What it can do
A sermon can provide the weekly Bible theme, discussion path, memory verse practice, and prayer focus. That can be useful for families who want their homeschool Bible work to connect with their church's sermon.
A sermon can become supplemental homeschool Bible curriculum when a parent turns it into Scripture reflection, memory work, discussion, prayer, and application. Ponder can create that reviewed Bible lesson draft, but it does not claim to be accredited homeschool curriculum.
A sermon can provide the weekly Bible theme, discussion path, memory verse practice, and prayer focus. That can be useful for families who want their homeschool Bible work to connect with their church's sermon.
Ponder should not be treated as a full homeschool curriculum provider. It creates supplemental Bible discipleship drafts from a sermon.
Use it as supplemental Bible discipleship and review it against your homeschool plan before teaching.
No. Ponder creates supplemental homeschool Bible lessons from sermons, not accredited curriculum.
It can include Scripture reflection, memory work, family discussion, prayer, application, and simple activities.
Bring a sermon you have the right to use, choose the audience, and review the draft before teaching, sharing, or using it with someone else.
Ponder gives users a real path from sermon to reviewed weekly discipleship. These screenshots show that app path before signup.

Actual onboarding screen where a user starts by naming the discipleship setting.

Actual help center screen with searchable support before and after a first sermon.

Actual pricing screen showing the free start, individual plan, and church plan.