Bible study for Native Americans honors the deep spiritual heritage of indigenous peoples while embracing the transforming truth of Scripture. For centuries, Native peoples have recognized the Creator's presence in creation, valued community over individualism, and honored the wisdom of elders - values that resonate powerfully with biblical teaching. Today, Native Christians are discovering how their cultural identity and Christian faith beautifully complement rather than conflict with each other. Whether you are Navajo, Cherokee, Lakota, Ojibwe, or from any of the hundreds of tribal nations across North America, these resources help you explore God's Word through the lens of your heritage, addressing historical wounds while building on the spiritual foundations your ancestors knew.
Why Native Americans Choose Bible Way
Bible study that celebrates your heritage, honors indigenous values, and equips your community with biblical truth for life's journey.
Indigenous Heritage
Study resources that honor the rich spiritual heritage and cultural values of Native American peoples.
Community Focus
Resources designed for tribal communities, extended families, and the communal traditions central to Native life.
Creation Care
Explore Scripture through the lens of stewardship and the sacred relationship with Creator's earth.
Elder Wisdom
Integrate the honored tradition of elder guidance with biblical wisdom and teaching.
Contextual Teaching
Engage with theological perspectives that speak to indigenous experience and worldview.
Healing Journey
Address historical trauma, identity, and wholeness through Christ-centered study and community.
Study Topics & Themes
Explore Scripture through indigenous experience and heritage
Creator and Creation
Understanding God through indigenous perspective
- The Creator God - From Genesis to Great Spirit Understanding
- Stewardship of the Land (Genesis 2:15)
- All Creation Declares God's Glory (Psalm 19)
- The Four Directions and Biblical Compass
- Sacred Seasons and Biblical Feasts
- Animals in Scripture and Native Tradition
Community and Relationship
Biblical foundations for Native community values
- The Body of Christ as Tribal Community (1 Corinthians 12)
- Extended Family in Scripture and Native Culture
- Hospitality: From Abraham's Tent to Native Welcome
- Elders in Scripture: Honoring Wisdom Keepers
- Circle of Fellowship - The Early Church Model
- Seven Generations Thinking and Kingdom Legacy
Identity and Healing
Addressing historical wounds through Scripture
- Created in God's Image: Indigenous Identity Affirmed
- Joseph's Story: Trauma, Forgiveness, and Restoration
- The Exile and Return: Displacement and Homecoming
- Jesus the Healer: Physical and Spiritual Wholeness
- Lament Psalms: Giving Voice to Pain
- Revelation's Promise: Every Nation, Tribe, and Tongue
Faith and Cultural Integration
Navigating faith and heritage together
- Paul Among the Nations: Cultural Contextualization
- What the Jerusalem Council Teaches Us (Acts 15)
- Cultural Elements as Worship Expressions
- Native Languages and Scripture Translation
- Sacred Stories: Oral Tradition Meets Written Word
- Traditional Ceremonies: Biblical Discernment Guide
Stories from Native Believers
See how Bible Way is impacting Native Christians across tribal nations
"These resources finally speak to who we are as Native believers. We can honor our ancestors and follow Jesus without feeling we must abandon our identity. Our congregation has grown spiritually and in numbers."
"My children are learning that the Creator has always loved indigenous peoples. They see themselves in Scripture now and understand their Native heritage is a gift, not a barrier to faith."
"After decades of feeling caught between two worlds, I found peace. These studies show how our deepest values - community, creation care, respect for elders - are biblical values. The Great Spirit and the God of the Bible are one."
Available Resources
Everything your community needs for meaningful Bible study
Heritage Devotionals
Daily devotionals connecting Native worldview with Scripture's eternal truths.
Community Study Guides
Comprehensive guides designed for tribal Bible study groups and extended family gatherings.
Healing Journey Materials
Christ-centered resources addressing historical trauma and identity questions.
Elder Discussion Questions
Thought-provoking questions bridging traditional wisdom with biblical teaching.
Youth Resources
Help young Native believers embrace both faith and cultural identity.
Pan-Tribal Community
Connect with Native Christians across nations and reservations.
Ancient Wisdom, Living Faith
Long before European missionaries arrived, indigenous peoples across Turtle Island knew the Creator. They understood that creation reveals divine glory, that community is sacred, that elders carry wisdom worth honoring, and that humans are stewards of the earth. These truths, which missionaries sometimes suppressed as "pagan," are deeply biblical truths.
