Sunday Recap | June 7

Time for the Student Quest Sunday recap for June 7th, 2026! We played Googly Moogly: Feeling Lucky, a game I created that plays with Google’s search function’s predictive text. For our teaching time, we had a special Sunday with eight of our students teaching the separate middle school and high school groups! Sam, Kenzie, Ezra and Ethan taught high school while Jayden, Lyle, Abby and Andrew taught middle school.

We had a few announcements/reminders:

  • Download our app! It has our event calendar, updates, photos, social links, podcast feed, video feed, and more! Find it on the Apple app store and Google Play store!
  • Registration for the Dorney Park trip happening July 15th is open; click here to learn more and register online.
  • Construction is continuing with the church renovations! For the next month or so, students will only be able to get to the Sunday student hour through the main entrance. Just follow the signs to the student area!

God So Loved the World: John 3 contains some of the most famous verses in the entire Bible, particularly verse 16. This chapter reveals a conversation between Jesus and man named Nicodemus, who was searching for truth and answers to his spiritual questions. This conversation was the focal point for what our students taught about this week. Keep the faith conversation going at home with these kinds of ideas:

  • Take a look at some baby pictures with your teenager. Talk about when they were born. Recount the momentous occasion. Draw a correlation between physical birth and “being born again,” “getting saved,” or “beginning the life of a Christ-follower.” It’s a momentous, life-altering, celebratory event.
  • Remind your child that, like Nicodemus, it’s always OK to ask questions about spiritual matters. Sometimes teenagers remain silent because they think they should already know the answers or they fear judgment from those around them. Make your home a safe place to explore matters of faith. And remember, if they ask questions you cannot answer, it’s OK to say, “I don’t know. Let’s find some answers together.”

You can watch both lessons below, or you can listen to them on our podcast feed:

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