Helping families and teachers connect faith with real life.
Welcome! I’m Marc Jarchow, author, teacher, and creator of MommmI’mBored — a growing library of Sunday School Resources designed especially for preteens. I have also written a number of books on my observations of the Christian life.
I started the lessons project because I saw a real need for instruction that is thoughtful, engaging, and realistic for the people actually teaching them. Whether you’re a parent, homeschooler, youth leader, classroom teacher, children’s ministry volunteer, or someone simply trying to help preteens navigate life with faith, finding resources that are both meaningful and manageable can be difficult, especially in our current spiritual climate.
Too often, lessons are either overly complicated, disconnected from real life, or simply not designed for the way preteens think and learn.
MommmI’mBored was created to change that.
The goal is simple:
Create lessons that help preteens think deeply, ask honest questions, and connect biblical truth to everyday life.
The library combines:
Each series is designed to feel connected and progressive — helping preteens build understanding step by step instead of through isolated lessons.
I believe preteens are at an incredibly important stage of life.
They are beginning to:
And they deserve Sunday School Resources that are more than shallow answers.
They deserve teaching that is:
That belief shapes every lesson in the library.
The growing Sunday School Resources library currently includes:
Bible and evidence-based series that help preteens understand:
Series focused on:
Lessons dealing with:
Every lesson is designed with flexibility in mind so families, schools, churches, homeschool groups, and ministries can adapt them easily.
Thank you for visiting the site and being part of helping the next generation grow in faith.
Whether you’re teaching one child around a kitchen table or leading a full classroom, your investment matters.
I hope these resources help make those conversations easier, deeper, and more meaningful.