Guides

How to Use FaithBlitz for Sunday School — Teacher Guide

Looking for a simple Sunday school Bible quiz idea? Here's how teachers can use FaithBlitz to make Scripture review more active, fun, and classroom-friendly.

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FaithBlitz Team
July 7, 2026

Sunday school teachers have one of the most important jobs in the church: helping children, teens, and adults understand Scripture in a way they can remember.

That is not always easy.

Some students are quiet. Some already know the Bible well. Others are brand new. Some love discussion, while others need something more interactive to stay engaged.

That is where a Sunday school Bible quiz can help.

FaithBlitz gives teachers a simple way to turn Bible review into something active, fun, and easy to use in class. Instead of only asking students to listen, you can invite them to answer, compete, discuss, and learn from Scripture together.

Why Use Bible Quizzes in Sunday School?

A Bible quiz is not just a game.

Used well, it can help students:

  • ·Remember key Bible stories
  • ·Review what they learned in class
  • ·Pay closer attention to Scripture details
  • ·Build confidence answering Bible questions
  • ·Discuss why the correct answer matters
  • ·See learning Scripture as something active and enjoyable

For younger students, quizzes can make Bible class feel more approachable.

For older students, quizzes can create healthy competition and deeper review.

For teachers, quizzes can quickly show which parts of the lesson students understood and which parts may need more explanation.

What Is FaithBlitz?

FaithBlitz is a Bible trivia and quiz platform built to help people engage with Scripture.

Teachers can use it for Sunday school, homeschool lessons, youth groups, small groups, church quiz games, and family Bible study.

You can browse Bible quizzes by topic, book, difficulty, or collection. Each quiz gives students a way to test what they know while staying connected to actual Scripture.

Browse Bible Quizzes

Best Ways to Use FaithBlitz in Sunday School

There is no single right way to use FaithBlitz. The best setup depends on your class size, age group, lesson topic, and available time.

Here are a few simple ways to use it.

1. Start Class With a Warm-Up Quiz

A short quiz at the beginning of class can help students focus.

Before the main lesson begins, choose a quiz connected to the day's topic. Ask students to answer individually, in pairs, or as a group.

For example, before teaching about Jesus' miracles, you could use a quiz about the Gospels. Before teaching Genesis, start with a creation or Abraham quiz.

This gives students a quick way to enter the lesson and helps you see what they already know.

2. Use a Quiz After the Bible Lesson

Another easy option is to teach the lesson first, then use a FaithBlitz quiz as review.

This works especially well because students have just heard or read the Bible passage. The quiz helps reinforce the main details and gives them a reason to think back through the lesson.

After each question, pause and ask: "Where do we see that in Scripture?"

That simple question turns trivia into Bible study.

3. Split the Class Into Teams

FaithBlitz also works well for friendly team competition.

Divide the class into two or more teams. Read each question aloud, let teams discuss, then have them choose an answer.

This is one of the easiest church quiz games to run because you do not need complicated supplies. You only need a quiz, a way to display or read the questions, and a simple scoring method.

Team play works especially well for:

  • ·Youth groups
  • ·Middle school classes
  • ·High school classes
  • ·Family Bible nights
  • ·Church fellowship events
  • ·Review days before a new lesson series

Keep the tone light and encouraging. The goal is not to embarrass anyone. The goal is to make Scripture review memorable.

4. Let Students Take a Quiz Individually

If your class has access to phones, tablets, or computers, students can take a quiz individually.

This works well for older students, homeschool groups, or small classes.

Ask students to create a free account if you want their progress connected to a username. That way, they can build XP, appear on leaderboards, and continue learning outside of class.

For younger students, you may prefer group play or teacher-led questions instead.

5. Use Beginner-Friendly Collections

If your students are newer to the Bible, start with a guided collection instead of jumping straight into harder quizzes.

The Beginner's Bible Path is a good starting point because it is designed to be simple and welcoming.

Use it when:

  • ·Your class has mixed Bible knowledge
  • ·You are teaching younger students
  • ·You want a low-pressure introduction
  • ·You are helping new believers learn basic Bible stories
  • ·You need an easy first activity for a new class
Beginner's Bible Path

6. Pick Quizzes That Match Your Lesson

FaithBlitz works best when the quiz supports the lesson instead of feeling random.

Before class, choose a quiz that matches one of these:

  • ·The Bible book you are teaching
  • ·The story your class just studied
  • ·The theme of the lesson
  • ·The age level of your students
  • ·The difficulty level your class can handle

For example:

If you are teaching David and Goliath, choose a quiz about David.

