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topical12 sessions

The Gospel of John

by Appostolic Staff

John
Prep time: ~20 min per session

Step into the Gospel of John and encounter Jesus as the eternal Word made flesh. Across twelve sessions, this curriculum guides adults, teens, and children alike to see how John’s Gospel reveals the heart of Christ through His seven miraculous signs and His profound “I AM” declarations. Each session invites participants to explore how these moments unveil Jesus’ divine identity, deepen faith, and call believers to a life of abiding discipleship. Designed for multi‑age engagement, *The Gospel of John* offers a clear, relational approach to studying Scripture—helping every generation grow in confidence, love, and obedience to the One who is the Light of the world.

What's Included

When you pull this study into your workspace, these items come with it.

  • Lessons60

    Teaching sessions adapted for your audience.

  • Handouts1

    Take-home sheets to reinforce the lesson.

  • Discussion Guides1

    Questions and prompts for teachers and parents.

  • Quizzes0

    Knowledge checks and reflection questions.

  • Slides0

    Presentation decks for classroom use.

What You'll Study

In the Beginning Was the Word

John 1:1–18

Jesus, the Eternal Word

Learning Objectives

Participants will grasp that Jesus is the eternal Word who was with God and is God. They will recognize how John’s opening connects creation and redemption, and express ways Jesus brings light into their lives.

Behold the Lamb of God

John 1:19–51

The Calling of Disciples

Learning Objectives

Participants will identify John the Baptist’s mission as witness to the Lamb of God. They will explore what it means to follow Jesus personally and invite others to discover Him. Help participants connect how Jesus fulfills Israel’s sacrificial system — the Lamb who takes away sin once for all.

Water into Wine

John 2:1–11

The First Sign

Learning Objectives

Participants will understand the significance of Jesus’ first sign at Cana as a revelation of His glory. They will discuss how Jesus transforms the ordinary into new joy and abundance. Show how Jesus transforms those jars (old covenant) into vessels of joy (new covenant grace).

The New Birth

John 3:1–21

Born from Above

Learning Objectives

Participants will explain Jesus’ teaching about being born again by the Spirit. They will reflect on the difference between outward religion and inward renewal.Contrast his religious status with his confusion about spiritual rebirth: being “good” isn’t enough without the Spirit’s transformation.

Living Water for a Thirsty Heart

John 4:1–42

The Living Water

Learning Objectives

Participants will see Jesus as the source of living water who satisfies the deepest thirst. They will recognize His inclusive grace in reaching the Samaritan woman and consider how to share that grace with others. Map the geography and discuss how Jesus crosses social and religious boundaries to offer life.

The Bread of Life

John 6:1–59

True Sustenance

Learning Objectives

Participants will understand Jesus’ claim, “I AM the Bread of Life,” as a call to depend on Him daily. They will explore how faith in Christ nourishes and sustains spiritual life. Connect manna in the wilderness (Exodus 16) with Jesus’ claim — He is God’s true provision for spiritual hunger.

The Light of the World

John 8:12–59

Revealing the Father

Learning Objectives

Participants will identify Jesus as the Light of the World who reveals the truth about God and exposes darkness. They will explore how He made this claim during the Feast of Tabernacles, when the temple was lit with great lamps celebrating God’s guiding light in the wilderness. They will recognize that Jesus fulfills and surpasses that symbol as the eternal Light who leads all people out of darkness. Participants will consider how walking in His light brings freedom, guidance, and renewed purpose.

The Good Shepherd

John 10:1–21

Knowing His Voice

Learning Objectives

Participants will recognize Jesus as the Good Shepherd who knows, leads, and lays down His life for His sheep. They will evaluate what it means to listen to His voice in everyday decisions. Context to highlight: Echoes Ezekiel 34, where God condemns Israel’s false shepherds and promises to shepherd His people Himself. Show how Jesus fulfills that prophecy — the shepherd who knows every sheep by name.

The Resurrection and the Life

John 11:1–44

Power Over Death

Learning Objectives

Participants will understand that Jesus is the Resurrection and the Life with power over death. They will reflect on how belief in Him brings hope in grief and courage to trust His timing. Discuss how Jesus shifts resurrection from a future event to a present reality in Himself.

The Way, the Truth, and the Life

John 14:1–14

The Promise of His Presence

Learning Objectives

Participants will affirm that Jesus alone is the Way, the Truth, and the Life, and that no one comes to the Father except through Him. They will understand that the righteousness God requires is perfectly fulfilled in Christ—not achieved by human goodness. They will reflect on how trusting in His finished work frees believers from striving for acceptance and leads to a life of grateful obedience.

The True Vine

John 15:1–17

Abiding Discipleship

Learning Objectives

Participants will understand that lasting fruit is the visible outcome of abiding in Christ—expressed through genuine love and obedient partnership with God’s work. They will explore how Jesus defines fruitfulness as loving others with self‑giving, active care (Philippians 2:3‑4) and following the Father’s lead in daily life. They will identify specific ways to cultivate this kind of fruit‑bearing love and obedience.

That You May Believe

John 20:24–31

The Risen Lord

Learning Objectives

Participants will celebrate the risen Lord and John’s purpose in writing—that we may believe and have life in His name. They will articulate personal faith in Jesus and consider how to share that life with others.

Available For

This study adapts to your church

When you bring this study into your workspace, it adapts to your theological convictions, your teaching context, and your audience. No other curriculum does this.

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