Writing instructions
How to write the page later.
- Open with a 40 to 60 word direct answer that can stand alone in Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, and Gemini.
- Use Scripture first, then interpret it with the vocabulary, practices, and pastoral instincts of the selected tradition.
- Write like a calm guide, not a polemicist. Name differences clearly, but do not frame other denominations as enemies.
- Prefer short sections, helpful subheads, concrete examples, and one practical next step after each major teaching block.
- Quote or paraphrase key doctrinal sources when relevant, but keep the prose accessible to curious readers, returners, and beginners.
- End with one Chosen Portion invitation: a quiet prompt, a prayer, and a gentle next action that can happen in five minutes.
- Assume the reader may be spiritually curious but not fluent in church vocabulary.
- Use simple language for justification, sanctification, discipleship, and grace when those ideas appear.
- Keep the page ready for SEO snippets, group discussion, and personal quiet time.
Structure
Prompt-first page architecture.
- Quick answer: one paragraph that resolves the search intent immediately.
- Why this matters in this tradition: one short section naming the doctrinal lens and spiritual posture.
- Bible lesson: three to five exposition blocks with headings that match natural-language search queries.
- Verse loop: a repeatable prompt section for each featured verse, including context, doctrine, and prayerful application.
- Practice section: one prayer, one habit, and one journal question shaped by the denomination's spirituality.
- FAQ: four concise answers for high-intent search questions, each written to stand alone.
- Add one section titled `What this means right now`.
- Add one section titled `Simple next step with God`.
Topic clusters
Angles worth covering from this tradition.
How to read the Bible for everyday life
Relationship with Jesus and daily trust
Prayer for beginners and returners
Finding a church and building habits
What the Gospel means in plain language
Applying Scripture without overcomplicating it
Verse loop
Repeat the prompt pattern for each featured verse.
This is the loop-ready section for future long-form generation. Each block already names the verse, the angle, and the writing direction.
Verse loop 1
Matthew 11:28
Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
Why this verse: Invitation and relief
Prompt: Write a seeker-friendly prompt that makes Jesus's invitation feel immediate, gentle, and actionable.
Verse loop 2
Psalm 119:105
Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.
Why this verse: Scripture as daily guidance
Prompt: Create a practical section on using Scripture for daily decisions without pretending every question becomes instant certainty.
Verse loop 3
James 1:22
Be doers of the word, and not hearers only.
Why this verse: Application and obedience
Prompt: Build a prompt that turns Bible reading into one clear next step for the reader this week.
Verse loop 4
John 15:4
Abide in me, and I in you.
Why this verse: Relationship with Jesus
Prompt: Explain abiding with simple language for prayer, presence, trust, and ongoing connection with Christ.