Today's Native Christians are reclaiming the beautiful alignment between indigenous values and biblical teaching. We study Scripture not despite our heritage but through our heritage - finding that our ancestors' recognition of Creator prepared the way for knowing Him fully through Jesus Christ, who came for every nation, tribe, and tongue.
"From every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne and before the Lamb."
- Revelation 7:9
Native Values & Scripture
- ✓Community over individualism - mirrors biblical "one body" teaching
- ✓Creation care - reflects Genesis stewardship mandate
- ✓Elder respect - aligns with Fifth Commandment and Proverbs
- ✓Hospitality tradition - matches Abraham's welcome of strangers
- ✓Oral tradition and storytelling - Jesus' teaching method
Key Takeaways
Native American values of community, elder respect, and creation care align deeply with biblical teaching
Following Christ does not require abandoning indigenous identity - God calls every nation and tribe
The Creator known through creation is the same God revealed fully in Jesus Christ
Historical trauma can be addressed through Scripture's resources for lament, forgiveness, and healing
Native Christian voices bring essential gifts of creation theology, community practice, and resilient faith to the global church
Biblical discernment guides navigation of traditional ceremonies and cultural practices
Native Christian Community
Walking together on the good road of faith
What We Offer
- Heritage devotionals connecting indigenous worldview with Scripture
- Community study guides for tribal and extended family groups
- Healing journey resources addressing historical trauma
- Pan-tribal community connection across nations
"For decades I felt I had to choose - be Native or be Christian. Bible Way showed me I can be fully both. My culture is a gift from the Creator, not an obstacle to knowing Him. Our whole family studies together now, honoring our ancestors while following Jesus."
Margaret H.
Mother and Teacher, Ojibwe, Minnesota
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about Bible study for Native Americans
What is the history of Christianity among Native Americans?
The history of Christianity among Native peoples is complex and spans five centuries. Spanish missionaries arrived in the 1500s, followed by French, English, and American missionaries over subsequent centuries. This history includes both genuine spiritual awakening and cultural destruction. Many Native peoples were forced into Christianity through colonial policies, residential schools, and suppression of traditional practices - causing deep wounds that persist today. However, the story is not only one of colonialism. Many Native peoples encountered Christ authentically and found ways to follow Jesus while maintaining cultural identity. Native evangelists and pastors have carried the gospel within their own communities for generations. Native-led churches have developed contextualized expressions of faith. Today, significant numbers of Native Americans identify as Christian - with substantial populations in Catholic, mainline Protestant, Evangelical, and indigenous Christian traditions. Contemporary Native Christianity increasingly addresses historical wrongs while celebrating authentic indigenous expressions of faith. Organizations like the Native American LifeLines ministry, Richard Twiss's Wiconi International (before his passing), and various tribal Christian communities work to decolonize Christianity while maintaining biblical faithfulness. The future of Native Christianity lies in indigenous leadership, contextual theology, and healing of historical wounds while holding firmly to the transforming power of the gospel.
How can Native Americans reconcile Christianity with their cultural heritage?
Reconciling Christianity with Native heritage requires understanding that faith in Christ does not require cultural genocide. The God of Scripture created the diversity of peoples and cultures - including indigenous cultures - and calls people from "every nation, tribe, people and language" (Revelation 7:9). The Bible shows cultural diversity in God's kingdom, not cultural uniformity. Key principles help in this reconciliation: First, distinguish between culture and religion. Many Native cultural practices - respect for elders, community responsibility, creation care, hospitality, oral tradition, artistic expression - are not inherently religious but cultural values that align with Scripture. These can be fully embraced. Second, apply biblical discernment to specifically religious practices. Some traditional ceremonies may be neutral (like harvest celebrations) and can be "baptized" into Christian expression. Others may conflict with biblical faith (practices involving spirits or powers other than the Triune God) and require transformation or abandonment. Third, recognize that Western Christianity is not "pure" Christianity - it too reflects cultural adaptation. Native Christians are not rejecting Christianity by rejecting Western cultural expressions; they are developing authentic indigenous Christian expression, just as Korean, Nigerian, and Brazilian Christians have developed contextual expressions. Fourth, reclaim what colonialism stole. Native languages, art forms, music styles, community structures, and values can be vehicles for gospel expression. Native theologians like Richard Twiss, Randy Woodley, Terry LeBlanc, and others have developed frameworks for this integration. The goal is not syncretism (mixing Christianity with incompatible elements) but contextualization (expressing biblical faith through cultural forms) - following Paul's example of becoming "all things to all people" while maintaining the gospel's integrity.
