Breaking Chains: The Church's Call Against Human Trafficking
A 7-day study exploring Scripture's mandate for justice, the Church's prophetic voice, and practical steps to combat modern slavery and support survivors.
About this plan
Human trafficking represents one of the darkest injustices of our time—a modern slavery affecting millions worldwide. Yet many Christians remain unaware of this crisis or uncertain about the Church's role in addressing it. This Bible study plan calls us to examine Scripture's passionate advocacy for the oppressed, the vulnerable, and those trapped in bondage.
Throughout the Bible, God demonstrates an unwavering commitment to justice and liberation. From the Exodus narrative to Jesus's proclamation of freedom to captives in Luke 4, Scripture consistently elevates the cause of the enslaved and marginalized. The Church, as Christ's body on earth, inherits this mandate. We are called not merely to spiritual comfort but to active compassion—to be voices for the voiceless and advocates for the powerless.
This week, we will explore seven essential dimensions of this calling: God's heart for justice, recognizing modern slavery, the Church's prophetic responsibility, Jesus's example of radical compassion, biblical frameworks for action, practical engagement, and sustained intercession. As we journey through these truths, we invite the Holy Spirit to challenge our complacency, expand our awareness, and mobilize us for redemptive action.
Whether you are new to this issue or already engaged in anti-trafficking work, these daily reflections will deepen your conviction that this is not someone else's burden—it is ours. God sees every victim, grieves every injustice, and invites His Church to join Him in breaking chains and proclaiming freedom. 🕊️ ⛓️ 🙏
What you'll study
⚖️ God's Heart for Justice
👁️ Recognizing Modern Slavery
📢 The Church's Prophetic Voice
❤️ Jesus's Radical Compassion
🤝 Biblical Frameworks for Action
🌱 Practical Engagement and Healing
🙏 Sustained Intercession and Hope
Ready to begin?
Create a free account and start this study plan today — alone or with a group.