Sermon Notes for Kids–The Secret to Making Church More Exciting
Wondering how to make church more exciting for your kids and teens? These sermon notes for kids will help your kids get more out of the sermon and GROW in faith!
I grew up in the church. Twice on Sundays and once on Wednesdays, I would sit next to my mom in the pews. I remember gazing up at the stained glass windows for what seemed like hours and hours each time we went to church. Sometimes my sister and I would draw “sermon notes” on the church bulletin, but let’s just say those notes weren’t so focused on the actual sermon.
Sadly, I don’t remember much of anything all those pastors preached. As a result, when I grew up and life threw curveballs into my neatly manicured white-picket-fence life, I had little foundation to help me. I almost became one of those statistics.
I desperately needed a personal faith. I had the Christian label and a salvation story but zero application of that in my own life.
If there is anything I want to do as a parent, it’s to make sure this doesn’t happen to my kids. I can’t guarantee they will choose to have a personal relationship with Christ, but I can make sure they have the foundation and teaching they need to understand why they would want one.
As parents, God commands us to teach our children diligently, to provide for them, and to live a Christ-like example before them. Of course, this starts at home with an intentional plan for devotions for kids. But we can’t stop there.
What we do in the pews of our local churches is crucial to the spiritual growth of our kids.
I can’t wait to show you how a sermon notebook will help you provide the foundation your kids need!
Why kids should take sermon notes?
When both of my girls began attending worship with me, I had some very clear ideas of what I wanted to see. Since I knew something was lacking from my childhood, I paid close attention to this topic. Books like Parenting in the Pew: Guiding Your Children into the Joy of Worship were helpful in guiding my thoughts as I considered what was important to my family.
I realized that the message I’m sending to my kids in the pew is loud and clear.
The things I allow my kids to do or NOT do during the sermon clearly communicate to them the value I place on the sermon.”
Mostly, I wanted for them to NEVER get the idea that worship was something we HAVE to do or HATE to do. I also wanted to be sure I didn’t convey the message that the pastor’s sermon was boring or that they needed to be entertained during that time. So I set forth a few guidelines:
- Sitting in the pews with me was never a punishment . . . it was a joyful privilege!
- Electronics, coloring books, puzzles, and other distractions were to have no place in the pew with us.
- Full participation would be expected of all my children. (That means no sleeping, sitting during songs, or flipping through the Bible or hymnal for fun.)
Now, I don’t want anyone to read that and think I’m a crazy legalist here. After a lifetime of meaningless pew-sitting, I want to make sure I don’t convey that same idea to my children.
This starts with the behaviors I don’t want to see, but the best part is the behaviors I do want to see.
From a young age, all my children have carried a notebook to church.
I wish I could say this started because I was intentional to buy them one, but it didn’t. It started because I carry one, and my kids wanted to be like me. (Aren’t you thankful when they copy the good stuff and not just the stupid things we do?)
My oldest daughter saw me carrying a sermon notebook each week and wanted one of her own. So I bought her a blank notebook too.
She was excited to get hers and took copious notes (by copying mine) for many weeks. As time went on, I found that she was struggling a lot to figure out what to write down. My pastor is partially to blame for this as he isn’t much of an outline kinda guy, but even if he was, I think she would still have struggled to take notes in the same manner I did.
So I created a sermon notebook specifically designed for sermon notes for kids. Instead of blank spaces, it was designed to help the kids focus on the sermon and actually record key points they could take away from it.
The Goal Of Our Sermon Notes For Kids
The Sermon Notebook was designed to help kids focus on the sermon and record the key points in a simple way. I wanted something that would be easily understood (so parents didn’t have to help) but at the same time still hold the interest of kids of all ages.
Most importantly, I wanted to create something that would excite our children and capitalize on their love of God’s Word so they could grow in faith!
What is included?