What does the Bible say about indigenous peoples?
While the Bible does not specifically mention Native Americans (written before European knowledge of the Americas), it contains clear teachings relevant to indigenous peoples. Genesis establishes that all humans are created in God's image (Genesis 1:27) - this includes every indigenous person without exception. God's image is not diminished by culture, ethnicity, or geography. The Table of Nations (Genesis 10) shows God's plan for human diversity - peoples spreading across the earth was divine intention, not accident or curse. Acts 17:26-27 affirms that God "made all nations of men" and "determined the times set for them and the exact places where they should live." God sovereignly placed indigenous peoples in their lands. The prophets repeatedly declare God's concern for all nations. Isaiah envisions peoples from "distant shores" (Isaiah 66:19) coming to God. Jesus' Great Commission extends to "all nations" (Matthew 28:19) - the Greek word "ethne" specifically means ethnic groups, including every indigenous nation. The early church's struggle with Gentile inclusion (Acts 15) established the principle that people do not need to abandon ethnic identity to follow Christ. Gentiles were not required to become culturally Jewish. This precedent applies to Native Christians today - they need not become culturally Western. Revelation's vision of heaven explicitly includes people "from every nation, tribe, people and language" (Revelation 7:9) - Native languages, tribes, and nations are present in God's eternal kingdom. This is not homogenization but celebration of diversity. God calls indigenous peoples, loves indigenous peoples, and welcomes them exactly as He created them - while transforming all believers into Christ's likeness regardless of cultural background.
How should Native Christians approach traditional ceremonies?
Approaching traditional ceremonies requires wisdom, biblical grounding, and community discernment rather than simple rules. Native ceremonies vary dramatically between nations - a sweat lodge, powwow, and sun dance have different purposes and spiritual significance. Blanket acceptance or rejection fails this diversity. Biblical principles provide guidance: First, test everything against Scripture (1 Thessalonians 5:21). Does a ceremony honor the Triune God, or invoke other spiritual powers? Does it align with biblical teaching or contradict it? Second, consider the ceremony's purpose. Is it cultural celebration (like a harvest gathering) or specifically religious worship? Cultural events can often be redeemed; worship of beings other than God cannot. Third, examine your own conscience and context (Romans 14). Some Native Christians participate in certain ceremonies with clear conscience; others cannot. Neither should judge the other on disputable matters, but neither should violate their conscience. Fourth, consider witness and stumbling blocks (1 Corinthians 8-10). How will participation or non-participation affect other believers? Unbelieving family members? The broader community? Fifth, seek community wisdom. Individual decisions on complex cultural matters benefit from elder counsel and community discernment. Native Christian communities have developed varied approaches: Some participate fully in traditional ceremonies, seeing them as cultural rather than religious. Others abstain from all traditional ceremonies out of caution. Many take middle positions - participating in some ceremonies (powwows, talking circles) while declining others (certain healing ceremonies, spirit-invoking practices). The key is thoughtful biblical engagement, not reactionary acceptance or rejection. Native Christians developing indigenous Christian ceremonies - incorporating native languages, music, and symbolism into explicitly Christian worship - offer creative alternatives that honor heritage while clearly centering Christ.
What resources exist for Native American Bible study?
Resources for Native American Bible study have grown significantly as indigenous Christian scholarship has developed. Several categories of resources are available: Bible translations in Native languages include partial or complete translations in Navajo, Cherokee, Lakota, Ojibwe, and dozens of other languages. Wycliffe Bible Translators and SIL International continue translation work in many indigenous languages. The American Bible Society offers resources in multiple Native American languages. Contextual study resources include works by Native theologians: Randy Woodley's "Shalom and the Community of Creation" connects Native and biblical worldviews; Richard Twiss's "Rescuing the Gospel from the Cowboys" addresses decolonizing Christianity; Terry LeBlanc and NAIITS (North American Institute for Indigenous Theological Studies) produce academic and practical resources. The "First Nations Version: An Indigenous Translation of the New Testament" offers Scripture in culturally resonant English for Native readers. Organizations serving Native Christians include CHIEF (Christian Hope Indian Eskimo Fellowship), Native American LifeLines, Indian Bible College, and various tribal Christian ministries. These provide culturally appropriate discipleship materials. Academic resources are growing through NAIITS, which offers graduate-level indigenous theological education. Books by Native scholars appear through secular and Christian publishers. Practical church resources are available through denominations with significant Native ministries - Presbyterian Church (USA), Episcopal Church, United Methodist Church, American Baptist Churches, and various Evangelical organizations have developed Native-specific materials. Online resources continue expanding, including Native Christian podcasts, YouTube channels, and websites addressing indigenous faith questions. The Bible Way app includes features supporting communal study appropriate for Native contexts.
