Week 4: Prompting AI Effectively as a Christian Leader
Core Question
How do I get useful results from AI?
Introduction
Over the past three weeks, we have explored:
- What
AI is and what it is not - How
Christian leaders can engage AI wisely and biblically - The
opportunities and risks of AI - Practical
ministry applications
Now we arrive at the most practical part of this training.
Many people try AI once and conclude:
“AI isn’t very useful.”
Often, the problem is not the AI.
The problem is the prompt.
A prompt is simply the instruction you give to AI.
Just as the quality of a question often determines the quality of an answer, the quality of your prompt often determines the quality of the response you receive.
Learning to write effective prompts is one of the most valuable AI skills a Christian leader can develop.
What Is A Prompt?
A prompt is the information, instruction, or request you give to AI.
For example:
Poor Prompt:
“Write a sermon.”
Good Prompt:
“Act as an experienced pastor. Create a sermon outline from Hebrews 11 on the topic of faith for young professionals. Include key teaching points, illustrations, practical applications, and discussion questions.”
Notice the difference.
The second prompt gives:
- Context
- Purpose
- Audience
- Desired
outcome
The more clarity you provide, the better the response.
Why Most People Get Poor Results From AI
Most people treat AI like a search engine.
They ask:
- “Write
a sermon.” - “Create
a Bible study.” - “Make
a social media post.”
These instructions are too vague.
AI works best when it understands:
- Who it
should act as - What
task it should perform - Who
the audience is - What
outcome is desired
Think of AI as an intelligent assistant.
If you give vague instructions, you’ll receive vague results.
If you give clear instructions, you’ll receive much stronger results.
The Anatomy of a Great Prompt
Effective prompts typically contain five components.
1. Role
Tell AI who it should act as.
Examples:
- Pastor
- Bible
teacher - Leadership
coach - Church
administrator - Discipleship
mentor - Communications
specialist
Example:
“Act as an experienced Bible teacher.”
2. Task
Clearly explain what you want.
Example:
“Create a Bible study outline.”
3. Context
Provide background information.
Example:
“This Bible study is for new believers in a church discipleship program.”
4. Format
Specify how you want the information organized.
Example:
“Present the content in five sections with discussion questions.”
5. Outcome
Explain the desired result.
Example:
“The goal is to help participants develop a stronger prayer life.”
The Christian Leader Prompt Formula
Use this simple formula:
Role + Task + Context + Format + Outcome
Example:
“Act as an experienced pastor. Create a Bible study on prayer for young adults. Organize it into five teaching sections with discussion questions and practical applications. The goal is to help participants develop a consistent prayer life.”
This formula alone will dramatically improve your results.
Prompting Example: Sermon Preparation
Instead of:
“Write a sermon on faith.”
Use:
“Act as a pastor with 20 years of ministry experience. Create a sermon outline on faith from Hebrews 11 for young professionals. Include an introduction, three main teaching points, biblical illustrations, practical applications, and small group discussion questions.”
Notice how much more specific this prompt is.
Prompting Example: Bible Study
Prompt:
“Act as a Bible teacher. Create a Bible study guide on Ephesians 4 for church leaders. Include key themes, reflection questions, practical applications, and a closing prayer.”
Prompting Example: Small Group Discussion
Prompt:
“Act as a discipleship leader. Create a small group discussion guide based on James 1. Include icebreaker questions, discussion questions, personal reflection exercises, and action steps.”
Prompting Example: Church Announcement
Prompt:
“Act as a church communications specialist. Write a warm and engaging announcement inviting church members to a three-day prayer and fasting program.”
Prompting Example: Volunteer Recruitment
Prompt:
“Act as a ministry leader. Create a volunteer recruitment message encouraging church members to join the media department. Highlight the impact of serving and include a clear call to action.”
Prompting Example: Leadership Training
Prompt:
“Act as a leadership coach. Develop a training session on servant leadership for church volunteers. Include teaching points, practical exercises, reflection questions, and action steps.”
The Power of Follow-Up Prompts
Many people make one request and stop.
Experienced AI users continue the conversation.
For example:
Initial Prompt:
“Create a sermon outline on faith.”
Follow-Up Prompts:
- Make
the introduction stronger. - Add
real-life illustrations. - Include
more practical applications. - Simplify
the language. - Add
discussion questions. - Expand
point two. - Provide
relevant cross-references.