Primary—young children, ages 5–7
- One page to record their salvation testimony and their favorite verses
- One page to record their prayer requests
- Sermon note pages with space to tally up words they hear, write or illustrate a verse, and write or illustrate their own notes on each sermon
Junior—strong readers and writers, ages 8–12
- One page to record their salvation testimony and their favorite verses
- One page to record their prayer requests
- Sermon note pages with space for recording details like date, sermon title, themes, keywords, and unfamiliar words, as well as a larger lined area for writing out main points and personal thoughts for each sermon
Teen/Adult—ages 13+
- Two designs: Minimalist Gray or Floral Teal
- A header on every other page for recording the date, sermon, Scripture, and speaker
- Teal design—alternating lined and bullet journal-style pages for recording notes, personal thoughts, and application
- Gray design—lined pages for recording notes, personal thoughts, and application
Each sermon notebook includes enough pages to last 1 year of taking notes on 1 sermon a week or 6 months of taking notes on 2 sermons a week!
Get your Sermon Notes for kids
If you are looking for ways to help your kids grow in faith and develop personal relationships with Jesus, this Sermon Notebook is for you! Give your kids the tools they need to know and understand God’s Word.
Find out more about our sermon notebook or click the image below for the sermon notebook bundle.
Through practical tools & Bible-based resources, Kim Sorgius is dedicated to helping your family GROW in faith so you can be Not Consumed by life’s struggles. Author of popular kid’s devotional Bible studies and practical homeschooling tools, Kim has a master’s degree in education and curriculum design coupled with over 2 decades of experience working with kids and teens. Above all, her most treasured job is mother and homeschool teacher of four amazing kiddos.
This is so great! I have been trying to find something like this for my SS kids I have the 8-12 year olds and I believe they should be learning to sit in services. I also want them to enjoy it and not be entertaining themselves with things. Thanks again for all this!
Yay! I’m so glad to hear that you can use it.
Thank you Kim for these wonderful sermon notes 😀 surely my 7 yr.old and 15 yr.old will love it. Stay Blessed and continue to inspire others 😀
You’re welcome!
I have been trying to design something like this for my kiddos. My oldest uses the note outline our pastor has printed on our weekly bulletin, and she helps her brother to fill out the major points, but I have been really trying to figure something out for my two youngest. Thank you so much for giving these away. They are exactly what I am needing. I am so glad to have found your blog and have been very blessed to read it for several months now.
Aww…you’re so sweet! I’m thrilled that you will be able to use them!
Thank you for this!
Great ideas! I teach sunday school and once a month or so I keep the kids upstairs and I’m teaching them to take notes during the sermon. Such a good thing for kids to learn.
First, thank you so much for this. I have been trying to figure a way to get my son to pay better attention to the sermons in church! I so appreciate you sharing this! My question though…..What size is the printed version? When I downloaded it, it looked like it was half a page size but I do not get how to assemble it to look right. Can you help? Do I print it double sided? Thanks!
Yes they are half pages. You can print them double sided and that should work perfectly!
Hi! I tried printing them double sided, and the pages are all out of order when you assemble the booklet. Maybe I’m doing it wrong? Do you mean print it double sided and then fold like a booklet? If so, I think that’s what I did. Do you think you could describe how to put the pages in order to make the booklet? Thanks so much!
Melanie
I actually didn’t fold them. The main pages are actually super easy. The first few might take a few minutes of positioning to get them just right. One option, if you can’t figure it out is to just print the first few pages without being back-to-back. Then you can do the main pages after that. Hope that helps!
Hi! This is such an amazing resource and I am so excited to have found it! However, I am also a little confused on how to put this together. Did you cut the pages in half and staple? It very much looks like it is meant to be a booklet but I can’t seem to get the pages to line up right. What order did you put them in? I would really appreciate any help you could offer. I’m sure I am making this more difficult than it has to be! Ha!
You should be able to print and fold in the exact order we have them in the file.
Wow! My child is getting baptized this weekend, and he struggles with listening to the sermon. He already has a Bible and a worship basket (for personal devotions- contains Bible lesson study papers, ruler for underlining, Bible marking pencils, journal and pen, devotional, & his Bible stays there when it’s not in use), so I was at a loss about what to do for a gift for his baptism. This is it. Thanks so much!
What a GREAT idea!