How do Native American values align with biblical teaching?
Many core Native American values profoundly align with biblical teaching - sometimes more closely than dominant Western Christian culture. Community over individualism: Native cultures emphasize collective wellbeing over individual achievement. This mirrors the biblical "one body, many members" teaching (1 Corinthians 12), early church sharing (Acts 2:44-45), and commands to bear one another's burdens (Galatians 6:2). Western individualism often distorts Scripture's communal vision; Native communal values may be closer to biblical intent. Respect for elders: Native honor for elders reflects the Fifth Commandment (Exodus 20:12), Leviticus 19:32's instruction to rise before the aged, and Proverbs' repeated connection of wisdom with age. Biblical cultures were honor-shame cultures with strong elder respect - like Native cultures, unlike modern Western culture. Creation care: Native peoples' sacred relationship with the land reflects Genesis 2:15's call to tend and keep the earth, Psalm 24:1's declaration that "the earth is the LORD's," and biblical stewardship teaching. The extractive relationship Western culture has with creation is arguably less biblical than Native stewardship. Hospitality: Native traditions of generous hospitality align with Abraham's example (Genesis 18), the hospitality commands of Hebrews 13:2 and Romans 12:13, and Jesus' teaching on welcoming strangers (Matthew 25:35). Oral tradition and storytelling: Scripture was first oral tradition, and Jesus taught through stories. Native oral traditions align with biblical communication patterns. The Western privileging of written over oral is cultural, not biblical. Holistic worldview: Native refusal to separate sacred from secular reflects Hebrew thought. The Greek division of sacred and secular that permeates Western Christianity is absent from both Native and biblical worldviews. These alignments don't mean Native religion is Christianity - but they do mean Native Christians can embrace cultural values as biblical rather than pagan, finding their heritage affirmed rather than condemned by Scripture.
How can Native Christians address historical trauma?
Historical trauma - the collective, cumulative emotional wounding across generations from colonization, forced relocations, residential schools, and cultural suppression - requires intentional healing that addresses both spiritual and psychological dimensions. Scripture provides resources for this journey: The lament psalms (Psalm 13, 22, 44, 74, 79, 88) model bringing grief, anger, and pain to God honestly. Native Christians can use these templates to voice historical wounds. Indigenous worship incorporating lament can facilitate communal processing of grief. The exile narratives show God's people surviving displacement while maintaining identity - relevant for peoples who experienced forced removal from ancestral lands. Jeremiah's instruction to "seek the peace and prosperity" of the place where you live (Jeremiah 29:7) while maintaining distinct identity speaks to contemporary Native reality. Jesus the wounded healer - marked by scars even in resurrection - understands suffering from the inside. His resurrection demonstrates that trauma does not have the final word. The Holy Spirit as Comforter (John 14:26) provides divine presence in ongoing healing. Practically, healing trauma requires: Individual therapy when needed - many Native-serving counselors combine clinical training with cultural understanding. Community healing ceremonies that honor both tradition and Christ. Telling truth about history - churches acknowledging and repenting of participation in cultural genocide. Recovering cultural practices as healing activities - language reclamation, traditional arts, connection to land. Forgiveness processes that do not minimize harm but release bitterness's poison. Intergenerational programs connecting youth with elders in healing community. Native Christian leaders increasingly address these issues directly, developing Christ-centered trauma recovery programs that honor indigenous approaches to healing while grounded in biblical hope.
What is the significance of land for Native Christians?
