David and Goliath

Warm child-friendly illustration for David and Goliath, a Bible story about courage featuring David

Helping children discover that courage grows when they remember who God is.

Perfect for: Families Sunday School Homeschool Children's Ministry

Introduction

Children face challenges that can feel enormous: entering a new classroom, speaking in front of others, trying something difficult, standing up for what is right, or admitting when they need help.

The biblical account of David and Goliath offers more than a message about being brave. It points children toward the source of lasting courage. David did not trust in his size, equipment, or reputation. He trusted the God he already knew to be faithful.

Why This Lesson Matters

Children sometimes believe courage means never feeling afraid. A healthier biblical understanding is that courage helps us take a wise and faithful next step even when fear is present.

This distinction allows children to be honest. They can name what feels scary, seek help from a trusted adult, prepare carefully, pray, and remember that they do not face hard things alone.

David's confidence grew from remembering God's past faithfulness. Families can practice the same habit by noticing ways God has helped, guided, and strengthened them before.

Understanding the Bible Verse

“All those gathered here will know that it is not by sword or spear that the Lord saves; for the battle is the Lord's.”

1 Samuel 17:47

David wanted everyone watching to understand that victory did not depend on impressive human strength. God was the one who could save His people.

This does not teach children to rush into danger or handle serious problems alone. Children should always seek a trusted adult when safety, bullying, health, or harm is involved. The verse teaches them that faithful action begins with dependence on God rather than confidence in appearances.

What Children Can Learn

I can be honest when I feel afraid, ask for help, and trust God to give me courage for the next right step.

Children can learn that being small, young, or inexperienced does not make them unimportant to God. He can use the gifts, wisdom, and opportunities He has placed in their lives.

They can also learn that courage is connected to purpose. Biblical courage is not showing off or proving superiority. It is choosing what is faithful, loving, and right.

Conversation Starters

  1. What made Goliath seem frightening to the people of Israel?
  2. What did David remember about God?
  3. What does 1 Samuel 17:47 teach us about where true help comes from?
  4. What is something that feels big or difficult to you right now?
  5. How can you prepare wisely while also trusting God?
  6. Who are trusted adults you can ask for help?
  7. What is one courageous and kind step you could take this week?

Family Activity

Build a Courage Stone Reminder. Find five small stones outside or use five crumpled pieces of paper. On small slips of paper, write five reminders of God's faithfulness, such as a prayer He answered, a person He sent to help, a difficult day your family came through, a Bible promise, or something in creation that displays His care.

Place one reminder beside each stone. Let family members choose one and explain how it can encourage them during a current challenge. Finish by naming one wise next step and one trusted person who can help.

Family Prayer

Dear God, thank You for being greater than every challenge we face. When we feel small or afraid, help us remember Your faithfulness. Give us wisdom to make safe choices, humility to ask for help, and courage to take the next right step. May our confidence rest in You rather than in our own strength. In Jesus' name, Amen.

Final Encouragement

Courage develops through repeated moments of trust. Every time your child names a fear, receives patient support, remembers God's character, and chooses a faithful next step, that courage grows stronger.

Your calm presence matters. You can help challenges feel manageable without dismissing them. For more faith-building conversations, browse the Parent Guides library or explore the David and Goliath activities.

Perfect for Families and Children's Ministry

These Parent Guides are designed to help:

  • Family bedtime discussions
  • Sunday School lessons
  • Homeschool Bible study
  • Children's church
  • Family devotions
  • Small group discussions

These Parent Guides are meant to be shared. Print a copy for your home, church, homeschool, or classroom, and use it to help children discover God's Word in meaningful and practical ways.

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