Thank you for this. I have been paying my girls to write down the scripture references (1 cent for each reference 5 cents if it is spelled correctly and 10 cents if they write the whole scripture) pastor uses to keep them listening. I love this writing the main points also. I may have to reconfigure the sermon page a little to fit our service but the rest is lovely. Our pastor uses many many scripture references throughout the sermon.
I couldn’t get it to let me enter my information. The fields were there, but no button to submit them. I so want this outline as my son just recently decided to leave the kids class to attend the adult service so he can “learn more”.
Hmm…that was weird. I fixed it. Please try again!
Do you have a notebook for adults to purchase?
No, unfortunately I don’t. I guess I should consider that, huh? 🙂
Hi,
Thanks for this post, it has really helped my husband and I. We have just started ministry in a church w no kids programs, we have been looking for new a creative ideas for our 5 – 11 years olds. We have a total no technology in church or on Sunday just give us all a day off a week. Do you find it difficult talking to other parents that allow technology in church? We find it difficult as our kids gravitate to screens and think we are the bad guys when we ask them to turn away. So good to hear what you have to say.
At my present church, it’s not a problem. Parents are rather serious about discipling their children, especially in the service. At previous churches, there were many things that I found that I was the “bad guy” on. I just always try to explain to my kids that I am accountable for the decisions in our family and that I have to make decisions based on what I believe God is telling me through His Word. I never make it about other people, but it does naturally point out that others are doing it. The bottom line in this case is that if we are Christians, we should be thirsty for what is going on in the service!
I wish I’d have found this before I got my son in the bad habit of taking his iPad mini to service. I can’t wait to start implementing it and having some interesting conversations about what was learned.
It’s never too late to start over. Whenever I change something like this with my kids (and it happens often enough), I’m usually very honest with them. I just tell them that I messed up and that I should have let them do that. I tell them that it’s my job to parent and I failed them. It’s amazing what this kind of humility does for the situation. Seems like it makes them so much more willing to make the change!
thanks for sharing! I love the “rules”! I think it’s great to set the expectation of participating during service. Great job!
I would like an adult copy of sermons!
I gave this to my 7-year-old last Sunday and she LOVED it! The best part was watching her give the completed sheet to our pastor. He got to see evidence of a young child who was enthusiastically and whole-heartedly listening to his sermon. Thank you so much for providing this resource.
How sweet! I love that.
I love this idea and use something much like it for my older daughter. I keep seeing a picture with a pink and lime green “theme” that leads me to this page every time…is that one available for download? I can’t seem to find it anywhere. Thanks for any help!
I have been looking for something to use with 11 and 12 year old girls. The youngest is very new to church, but the older has grown up in the church. This is perfect! It is simple without being childish. This is a great beginners guide to worship notes. I plan to print them out and put them in a binder so wet can just add more as needed. Thank you so much for this wonderful resource!
So glad it’s useful!
Thank you so much for making this available not only to families, but to ministries as well!! I’ll be sharing your site with the families here at Wesley UMC so they can look for more resources to meet their needs as well. 🙂
God Bless You!! Thank You so much for such a wonderful resource. Our church just launched a Spiritual and Academic Program for our youth. I’ve looked all over trying to find a sermon notebook for the Kids. Again Thank You so much!!! This is AMAZING!!!
Hello. I really like your ideas here and I’m wondering if you wouldn’t mind sharing how you had these produced (like what company or service?) I just know that my girls would prefer a different cover design and type of book (a slim stitch bound I’m thinking) and I would like to tailor the pages inside to fit better with the structure of our services. I’ve tried looking at Vistaprint and Staples Copy and Print services and a couple others but I can’t find a book printing service that let’s me choose the inside pages. Appreciate if you could share your resource. Thank you!
Have you checked out Amazon’s self-publishing service (CreateSpace)? It’s a great place to start!
Suzanne@NotConsumed
Are these no longer available as a free printable? I’m looking for something to use for the children in our church when they join us for worship.
Hi Val, These are no longer available as a printable. However, they are currently on sale in a notebook: https://store.notconsumed.com/products/sermon-notebook-for-kids.