If you are teaching the Ten Commandments, try the Ten Commandments Quiz for Kids.

If you are teaching the life of David, try the Life of David Quiz for Kids.

If you are teaching the Sermon on the Mount, choose a quiz from Matthew or a Jesus teaching topic.

If you are teaching salvation, choose a quiz connected to the Gospel of John, Romans, or the life of Jesus.

The closer the quiz is to the lesson, the more useful it becomes.

7. Use Questions as Discussion Starters

Do not rush through every question.

Some of the best teaching moments happen after students answer.

After a question, ask:

  • ·Why do you think that answer is correct?
  • ·What part of the Bible story does this come from?
  • ·What does this teach us about God?
  • ·How does this connect to today's lesson?
  • ·Was there another answer that sounded close?

This helps students move beyond guessing.

A good Sunday school Bible quiz should point students back to Scripture, not just reward fast answers.

8. Keep the Difficulty Level Fair

Not every class should start with hard quizzes.

If students feel lost, they may stop participating. If the quiz is too easy, older students may lose interest.

A good approach is:

  • ·Use easy quizzes for younger students or beginners
  • ·Use medium quizzes for regular Sunday school review
  • ·Use hard quizzes for advanced students, teens, or team competitions

You can also mix difficulty levels. Start with easier questions to build confidence, then add harder ones near the end.

9. Use FaithBlitz as a Take-Home Activity

FaithBlitz does not have to stop when class ends.

You can tell students or families: "Try one Bible quiz at home this week."

This gives families a simple way to continue the lesson outside Sunday school.

Parents can quiz children. Siblings can compete. Students can take the Daily Challenge during the week.

That turns one Sunday lesson into a longer Scripture habit.

Daily Bible Challenge

10. Use Pro Tools for Printable and Group Needs

Free FaithBlitz quizzes are great for playing online.

Teachers who want more classroom tools may want FaithBlitz Pro.

Pro is built for Sunday school teachers, pastors, homeschool families, and Bible study leaders who need more structure.

Depending on your class needs, Pro can help with:

  • ·Printable Bible quiz PDFs with answer keys
  • ·Scripture references on every question
  • ·Class-friendly study materials
  • ·Church Group Mode
  • ·Assigning quizzes to students
  • ·Supporting a more organized Bible study flow

If you regularly teach Sunday school, printable resources can save time and make lesson prep easier.

FaithBlitz Pro
Browse Printable Bible Quizzes

Simple 30-Minute Sunday School Quiz Plan

Here is an easy format you can use this week.

First 5 minutes: Open with prayer and introduce the lesson topic.

Next 10 minutes: Teach or read the Bible passage.

Next 10 minutes: Use a FaithBlitz quiz as review. Let students answer individually, as teams, or as one class.

Final 5 minutes: Review missed questions, read the Scripture references, and ask one reflection question.

This keeps the quiz connected to the Bible lesson instead of making it feel like a separate activity.

Simple 45-Minute Sunday School Quiz Plan

For a longer class, try this:

First 5 minutes: Opening prayer and quick warm-up question.

Next 15 minutes: Bible lesson or passage study.

Next 15 minutes: FaithBlitz quiz in teams.

Next 5 minutes: Discuss the hardest question.

Final 5 minutes: Give students a take-home challenge: complete one quiz during the week.

This format works especially well for older children, teens, and mixed-age groups.

Tips for Teachers

If you are using FaithBlitz in Sunday school, keep these tips in mind:

  • ·Choose the quiz before class
  • ·Match the quiz to your lesson
  • ·Keep competition friendly
  • ·Pause after important questions
  • ·Use wrong answers as teaching moments
  • ·Encourage students who are newer to the Bible
  • ·Point students back to Scripture
  • ·Invite families to continue with quizzes at home

The quiz is the tool. Scripture is the focus.

Try a Sunday School Quiz

FaithBlitz was built to make Bible learning more active, engaging, and habit-forming.

For Sunday school teachers, it can be a simple way to review lessons, encourage participation, and help students remember what they are learning from the Bible.

Start with one quiz this week.

Try a Sunday School Quiz
Explore the Beginner's Bible Path
Browse Printable Bible Quizzes
Visit FaithBlitz Guides
Learn About FaithBlitz Pro
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Today's Verse

If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins.

1 John 1:9 (NIV)

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