it and claim it" promise of guaranteed financial blessing trades a sovereign, gracious God for a vending machine. True faith trusts the God who has already made us rich in Christ, and it produces contentment and generosity rather than a formula for getting wealthy.
Real courage doesn't come from being big or strong — it comes from trusting that God is bigger than anything we're afraid of.
God is the Creator of everything, and worshiping Him as Maker is glorious—but the true test of saving faith is trust in Jesus Christ crucified and risen, not winning a debate about the age of the earth. We can hold our convictions about creation with both conviction and humility.
God calls husbands and wives to speak words that build up rather than tear down — communication rooted in listening, grace, and truth spoken in love reflects the covenant love of Christ and strengthens the bond between spouses.
Your truest identity isn't something you build, perform, or earn — it's received as a gift from the God who made you and calls you his own, and that secure identity is what frees you to discover your calling.
Jesus is God who became one of us, died for our sins, and rose again — and knowing Him personally is the heart of what it means to be a Christian.
Grief is not a problem to be solved or a sign of weak faith — it is the cost of love, and we can carry it honestly in the presence of a God who draws near to the brokenhearted and gives a hope that does not erase our tears.