Land holds profound significance for Native peoples - spiritual, cultural, historical, and practical - and Scripture validates much of this understanding. Biblically, land is not merely economic resource but sacred trust. Genesis 2:15 commissions humanity to "tend and keep" the garden - language of stewardship, not exploitation. The Promised Land theology shows God connecting people and place in covenantal relationship. Jubilee laws (Leviticus 25) prevented permanent land alienation, recognizing land's connection to family and identity. Psalms declare "The earth is the LORD's" (Psalm 24:1) - humans are stewards, not owners. This resonates deeply with Native understanding that land cannot truly be "owned" - we belong to the land more than it belongs to us. Native attachment to ancestral lands - the mountains, rivers, and plains where generations lived, worshipped, and are buried - reflects the biblical pattern of sacred places (Bethel, Sinai, Jerusalem) where God encountered His people. Displacement from these lands is not merely geographic but spiritual loss. The forced removals, broken treaties, and land theft experienced by Native peoples constitute injustice that Scripture condemns. The prophets thundered against those who "join house to house and add field to field till no space is left" (Isaiah 5:8) and those who "move boundary stones" (Hosea 5:10). Native land loss was sin requiring acknowledgment and, where possible, remedy. For Native Christians today, this means: Continued advocacy for tribal sovereignty and land rights as justice issues. Maintaining connection to ancestral lands where possible - visiting, praying there, passing knowledge to next generations. Recognizing that loving a place is biblical, not idolatrous. Practicing creation care as spiritual discipline. Trusting that the new heavens and new earth (Revelation 21) includes restoration of land relationship, not escape from earthly existence.
How can churches support Native American Christians?
Churches can support Native Christians through education, relationship, practical action, and ongoing commitment: Education: Learn accurate Native history - including the church's role in residential schools, forced conversions, and cultural suppression. Acknowledge this history from pulpits and in church education. Study Native theology and incorporate Native Christian voices into teaching. Replace stereotypes with real understanding. Relationship: Build genuine relationships with Native Christians and communities - not as mission projects but as brothers and sisters. Listen more than speak. Welcome Native expressions of worship. Support Native leadership in your denomination. Attend powwows and cultural events when welcomed. Learn the history of the Native peoples whose land your church sits on. Practical support: Advocate for tribal sovereignty, treaty rights, and land issues as justice concerns. Support Native-led ministries and organizations rather than paternalistic missions. Fund Native Christian scholarships and leadership development. Address practical needs in Native communities while respecting community agency. Repentance and reparation: Denominations that participated in residential schools or forced assimilation should make formal apology and pursue concrete reparations. Individual churches can repent for benefiting from land theft. Repentance without changed behavior is incomplete. Long-term commitment: One-time events or short-term mission trips can reinforce problematic patterns. Commit to long-term relationships and support. Follow Native leadership rather than imposing outside agendas. Recognize that healing five centuries of harm will not happen quickly. Support what Native Christians identify as needs rather than assuming outside knowledge. The goal is partnership, not patronage - recognizing Native Christians as full members of Christ's body with gifts to share with the whole church, not deficient believers needing rescue.
What role do Native languages play in Bible study?
Native languages play crucial roles in Bible study for indigenous believers - roles that extend beyond mere translation to cultural survival, spiritual depth, and identity affirmation. Language carries worldview. Native languages encode ways of understanding reality that English cannot replicate. Concepts central to indigenous thought may have no English equivalent. When Scripture is rendered in Native languages, meanings emerge that English translations miss. The Lakota Bible, Navajo Scripture portions, Cherokee New Testament, and other translations allow believers to encounter God's Word through their own conceptual frameworks. Language connects to ancestors. When Native Christians read or hear Scripture in languages their grandparents spoke, they connect to generations of believers before them. This is particularly powerful for peoples whose languages were suppressed through residential schools and assimilation policies. Reclaiming Native-language Scripture is an act of healing. Language preserves culture. Many Native languages are endangered, with few fluent speakers remaining. Bible translation has historically contributed to language preservation - creating written forms of previously oral languages, developing literacy materials, and motivating language learning. Native-language Bible study supports broader cultural survival. Practical application includes: Using Native-language Scripture in worship where speakers exist. Learning key biblical terms in tribal languages even if full fluency is not possible. Supporting ongoing translation work through Wycliffe, SIL, and tribal language programs. Incorporating Native-language songs, prayers, and liturgy in Christian worship. Recording elder speakers reading Scripture for preservation and teaching. Resources like the First Nations Version (a Native-perspective English translation) help when ancestral language fluency is not available. The goal is Scripture in the heart language - whether that's a tribal language for fluent speakers or culturally resonant English for those whose languages were taken from them.
How do Native American Christians view the relationship between Christ and Creator?