Think of AI as a conversation partner, not a one-time tool.
Refining AI Responses
Never assume the first response is the final response.
Review everything.
Ask:
- Is it
biblically sound? - Is it
accurate? - Is it
relevant? - Does
it fit my audience? - Does
it reflect my voice?
The best results often come after several rounds of refinement.
Important Warning
AI can assist your preparation.
It cannot replace your responsibility.
Always remember:
AI Can Generate Content
But it cannot generate conviction.
AI Can Generate Information
But it cannot generate revelation.
AI Can Generate Structure
But it cannot generate spiritual authority.
The Holy Spirit remains central to ministry.
AI should support your work, not replace your dependence on God.
Christian Leader Prompt Library
Sermon Outline Prompt
Act as an experienced pastor. Create a sermon outline on [TOPIC] from [SCRIPTURE]. Include an introduction, three teaching points, supporting scriptures, illustrations, practical applications, and discussion questions.
Bible Study Prompt
Act as a Bible teacher. Create a Bible study guide on [SCRIPTURE]. Include key themes, discussion questions, personal reflection exercises, and practical applications.
Small Group Prompt
Act as a discipleship leader. Create a small group discussion guide on [TOPIC]. Include icebreakers, discussion questions, personal reflection questions, and action steps.
Church Announcement Prompt
Act as a church communications specialist. Write an engaging church announcement for [EVENT]. Include event details, benefits of participation, and a clear call to action.
Event Planning Prompt
Act as an event planner for a church. Create a planning checklist for [EVENT]. Include preparation timelines, volunteer responsibilities, promotion strategies, and follow-up activities.
Leadership Meeting Prompt
Act as an executive assistant. Create a leadership meeting agenda for a church leadership team. Include discussion items, decision points, action items, and follow-up responsibilities.
Social Media Prompt
Act as a Christian content strategist. Create five social media posts on [TOPIC]. Include captions, engagement questions, and calls to action.
Discipleship Curriculum Prompt
Act as a discipleship coach. Create a six-week discipleship curriculum on [TOPIC]. Include weekly objectives, teaching content, discussion questions, assignments, and reflection exercises.
Volunteer Training Prompt
Act as a ministry trainer. Create a volunteer training guide for [MINISTRY DEPARTMENT]. Include responsibilities, expectations, practical examples, and discussion questions.
Pastoral Care Prompt
Act as a pastoral care advisor. Suggest biblical encouragement, scriptures, and practical support ideas for someone facing [SITUATION]. Ensure the response is compassionate, biblically grounded, and pastorally sensitive.
Reflection Questions
- What
surprised you most about effective prompting? - Which
prompt from the library will you use first? - How
can prompting help you save time in ministry? - What
safeguards will you put in place when using AI? - How
can AI create more space for prayer, discipleship, and people-focused
ministry?
Take a few moments to write down your responses.
Key Takeaways
✓ The quality of AI output depends largely on the quality of your prompt.
✓ Great prompts provide context, clarity, and direction.
✓ Follow-up prompts improve results significantly.
✓ AI works best as a collaborative assistant.
✓ Christian leaders should always verify and refine AI-generated content.
✓ AI can support ministry effectiveness while spiritual authority remains rooted in God’s Word and the leading of the Holy Spirit.
Final Encouragement
What’s Next?
Over the past four weeks, we’ve explored how Christian leaders can engage Artificial Intelligence with wisdom, discernment, and biblical conviction.
But learning is only the beginning.
Technology is evolving rapidly.
New tools are emerging every month.
New questions are arising every week.
The challenge facing Christian leaders today is not simply gaining information—it is finding a community committed to learning, growing, and navigating these changes together.
That’s why we would like to invite you to join the Kingdom Life App (KCI) App.
Inside the KCI community, you’ll gain access to:
✓ Ongoing discussions on faith, leadership, technology, and culture
✓ Practical discipleship resources
✓ Courses and learning experiences designed for Christian growth
✓ Community engagement with believers and leaders from different backgrounds
✓ Future trainings and resources on AI, ministry, leadership, and spiritual formation
✓ Opportunities to learn, connect, and grow alongside others who are committed to advancing God’s Kingdom
The conversations we’ve started in this guide do not end here.
They continue within a community of believers who are committed to growing in wisdom, truth, and spiritual maturity.
We believe that transformation happens best in community.
We look forward to growing with you.
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