Ministry leaders and volunteers often spend hours every week building lesson plans from scratch, with no budget and no team to help. DiviNav AI is a lesson-plan generator built for youth workers, small-group leaders, and bivocational pastors who need sound, ready-to-teach material fast.^1
Tell it your ministry type, topic, session length, group size, and your church's statement of faith, and it returns a complete teaching kit in minutes: a time-boxed lesson plan, leader script, slides, student handouts, and promo copy. Every plan is automatically run through a review for theological fit, plagiarism, and sensitive topics before it reaches you.^1
DiviNav AI is built by Mindi and Robert Wurster, a family in Donnelly, Idaho, who have been publishing whole-Bible study journals and discipleship curriculum under the DiviNav name since before launching the AI tool.^2 Their materials use the public-domain Berean Standard Bible, quoted verbatim and labeled by translation, and align content to one of six denominational statements of faith (Baptist, Presbyterian/Reformed, Methodist/Wesleyan, Pentecostal/Charismatic, non-denominational, or broad evangelical) or a custom statement you paste. It is explicitly AI-assisted, not autopilot: a human always reviews before teaching.^3
Notable- Every plan is checked by independent reviews for doctrine, safety and sensitive topics, and originality, alongside a simulated leader panel that pressure-tests the material before you teach it.^3
- Public showcase of 54 real generated plans across six doctrinal traditions, including deliberately hard contested-doctrine cases (predestination, eternal security, women in ministry, the Lord's Supper).^3
- The team red-teams its own review by planting known errors — shaky doctrine, borrowed prose, unsafe advice — and reports that it caught all six safety-critical ones.^3
- Crisis-sensitive: lessons touching suicide, abuse, or self-harm direct leaders to the right crisis resources.^3
- Free tier to try it on a real lesson; paid plans for individual leaders, teams, and multi-campus churches.^4