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Students often ask, “Who is God, really?” Because God is invisible and mysterious, that question can feel hard to answer. The good news is that God has made Himself known—clearly and personally. Yahweh is a 4-week youth ministry series designed to help students connect with God by exploring how He reveals Himself as Father, Son, and Spirit–the Trinity. As they trace these portraits across Scripture, teens gain concrete language for God’s character and fresh pathways for real relationship with Him.
This series introduces students to the God who is near and knowable. Week 1 anchors them in God as Father, perfect in His care where earthly fathers fall short. Week 2 centers on Jesus, the Son of Man, whose life, death, and resurrection make God’s reign good news for sinners. Week 3 highlights the Holy Spirit, not “out there,” but making His home within every believer. Week 4 draws the threads together in the unity of Father, Son, and Spirit—distinct Persons, perfectly one—offering students a healthier lens for relationships, conflict, and community.
Intro: Our experiences with imperfect dads can make “Father” a complicated word.
Truth: David praises God as the perfect Father—reliable, protective, and good—an essential piece of knowing who Yahweh is.
Takeaway: God is the perfection of your earthly father.
Intro: Disagreement—even among Christians—about who Jesus is can be frustrating.
Truth: Daniel’s vision reveals the Son of Man who overpowers sin and reigns; Jesus claimed this title and confirmed it by His sinless life and sacrificial death.
Takeaway: Jesus is the Son of God—and that’s good news.
Intro: If God is close, why is He hard to find in a bleak world?
Truth: Across Israel’s history, God’s presence moved from holy places…to a Person…to the Spirit who now makes His home within each believer.
Takeaway: God has never been closer than He is right now.
Intro: Humans struggle to practice healthy unity.
Truth: Jesus prays to the Father about the unity He shares with the Father and the Spirit—different, distinct, separate…yet one—a model that reframes how we approach people and problems.
Takeaway: God’s unity provides unity for us.
Clarifies who God is for students in concrete, relational terms (Father, Son, Spirit).
Centers on Scripture while giving leaders clear, practical talking points for each week.
Builds a gospel-centered foundation that students can apply to identity, relationships, and community life.