✨ A Brand New Series!

Witnesses.

A group of Sunday school children discover what it actually means to obey Matthew 18:3 — and in doing so, show the adults watching what they forgot.

"You will be my witnesses." — Acts 1:8

Sunday School Video Series · Ages 6–12 · YouTube & TikTok

Childlike is not the
same as childish.

Paul says "put away childish things." Jesus says "become like little children." These appear to contradict — they do not. Childlike trust matures into wisdom; it is never replaced by it. Set in Durango, Colorado, Witnesses follows a reluctant Sunday school teacher and the children in her class as they learn to observe, discern, and report on Scripture at work in their own lives — without ever weaponizing what they see.

The Teacher

Recently divorced, believing God is real but no longer believing He is for her. Called anyway. Equipped along the way.

The Classroom

9–13 kids on any given Sunday, ages 6–12, combined grades — the real, fluid, small-town Sunday school room.

The Week

Children live out the teaching Monday through Saturday, collecting observations without knowing that's what they're doing until Sunday comes.

No separation.

The title carries a double meaning: no separation between childlike faith and adult wisdom — and no separation from God's love (Romans 8:38-39). The series recovers a lost skill: observing human behavior, drawing a spiritual conclusion, and sharing the insight without exposing or weaponizing the person. Gossip is the corrupted version of that skill. Witnesses models the uncorrupted version, through children — and the adults watching realize what they've lost.

Every episode,
the same shape.

The audience learns to anticipate the structure. That anticipation is part of the discipleship.

01
Cold Open — Anchor Verse
The episode's Scripture verse appears on screen. No context, no explanation. Kids think: that's about me. Adults think: I don't fully understand that.
02
What Did You See?
Children report what they saw as evidence Scripture is at work — observational, not accusatory. The No-Names Rule: they describe the pattern, never the person.
03
This Week's Teaching
Mrs. Caldwell teaches from the anchor verse. A student raises the reasonable carnal counterargument. Four key points go on the board.
04
The Week
One or two children are followed through their days, living the four points without knowing it — internalizing before they can articulate it.
05
Verse Reprise
The same verse from the cold open returns, unnarrated. It means something different the second time.
06
Episode Close
This Sunday's callback, and next week's verse tease — the reason the audience comes back.

Durango, Colorado.

A small mountain town of about 19,500 in the San Juan Mountains — ancient, specific, and visually unlike anywhere else in children's animation. The Animas River runs through it; Rio de las Animas Perdidas, "the River of Lost Souls," is its historical Spanish name. Animas Valley Church sits in that valley. Mesa Verde Elementary — home of the Bighorns, named for one of the most ancient landmarks in the American Southwest — anchors the kids' world outside the classroom.

The Classroom

9–13 kids on a given Sunday, ages 6–12, combined grades, at least 3 volunteer teachers — small-town Sunday school as it actually runs.

The Families

Generational ranching families, remote-worker transplants, entrepreneurial dreamers, service workers, and Fort Lewis College families — a real cross-section of a mountain town.

All Nations, Literally

A foreign exchange student joins each season from a different region of the world — unfiltered by American cultural Christianity, asking the question no one else would.

The class.

A small cast the audience gets to know across seasons — each one further along, or further behind, than the adults think.

The Teacher

Recently divorced. Believes God is real, isn't sure He's for her anymore. Called to teach anyway — and equipped along the way, one Sunday at a time.

The Anchor Kid

Eight years old, curious, literal. Takes Scripture at face value because no one's taught him not to yet. The child the adult audience recognizes as who they used to be.

The Anchor Kid's Dad

A good man, distracted, carrying the weight of adulthood visibly — a quiet picture of what self-reliance does to a person over decades.

The Student Roster

Four to six kids with distinct personalities — some deep, some literal, some funny, all more spiritually perceptive than the adults around them.

Let's talk.

Witnesses is a project of Of All Nations Ministries, Inc. For inquiries, reach us at hello@witnesses.kids.