Native American Christians generally understand the relationship between Christ and Creator (often called Great Spirit, Grandfather, or various names in tribal languages) as identity rather than competition. The God revealed in Scripture - Father, Son, and Holy Spirit - is the same Creator indigenous peoples have always acknowledged, now more fully revealed in Jesus Christ. This understanding rests on several foundations: Romans 1:19-20 indicates that God has revealed Himself to all peoples through creation - "what may be known about God is plain to them, because God has made it plain to them." Native peoples, with deep creation connection, recognized the Creator's reality through this general revelation. Acts 17 shows Paul finding common ground with Athenian pagans through their "unknown god" and creation awareness. Many Native Christians see parallel dynamics - their ancestors knew the Creator genuinely though incompletely, and the gospel brings fuller revelation, not replacement of a false god with a true one. The Great Spirit, properly understood, is not a tribal deity competing with the Christian God but the one true Creator whom all peoples encounter. Native Christians worship this same Creator now revealed as Triune - Father, Son, and Spirit - in the fullness of biblical revelation. This is not syncretism (mixing different religions) but recognition that God was never absent from indigenous experience. Jesus is not a foreign God brought by colonizers but the Creator enfleshed, the Word through whom all things were made (John 1:3), including Native peoples and lands. Native Christian theology often emphasizes creation-centered spirituality that sees Creator's presence throughout the natural world - consistent with psalms that declare heaven and earth reveal God's glory. This contrasts with some Western Christianity that treats creation as merely backdrop for human drama. The incarnation - Creator entering creation - validates the sacred nature of the material world that Native peoples have always recognized.
What unique gifts do Native Christians bring to the broader church?
Native Christians bring valuable gifts that enrich the entire body of Christ - gifts often underrepresented in dominant Western Christianity. Creation theology: Native Christians' deep connection to land and creation provides vital perspective as the global church addresses environmental crisis. Biblical stewardship teaching comes alive through indigenous practice. Native creation spirituality can call Western Christianity back to biblical roots often neglected in industrialized societies. Community practice: In an age of isolation and individualism, Native communal values model biblical fellowship. The experience of people who have maintained community despite centuries of assault has much to teach fragmented modern churches. Native believers understand practically what "one body, many members" means. Resilient faith: Native Christians have maintained faith through colonization, forced relocation, cultural suppression, and ongoing marginalization. This survival and faithfulness models perseverance through suffering that comfortable Western Christians need to see. Native church history is a story of resurrection. Healing and reconciliation expertise: Peoples who have survived trauma and are actively pursuing healing have hard-won wisdom for the whole church. As Western societies increasingly grapple with historical injustices, Native Christians model paths toward truth-telling, lament, forgiveness, and reconciliation. Contextual theology: Native theologians demonstrate how to express biblical faith through cultural forms without syncretism - a skill urgently needed as Christianity grows in the Global South and as Western Christianity recognizes its own cultural captivity. Prophetic witness: Native Christians standing for justice - treaty rights, land protection, sovereignty - embody biblical concern for the marginalized and provide prophetic voice calling the church to costly solidarity. Artistic expression: Native visual art, music, dance, and storytelling offer distinctive worship expressions that enrich the church's creative vocabulary for praising God. The church needs these gifts. Relationships that allow Native Christians to share their wisdom benefit everyone in the body of Christ.
Helpful External Resources
Trusted resources for Native American Christian Bible study
Bible Gateway
Multiple translations for study
biblegateway.com →First Nations Version
Indigenous perspective Bible translation
firstnationsversion.com →NAIITS
Indigenous theological studies
naiits.com →Got Questions
Biblical Q&A resources
gotquestions.org →Bible Hub
Commentaries and study tools
biblehub.com →Christianity Today
News and articles on faith
christianitytoday.com →Wycliffe Bible Translators
Native language Bible translation
wycliffe.org →SIL International
Language and translation resources
sil.org →Related Bible Studies
Explore more cultural and community-focused Bible study resources
Multicultural Families
Unity in diversity
Family Bible Study
Resources for all families
Rural Bible Study
Faith in rural communities
Trauma Recovery
Healing through Scripture
Recovery Bible Study
Freedom and restoration
Bible Study on Healing
Physical and spiritual wholeness
Grandparents Bible Study
Intergenerational faith
Daily Bible Study
Consistent daily Scripture
Start Your Community's Faith Journey Today
Join Native Christians across tribal nations who are deepening their faith while celebrating their heritage. Download Bible Way and access resources designed specifically for indigenous believers - honoring the wisdom of ancestors while walking forward with the Creator.