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Graduation / CommissioningFill-in Template~12 minClaude Opus 4.6

The Plans I Have for You: Stepping Into a Future You Cannot See

Jeremiah 29:11Proverbs 3:5-6

God's plans, stepping into the future, trusting divine guidance

This template has fill-in placeholders

Look for [BRACKETED TEXT] throughout the sermon. Replace these with your specific details to personalize the message.

[GRADUATE_NAME] e.g., Jessica, the Class of 2026, our seniors[SCHOOL] e.g., Riverside High, the university, our homeschool co-op[NEXT_STEP] e.g., college, a career, a gap year, the mission field[ENCOURAGEMENT] e.g., your kindness has already changed this community, we have watched you grow into a person of integrity

The Most Misquoted Verse in the Bible

Jeremiah 29:11 is on graduation cards, coffee mugs, and dorm room posters all over the world. "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." It sounds like a blank check from heaven. It sounds like God is promising that everything will go well. But here is what the graduation cards never tell you: this verse was written to people in exile. The nation of Israel had been conquered. Their homes were destroyed. Their temple — the center of their faith — was in ruins. They had been dragged to Babylon against their will, and false prophets were telling them it would all be over soon. "Just wait two years," the false prophets said. "God will fix this quickly." And God's actual response, through Jeremiah, was this: "You are going to be in Babylon for seventy years. Build houses. Plant gardens. Get married. Have children. Seek the welfare of the city where I have sent you." In other words: this is not a detour. This is the journey. And somewhere in the middle of that longer, harder, more honest journey, God says, "I know the plans I have for you." [GRADUATE_NAME], this is the real promise — and it is better than the coffee mug version. God is not promising you a life without exile, without confusion, without the feeling of being in a place you did not plan. He is promising you that even in those places, He has a plan. Even when the path is longer and harder than you expected, He knows where it leads. That is not a promise of comfort. That is a promise of companionship.
Jeremiah 29:11Jeremiah 29:4-7

The GPS Recalculates

You know the voice your GPS uses when you miss a turn? It does not scream. It does not say, "You have ruined everything." It simply says, "Recalculating," and finds a new route to the same destination. God is the ultimate GPS. You will miss turns. You will take detours you did not plan. You will sometimes drive in circles wondering if you are lost. And every single time, the voice of God says, "Recalculating. I still know where we are going. Trust Me." The destination does not change just because the route does.

Source: Contemporary metaphor

Trust in the Lord with All Your Heart

Solomon adds the other half of the equation in Proverbs 3: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will make your paths straight." Notice the structure: the human part comes first. Trust. Don't lean on your own understanding. Acknowledge God. And then — then — the paths are made straight. This is hard for graduates. You have just spent years learning to lean on your understanding. You have studied, tested, analyzed, and been graded on your ability to figure things out. And now the Bible says: your understanding is not enough. That is not an insult to your intelligence. It is an invitation to something bigger than intelligence — wisdom. [GRADUATE_NAME], as you step into [NEXT_STEP], you will face decisions that no textbook prepared you for. You will face moments where every option looks uncertain, where the data is incomplete, where the right answer is not in the back of the book. In those moments, the smartest thing you can do is the most counterintuitive: stop trying to figure it out alone and say, "God, I trust You. I don't understand this, but I trust You." [ENCOURAGEMENT]. And the same faithfulness that brought you to this moment will carry you into every moment that follows.
Proverbs 3:5-6James 1:5

Go: You Are Sent, Not Just Released

There is a difference between being released and being sent. When you are released, the institution opens the door and says, "Good luck." When you are sent, a community lays hands on you and says, "We are with you. God is with you. You carry us with you, and we carry you in our prayers." [GRADUATE_NAME], you are not just graduating. You are being commissioned. The word commission means "to send with authority." You are going out from this place not empty-handed but equipped — equipped with faith, with community, with a God who has already gone ahead of you to prepare the way. Joshua stood at the edge of the promised land, terrified, and God said to him the same thing I want to say to you today: "Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid. Do not be discouraged. For the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go." Wherever you go. Not just wherever is safe. Not just wherever is familiar. Wherever. The dorm room. The first apartment. The new city where you know nobody. The job that overwhelms you. The season of doubt when you wonder if you heard God correctly. Wherever you go, He is already there. This community is proud of you. This church has watched you grow. And as you step across this threshold, know that you go with our blessing, our prayers, and the unshakable promise of a God who knows the plans He has for you — plans for hope and a future.
Joshua 1:9Matthew 28:19-20Philippians 1:6

Applications

  • 1When the path is unclear, choose faithfulness over certainty. You do not need to see the whole road — just the next step.
  • 2Build a circle of wise, godly people who will tell you the truth. You will need voices of wisdom more than voices of flattery.
  • 3Serve wherever you land. The fastest way to find purpose in a new place is to find someone who needs help and help them.
  • 4Stay in the Word and in community. Faith atrophies without exercise. Find a church, a small group, a place to be known.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Lord, we commission [GRADUATE_NAME] into Your care today. You have been faithful through every exam, every doubt, every late night — and You will be faithful still.
  • Give [GRADUATE_NAME] wisdom that goes deeper than knowledge, courage that outlasts fear, and the humility to trust You when the path is unclear.
  • Surround [GRADUATE_NAME] with community in the next season. Let there be friends who sharpen, mentors who guide, and a church that feels like home.
  • We trust Your plans. We trust Your timing. We trust that the One who began a good work in [GRADUATE_NAME] will carry it to completion. In Jesus' name, Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)

When Gandalf falls in the Mines of Moria, his last words to the fellowship are, "Fly, you fools!" — get moving, keep going, the mission does not stop because I am not with you. Later, Frodo says, "I wish none of this had happened." And Gandalf responds, "So do all who live to see such times. But that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us." That is the graduation charge: you did not choose the era you live in, the challenges you face, or the uncertainties ahead. But you get to decide what you do with the time given to you. And the God who gave you that time is walking with you through every step of the journey.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

Jeremiah 29:11 was not written to comfortable people. It was written to exiles. The promise is not that the road will be smooth — it is that you will not walk it alone.

Pastoral

You are not being released into the world. You are being sent. There is a difference — and it is the difference between 'Good luck' and 'God is with you.'

Edgy

The most misquoted verse on graduation cards was written to prisoners of war. Maybe read the context before you put it on a coffee mug.

More Titles

Sent, Not Just Released: A Graduation CommissioningRecalculating: When God's Plan Takes a DetourTrust the Path You Cannot SeeWherever You Go: The Promise That Follows YouThe Exile's Promise: Why Jeremiah 29:11 Is Better Than You Think
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Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a graduation sermon be?

Graduation sermons should be 10-15 minutes. Graduates and their families are celebrating — keep it focused, heartfelt, and memorable. This template targets 12 minutes.

Is Jeremiah 29:11 appropriate for a graduation sermon?

Yes, but with context. This template addresses the common misquotation by explaining that the verse was written to exiles — which actually makes it more powerful for graduates facing uncertainty. It's not a promise that everything will be easy. It's a promise that God is with you in the hard parts.

Can this be used for a baccalaureate service?

Absolutely. This template works for church graduation Sundays, baccalaureate services, homeschool co-op ceremonies, and commissioning services. Adjust the placeholders for your specific context.

This Sermon in Your Tradition

A graduation / commissioning sermon sounds different depending on your theological tradition. See all 17 versions.