InVerse Bible Study Guide Revives Sabbath School for Adventist Youth in Bulgaria

Inter-European Division

InVerse Bible Study Guide Revives Sabbath School for Adventist Youth in Bulgaria

“InVerse quickly got me hooked,” says Miroslav Milkov, an Adventist youth leader in Bulgaria. “I quickly realized that … this contemporary Bible study could transform the way the young adults study their Bibles and even bring them back to church and Sabbath School.”

Bulgaria | Miroslav Milkov

As in many other countries, Sabbath School (SS) seems to be languishing in Bulgaria. According to a survey by the Sabbath School Department of the Bulgarian Union of Seventh-day Adventist Churches, in Q2 2022, among 749 laity (12 percent of the union’s membership), 142 Sabbath School teachers, and 25 pastors, only 40 percent of the youth attend Sabbath School regularly.

inVerse

In this same period (Q2 2022), Miroslav Milkov, a youth leader of one of the churches in Sofia and a volunteer in the SS Department, was browsing the international church’ resources for ideas when he came across the inVerse Bible study guide. “inVerse quickly got me hooked,” says Milkov. “It was like nothing I had seen before, and I quickly realized that, with its fresh concept, this contemporary Bible study could transform the way the young adults study their Bibles and even bring them back to church and Sabbath School.”

The First Test

Milkov decides to test the Bible study with his small youth group, which meets every Friday night. “At first, some members of the group were confused by the new titles of the sections in the lesson. [Fast forward to] only a few weeks later, and I started seeing motivated youth coming to the group meetings with their notebooks. My friends were inspired by the truths that they had discovered on their own during their Bible study and were willing to share with the group. Soon, we didn’t need to look at the guide anymore, as we already knew what questions to ask in each part of the lesson by heart. A guy was driving 250 kilometers regularly to attend our group meetings each Friday,” concluded Milkov.

Translating the Project

Seeing God’s blessings at work among his small group members, Milkov decided that the new study guide was too good to be kept secret. To make inVerse accessible for all in Bulgarian, a translation needed to be made. He shared the idea with his Sabbath School team and got their support. 

The team came up with the clever plan to involve young volunteers in the translation rather than using a professional translation service. This way, the youth involved would become motivated and also spread the news to their friends. 

“Everything—from team gathering to translation, editing, and publishing—needed to be organized in a month so that we [could] have the lessons for the next quarter [Q4 2022] ready in time,” Milkov remembers. “At first, a few people joined the team. Then a couple more. The deadline for having the team set up and running was approaching. I had already come up with the lesson distribution: Each translator would need to translate two lessons. Then, in the last moment, God blessed the project deeply. A girl texted me, providing five names of young people who wanted to become part of the team. Not only did we have a translator for each of the thirteen lessons, but we now had more translators than lessons.”

The First Publication

After the lessons for Q4 2022 were translated, they were published in the official Sabbath School app of the General Conference. The digital version of the study guide became the preferred media. Having met the tight deadlines and after making all lessons available at the start of the quarter, Milkov and his team were facing another challenge: spreading the new study guide in the entire country and getting local churches’ buy-in. 

The SS Department came up with a cool marketing campaign to appeal to the youth. Special inVerse journals were designed and printed that contained information about inVerse and had space for personal notes, as well as the inVerse methodology guide. Water bottles were branded with the inVerse logo. A bottle was distributed every week—a prize for the winner of a weekly inVerse challenge running on the department’s Facebook page. A question based on the weekly lesson was asked, and the winner was randomly selected.

Initial Results

All this, combined with God’s rich blessings on the project, produced great results over the next several weeks. “People started texting me to express their gratitude for the new study guides,” Milkov recalls. “The youth Sabbath School group became the most visited group in our church. People were finally participating, animatedly, in the discussions. The Holy Spirit led a young couple to our services and Sabbath School group. Their experience with inVerse contributed to their decision to devote their lives to Jesus.” 

It was time to organize the translation of the next quarter’s lessons. More people wanted to join the team, having learned about inVerse from their friends. This is how the team got the ball rolling. Many churches made the decision to adopt the new study guide from the following quarter (Q1 2023).

Stoyan Petkov, pastor and Sabbath School Ministry director for the Bulgarian Union, stated, “My dream was to revive the participation of church members after the pandemic. I knew this would happen through the young people, and I see now that it is happening with the inVerse Bible study groups, not just in our church, but throughout Bulgaria. It can easily become contagious all over Europe.”

More About inVerse

inVerse is a Bible study guide for university students, young adults, working professions, and young parents (ages 18–35+). Published by the Seventh-day Adventist Church, in a given year, two of the four quarters correlate with the same study topics as does the Adult Bible Study Guide, while the two remaining quarters specifically address young adult issues and topics.

The original version of this story was published on the Inter-European Division website.