Mind of Faith
Belief, perseverance, vision
Faith is not the absence of doubt — it is the willingness to move forward when you do not have all the answers. The Mind of Faith builds the muscle of perseverance, the clarity of vision, and the willingness to trust what you cannot see.
Audience Level
High School — Developing skills and emotional tools.
Activate
Open the mind — thought prompts, reflection prompts, and activities like quick-write, rating scale, and "current reality" worksheets.
- What is faith and what is it not? Faith is not believing without evidence — it is acting on what you believe even when the outcome is not guaranteed?
- What would it look like if this were true for you right now?
- What is blocking you from seeing this clearly?
- Is there something I am believing God for right now? Am I waiting passively or actively trusting? When has doubt or fear stopped me from doing something I knew was right?
- Where do you already experience something related to this?
- What has your past taught you about this topic?
- 1 Quick-write: 5 minutes free-writing on the topic — no editing, just start.
- 2 Rating scale: "On a scale of 1-10, where are you right now?" Write your number and explain it in one sentence.
- 3 "Current reality" worksheet: describe exactly how this shows up in your life today, without judgment.
Bridge
Connect to real life — scenario discussion, news/social media analysis, and personal storytelling.
- Where have you seen this play out in real life — news, social media, a friend story?
- What scenario from your own experience connects to this?
- If this were happening in a show or movie, what would the characters be feeling?
- What personal story comes to mind when you think about this?
- Why do you think this scenario happened the way it did?
- What would you have done differently in that situation?
- 1 Scenario analysis: find a real news story or social media post that connects to this topic. Write three observations.
- 2 Personal storytelling: share a 2-minute story with a partner about a time this topic showed up in your life.
- 3 Media critique: identify one piece of content (song, ad, show) that reflects or contradicts this idea. Write one paragraph.
Consider
Critical thinking — debate/opposing perspectives, mind maps, and "challenge the belief" worksheets.
- What would someone who strongly disagrees with this point say?
- What is the strongest argument against what you just believed?
- Where could this idea be wrong or misleading?
- What belief are you holding that might need to be challenged?
- Where has your thinking on this been too narrow or one-sided?
- What question would you most NOT want to answer — and why?
- 1 Debate exercise: argue the opposite side of your position for 5 minutes. Write what you learned.
- 2 Mind map: draw a visual map connecting this topic to everything around it — people, ideas, fears, hopes.
- 3 "Challenge the belief" worksheet: write your current belief clearly. Then list three ways it could be wrong.
Develop
Build strategy — skill-building worksheet, goal-setting, and personal action-plan.
- What specific skill do you need to build based on what you just learned?
- What is the first step toward acting on this — and is it small enough to actually do?
- What would you do if you were 20% more confident right now?
- What have you avoided thinking about because it felt too hard?
- What would it cost you to NOT act on this?
- What does your ideal self do in this situation?
- 1 Skill-building worksheet: identify one specific skill this topic requires. Write three ways to practice it this week.
- 2 Goal-setting: set one 30-day goal that flows from what you just learned. Include a start action and a check-in date.
- 3 Personal action plan: write the exact next step you will take in the next 48 hours. Share it with someone.
Engage
Personal application — journal reflection, pair-share, and commitment statement.
- How does this connect to something you already care deeply about?
- What would it mean to actually live this out — not just think about it?
- Who in your life needs to hear or see what you just learned?
- Write down one thing you are believing God for right now — something concrete. Then write one step of faith — something small but real — that you will take this week in that direction.
- What part of your life would change most if you fully embraced this?
- What is one thing you will do differently starting today?
- 1 Journal reflection: write for 10 minutes on the question, "How does this connect to who I want to become?"
- 2 Pair-share: find a trusted person and share what you just learned. Ask them one question about their response.
- 3 Commitment statement: write one sentence that captures what you are committing to — not a goal, a stance.
Forge
Discipline & identity — 7-day challenge, accountability partner check-in, and habit tracker.
- Who are you becoming as a result of doing this work?
- What does discipline look like when no one is watching?
- What identity are you building that outlasts any single day?
- Create a faith journal — start a page for each area of your life (school, family, future) and write what you believe God is doing in each one. Update it monthly.
- Where have you shown up consistently for yourself in the last 30 days?
- What is one pattern you are breaking and what replaces it?
- 1 7-day challenge: pick one action from what you learned. Do it every day for 7 days. Track it.
- 2 Accountability partner check-in: schedule a 15-minute call with someone this week to report what you built.
- 3 Habit tracker: design a simple tracker for the habit that flows from this Mind. Use it for 30 days.