Lead a group

You don't have to be qualified. You just have to go first.

Here's what leading a Beneath the Rubble group actually requires: You read a book. You invite some people. You ask the questions we give you. And when somebody asks something you can't answer, you say "I don't know — let's find out."

That's it. That's the whole job.

You don't need a theology degree. You don't need a polished testimony. You don't need to have your life together, and if you're waiting until you do, you'll be waiting a while. Sheldon and Annette didn't have any of that either. That's sort of the point of the book.

What we give you

  • The book — for you and for everyone in your group
  • The questions — a simple guide for every session, so you're never staring at a blank page
  • A real person — someone from our team who checks in on you, not just at you
  • Somewhere to send the hard stuff — if someone in your group is in crisis or in over their head, you don't carry it alone

What you bring

  • Some people. Four is plenty. Two is a start.
  • A table, a living room, a break room, or a video call. It genuinely does not matter.
  • An hour a week.
  • A willingness to go first.

What happens after you hit send

A real human reads it — usually within a couple of days — and reaches out to talk it through. No pressure, no pitch. If it turns out the timing is wrong, that's a completely fine outcome and we'll say so.

You are not committing to anything by filling this out. You're raising your hand.

Tell us about you
Tell us about the group

How would you meet?

Roughly how many people are you thinking?

When would you like to start?

Have you read Beneath the Rubble yet?

Anything else