88 Visual Concepts towards Knowing God with NLT Bible Verses & Reflection Questions
🧩 Big truths about God, finally click
🌱 Faith that takes root early
💬 Kids who can explain what they believe
88 Visual Concepts towards Knowing God with NLT Bible Verses & Reflection Questions
🧩 Big truths about God, finally click
🌱 Faith that takes root early
💬 Kids who can explain what they believe
🔥 Join 1,000+ Parents 🔥
I started using this resource with my 8 year old to start teaching him the fundamental doctrines of our faith. It is an absolutely wonderful resource. He loved using it and was always excited about our lessons. In his own words, “I have questions about God and this helps me start answering those questions“.
👉 Real feedback from families using Systematic Theology for Kids. 📚
No — it's written specifically for ages 6 to 9, in plain language with a full-color picture on every concept. You read it together, starting with the simpler ideas, so your child grows into the bigger ones at their own pace. Most parents are surprised how much their kids take in.
The verses are from the New Living Translation (NLT), chosen because it's easy for young readers to follow. It focuses on the core truths Christians across traditions hold in common — who God is, creation, sin, Jesus, and salvation — so it sits comfortably in most Christian homes.
Yes, and that's exactly who it's built for. The idea, the verse, and the question are written out for you, so you're not expected to be the expert — you're a guide reading alongside your child. If they ask something you're unsure of, the book gives you a place to find the answer together.
About five minutes for one concept. There's no required schedule — some families do one a day at breakfast, others do a few on Sundays. You can move as fast or slow as your child's attention allows.
Yes — every one of the 88 concepts is in full color, which is a big part of why it holds a young child's attention. It's a printed book made to be read together and returned to often.
It's built to feel like a conversation, not a lecture. The pictures pull them in, the lessons are short, and the reflection question gets them talking instead of just listening — which is usually the part kids like most.